Religions, as we know them, emerged in the era of Medieval consciousness - which was a millennia-long transition between the immersive passive un-consciousness of Original Participation and the current alienated Modern consciousness.
There were (perhaps) two main forms of religion - one for the masses, the other for elite religious specialists.
The Medieval mass consciousness was based on obedience to the religious institutions, and spiritual aspects are made possible by intermediary phenomena; such as symbol, ritual, scripture, song - or social dynamics.
The Medieval elite consciousness was based upon control of the whole person by "will power"; that is by human will aligned with divine will. The basic idea was that a human being might discover the divine will and then organized his life around the process of getting his own will into accord with the divine - and the totality of his behaviour into accord with his own divine-aligned will.
Since the religious elites led the masses - and the obedience of the masses was directed at the religious elites - it was vital that there was sufficient alignment between elite and divine will.
Usually - in most places, most of the time - there was not sufficient human-divine alignment - but sometimes and in some places there was; so it remained a valid ideal; especially in a world where individual consciousness was not much developed in most people.
This idea of subordinating the whole of life to an elite will (purportedly aligned wit the divine) was "a good thing" insofar as the human will really was aligned with the divine will.
And also insofar as the Medieval mode of consciousness infused this process of deployment of human will with "the spirit". Because otherwise the whole thing was merely legalism - with all the ambiguities and imprecision intrinsic to the interpretation of language
It is this second aspect of the spirit infusing the human will that has changed so much in the modern era - such that the religious elites seldom even claim seriously to to be highly-aligned with divine will.
Indeed, elite religious authority is usually based upon the same modes as the secular - that is to say institutional legitimacy, laws, rules, guidance understood as normal language, and in practice interpreted in the secular ways that such language is interpreted - e.g. legalistically, by historical and linguistic analysis, quasi-scientifically etc.
What the modern era is left-with is therefore the forms of Medieval consciousness minus the spontaneous spiritual infusion that accompanied these forms.
This, I think, is why the Medieval forms are so badly-disenchanted; and exhibit such a dry, monochrome, dull, "school dinners" atmosphere...
And this, in turn, is why so many of the religious elite have turned away from them to immerse in the psychological gratifications - e.g. political spectacle-excitement, media entertainment, self-gratifying pseudo-moralism, therapies and palliatives - of mainstream secular culture.
This, then, is our situation. The aim, I presume, for each of us is to seek the "enchantment" - i.e. the infusion by divine spirit - that Mankind enjoyed in the past - but accepting that this is not possible either by passive immersion or by mediating phenomena.
We need to seek the spirit actively and consciously - or else it will not happen.
And seek to integrate our-selves not by will power - which is now dead. Nor by integration with the unconscious - from which we are detached, and which is anyway not Christian.
But instead by seeking re-connection with our own partially-divine, eternal, original selves that are currently cut-off and alienated both by modern culture and by the forms of Medieval religion without the spirit.
Because it is the eternal self that is in direct contact with the divine; and which therefore knows when it is aligned with God - and when it is (usually) more or less in a state of disharmony with creation - i.e. sin.
For us; will power, and the disciplined seeking of conscious goals that characterized elite religious life in the Medieval era of consciousness; needs to be secondary to seeking divine-motivation and -correction by this inner-directed seeking to recover direct-contact with our eternal selves.
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