The Trouble with "Religion"
What could possible be wrong with a word that for
millennia has tried to represent peace, faith, piety, concern for fellow man,
and in most cases, unselfish acts of kindness? There is something about the word, “religion”, that
mildly offends my spirit and bids me avoid its use in referring to my own
personal value and life system.
Part of my hesitation is because the word refers to so
many diverse traditions with such wide-ranging beliefs and practices. When a word is used to define too many
different things, it loses its power to clearly describe anything at all.
The word “religion” is often used in a subtly
derogatory sense, perhaps as a tyrannical master restricting personal freedom
in unreasonable ways, as in “such-and-such is against my religion,’ or “my
religion won’t allow me to do that.”
This usage gives religion a negative connotation as something with which
we might regret our association. It
might make others question why we would continue with such a personally
controlling program.
Throughout history horrid atrocities have been committed
in the name of religion. Adherents and
especially leaders of religions too easily change doctrines or interpret dogmas
in ways that, in their eyes, justify persecution, oppression, and even violence
towards those who are perceived as having a “different”, or ‘unacceptable”
behavior or belief. The treatment of the
Hebrew people by their neighbors since the days of Moses is a sufficient case
study.
In modern times the term “religion” carries a connotation
of responding to or accepting something based primarily on emotion. We can observe that the most effective
advocate of religion is a speaker highly skilled in creating an emotional
response in his or her audience. (Here
could be inserted another discussion on the difference between emotion and the
effect of the Holy Ghost. The externally
observable results of the two influences can be easily confused.) Emotion is often placed over against reason,
and the use of emotion may be considered to give the proponent of religion an
unfair advantage over his hearers, so that in their supposed intellectual
weakness they are led unknowingly into accepting concepts that are at least
demeaning if not ultimately damaging to them.
So is there a good alternative to the word “religion” in
referring to a personal system of values?
Here is one suggestion. I like to
think of myself as participating not in a religion, but in a “Plan”.
It is a reasonable, rational plan that answers all of life’s
“terrible questions” regarding who I really am, where I came from, and what is
my purpose here. It is a happy plan that
bids me be cheerful and positive in my thoughts and words. It is a plan that accepts all persons,
regardless of their beliefs and behaviors, as worthy of my honest and hopeful
consideration. It is a plan laid down
in distant ages past, before this world was, at a time and place that cannot be
appreciated by any mortal calculation or imaginative theory. It contemplates all of mankind, from first to
last; from least to greatest, all cultures, all languages, all traditions, all
worlds. It is a totally inclusive plan. There is no alternative to it. We are all participants whether we know it or
not. The plan is concrete, it is “bricks
and mortar”, it informs everything I do. It has many names, but for me, “religion” is not one
of them. Knowledge is what I seek, not
an emotional, philosophical “religion”.
Some will answer that this “plan” is nothing more than
“religion” by another name. But I
disagree. It has nothing to do with
emotion, or hopes, or traditions. It is evidenced
in everything I see. It is beyond
belief. It comprehends all questions, all theories, all arguments. It invites me to ask questions, to seek
knowledge, to humbly realize that I am in the middle of something great and
wonderful. It is a joyful plan.
Right on, Grampa!!!
ReplyDeleteI like it, a plan is eharently thought out, not simply an emotional response. Nice piece of wisdome, thanks dad!
ReplyDelete