Numinous Experience, Spiritual Emergency, and Symbolic Crisis
Numinous experience can deepen psychic life, but it can also destabilize it. In analytical psychology, overwhelming sacred or archetypal intensity is never treated as mere emotion, yet neither is it automatically trusted as spiritual maturation. This article examines how Jungian and post-Jungian thought approach numinous experience, spiritual emergency, and symbolic crisis through the lenses of inflation, archetypal possession, ritual containment, dream overflow, trauma, and integration. It argues that sacred intensity becomes transformative only when the ego, symbolic structure, and relational holding are strong enough to contain it. Rather than romanticizing spiritual crisis, the article treats it as an ambiguous threshold where transformation, fragmentation, awe, terror, and meaning collapse may all become entangled.









