"We are stardust, we are golden,
and we've got to get ourselves back to the Garden..."
When a half-million strong arrived at Max Yasgurs
farm in Bethel, NY, during the summer of 69, they
came looking to set their souls free. They were looking
for something real, something worth investing their whole
lives. The experience of Woodstock was tangible, giving
a whole generation a taste of love and peace that they hoped
could change the world forever. Getting back to the garden
had tremendous significance at Woodstock because what the
Movement was really all about was finding the source of
love and unity and getting back to it. It was like trying
to find Utopia, that place of everlasting bliss and happiness
that history had taught was nowhere.
What was experienced at Woodstock was hard to deny. Throngs
of young people came back from the event full of zeal, full
of hope, fervently trying to convey to their friends what
they had seen and experienced. They were convinced that
the experience of Woodstock could spread to the whole nation.
But somehow what they found there wasnt connected
to the true Source of love and unity because the Woodstock
Nation never became a reality.
Since then, most of the scattered Woodstock Nation abandoned
the search, rejected the need for the true Source and settled
for any myth that could give their personal life meaning.
Eric Utne, the editor of Utne Reader, describes it this
way:
For the last 25 years Ive explored all manner
of spiritual approaches Eastern and Western, modern
and traditional. Spirituality and its relationship to politics,
education, the arts, and other aspects of life continues
to interest me more than almost anything else.
A myth is simply a story about gods.
Spirituality is defined by myths which are either created
in the mind of the individual or learned from an established
religion. Myths are mans attempt to grope for God,
to explain the need for healing, for forgiveness, for a
sacrifice, for a new life. Myths teach concepts of how we
should treat each other, for it is instinctively known in
the heart of all individuals. The importance of finding
spiritual meaning to life is expressed in the following
quote, again from Eric Utne:
While traditional church attendance is declining,
alternatives like Evangelicalism, Eastern philosophies,
and New Age spirituality are booming. Bill Moyers, whose
six-part PBS series on myth with Joseph Campbell captivated
many Americans, recently announced that he believes Americas
spiritual quest will be the story of the next 50 years.
He added, Ive given up the beat of politics,
Ive given up the beat of international affairs, because
. . . this is the biggest story of the millennium.
The countless myths that have been created to define or
explain God and mans relevance here on earth proves
the universal fact that human beings are cut off from direct
fellowship and communion with God as well as having a lack
of revelation of the purpose for human life. Without a demonstration
of love, justice, peace, and unity that is tangible, all
that is left for mankind is mythology any real or
fictional story existing in the mind only. Joseph Campbell,
one of the foremost writers and experts on myth said:
The individual has to find an aspect of myth that
relates to his own life... Every mythology has to do with
the wisdom of life as related to a specific culture at a
specific time. It integrates the individual into his society
and the society into the field of nature. It unites the
field of nature with my nature. Its a harmonizing
force. Our own mythology, for example, is based on the idea
of duality: good and evil, heaven and hell. And so our religions
tend to be ethical in their accent. Sin and atonement. Right
and wrong.
Many parents have turned to myths to give life some sort
of universal meaning for them and especially for their children.
As one mother said about the subject when interviewed, I
want her (three-year-old daughter) to know the Bible stories,
the mythology. Its a major part of our culture.
Anthony Brandt, a contributing editor of Parenting
magazine brings the point home vividly in his own words:
What does your run-of-the-mill modern skeptic
tell his 10-year-old daughter when her closest friends have
just died in a fire? ... I wanted so much to console her,
to find something to say that would explain, would justify
these deaths and give them meaning. But I didnt think
these deaths had any meaning. All I could come up with was
something I didnt believe. Maybe their is a
heaven, I said, and thats where they are.
Yeah, maybe. And maybe not. ... Im old enough to know
that ... we all need to find or generate some kind of meaning
for our lives if life is not to become unbearable. ... To
raise children in a culture without at least exposing them
to its religious traditions, even if you yourself have abandoned
the beliefs on which they are based, may be doing them a
disservice. ... I continue to distrust and dislike organized
religion but find it hard, as I grow older, to live with
only my vague faith that life must have some kind of meaning,
even if I dont know what it is.
Myths do not provide a life that deals with the basic problems
that isolate and alienate. Many of todays parents,
the children of the 60s, have no problem identifying with
Michael Ventura in this observation:
...perhaps when we love them [our children], our
greatest fear is: that we cannot help them, cannot protect
them, and that we have nothing real to give them. And their
greatest rage is: that we cannot help, cannot protect them,
and that we have nothing useful to give.
Is this the statement we leave for generations to know
us by? Somewhere, somehow there must be a life that would
fulfill that Elusive Dream that even our children would
take identity with. But, you ask, where is it and how do
I find it?
The day we are living in is prophesied in the Bible. It
says that a time is coming when men will find teachers who
will satisfy their own liking and foster the errors they
hold. They will turn away from the truth and turn to myths,
traditional stories dealing with supernatural beings.
Modern Christianity is perhaps the greatest myth of all,
full of stories about the God of Israel, who went to great
extents to reveal His awesome power to His people. They
even have all the stories about the Son of God who qualifies
without question as the greatest man who ever lived. But
all they have is the stories. They dont have the reality
of this God, the Creator of the universe. The myth of Christianity
is just one among many, but the one that defiles the whole
world.
They tell the stories, but those who follow this cultic
myth would not ever tolerate the real thing: a life of love,
a people living in unity and oneness, laying down their
life, being real, being a corporate body, corporeal, having
substance, body, going through suffering every day with
one another. The myth is exposed when the real substance
is seen. The myth of the resurrection is without any consequential
effect unless it produces a life of loving one another,
praying with one another, working with one another, eating
together and sharing everything together in a common life,
being in co-ordination, a real Body in which the real Spirit
can dwell.
The unity our Master Yahshua
prayed for is material; it is real. It has substance. It
is not just in the mind. It is what his actual Spirit gives
his disciples so that love can be perfected through a demonstration
of unity. God is not a myth. Thats why He wants a
life of love and unity to be seen so that the world may
know that God sent His son, and that He is real. This unity
has to be as real as His own body in order to set the evidence
before all mankind that distinguishes our Master, Yahshua
as the real and true God. Without this, it doesnt
matter what myth you believe.
Utne Reader, Jan/Feb 1991, p. 2
Joseph Campbell, The Power of Myth, p. 22
Utne Reader, Jan/Feb 1991, p. 2
Joseph Campbell, The Power of Myth, pp. 55,106
Utne Reader, Jan/Feb 1991, p. 87
Utne Reader, Jan/Feb 1991, p. 84
Utne Reader, July/August 1994, p.64