The Principle of Authority

For those who are firmly on the path of spiritual evolution one of the most fundamental and important lessons is the principle of authority. When I Googled “what is a principle” I got these definitions:

prin·ci·ple

1. a fundamental truth or proposition that serves as the foundation for a system of belief or behavior or for a chain of reasoning.

2. a fundamental source or basis of something.

An authority, whether it is a person, a book, or a state mind is something that you trust to give you reliable knowledge and guidance. Probably the most important fact about your authorities is how you came to accept them. What you accept as valid authority sets the foundation of  your belief system and everything you believe or know about the world proceeds from that choice.

Young children naturally tend to accept parents as their first authority.  Parents are larger, more powerful, and – if good parents – have a track record of giving the child nurturing and protective guidance. As the child grows older parents and/or society may appoint other authorities. The child is told to trust and respect authorities such as teachers, doctors, nurses, police and possibly priests or preachers.

When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I put the ways of childhood behind me.  1 Corinthians 13:11

As we mature we may find that some authorities are reliable, and some not so much so. To “put the ways of childhood behind [us]” we have to learn to test authority.

To question authority is essential for spiritual progress

Question authority” was a popular slogan in the 1960s and is a slogan that everyone who aspires to spiritual progress must take to heart. To learn to question authority is essential for spiritual progress.

Probably the simplest test is to recall past performance.

Perhaps you had a math teacher who could do the math herself and show you how to do those same calculations on your own. Maybe you had an art teacher who could produce interesting art objects and give you workable instructions on how to express your own ideas.

Those are examples of earned authority. A person earns authority by demonstrating competence and ability. When you have faith in an earned authority it is based on something real and tangible.

Accepted and appointed authorities can become earned authorities. On the other hand we may become disillusioned when these earlier authorities don’t turn out to be so trustworthy after all. Maybe in church the preacher taught chastity on Sunday  but then you found out he was having affairs with different married women in his church. That is what you might call a false authority, or in more common parlance, a hypocrite.

You need to learn to test an authority…

There are a lot of false authorities in the world. Saying one thing and doing another is epidemic in many areas of human life, especially in politics and religions. That is why you need to learn how to test an authority before you place a lot of faith in it.

You can use logic or just plain common sense. You can use your mind to evaluate whether something really makes sense, or is just an appeal to our emotions – sucker bait making promises that can never be delivered in reality.

Most of what has been said above is for the most part not a great revelation. Using past experience and our minds to think through things maybe doesn’t sound too spiritual. Recognizing fakes and liars again may not seem too spiritual.

It is easy to say “use your mind” but hard to do. Con men and politicians spend a lot of time and money trying to figure out what you desperately want to hear and how to convince you they can deliver it.

You are responsible for the authorities you accept and the consequences of that acceptance. You are just as responsible if instead of choosing authorities by a rational and discriminating process you just blindly accept the authorities you inherit from your parents or from society. You are also responsible when you turn a blind eye to the clear failures and hypocrisy of your authorities.

One way or another you have to choose your authorities, either by unthinking default, by emotional longing, or by trying to figure our the facts for yourself as much as is possible and testing your authorities.

In the next post we will talk about more about the principle of authority and how important it is for you to come to fully understand it.

Who Is God?

Shirley MacLaine in her book Out On A Limb famously said that “I am God.” Does that make any sense, and if so, could it be true? It largely depends on how you understand her claim.

Mainstream Christians mostly seem offended by this statement. They may see it as enormously egotistical. Those of a more fundamentalist stripe might say something like:

You are not God! You are not the Creator of the Universe! Who do you think you are!

Those a little familiar with New Age thought may not see this as a claim to being the one, the only, and the almighty God in one person incarnate. They see it more as being one with that God. They don’t see it as a claim to be the whole entity that is God, but rather a part of it. Author Joseph J. Dewey put it this way:

A drop of water is insignificant when it is removed from a giant wave, but when it is joined back into the wave and cooperates with it, it then becomes the wave.  We are like drops of water that have separated from the Life wave we call God.  When we join back in with the God wave we become one with it and we can say with all the other billions of lives:  “I am the wave” or “I AM God“.  We have not lost the molecules that have made us the drop.  We still have our identity, but we also have much more.  We are one with something much greater than ourselves (as drops) to the extent we actually become the wave.  We are a wave, yet millions of drops combined.  We are God, yet millions of human drops combined.  No life is separated from the life which is God.

Gods Of The Bible, Joseph J. Dewey

The Christian Apostle Paul alluded to this:

For as the body is one, and hath many members, and all the members of that one body, being many, are one body: so also is Christ. For by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free; and have been all made to drink into one Spirit. For the body is not one member, but many.

1 Corinthians 12:12-14

 God is both one, and many. There is only one God but it is composed of many members. And again from Paul:

Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God: 

Philippians 2:5-6

We are all “in the form” God, like Jesus, and it is not a crime to understand our equality to God in the sense of being part of God.

We are all members in the same body that is God. We are equal as drops in a giant wave. We become one with God when we seek its will. We become one with God when we cooperate with the wave and not resist it.


Is God Perfect?
Being God
What Is God?
What Question Would You Ask God?