Once
in a while, I read criticisms of blogs that copy info and don't present
their original ideas. Sounds like a sound criticism--except that
information directed at your small sphere of friends and family may not
have access or inclination to search such information. I think some
exceptions are reasonable.
The
information below was given to me while I was still a student in a
master's of counseling program. I was very impressed because I could
relate to it. Can you?
Few are the people who reach the final stage...is it you?
"Many a man fails as an original thinker simply because his memory it too good." ~
Stages of Faith
James Fowler
Stage I Intuitive-Projective faith
is the fantasy-filled, imitative phase in which the child can be
powerfully and permanently influenced by examples, moods, actions and
stories of the visible faith of primally related adults.
The
stage most typical of the child of three to seven, it is marked by a
relative fluidity of thought patterns. The child is continually
encountering novelties for which no stable operations of knowing have
been formed. The imaginative processes underlying fantasy are
unrestrained and uninhibited by logical thought. In league with forms of
knowing dominated by perception, imagination in this stage is extremely
productive of long-lasting images and feelings (positive and negative)
that later, more stable and self-reflective valuing and thinking will
have to order and sort out. This is the stage of first self-awareness.
The "self-aware" child is egocentric as regards the perspectives of
others. Here we find first awarenesses of death and sex and of the
strong taboos by which cultures and families insulate those powerful
areas.
The gift or emergent strength of this stage is
the birth of imagination, the ability to unify and grasp the
experience-world in powerful images and as presented in stories that
register the child's intuitive understandings and feelings toward the
ultimate conditions of existence.
The dangers in this
stage arise from the possible "possession" of the child's imagination by
unrestrained images of terror and destructiveness, or from the witting
or unwitting exploitation of her or his imagination in the reinforcement
of taboos and moral or doctrinal expectations.
The
main factor precipitating transition to the next stage is the emergence
of concrete operational thinking. Affectively, the resolution of Oedipal
issues or their submersion in latency are important accompanying
factors. At the heart of the transition is the child's growing concern
to know how things are and to clarify for him- or herself the bases of
distinctions between what is real and what only seems to be.
Stage 2 Mythic-Literal faith
is the stage in which the person begins to take on for him- or herself
the stories, beliefs and observances that symbolize belonging to his or
her community. Beliefs are appropriated with literal interpretations, as
are moral rules and attitudes. Symbols are taken as one-dimensional and
literal in meaning. In this stage the rise of concrete operations leads
to the curbing and ordering of the previous stage's imaginative
composing of the world. The episodic quality of Intuitive-Projective
faith gives way to a more linear, narrative construction of coherence
and meaning. Story becomes the major way of giving unity and value to
experience. This is the faith stage of the school child (though we
sometimes find the structures dominant in adolescents and in adults).
Marked by increased accuracy in taking the perspective of other persons,
those in Stage 2 compose a world based on reciprocal fairness and an
immanent justice based on reciprocity. The actors in their cosmic
stories are anthropomorphic. They can be affected deeply and powerfully
by symbolic and dramatic materials and can describe in endlessly
detailed narrative what has occurred. They do not, however, step back
from the flow of stories to formulate reflective, conceptual meanings.
For this stage the meaning is both carried and "trapped" in the
narrative.
The new capacity or strength in this stage
is the rise of narrative and the emergence of story, drama and myth as
ways of finding and giving coherence to experience.
The
limitations of literalness and an excessive reliance upon reciprocity
as a principle for constructing an ultimate environment can result
either in an over-controlling, stilted perfectionism or "works
righteousness" or in their opposite, an abasing sense of badness
embraced because of mistreatment, neglect or the apparent disfavor of
significant others.
A factor initiating transition to
Stage 3 is the implicit clash or contradictions in stories that leads to
reflection on meanings. The transition to formal operational thought
makes such reflection possible and necessary. Previous literalism breaks
down; new "cognitive conceit" (Elkind) leads to disillusionment with
previous teachers and teachings. Conflicts between authoritative stories
(Genesis on creation versus evolutionary theory) must be faced. The
emergence of mutual interpersonal perspective taking ("I see you seeing
me; I see me as you see me; I see you seeing me seeing you.") creates
the need for a more personal relationship with the unifying power of the
ultimate environment.
