Friday, June 16, 2006

Mythology Part One

The voice of Joseph Campbell has been echoing in my head since 1989. My friend and mentor, Dave Anderson of Butler County Community College, introduced Campbell to me when I first began teaching at the college level and I knew I had found someone important.

But it all began well before that. I began reading myths when I was very young. The Twelve Labors of Hercules, Theseus and the Minotaur, Jason and the Golden Fleece were some of my earliest ventures into myth. I loved the characters, the themes, and the lessons that resided in myth.

From there, I delved into Norse mythology: Thor with his mighty hammer, Mjolnir, tales of Odin, and, of course, Beowulf.

I realized, from early on, that these stories somehow embodied truths about the human spirit, and, as my other friend and mentor, Art Barlow from Clarion would say, “All myths are true.” He’s right, all myths point to spiritual truths that can be identified and felt by all humans.

Before I move any farther, allow me to offer a definition of myth. Myths are stories, rituals, and works of art that point to transcendent spiritual truths. Think of it this way: Humans live in the physical plane, but we also know that there is a spiritual plane “out there” somewhere. This is the realm of the non-physical. How do we know what occurs in the realm of the non-physical? How do we begin to understand how we are connected to the spiritual realm? Through our myths.

The problem, as far as I can tell. Is that we’ve kinda screwed up the interpretation of our myths. We either treat them as fairy tales that are not literally true and therefore mostly irrelevant, or we treat them as literal, historical facts, which make them equally irrelevant because when we interpret them as facts, we mistake the symbol for the referent and therefore remain focused on the symbol.

For example, once upon a time, a girl named Red Riding Hood didn’t really come across a wolf dressed in her grandmother’s clothing, did she? And even if she did, we don’t interpret the event in literal terms.

Instead, we take the spiritual/psychological truth from the story and move on. The story teaches us that it’s certainly important for a young woman to understand that there are big, bad wolves in the physical realm and that a young lady should be careful. So, even though the myth didn’t actually occur (or maybe because it has occurred symbolically so many times in human history) we can gain a spiritual truth from it.

In contrast, religious fundamentalism would take us in the opposite direction. Instead of allowing the symbols to remain symbols that transcend the physical realm, fundamentalists of all stripes attempt to codify the symbols and events into actual historical events. And while there may be one or more historical events connected to the emergence of the symbol, we need to allow the symbol to point to the spiritual truth without getting caught up in the need to demonstrate the scientific validity of each of the symbols.

Guess what? There are many flood stories in mythologies from around the world. They teach us that we live on the razor’s edge—that disaster can strike any time—and often does. In Noah’s case, it also teaches us to have clean hearts and to be prepared for difficulty on our journeys through life.

Therefore, to focus on the story of Noah’s Ark as an actual historical event and begin searching mountains in the Middle East or Africa for remnants of Noah’s Ark is to miss the point. The story of Noah is simply another flood story generated by human beings, in the physical plane, in order to comprehend a larger spiritual reality.

That’s what myth does. It points from the direction of the human heart toward universal truths within the spirit realm. It provides humanity with a roadmap to understand our place within our cultures and within the cosmos. It should be leading us always toward larger, shared spiritual truths and not toward arguments about whose god is mightier.

More later.

Doc

5 comments:

Ralph said...

Yes, Mike, but I want some new myths, that are more relevant to our society that stories like "Noah's Ark, Little Read Riding Hood, and the like." Do urban legends offer some mythology for today's society? How do we create effective modern myths that we can use to communicate spiritual truths to today's generation? I think you're work with video is a good start down this path.

Dr. Downing said...

The stories are everywhere...

The sporting world is filled with great mythologies. Pick a sport.

Baseball is a fine choice. The design of the game itself mimics the heroic journey. The hero begins at "home" and faces the threshold guardian in the form of a pitcher who tries to slay the hero.

If the hero defeats the threshold guardian, he begins his journey to first base.

But he's not out of the woods yet. There are many challenges left to him before he can come home again. The pitcher will try to pick him off, or he might be sacrificed at second on a fielder's choice.

Once on base, our hero will also have helpers in the form of his teammates. Each player will try to help him advance so that he can complete the mythic round (in this case, a mythic diamond) and have his efforts "count" for something, namely one run.

A batter might even "sacrifice" himself so that that hero may continue his journey.

It's truly a beautiful game, which of itself springs forth from the mythic imagination.

As for urban legends, I guess that has some functionality in terms of getting us to discuss facets of reality, but I would draw a line between legend and myth.

Legends are tales which consider something that is out of the ordinary but could still be true. As time goes by, however, legends convert into myths or they are proven false.

In other words, myths stand the test of time and legends may or may not.

Much of today's myths are communicated through video games, movies, and music. Through these forms, we begin to understand where we stand in relation to our own culture and, hopefully, to the spirit world.

Done for now.

DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDd

Ralph said...

Right. That makes a lot of sense. So, my love of baseball can be explained as the love of the mythology it relates to. And certain video games, instead of harming our children's minds can actually help them understand life's journey. I like it.

Ralph

Anonymous said...

The whole life of Christ follows the arc of an epic story. A king born under adverse conditions, must flee or go into hiding. Then nothing until puberty gets a passing mention. A wedding. Great feats are accomplished during middle age. Then death, usually violent, alone, surrounded by enemies on a hilltop.

All the times during a persons life which are considered rights of passage.

King Arthur was born and went into hiding. Even though he was of royal blood he was raised humbly. Then we hear nothing until he is in his teens...he pulls the sword from the stone..symbolic of entering manhood, puberty. You get the picture.

Dr. Downing said...

Right, Steve. It seems Joseph Campbell has cast quite a wide shadow.

Doc