Information and comments on the essay:
The meaning of the “Sacred”
From the book: Chum for Thought: Throwing Ideas into Dangerous Waters by David Satterlee
Read or download this essay as a PDF file at:
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#Religion #God #Worship
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Chum For Thought:
Throwing Ideas into Dangerous Waters |
Let us take “the sacred” to be that which is accepted (by an
individual, culture, etc.) to provide an ultimate reality, value, and meaning
for life (Ludwig 3). Although there are some who believe that life holds no
meaning and that nothing can be proved, these same people usually choose to
keep living and hold some criteria that serves as their basis for making
choices. I would propose that a sense of the sacred is universal among
self-reflective beings.
With the above definition, “anything” can be sacred. For
instance, for the very secular, scientific truth may be held as sacred. Anything that merits the use of ceremony may also be endowed with sacred
attachment. In religion, baptism and weddings may actually be called
sacraments. In a wider perspective, life is so remarkable, the unlikely
conditions that make our life-supporting environment possible are so precious,
and the potential of our creative nature is so inspiring, that everything
should be sacred.
An unusual predominance of such feelings of sacred fullness
and identification was first associated with epileptics in the late 1800s.
Since then, a wide range of scientific experiments