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An integral worldview (5 of 5)

07.18.03 | 3 Comments

“This new worldview is emerging from a number of streams of thought: the new physics; liberation theology; feminist theology; the reflections of psychologist Carl Jung and paleontologist Teilhard de Chardin; process philosophers such as Alfred North Whitehead, Charles Hartshrone, John Cobb, and David Ray Griffin; …the Buddhists Thich Nhat Hanh and Joanna Macy; and many Native American religions. The integral view of reality sees everything as having an outer and an inner aspect.

“Heaven and earth are seen here as the inner and outer aspects of a single reality. This integral worldview affirms spirit at the core of every created thing. But this inner spiritual reality is inextricably related to an outer form or physical manifestation. This new worldview takes seriously all the aspects of the ancient worldview, but combines them in a different way. Both worldviews use spatial imagery. The idea of heaven as ‘up’ is a natural, almost unavoidable way of indicating transcendence. But if the world turns, there is no longer an ‘up’ anywhere in the universe, just as north is no more ‘up’ than south is ‘down…’

“In this worldview, soul permeates the universe. God is not just within me, but within everything. The universe is suffused with the divine. This is not pantheism, where everything is God [sic], but panentheism (pan, everything; en, in; theos, God [sic]), where everything is in God [sic] and God [sic] in everything. Spirit is at the heart of everything, and all creatures are potential revealers of God [sic].”

(From Walter Wink’s The Powers That Be, pages 19-20.)

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