In Stage 3 Synthetic-Conventional faith,
a person's experience of the world now extends beyond the family. A
number of spheres demand attention: family, school or work, peers,
street society and media, and perhaps religion. Faith must provide a
coherent orientation in the midst of that more complex and diverse range
of involvements. Faith must synthesize values and information; it must
provide a basis for identity and outlook.
Stage 3
typically has its rise and ascendancy in adolescence, but for many
adults it becomes a permanent place of equilibrium. It structures the
ultimate environment in interpersonal terms. Its images of unifying
value and power derive from the extension of qualities experienced in
personal relationships. It is a "conformist" stage in the sense that it
is acutely tuned to the expectations and judgments of significant others
and as yet does not have a sure enough grasp on its own identity and
autonomous judgment to construct and maintain an independent
perspective. While beliefs and values are deeply felt, they typically
are tacitly held-the person "dwells" in them and in the meaning world
they mediate. But there has not been occasion to step outside them to
reflect on or examine them explicitly or systematically. At Stage 3 a
person has an "ideology," a more or less consistent clustering of values
and beliefs, but he or she has not objectified it for examination and
in a sense is unaware of having it. Differences of outlook with others
are experienced as differences in "kind" of person. Authority is located
in the incumbents of traditional authority roles (if perceived as
personally worthy) or in the consensus of a valued, face-to-face group.
The
emergent capacity of this stage is the forming of a personal myth-the
myth of one's own becoming in identity and faith, incorporating one's
past and anticipated future in an image of the ultimate environment
unified by characteristics of personality.
The dangers
or deficiencies in this stage are twofold. The expectations and
evaluations of others can be so compellingly internalized (and
sacralized) that later autonomy of judgment and action can be
jeopardized; or interpersonal betrayals can give rise either to
nihilistic despair about a personal principle of ultimate being or to a
compensatory intimacy with God unrelated to mundane relations.
Factors
contributing to the breakdown of Stage 3 and to readiness for
transition may include: serious clashes or contradictions between valued
authority sources; marked changes, by officially sanctioned leaders, or
policies or practices
previously deemed sacred and unbreachable
(for example, in the Catholic church changing the mass from Latin to the
vernacular, or no longer requiring abstinence from meat on Friday); the
encounter with experiences or perspectives that lead to critical
reflection on how one's beliefs and values have formed and changed, and
on how "relative" they are to one's particular group or background.
Frequently the experience of "leaving home"--emotionally or physically,
or both--precipitates the kind of examination of self, background, and
lifeguiding values that gives rise to stage transition at this point.
The movement from Stage 3 to Stage 4 Individuative-Reflective faith
is particularly critical for it is in this transition that the late
adolescent or adult must begin to take seriously the burden of
responsibility for his or her own commitments, lifestyle, beliefs and
attitudes. Where genuine movement toward stage 4 is underway the person
must face certain unavoidable tensions: individuality
versus being defined by a group or group membership; subjectivity and
the power of one's strongly felt but unexamined feelings versus
objectivity and the requirement of critical reflection; self-fulfillment
or self-actualization as a primary concern versus service to and being
for others; the question of being committed to the relative versus
struggle with the possibility of an absolute.
Stage 4 most
appropriately takes form in young adulthood (but let us remember that
many adults do not construct it and that for a significant group it
emerges only in the mid-thirties or forties). This stage is marked by a
double development. The self, previously sustained in its identity and
faith compositions by an interpersonal circle of significant others, now
claims an identity no longer defined by the composite of one's roles or
meanings to others. To sustain that new identity it composes a meaning
frame conscious of its own boundaries and inner connections and aware of
itself as a "world view." Self (identity) and outlook (world view) are
differentiated from those of others and become acknowledged factors in
the reactions, interpretations and judgments one makes on the actions of
the self and others. It expresses its intuitions of coherence in an
ultimate environment in terms of an explicit system of meanings. Stage 4
typically translates symbols into conceptual meanings. This is a
"demythologizing" stage. It is likely to attend minimally to unconscious
factors influencing its judgments and behavior.
