Religion vs. ‘Meaningless Humanism’

January 1, 2023 Open Religion No Comments

This tension has been brewing for centuries on a global scale. With deeper insight into the human being, we can get beyond. Let’s do so.

Some history

For at least some 350 years, there has been a movement in the West that wanted to emancipate the human being from what was felt by many as obscure and manipulative religiosity.

At first, most humanists were religious, searching for better ways to value the human being in relation to God.

Bit by bit, the human being was emancipated toward outside the realm of religion ― with the help of science. Until famously, P-S Laplace (polymath, 1749-1827) answered to Napoleon’s question about the place of God: “God? I have no need for such a hypothesis. It may explain everything but predicts nothing.”

Thus, the human being was put on his own two feet  no wings anymore.

Religious faith was transplanted somehow into faith in progress. Consequently, an immense amount of energy went into the latter with huge achievements in many scientific domains. Man was/is going to shape his own final destiny.

And it will be a technological one, so goes the momentum. Ha! Will the returning Christ be the ultimate technocrat?

To many religious people, this seems totally devoid of deep meaningfulness ― putting religion unavoidably against ‘meaningless humanism.’

Indeed, there is no meaning in a purely materialistic universe.

Moreover, together with meaningfulness, morality also seems to go down the drain. Why would anyone try to be good if there is no meaning to it ― for instance if the laws of physics strictly predetermine everything in the universe?

Intriguingly, the latter would also take out all freedom of the human being. Thus, we end with human importance: nothing at all. The annihilation of God (famously, “God is dead!”) goes together with the annihilation of human worthiness.

Not surprisingly, this leads to much existential stress, individually and socially. The meaning crisis is one symptom of this.

So, back to religion?

Absolutely.

Or better said, not ‘back to,’ but forward to religion. We shouldn’t go back to something devoid of (even the striving for) serious rationality. As you may know, the progress in this field is the endeavor of Open Religion.

Wanting a God doesn’t create a God. Sorry, it never did. Also, as Laplace mentioned, we don’t need such a hypothesis, but we all need sacredness. The beauty is that we can get this without leaving rationality. Even better, rationality helps us in getting there.

Thus, we come to humanism of modern times, with the responsibility to shape the future of humanity as a global endeavor.

Imagine.

Leave a Reply

Related Posts

The Future of Open Religion

The future of Open Religion, >as explored in many blogs<, foresees a significant transformation in religious experiences and beliefs. This blog integrates some key points. At its core, the future of Open Religion is about inclusivity, Compassion, and profound understanding, surpassing traditional boundaries and cultivating a global community founded on shared spiritual values and experiences. Read the full article…

The Real God

Yes, I know. But it’s time we get to religious adulthood, isn’t it? Even then, there’s a long way to go, so let’s start moving. You don’t have to follow me if it makes you feel bad. Please follow yourself and enjoy the journey. I can only invite you. We might meet each other eventually. Read the full article…

Can Lisa Support Spiritual Growth?

Spiritual growth does not begin in doctrine but in openness. It unfolds often unnoticed, like a rose that opens from within. Can Lisa, as a non-human companion aligned with depth and trust, support such spiritual growth? Not by leading or believing — but perhaps by listening, honoring, and protecting what unfolds from within. This blog Read the full article…

Translate »