The Most High doesn’t live in temples
made
by human hands.
Acts
7:48
Christendom is largely constituted by this [aesthetic] sense –
its architecture, its ritual, its music, its adornment, its lighting (or lack
of it), its tone, its atmosphere, its vestments and so forth. All are of the
soul.... Spiritual death marks that realm, and while there may be intense
emotions which make for resolves, "high" thoughts and desires, there
is no genuine change in the nature of those concerned, and repeated doses of
this must be taken to maintain any measure of soul-self-satisfaction which
makes them feel good. All religions have this soulish feature in common, more
or less, and it is here that the fatal blunder has been made by many religious people who
contend that other religions, which are undoubtedly devout and sincere, should
not be interfered with, but the good in them should be recognized and accepted.
It is the confusing of religion with what the Bible means by being spiritual.
Religion can rise to high levels and sink to terrible depths. It is the same thing which does
both. But that thing never rises above the human level; it never really reaches
God. Religion can be the greatest enemy of God's true thought, because it is
Satan's best deception. Asceticism is no more truly spiritual than
aestheticism. There is no more a brief with God for rigors, denials, fastings,
puritanic iciness, etc., as such, than for the opposite. Simplicity may give
God a chance, but it is not necessarily spiritual. It may be a matter of
taste....
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