“Luminous beings are we”

Said Yoda. Jeffrey Weiss of the Dallas Morning News Bug Me Not.

Did George Lucas tap into audience’s desire for a new religion? In 1999 he told interviewer Bill Moyers that he wanted “to try to awaken a certain kind of spirituality in young people.”

Weiss writes, “Two of the basic story themes for Western culture are redemption through sacrifice and redemption through violence, said Tyron Inbody, a theology professor at United Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio.

“Star Wars uses both of those ideas, and adds Eastern motifs about attachment and emotion pulled from Buddhism and Taoism, said Dr. Inbody, who has studied religion in films.”

What strikes me as “Pagan” about the Force (which could equally well be claimed by other traditions) is its impersonality. Gary Snyder once quoted a Northwest tribal saying, “The world is as sharp as the edge of a knife.”

(Yoda: “As sharp as the edge of a knife the world is.”)

In a polytheistic system, you may have a relationship with one or more deities and ignore (and be ignored by) others. There is not the problem of how the all-loving creator who supposedly numbers the hairs on your head lets bad things happen to you.

But now I have invoked Gods and an impersonal Force as well. Which is it? I think it likely, as did some of the ancients, that the Gods too are somehow subject to Fate, or Wyrd or the Force, but in a way that is outside our normal scale of imagining.

(Thanks to Get Religion for the original link.)