Scientific Investigation of the 'Dark Side' |
Scientific Investigation of the 'Dark Side'
By Ken R. Vincent, Ed.D.
(A lecture delivered to the Psi Beta Psychology Honor Society at Houston
Community College, October, 2008 and published in the 2009 Universalist
Herald, 160, 3, 14-17 as The Dark Side of Spiritually Transformative
Experiences)
Religious experiences, currently known by the term, 'Spiritually Transformative
Experiences'
(STEs) have been studied scientifically for the past 150 years by social
scientists and
biomedical researchers. For purposes of this study, Spiritually Transformative
Experiences
have been divided into four categories: 1) Religious/Spiritual/Mystical
Experiences (RSMEs),
2) Near-Death Experiences (NDEs), 3) Death-Bed Visions (DBVs), and 4)
After-Death
Communications (ADCs). While most reported STEs are 'positive' in that they are
pleasant
and provide clarity or insight, a significant minority of reported cases are
'negative' in that
they are frightening. As indicated by the word, 'Transformative,' the most
consistent
characteristic of both positive and negative STEs is that they CHANGE PEOPLE'S
LIVES.
Most of you know me as a Professor of Psychology, but you may not realize that
my main
research focus over the past 20 years has been to ascertain the role that
religious
experience plays in the human psyche. The material I research can usually be
found in no
more than one or two chapters of a Psychology of Religion textbook. Just let me
remind you
again: Research into Spiritual Experiences CAN BE and IS conducted using the
same
criteria that we use to investigate any other psychological phenomena (Vincent,
2006). These include: 1) Case studies of transpersonal experience, 2) Sociological
surveys that tell
who and what percentage of the population have STEs, 3) Psychological tests that
measure
not only the mental health of the individual but also evaluate the depth of
mystical
experiences, 4) Biomedical and neuroscience testing, including the EEG,
PET-scan, and
functional MRI to, in some cases, document genuine altered states of
consciousness and
demonstrate that mystical experiences are not just wishful thinking;
additionally EEGs and
EKGs allow us to document death in NDEs that occur in hospitals, 5) Sociological
and
psychological investigations that assess the after-effects these experiences
have on people,
and 6) Controlled experimental research (such as Panke's experiment testing
psychedelics)
(Smith, 2000, pp. 99-105).
Even though we are talking about human experience that is basically 'religious'
in nature,
scientists have a legitimate role to investigate it using all the tools of
analysis at our
disposal. In this way, we separate ourselves from the sensational and
fictitious accounts of
the National Enquirer and gradually move toward a greater understanding of the
broad
spectrum of human experience.
Spiritually Transformative Experiences - Surveys
Current research documents the following facts: 1) A large percentage of the
population
have experienced STEs, 2) The overwhelming majority of those having STEs are
mentally
normal and not psychotic, and 3) STEs change people's lives for the better
(Vincent, 2006).
To date, research has shown that negative STEs are far less common than positive
ones. In
his initial study of 3,000 cases of STEs sent to the Religious Experience
Research Centre
(RERC) (formerly at Oxford; now at University of Wales Lampeter), Sir Alister
Hardy (1979, p.28) found 4% negative. Somewhat later, using 4,000 cases at the RERC, Merete
Jakobsen
(1999, p. iv) also found 4% negative experiences. Recently, Zinzhong Yao and
Paul
Badham (2007, pp. 9,45-46) of the RERC found in studying 3,196 Chinese that
56.7% had
religious experiences, but only 8.5% of them were negative. They compared this
to a 1987
British survey which found 12% negative experiences (Yao & Badham 2007, p. 185).
Regarding NDEs, in a monumental analysis of over 21 studies, Nancy Evans Bush
(2006)
found 17.2% of them to be negative. Also, most researchers of STEs feel that
the numbers
are under-reported because of the stigma sometimes associated with having a
negative STE.
Judgment and Afterlife in Ancient and Modern World Religions
Do Spiritually Transformative Experiences prove the existence of a God who
interacts with us
personally? Do encounters with dead humans prove the existence of an afterlife?
From my
perspective, they point in that direction for this reason: Virtually all
religions have their
genesis in the Spiritually Transformative Experience of their founder. Also,
the subsequent
theology of virtually all ancient and contemporary religions includes some form
of Judgment
by Divine Beings and subsequent relegation to Heaven or Hell based on the ratio
of good to
bad deeds of the deceased person while on Earth. Hell, of course, is the
ultimate
experience of the 'Dark Side.'
