Carl Jung and God


Start date
24 Jan 2025, 10 a.m.
End date
24 Jan 2025, 4 p.m.
Location
Online
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  • Friday 24th January
  • 10am to 4pm
  • Online and at Sarum College
  • When booking, choose one of the Portsmouth CMD options

Carl Jung and God course

Carl Jung was born in 1875, 150 years ago. His impact upon psychology is immense, with notions such as extroversion and introversion, archetypes and synchronicities. But what lies at the heart of his psychology and how compatible is it with theistic convictions?

Assuming no prior knowledge, this course will examine the fundamentals of Jung’s depth psychology, paying particular attention to its significance for religious belief. Jung felt that psychoanalysis had emerged to fill a vacuum in the western world, with churches losing the ability to address the pressing issues of inner life.

He endured a substantial crisis in the earlier part of his life, known now in his so-called Red Book, in which he describes encounters with various entities and the zeitgeist. He strove to bring the insights he gained to the wider world, in various phases of work, including personality types and alchemical concepts. He also engaged with other thinkers such as Nietzsche and Darwin and, of course, Freud.

Towards the end of his life, he described not believing in God but knowing of God’s existence. He also disagreed with the classical conception of God held in traditions including the Christian. What can be made of his work now?

About the Tutor

Mark Vernon is a psychotherapist, blogger and writer, penning journalistic articles, as well as books. He has a PhD in ancient Greek philosophy, and degrees in theology and physics. His books include  A Secret History of Christianity: Jesus, the Last Inkling, and the Evolution of Consciousness, Dante’s Divine Comedy: A Guide for the Spiritual Journey, and the forthcoming, Awake! William Blake Reenchants the World, due to be published in mid-2025. For more visit here.

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