A friend sent me an article from Mercosur dated Sunday, 27 August, headlined “Maya civilization collapsed upon learning kings weren’t gods,” a very interesting piece (which I append to this post). The article outlines a scholar’s argument that the collapse may have come less from warfare or environmental damage than from what we might call a belief-system collapse.
Without necessarily buying in to this man’s theories, I will say that this is exactly the process that has been going on in western civilization for at least
90 years – since World War I – and actually before that. When a civilization loses its core beliefs and cannot replace them with something equally satisfying, equally fulfilling, it dies. Ecce the west. The old Christian civilization is dead at the core. The faiths that replaced it — faith in Human Perfectability, and in Inevitable Progress, and in Science and Technology, and in Socialism and in what Lord Clark called “heroic materialism” — have failed, one by one.
This I think is what the religious right is trying to fight: a collapse of civilization due to erosion of the core beliefs that constructed that civilization. But as Carl Jung pointed out, the gods never reinhabit the dwellings they abandon. Christianity as our ancestors knew it does not grip us as it did them, not because we are lesser beings but because it cannot meet our current needs. We do not need a faith that we must force ourselves to try to believe in; we need a faith that so embodies truth that we are forced to believe despite ourselves.
I often think I see the beginnings of such a faith, though it will probably take decades, maybe centuries, to develop fully. But one thing I know for sure. We live in a time between beliefs. Kind of exciting, but not very comfortable.
http://www.mercopress.com/Detalle.asp?NUM=8615
Maya civilization collapsed upon learning kings weren’t gods
The decline of the Maya civilization began some 1,100 year ago when millions of Indians working on the contruction of tall pyramidal temples and palaces learned that their kings weren’t gods, Spanish anthropologist Andres Ciudad told EFE.
The collapse of this culture with its brilliant mathematicians, astronomers and engineers, came when monarchs stopped being immortal in the eyes of their subjects, said Ciudad, who is deputy dean of the Faculty of Geography and History at Madrid’s Universidad Complutense.
The inhabitants of Mayan lands, which extended through much of what is now Guatemala, El Salvador, Belize, Honduras and Mexico, at some point understood there was no sense in working themselves to death building pharaonic edifices and temples destined for the burial of kings who had no “heavenly privileges.”
That is one of the conclusions drawn by the team of archaeologists led by Ciudad in the town of Machaquila, 150 kilometers (93 miles) south of Tikal in Guatemala, the city most representative of the Mayan world that was named by its founders “the city of voices.”
The study, which weakens theories that attribute the death of this civilization to tribal warfare or prolonged drought, has also led to confirmation that the Mayas did not build an empire as such, but rather forged a series of decentralized states in which a noble caste governed together with the kings.
The collapse of this civilization, known for perfecting a calendar associated with movements of the moon, the sun and Venus, was slow and took centuries, according to the archaeologist.
The slow spread of the decay, which began in the west, explains why human activity in large urban centers like Tikal, Yaxha or Uaxactun could end in the 9th century, yet continued on in other places like Copan in what is now Honduras until the 13th century.
The fruit of all that is the diversity and riches of the Mayan heritage that can be appreciated in Santa Rita de Corozal or in Lamanai, the land of the “submerged crocodile” in northern Belize where the culture survived longer.
It also explains why the ruins in Lamanai, which remained active until well into the 14th century, differ significantly in form from the archaeological remains of Copan, renowned for its “sumptuous altar” of sculptured stone.
At the same time, the ruins of both towns are different from those of the early city of Tikal in the Peten region, where, the archaeologist believes, harmony governs a space of prominent pyramidal temples that stretch toward the sky in an attempt to reach the Corn God, the Mayas’ principal divinity.
The beauty of landscapes along the “Maya Route” is for the Guatemalan ambassador in Spain, Roberto Gereda, the best tourist advertisement in Central America, where, he says, “the wisdom of the pre-Columbian people lives on.” Gereda told EFE that a journey through this region, where in Guatemala alone as many as 21 indigenous languages are spoken, is sufficient to understand the need to protect the identities of the groups that now maintain that diversity.
In his opinion, not only the culture of the Mayan communities is threatened by the “new globalized world,” but also their heritage and environment because of “the ambition” of looters of treasure, wood and endangered animals like the jaguar and the quetzal, the Indians’ sacred bird.
Nonetheless, the ambassador pointed to the “serious efforts” underway for sustainable development in Central America.
August 30th, 2006 at 12:15 pm
Interesting paradigm. This is essentially the vision I had that spawned my first novel, Elysen. A total unravelling of society and civilization because people lost faith.
p.s. The definition of dogma could be this: comfortable, but not very exciting.
September 2nd, 2006 at 11:22 am
‘ello!
I loved this line!
“We do not need a faith that we must force ourselves to try to believe in; we need a faith that so embodies truth that we are forced to believe despite ourselves.”
This is so very true - it feels good and right. I never really understood religions… When I was growing up, I saw that people around me who were religious were doing things without thinking about what they’re doing. And they were doing it, for the most part, out of fear… Out of fear of ridicule, of not getting into heaven. Some just did it because “this is the way things are done.”
I would look and see a God…always at the culmination of a religion appeared to be a God of some kind. And I would be jealous. Someone I could believe in more than myself? It must be nice to not have that kind of responsibility anymore…
It wasn’t until later in life that I discovered… That responsibility (of believing in ourselves) is where our true power resides. If you can start *there*, taking total responsibility for your entire life and everything it is, was or ever will be - every tiny little bit of it, the good and the bad - then you step into your place of power and take your spot as the primary creator of your life. *That* is where true choice comes from - not out of rote, or fear, but out of total respect for the Self.
My thoughts!
*hugs!*
- Dawn
September 2nd, 2006 at 1:02 pm
Having spent years living in Belize and visiting Mayan ruins there and in Guatemal and Mexico - the Mayan civilization has always been a great source of fascination for me.
The theory that Mayan civilization collapsed because the people realized that `their rulers were not god(s)’, (therefore God was not God?) - makes sense, especially if you include the corollary that - Therefore it was no longer necessary to perform human sacrifices anymore. Like the Aztecs who actually welcomed the arrival of Cortez as the returning Quetzalcoatl - the peaceful god who was driven out of Mexico; Mayan people may have experienced a movement AWAY from the bloodthirsty gods and their representatives on earth - the royalty and priesthood.
These things happen. Just as Christianity was a movement away from the Blood Sacrifice required by the Solar Serpent cults which controlled Europe and the Mediteranean Basin for thousands of years. Sometimes I think the Aztecs were caught in a time warp. The high levels of human sacrifice that the Spanish saw when they arrived in Mexico is how mankind had lived in the Meditteranean 1500 years before with child sacrifices to Baal, etc.