Before we go any further, it is important to realize that when one studies the
experiential
aspect of comparative religion that THE ANGELS, SAINTS, AND JINN OF THE WEST =
THE
SMALL 'g' GODS OF THE EAST because they perform the same function. This will
become
apparent as we look at some variations in cultural expectations surrounding
Judgment.
In Ancient Egypt, we have a Judgment in the Book of the Dead
whereby the heart of the
deceased is weighed against a feather, and woe to those whose heart is heavy
with sin! This Judgment is presided over by the savior god Osiris and his wife Isis
(Budge, 1895/1967,
pp. 253-261).
Later, in Zoroastrianism (the religion of the Magi), Judgment is conducted by
three angels
whose duty is to weigh the good deeds against the bad deeds of the deceased. If
his or her
life reflects an overwhelming preponderance of GOOD deeds, they are allowed to
proceed
across a WIDE bridge; if the deceased has been more evil than good, the bridge
becomes
narrow, and he or she falls into hell.
This same bridge imagery lives on in Shiite Islam where it is the job of the
Angel Gabriel to
hold the divine scales of Judgment (Vincent, 1999, pp.5-6; Masumian, 1995,
p.79).
In Judaism, according to the Book of Daniel (12:1-3), the Archangel Michael
holds the scales
of Judgment on which the deeds of the deceased are weighed. In Medieval
Christian artwork,
the Archangel Michael still holds the scales, but Jesus sits above him as judge.
Now let us move from West to East. In Hinduism and its children, Buddhism,
Sikhism, and
Jainism, Yamaraj (King Yama) is the judge of the dead. In all these religions,
weighing your
good deeds against your bad deeds on the divine scales of justice determines not
only
whether or not you go to heaven or hell in the intermediate state but also the
status of your
next life after reincarnation (Masumian, 1995, pp.5-7, 143). To me,
reincarnation is the only
major theological difference in world religions. The East has it, and in the
West,
reincarnation is only a minority position (such as in the Christianity of the
Gnostics and the
Islamic sect of the Druze).
We see these same themes repeated in the Native American religions of North
America,
Mezzo-America, and South America where the themes of Paradise and Punishment are
repeated (Nigosian, 2000, pp. 382, 384). In virtually all religions, assignment
of the
deceased to the 'Dark Side' is either 1) determined by God's emissaries or 2)
determined
by the natural law of the universe.
Near-Death Experiences
Now let us look at the 'Dark Side' of the NDE. In an article in
Psychiatry journal, Bruce
Greyson and Nancy Evans Bush (1992) identified three types of negative NDEs. 1)
The
first type is the NDE that is initially frightening but later turns positive,
most often after the
person calls out to God or God's emissary. 2) The second type is a
non-existent or 'eternal
void' experience ─ in other words, an existential hell. 3) The third type is a
'graphic and
hellish landscape and entities.' In her book Blessing in Disguise,
Dr. Barbara Rommer
(2000, p. 87-96) adds a fourth category of a frightening life-review.
The following two examples describe distressing near-death experiences that turn
positive. (Note that both contain graphic imagery of hell.)
'I was in hell'I cried up to God, and it was by the power of God and the mercy
of God that I
was permitted to come back.' (Rommer, 2000, p. 42)
'God, I'm not ready, please help me'I remember when I screamed (this), an arm
shot out of
the sky and grabbed my hand at the last second. I was falling off the end of
the funnel, the
lights flashing; and the heat was really something.' (Greyson & Bush, 1992, p.
100)
Next is an example of both the void and a frightening life review: 'It was not
peaceful, much
baggage, much unfinished business. All things are connected. You are not your
body, you
are a soul. Mine was in limbo. I knew I would be in limbo for a long time. I
had a life review
and was sent to the void. The life review was so disquieting. I saw many
different ways my
life could have taken. I saw my past life in there and other past lives I was
unable to recall.
(Vincent, 1994, p. 119)
It is interesting to note that these experiences are highly similar despite
differences in time or
culture. Thomas Harriot (who was a member of the Jamestown Colony in 17th
Century
Virginia) recorded two stories of NDEs told to him by the Roanoke Indians which,
significantly, took place prior to the arrival of the British settlers. The
first story told of an
Indian who died and was buried; the next day, the grave seemed to move, and he
was dug
up. He told of being very near a terrible place of torment, but the gods saved
him and let
him come back to life to teach his friends what they should do to avoid hell.
The second
story was similar, except that in this story, the Indian went to Paradise (Baym,
pp. 76 - 80).
James McClenon (1991) discusses NDEs in Medieval China and Japan. In one case,
he tells
of a ruler named Muh who died but revived 2-1/2 days later. He told of meeting
the Emperor
of Heaven, hearing beautiful music, seeing 10,000 dances, and returning to life
with
prophetic information. Prof. McClenon notes that these Medieval Taoist NDEs
resemble
modern ones.
