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Sunday, January 15, 2012

What is it about Dreams???

I want to touch on a book that I just finished reading. It starts out a bit drab as it discusses the psychological work of Carl Jung. You may remember studying him during your early college years. Then, it gets into some really interesting analogies from the Bible. In the book, Dreams, God's Forgotten Language, author, John Sanford draws on the work of Carl Jung to show how dreams can help us find healing and wholeness and reconnect us to a living spiritual world.

Dreams traces the role of dreams in the Bible and how God speaks to us. Carl Jung, the founder of analytical psychology, pioneered a whole new outlook on the way we tick. He peered into our darker spaces and our dim, forgotten corners.

To start, lets discuss our shadow. If you stand facing the light, you will cast a shadow. Unless, you turn and look on the floor behind you, you will not be aware of the dark shadow following you. The shadow is the part of our personality, which is in our background, of which we are usually unaware. Similar to Eckhart Tolle’s idea of “the ego,” our shadow is the part of ourselves we want to hide from the world...our mistakes, guilt, failures, insecurities and demons that we bury under a carefully crafted ego of armor.

So the shadow is our angry side, our weakness, our sickness, our primitiveness, our sensuality, our rebelliousness, our inferiority...whatever it may be about ourselves of which we are most afraid and would rather not face. The shadow slinks around and most often we would rather die than have someone say we are like them.

Where do we see our shadow? In our dreams. It appears as the sinister or inferior figure of our own sex. The more we try to remain unaware of it, the more it manifests itself. To understand the shadow, we can contrast it to the persona. The persona is the front we put on. It is a form of adaptation to the society in which we live. Most often, we come to identify with the persona. We think we are the person whom we would like to appear to be. The shadow stands in direct contrast.

From a Christian perspective, our dreams reflect the life process at work in us that seeks to make us aware of Christlike totality or wholeness. So, it is not a matter or "either or", but of "both." We cannot give our shadow a full license, but instead, we become one with our good side and reach out  and intergrate our lower nature. This solves the "Christian Problem."

To learn more, consider reading Dreams, God's Forgotten Language by John Sanford. You will see illustrations of dreams and visions in the Bible and you will also see how we, as Christians, have suppressed our shadow and have literally become "split."

2 comments:

  1. Interesting. I always liked Jung, much more credible to me than Freud.

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    1. Read the book Dr. Johnson. I really think you will find it facinating as it applies to the Bible.

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