Are we living in a new axial age?
The first axial age marked a discovery of  transcendence. A new book 
proposes this energy is being retapped in the fringes  today
 
 
_Mark Vernon_ (http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/markvernon)  
_guardian.co.uk_ (http://www.guardian.co.uk/) , Saturday 17 November 2012 
 
Are centuries of technological innovation remoulding us culturally so that  
the inner lives of future generations will seem as strange and elusive as  
paleolithic man's is to us? Are we living in a new _axial age_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axial_Age) ? 
The question is posed in a collection of essays, edited by the American  
sociologist of religion, Robert Bellah: _The Axial Age  and Its Consequences_ 
(http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674066496) . 
The first axial age, it is said, ran across the middle centuries of the 
first  millennium BC. It marked a transformative time in human experience, 
broadly  accepted now by sociologists of religion, which can be summarised as 
an 
inward  turn and a discovery of transcendence. So, in this period, the 
Hebrew prophets  declared that God was more concerned with attitudes of heart 
than with bloody  rituals in the temple. Not long after, Socrates, Plato and 
Aristotle – that  extraordinary procession of master and pupil – "brought 
philosophy down from the  heavens": they were gripped by the nature of the 
human condition. 
The Buddha probably lived at the same time as Socrates, attempting reform 
of  the religions of India by his attention to human suffering and desire.  
Confucianism and Taoism were born too, creating between them a rich dialectic 
of  humanist rationalism and spiritual non-rationalism in China. 
"To generalise is to be an idiot," observed William Blake in a presumably  
self-conscious generalisation. So, duly warned, are ours axial times too? 
Karl Jaspers noted that in the period around the birth of Jesus of Nazareth 
 blossomed "superstition in manifold guises, doctrines of salvation of the 
most  extraordinary kinds, circles gathered round peripatetic preachers, 
therapists,  poets and prophets, in an endless confusion of vogue, success and 
oblivion … "  Sound familiar? 
Further, continued Jaspers, this riotous marketplace of ideas eroded the  
moral substructure of society: enjoyment was pursued for its own sake and  
slaves, the poor and the vanquished were left to rot. It took Christianity to  
replace the chaos with vision and purpose – Christianity being one way of  
consolidating and operationalising the Hebrew and Greek insights of the 
first  axial age. 
But if "an endless confusion of vogue, success and oblivion" marks our 
times  too, then there seems to be no new Christianity to guide our way, 
observes  Richard Madsen in his essay in the new book. Is there a contemporary 
faith that  might refresh "the deep matrix from which we sprang", as Jaspers 
put 
it? 
We need to be careful with the word "faith" here. It is not what the 
Canadian  philosopher _Charles  Taylor_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Taylor_(philosopher))  calls "expressive 
spirituality", of which there is plenty 
today,  based on the conviction that each one of us must create an 
authentic and  individual source of consolation, dreams and self-realisation. 
Expressive  spirituality actually breeds dislocation and feeds the chaos. Even 
less is faith  about being cognitively persuaded to adopt a creed: the head 
cannot reach "the  deep matrix" and so its convictions, when they lack heart, 
feel empty. 
Rather, the faith that can energise and organise people is what Jaspers  
defines as "the fulfilling and moving element in the depths of man, in which 
man  is linked, above and beyond himself". ... 
Madsen notes that the original axial movements emerged on the margins of  
powerful empires. Only at the edges of societies and institutions might you 
find  the kind of balance between playfulness with inherited traditions, and 
respect  for them too, that can retap the axial energy and transmit it in 
ways that are  once again meaningful. 
Madsen highlights the emergence of forms of _socially engaged  Buddhism in 
Taiwan_ (http://chinaperspectives.revues.org/2803#tocto1n2) . In the 
Christian tradition, Madsen finds inspiration in  South Korea and its "vigorous 
minjung [people's] Christian theology, which mixes  some of the expansionist 
passion of evangelical Christianity with the concern  for social justice of 
ecumenical Christianity." In the west, Madsen points to _Taizé_ 
(http://www.taize.fr/) , the _Sant'Egidio  community_ 
(http://www.santegidio.org/index.php?&idLng=1064)  and _the Sojourners_ 
(http://sojo.net/) . 
Practical wisdom and spiritual vitality is sought in these movements. They  
are flexible, unlike fundamentalist religious movements, because their way 
of  life is orientated not around protecting doctrines but around the 
struggle to be  faithful to the deepest principles of their tradition. They 
also 
strive  imaginatively to communicate their "findings". And they engage in 
critical  dialogue with other traditions, a dialogue energised more by the 
exchange of  ideas than the claim to power.

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