Deathbed Visions
The next example describes the DBV of a 7th Century Mahayana (Northern)
Buddhist. They
believe that the Amida Buddha is a 'savior god' who can rescue you from hell and
take you
to the pure land of bliss. Once there, you can work out your final ascent to
Nirvana under
blissful conditions. 'A butcher is dying. He first has a vision of hell,
whereupon he was
terrified into chanting the name of 'Amida;' He then had a vision of the Amida
Buddha
offering him a lotus seat and passed peacefully away.' (McClenon, 1994, p.176)
After-Death Communications
If a negative ADC is delivered by a STRANGER, he or she is properly termed a
'ghost!' If it
comes from some super-human entity, it is usually called a 'demon.' The
following two
examples are taken from Merete Jakobsen's Negative Spiritual Experiences:
Encounters
with Evil (pp.17, 21). The first is an evil presence in a British
house, 'This evil presence
was masculine and seemed to come from the wall facing me, nearer and nearer as
though
straining to get me. I saw nothing but the blackness of the room, as my sister
had
(previously), but although it is 20 years or more ago, I'll never disbelieve
that there are
powers of evil. A very violent family had lived there.' The second account is
Danish and
takes place in the woods. 'As we progressed, I found several dead birds along
the path. We reached an open space where there had been a bonfire. I felt more and more
anxious
and eventually said to my husband, 'I don't know how you feel, but I have a
sense of evil and
horror in this wood.' My husband said he had not wanted to tell me, but he had
heard that a
satanic cult had used the wood. I wanted to go home immediately. I find it
extraordinary that
human evil can change the whole atmosphere in a large wood.'
Religious/Spiritual/Mystical Experiences
There are ancient and modern accounts of tours of the afterlife. St. Paul,
in II Cor. 12 tells
us of his out-of-body experience in which he is transported to the third level
of heaven. Mohammed in Sura 17:1 of the Quran, tells us of his out-of-body
experience in which he
also is transported to heaven.
Other religious figures in history have had encounters with evil, including
Jesus' encounter
with Satan recorded in the Synoptic Gospels and Buddha's encounter with the
demon,
Mara. The following is St. Teresa of Availa's account of her mystical
experience of hell:
'The entrance, I thought, resembled a very long, narrow passage like a furnace,
very low,
dark and closely confined; the ground seemed to be full of water which looked
like filthy, evil-smelling mud, and in it were many wicked-looking reptiles. At the end, there
was a hollow
place scooped out of a wall like a cupboard, and it was there that I found
myself in close
confinement. But the sight of all this was pleasant by comparison to what I
felt there' I felt a
fire within my soul, the nature of which I am utterly incapable of describing '
The fact is that
I cannot find words to describe that interior fire and that despair which is
greater than the
most grievous torture and pains' There was no light, and everything was in the
blackest
darkness' (Bush, 2002).
There are accounts of individuals who are given tours of both heaven and hell.
One is the
story of Arda Viraf, a 9th Century follower of the religion of the Magi who was
given
hensbane (a non-hallucinogenic drug) that put him in a coma for several days.
(Segal, 2004,
pp.195-196) The Magi had chosen him for this holy quest because of his
righteousness. He
awoke to tell of his tour of heaven and hell. The psychiatrist George Richie
(1998, pp.37-41) who had an NDE in 1943 tells of visiting hellish realms invisible but on the
earth-plane,
as well as tours of other realms where people were trapped because of their own
desires. All around these lost souls were Beings of Light just waiting to assist them out
of their hellish
state. During his NDE, Richie reports that he was given this tour by Jesus
Christ himself!
Regarding mystical religious experiences, Merete Jakobsen (1999, p.52) notes
that evil
encounters are terminated when the person calls upon God or God's emissary,
usually
through prayer.
Hell is for Rehabilitation and Is Not Eternal
Is there a way out of hell? Most (but not all) religious experience
researchers think so. Both
Nancy Evans Bush (2002) and Barbara Rommer (2000, p. 27) note that these
negative
NDEs are for instruction and are thought to be a 'wake-up call' to those who
have them. This echoes the purpose of hellish experience as expressed in the Tibetan
Book of the
Dead (Evans-Wentz, pp. 28-68).
