Your observation is valid, but spiritual experiences of that sort are extremely rare. I was raised in an evangelical church, in a very serious, I might say fanatical, Christian family, and went to church, Bible study, and other church events regularly for many years. Spiritual experiences were a common topic of discussion. But no one in my family ever had one, nor any of my friends. They were things visiting missionaries from Africa talked about. So it doesn’t explain the great bulk of religion.
spiritual experiences of that sort are extremely rare
I don’t know about that. I have a feeling that these spiritual experiences cluster and that in certain times and social contexts they are pretty common, and in other times and contexts—not so much.
I think this indicates that there is a full spectrum of these experiences—from mild unease at something being vaguely there to being fully and completely overwhelmed by God’s presence. The extremes follow their own paths (one to being ignored and the other to becoming a full-fledged mystic), but the middle depends a lot of social expectations, priming, feedback loops, etc. The same experience could be described as presence of God and as “that was weird, my mind must be getting loopy”.
What can I say? I’ve met a lot of believers who claim that God talks to them on a regular basis. They seem sincere, but maybe they’re all just really good liars (or maybe I’m really gullible).
Your observation is valid, but spiritual experiences of that sort are extremely rare. I was raised in an evangelical church, in a very serious, I might say fanatical, Christian family, and went to church, Bible study, and other church events regularly for many years. Spiritual experiences were a common topic of discussion. But no one in my family ever had one, nor any of my friends. They were things visiting missionaries from Africa talked about. So it doesn’t explain the great bulk of religion.
I don’t know about that. I have a feeling that these spiritual experiences cluster and that in certain times and social contexts they are pretty common, and in other times and contexts—not so much.
I think this indicates that there is a full spectrum of these experiences—from mild unease at something being vaguely there to being fully and completely overwhelmed by God’s presence. The extremes follow their own paths (one to being ignored and the other to becoming a full-fledged mystic), but the middle depends a lot of social expectations, priming, feedback loops, etc. The same experience could be described as presence of God and as “that was weird, my mind must be getting loopy”.
What can I say? I’ve met a lot of believers who claim that God talks to them on a regular basis. They seem sincere, but maybe they’re all just really good liars (or maybe I’m really gullible).