5 results for stemmed:excommun

TPS6 Jane’s Notes March 8, 1981 stories Suzie damnation doll tale

They were these; that the entire world and its organization was kept together by certain stories or one in particular—like the Catholic Church’s; that it was dangerous beyond all knowing to look through the stories or examine them or to look for the truth and that all kinds of taboos existed to keep us from doing this, since.... since on the other side so to speak there was an incomprehensible frightening chaotic dimension, malevolent, powers beyond our imagining; and that to question the stories was to threaten survival not just personally but to threaten the fabric and organization of reality as we knew it. So excommunication was the punishment or damnation.... which meant more than mere ostracism but the complete isolation of a person from those belief systems, with nothing between him or her and those frightening realities.... without a framework in which to even organize meaning. This was what damnation really meant. To seek truth was the most dangerous of well intentioned behavior then.... and retribution had to be swift and sure.

WTH Part One: Chapter 6: April 30, 1984 hypnosis fatherhood express excommunication afternoon

People who wrote books against the Catholic Church were excommunicated. [...]

[...] One: She transferred stuff about excommunication into the loss of companionship — that nobody would want anything to do with you if you crossed them up. [...]

TPS6 Deleted Session March 11, 1981 church Normandy grandfather heresy nightmare

In medieval times to be excommunicated was no trivial incident, but an event harkening severance that touched the soul, the body, and all political, religious and economic conditions by which the two were tied together. [...]

[...] But there is a long history of the conflicts between creative thought, heresy, excommunication, or worse, death. [...]

TPS6 Deleted Session April 20, 1981 Sinful science church religion Frankenstein

The church can excommunicate you. [...]

DEaVF2 Chapter 9: Session 931, July 15, 1981 sinful overlays journal church bonding

[...] So excommunication was the punishment, or damnation … which meant more than mere ostracism, but the complete isolation of a person from those belief systems, with nothing between him or her and those frightening realities … without a framework in which to even organize meaning. [...]

“In medieval times, to be excommunicated was no trivial incident, but an event harkening severance that touched both the soul and the body, and all political, religious and economic conditions by which the two were tied together.

[...] But there is a long history of the conflicts between creative thought, heresy, excommunication—or worse, death. [...]