Religious ecstasy: Difference between revisions
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==Notable individuals or movements== |
==Notable individuals or movements== |
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*St. [[Teresa of Avila]], [[Roman Catholic]] [[mystic]], first entered states of ecstasy while studying religious texts when taken ill in a [[Carmelite]] cloister. |
*St. [[Teresa of Avila]], [[Roman Catholic]] [[mystic]], first entered states of ecstasy while studying religious texts when taken ill in a [[Carmelite]] cloister. |
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*St. [[Thomas Aquinas]] experienced an ecstasy during a church service towards the end of his life that caused him to stop writing. |
*St. [[Thomas Aquinas]] experienced an ecstasy during a church service towards the end of his life that caused him to stop writing. |
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* [[Toronto blessing|The Toronto Blessing]] - an example of religious ecstasy in the [[Charismatic]] Christian church. |
* [[Toronto blessing|The Toronto Blessing]] - an example of religious ecstasy in the [[Charismatic]] Christian church. |
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[[Category:Spirituality]] |
[[Category:Spirituality]] |
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Revision as of 16:46, 4 November 2005
- Another article on a related topic is ecstasy.
Religious ecstasy is a trance-like state characterized by expanded mental and spiritual awareness and is frequently accompanied by visions, hallucinations, and physical euphoria. Such an experience usually lasts about a half-hour. However, there are many records of such experiences lasting several days, and some people claim to have experienced ecstasy over a period of over three decades, or to have recurring experiences of ecstasy during their lifetime.
Religious ecstasy can be distinguished from spirit possession and hypnosis in that ecstasy is not accompanied by a loss of consciousness or will on the part of the subject experiencing it. Rather, the person experiencing ecstasy notices dramatic changes in his or her physiological responses and psychological perceptions. In some instances, ecstasy is induced accidentally or spontaneously, thereby creating intense fear and doubts about the mental health of those who experience it.
Religious ecstasy can be deliberately induced using a variety of techniques, including prayer, meditation, Gospel music, breathing exercises, dancing, sweating, fasting, thirsting, and the consumption of coffee, wine, or psychotropic drugs. The particular technique that an individual uses to induce ecstasy is usually one that is associated with that individual's particular religious and cultural traditions. As a result, an ecstatic experience is usually interpreted within the context of a particular individual's religious and cultural traditions.
Achieving ecstatic trances is a major activity of shamans, who use ecstasy for such purposes as traveling to heaven or the underworld, guiding or otherwise interacting with spirits, clairvoyance, and healing. Some shamans use drugs from such plants as peyote and cannabis (also see cannabis (drug)) in their attempts to reach ecstasy, while others rely on such non-chemical means as ritual, music, dance, ascetic practices, or visual designs as aids to mental discipline. The rituals followed by some athletes in preparing for contests are dismissed as superstition, but this is a device of sports psychologists to help them to attain an ecstasy-like state.
Kriya yoga, a type of yoga popularized in the West by Paramahansa Yogananda, provides techniques to attain a state of ecstasy called Samadhi. According to practitioners, there are various stages of ecstasy, the highest of which is called Nirvikalpa Samadhi.
In the monotheistic tradition, ecstasy is usually associated with communion and oneness with God. Indeed, ecstasy is the primary vehicle for the type of prophetic visions and revelations found in the Bible. However, such experiences can also be personal mystical experiences with no significance to anyone but the person experiencing them.
In Buddhism, especially in the Pali Canon, there are 8 states of trance also called absorption. The first four of these states are called Rupa or materially oriented. The next four are called Arupa or non-material. These eight states are preliminary trances which lead up to final saturation which upon return to the phenomenal world manifests as enlightenment. It takes great effort and years of sustained meditation to reach even the first absorption, when the meditator characteristically notices the sustained lucidity of a non-material light enveloping him/her.
In Christianity, the trance experiences of the Apostles Peter and Paul are recorded in Acts 10:10, 11:5 and 22:17.
In hagiography (writings on the subject of Christian saints) many instances are recorded in which saints are granted ecstasies. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, religious ecstasy (called supernatural ecstasy) includes two elements: one, interior and invisible, in which the mind rivets its attention on a religious subject, and another, corporeal and visible, in which the activity of the senses is suspended, reducing the effect of external sensations upon the subject and rendering him or her resistant to awakening.
The Catholic Encyclopedia also asserts that there are a number of false views on the question of religious ecstasy:
- That during an ecstasy there is a lessening of intellectual power.
- That ecstasies are solely a product of violent emotions.
- That ecstasy is an entirely natural phenomenon, and that others such as Archimedes and Socrates achieved these natural ecstasies.
- That religious ecstasy is another form of lethargy or catalepsy.
- That ecstasy is related to the hypnotic state.
- That ecstasy is related to somnambulism or the trances of spirit mediums.
- That ecstasy is equivalent to the states produced by the use of narcotic drugs.
Notable individuals or movements
- St. Teresa of Avila, Roman Catholic mystic, first entered states of ecstasy while studying religious texts when taken ill in a Carmelite cloister.
- St. Thomas Aquinas experienced an ecstasy during a church service towards the end of his life that caused him to stop writing.
- The Toronto Blessing - an example of religious ecstasy in the Charismatic Christian church.