Both the Northern Buddhist and Universalist Christian traditions have saviors (Amida
Buddha
and Jesus) who rescue people from hell (Vincent, 2005, p. 8). In the New
Testament book of
I Peter (3:18-20; 4:6, NRSV), it is stated that Jesus descended into hell after
his crucifixion
but before his resurrection: 'For Christ also suffered for sins once and for
all, the righteous
for the unrighteous in order to bring you to God. He was put to death in the
flesh, but made
alive in the spirit in which also he went and made a proclamation to the spirits
in prison, who
in former times did not obey.' 'For this reason, the gospel was proclaimed even
to the
dead, so that though they had been judged in the flesh as everyone is, they
might live in the
spirit as God does.'
It would seem from modern NDE accounts like some of those mentioned above; Jesus
is still
rescuing people from hell (Vincent, 2003). There is also an interesting 18th
Century
autobiographical NDE account by Dr. George deBenneville who died of a
'consumption-like'
illness and revived at his wake 42 hours later Vincent & Morgan, 2006). He told
of seeing
angels rescuing people from hell, after they had repented.
As in the Buddhist DBV above, the Amida Buddha stands ready to save any human
who
finds him or herself in hell if they call out to him as few as ten times (Nigosian,
2000, p.89). It
should be noted that in all of the Eastern religions, hell is not permanent but
is a method for
instruction. In the West, this was the view of the Christian church for its
first 500 years but
has become a minority view since that time (Hanson, 1899/2007, p. 139-141). In
Islam, there
are a few references in the Hadith to the view that hell is not permanent, but
this view is held
by only a few of the Sufis (Vincent, 2005, p. 12).
CONCLUSION
Only 150 years ago, scientific research into STEs began. The scientific
methods used to do
this research are the same as those used to research any other social or
biomedical
phenomena. We now know that, like positive STEs, negative STEs are widespread,
that
they occur in people who are normal and not mentally ill, and that they change
people's lives
for the better. While it may be too early to reach any final theological
conclusions from this
data, it would appear that there is a universal underpinning to the religions of
the world, that
humans are accountable for their actions, and that nothing good is ever lost.
References:
Baym, N. (Ed.) (1998) Norton Anthology of American Literature, Vol. 1. New
York: W. W.
Norton.
Budge, E, A, W, (1967/1895) The Egyptian Book of the Dead. New York: Dover
Publications.
Bush, N. E. (2002) Afterward: making meaning after a frightening near-death
experience.
Journal of Near-Death Studies, 21 (2), 99-133.
Bush, N. E. (2006) Distressing Western NDEs: Research Summary. Paper presented
at the
IANDS Conference, M.D. Anderson Hospital, Houston (DVD available from: iands.com).
Evans-Wentz, W. Y. (Ed.) (1957/11th century) The Tibetan Book of the Dead.
London:
Oxford University Press.
Greyson, V. & Bush, N.E. (1992) Distressing near-death experiences. Psychiatry,
55, 95-109.
Hanson, J. W. (2007/1899) Universalism, the Prevailing Doctrine of the Church
for its First
500 Years. San Diego: St Alban Press.
Hardy, A. (1997/1979) The Spiritual Nature of Man. Oxford: Religious Experience
Research
Centre.
Jakobsen, M. D. (1999) Negative Spiritual Experiences. Lampeter, Wales:
Religious
Experience Research Centre.
Masumian, F.C. (1995) Life After Death: A Study of the Afterlife in World
Religions. Oxford:
One World.
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comparative
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McClenon, J. (1994) Wondrous Events: Foundations of Religious Belief.
Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press.
Nigosian, S.A. (2000) World Religion: A Historical Approach, 3Ed. Boston:
Bedford/ St.
Martin's
Richie, G.G. (1998) Ordered to Return, My Life After Dying. Charlottesville, VA:
Hampton
Roads Publishing Co.
Rommer, B.R. (2000) Blessing In Disguise. St.Paul, MN: Llewellyn.
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Religions of the West.
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Smith, H. (2000) Cleansing the Doors of Perception. New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam.
Vincent, K. R. (1994) Visions of God from the Near Death Experience. Burdett,
New York:
Larson Publications.
Vincent, K.R. (1999) THE MAGI: From Zoroaster to the 'Three Wise Men'. North
Richland
Hills, TX: Bibal Press.
Vincent, K.R. (2003) The near-death experience and Christian universalism.
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Vincent, K. R. (2005) Magic, deeds, and universalism, afterlife in the world's
religions.
Universalist Herald, 156 (4), 5-8,12).
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Paper
presented at the IANDS Conference, M.D. Anderson Hospital, Houston (CD available
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Vincent, K. R. & Morgan, J. (2006) An 18th century near-death experience: the
case of
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Dr. Ken R. Vincent is the author of
The Golden
Thread: God's Promise of Universal Salvation
and
Visions of God From The Near Death Experience.