Lt
Careful, you might lose your dogma.
Terry
1.If Mysticism pits the mystic one on one with direct communication with God: where does scripture fit in (if at all?)
It doesn't, anymore than any other 'holy' book, except for those that deal directly w the subject of mysticism. Imo, the bible is very low in mystical content, as jews were mainly materialists.
2. If God is open to such one on one communication with the mystic: why do we need Jesus, the church or ritual?
We don't. Well, not much.
3.One-ness with God is a unity which has no lack. Humanity by virtue of its human-ness is non-god and non-spirit. Efforts to link chalk with cheese abound in religion/mysticism.
Yes, the human and the spirit have different characteristics.
Human/animal - food, sex, ego, pride, competition, conquest, control
Spirit - peace, tranquility, creating happiness in self an others, respect for nature
4.Religion and ritual are about "process". The means to an end. The end can be defined as god-union. Having the mind of god seems to replace having the mind of a human. After all, God didn't make a human as a seed that sprouts god-ness. Mysticism parlays floating concepts with dangling adjectives into a lifestyle that is rather vague. Either we are human as God made us or we are stuck in an egg-larvae-pupa-adult cycle on "rinse".
The cycle style can apply. I see us as dualistic. One who was totally spiritual would be living on the extreme fringe of society, relying on others to feed him. Perhaps a balance of the two is needed, not a replacement of one w the other. I have found that, many times, mystics have been those who had a hard time w worldly ways, or a distate for the ways of the flesh, including their own bodies. And so, they have retreated inward and found the spiritual dimension. Those who adapt easily to the physical world, or perhaps the world of the mental/mind generally don't get into the spiritual in a first hand way. I don't see the spiritual as necesarily superior to the animal or mental.
I blame the language on the confusion. The language of religion is not clearly defined under precise conceptual headings. Hence it is endlessly malleable. My chief point of contention with mysticism is the fast and loose way words are used which can mean practically anything.
Wouldn't you say the imprecision is a clue to the emptiness of the entire process?
While many people mix religion w mysticism, they do not necesarily mix. Systematic theology has attempted to place order and mix the two, but it is hopeless. While there are basics that many mystics do agree on, to me, it does seem as if there is also much that appears different to different mystics. As well, the mystical world is tremedously large, perhaps many times larger than the universe, and also includes it. It is mostly uncharted. From the perspective of this material world, perhaps the conquest of the other dimension is not that important at this time.
S