Stage
4's ascendant strength has to do with its capacity for critical
reflection on identity (self) and outlook (ideology). Its dangers inhere
in its strengths: an excessive confidence in the conscious mind and in
critical thought and a kind of second narcissism in which the now
clearly bounded, reflective self over-assimilates "reality" and the
perspectives of others into its own world view.
Restless with the
self-images and outlook maintained by Stage 4, the person ready for
transition finds him- or herself attending to what may feel like
anarchic and disturbing inner voices. Elements from a childish past,
images and energies from a deeper self, a gnawing sense of the sterility
and flatness of the meanings one serves any or all of these may signal
readiness for something new. Stories, symbols, myths and paradoxes from
one's own or other traditions may insist on breaking in upon the
neatness of the previous faith. Disillusionment with one's compromises
and recognition that life is more complex than Stage 4's logic of clear
distinctions and abstract concepts can comprehend, press one toward a
more dialectical and multileveled approach to life truth.
Stage 5 Conjunctive faith involves
the integration into self and outlook of much that was suppressed or
unrecognized in the interest of Stage 4's self-certainty and conscious
cognitive and affective adaptation to reality. This stage develops a
"second naivete'' (Ricoeur) in which symbolic power is reunited with
conceptual meanings. Here there must also be a new reclaiming and
reworking of one's past. There must be an opening to the voices of one's
"deeper self." Importantly, this involves a critical recognition of
one's social unconscious-the myths, ideal images and prejudices built
deeply into the self-system by virtue of one's nurture within a
particular social class, religious tradition, ethnic group or the like.
Unusual
before mid-life, Stage 5 knows the sacrament of defeat and the reality
of irrevocable commitments and acts. What the previous stage struggled
to clarify, in terms of the boundaries of self and outlook, this stage
now makes porous and permeable. Alive to paradox and the truth in
apparent contradictions, this stage strives to unify opposites in mind
and experience. It generates and maintains vulnerability to the strange
truths of those who are "other." Ready for closeness to that which is
different and threatening to self and outlook (including new depths of
experience in spirituality and religious revelation), this stage's
commitment to justice is freed from the confines of tribe, class,
religious community or nation. And with the seriousness that can arise
when life is more than half over, this stage is ready to spend and be
spent for the cause of conserving and cultivating the possibility of
others' generating identity and meaning.
The new
strength of this stage comes in the rise of the ironic imagination-a
capacity to see and be in one's or one's group's most powerful meanings,
while simultaneously recognizing that they are relative, partial and
inevitably distorting apprehensions of transcendent reality. Its danger
lies in the direction of a paralyzing passivity or inaction, giving rise
to complacency or cynical withdrawal, due to its paradoxical
understanding of truth.
Stage 5 can appreciate symbols,
myths and rituals (its own and others') because it has been grasped, in
some measure, by the depth of reality to which they refer. It also sees
the divisions of the human family vividly because it has been
apprehended by the possibility (and imperative) of an inclusive
community of being. But this stage remains divided. It lives and acts
between an untransformed world and a transforming vision and loyalties.
In some few cases this division yields to the call of the radical
actualization that we call Stage 6.
Stage 6 is exceedingly rare. The
persons best described by it have generated faith compositions in which
their felt sense of an ultimate environment is inclusive of all being.
They have become incarnators and actualizers of the spirit of an
inclusive and fulfilled human community.
They are
"contagious" in the sense that they create zones of liberation from the
social, political, economic and ideological shackles we place and endure
on human futurity. Living with felt participation in a power that
unifies and transforms the world, Universalizers are often experienced
as subversive of the structures (including religious structures) by
which we sustain our individual and corporate survival, security and
significance. Many persons in this stage die at the hands of those whom
they hope to change. Universalizers are often more honored and revered
after death than during their lives. The rare persons who may be
described by this stage have a special grace that makes them seem more
lucid, more simple, and yet somehow more fully human than the rest of
us. Their community is universal in extent. Particularities are
cherished because they are vessels of the universal, and thereby
valuable apart from any utilitarian considerations. Life is both loved
and held too loosely. Such persons are ready for fellowship with persons
at any of the other stages and from any other faith tradition.
THE SOMBRERO UNIVERSE
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