In the UK, at least, "pilgrimages" (including to "Recognized" Christian sites) have in recent decades become popular among churchy people and the secular-intellectual middle class more generally, and are often depicted in the mass media.
Since Christianity continues its steep decline and top-down destruction; this phenomenon could only be happening if pilgrimages were - or, at least, were expected to be - "a bad thing" and to do spiritual harm.
And indeed, this largely seems to be the case.
For a start; modern people are simply incapable of responding to symbolic phenomena such as pilgrimages, with the kind of spirituality-sustaining and motivating power that was possible (indeed apparently usual) in medieval times.
For instance, the premier healing pilgrimage site of Lourdes was closed during the Birdemic; so clearly real belief in the power of place and pilgrimage thereto was absent.
Indeed, nearly all Holy Places (including all churches) were locked-down and the public excluded; with the expressed approval of the pious - evidently, there is nowadays negligible actual lived-experience of a Holiness linked with place and artefact.
So modern pilgrimages (whether by the explicitly materialist-secular majority, or by the minority of self-identified Christians) are inevitably more of the nature of a holiday/ lifestyle-thing than anything resembling a real pilgrimage.
This is evidenced by the give-away of recording and depicting pilgrimage photographically and "sharing" these images and narratives on social media - whether serially "as it happens", or "curated" retrospectively.
It is obvious that extremely few "pilgrimages" would happen if the participants were forbidden to record and later boast... I mean talk - about their "experience".
In sum, modern pilgrimage is more like a do-it-yourself form of that populist literary genre "travel writing", than they are a sign of anything in the remotest degree "spiritual".
Insofar as pilgrimages do "work" - that is, insofar as they actually have a positively transformative spiritual effect; then this is nothing to do with official, recognized, popular, fashionable, photogenic pilgrimage sites; but a matter of individual significance.
It is most likely that nowadays a special place of pilgrimage would be almost unique to a person or a few people; as a consequence of sharing an unusually similar outlook and experiences.
And, even when a pilgrimage "works" spiritually in the desired and intended fashion; there is still a hazard to the fact of linking the experience to a place.
Life away from the place is perhaps thereby devalued; or else if the pilgrim was to relocate and move to dwell in the place of pilgrimage - then would occur the problem of over-familiarity, habituation; of building-up "tolerance" to the spiritual benefit.
In a nutshell: even a spiritually-successful pilgrimage may be alienating - that is, the mediating role of place may distance us (temporally and spatially) from a direct apprehension of the divine in life.
In sum; it seems to me that, in our era, pilgrimage should be regarded as at best providing a spiritual clue, perhaps an epiphany; and an effective pilgrimage needs to be used as a kick-start towards something else that comes after; rather than leading to the more usual pilgrimage-addiction, or the recycling of the primary act of pilgrimage - whether in discourse, memory, or in practice.
4 comments:
the birdemic, and specifically its closure of sacred sites, felt after a certain point like an invitation to make our own holy places - whether churches or sanctuaries or whatever else. or at least my wife and I felt it, and did something about it.
I think this spontaneous and individual quest can offer something more in our stage of consciousness than replaying the adventures of a hero or a saint can. and of course when I say individual, I do not necessarily mean it is alone, never shared with another, I only mean that the sharing has to be personal first, not 'open to all'.
There's also the maze/ labyrinth phenomenon which relates to a pilgrimage in the same way that Stations of the Cross relate to the supposed Via Dolorosa in Jerusalem.
I just found this caption to one of my photos from my "holiday of a lifetime" to Scandinavia in 2022. I was in Carlstad cathedral (Sweden): "Someone thought that a maze was a cool spiritual object for meditation, so in the choir area you can see a walkable maze on the floor. (Technically a labyrinth.) A close inspection revealed that it has been laid out with masking tape stuck onto the marble. Is that wise?"
There is a nice connection to ancient Celtic artwork and artefacts which enables enthusiasts for so-called "Celtic Christianity" to claim the authority of archaism for their present-day mazes.
@WA - I think you are correct in suggesting that the craze for labyrinths is related to that for pilgrimages.
Having said which, I do like labyrinths!
https://albionawakening.blogspot.com/2017/07/heddon-hill-and-ingram-church-john.html
Looking into the modern maze/ journey metaphor, I bought a copy of "The Path of the Holy Fool" (2020) by Revd Lauren Artress, (priestess of Grace Cathedral San Francisco and labyrinth custodian), and which superimposes labyrinth-following upon the archetypal narrative of the Grail Quest. The blurb says "The Path of the Holy Fool summons each of us to become a Holy Fool: one who is accountable, stands for equality and social justice, embraces an ecological vision, and encourages community spirit." Knowing that these phrases have rather precise meanings for these people, I see we have some of the Litmus Tests here! The others are discussed in the text, such as (given the date of publication) the regrettable Anglican/ Episcopalian confusions of birdemonium.
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