We must first discuss whether the existence
of God can be disproved. As will be seen, this is not possible because the
three modes of obtaining publicly accessible evidence (a-priori, a-posteriori,
and a combination of both) cannot be used to support the non-existence of a
transcendent being (see Unit F Section I). In view of this, atheism cannot in
principle be, a rational enterprise. We must then look into the most common
reasons for atheism, and respond to the choices and the agendas that most
frequently underlie the claim of atheism. Some of these claims may be
classified as follows:
1. Personal reasons:
a. “I don’t think an all-powerful all-loving
God would permit my or others’ suffering.”
b. “I do not want to be accountable to or
responsible to a transcendent entity.”
c. “If God exists, then I can’t be absolutely
free and absolutely responsible, but I am; therefore God doesn’t exist for me.”
d. “All religion is wishful thinking (a
projection of a good God to assuage my feelings of fear and loneliness), but I
can take the truth; therefore I choose not to believe in God.”
2. Atheism which is really against religion
(but not against God).
a. “Religion has done more harm than good
throughout history (torture and wars). Therefore, religion must be suppressed
in our society.”
b. “Religion is the opiate of the people, and
as long as people think about the next life, they will not engage in revolution
or any other social upheaval necessary for social change; therefore, religion
should be suppressed in our society.”
These opinions need to be responded to,
because they are only partially valid, and sometimes quite misleading and
incorrect. Section 2 will briefly redress some of the problems in the above
contentions. Special consideration will be given to the frequent objection that
belief in God is mere wishful thinking (Section 3 because this objection
attacks the integrity, authenticity, and courage of believers, and, as a
consequence seems to unconsciously undermine faith in young people. (Section
3).
The Impossibility of Disproving the Existence
of GodIt
may be thought that the existence of God can be disproved. One obvious
difficulty with this contention is that it would entail the denial of the two
proofs given in MOERF – God, Units F&G, and in NPEG Chaps Three through
Five, which, in turn, would entail a myriad of intrinsic contradictions and
denials of fact (including the denial of one’s own existence). But there is a
more sweeping problem with this contention, namely, it cannot be accomplished
in principle because the unrestricted nature of God renders all methods of
disproof fruitless. This can be shown by referring back to the three ways of
proving the truth or falsity of claims. Recall from MOERF - God, Unit F that a
claim may be considered reasonable and responsible if:
1 it can be affirmed by rigorous public corroboration,
or
2 its denial leads to an intrinsic
contradiction, or
3 its denial leads to a contradiction of fact
(a rigorously corroborated state of affairs).
None of these methods can be used to prove
the nonexistence of God. The following will make this clear.
The first method (rigorous public
corroboration) is quite useful for proving the existence of a reality, but
useless for proving the nonexistence of a reality. If, for example, I wish to
prove the existence of dogs, I need only experience one, and have other people
corroborate that experience. However, if I wish to prove the nonexistence of,
say, phoenixes, I would have to experience everything that there is to
experience, be certain that I had exhausted the entire range of possible
experiences, and notice that phoenixes are not there. This would seem to be a
rather daunting prospect.
Proving the nonexistence of God by this
method is even more daunting, for God, as defined (the absence of intrinsic or
extrinsic parameters which make realities accessible to human sensation,
imagination, and understanding), is, in principle, beyond human experience. If
God were to be experienceable, God would have to make an aspect of Himself
accessible to us (such as an experience of His love or beauty (as in mystical
or religious experience).[1]Therefore,
the first method of disproof cannot be applied to an unconditioned,
unrestricted being (God).
The second method (proving falsity through
intrinsic contradiction), is equally fruitless. As noted above, contradictions
arise out of the exclusionary properties of boundaries or restrictions (e.g.,
the boundaries of square exclude the boundaries of circle, or the boundaries of
proton exclude the boundaries of electron, such that one cannot have a
square-circle or a proton-electron in the same respect at the same place and
time). An entity without any intrinsic or extrinsic boundaries or restrictions
(i.e., an absolutely simple Reality) would be purely inclusive, and therefore,
would not exclude anything extrinsically (from Itself) or intrinsically
(“within” Itself). If there are no exclusionary properties intrinsic to
“absolutely simple, unrestricted, unconditioned Reality,” then there can never
be a basis for intrinsic contradiction. If there is no boundary or restriction,
there is no basis for contradiction.
The third method (proving nonexistence
through a contradiction of fact) is also fruitless for a similar reason. If a
reality is to be proven contradictory to fact (i.e., to be a contradiction of a
publicly corroborated state of affairs), it must be capable of being
contradicted. For example, if I am to prove that an electron does not exist at
a particular coordinate (x, y, z), then all I need do is prove that there is a
proton (or some other contradictory particle or state of affairs) at that
coordinate (x, y, z) in the same respect at the same time. The contradictory
properties of electron and proton make this kind of disproof possible.
However, as noted above, contradiction is
based on the exclusionary property of boundaries or restrictions. Now, if an
entity has no intrinsic or extrinsic boundaries or restrictions (as has been
defined of God), it does not exclude any bounded or restricted being from
itself; it does not extrinsically exclude anything. Therefore it cannot be
contradicted by any bounded or restricted being. Thus, one cannot say, “If
protons exist, God cannot exist,” for the boundaries of protons will never
exclude the boundarylessness of God. Similarly, one cannot say, “If squares
exist, God cannot exist,” for the boundaries of square do not exclude the
boundarylessness of God. The same holds true for all finite realities. The
boundaries of a finite thing cannot exclude the boundarylessness of God.
Therefore, nothing finite can ever be used to contradict the existence of God.
This means that nothing finite (and therefore nothing in our world) could ever
be the basis for disproving “God” (as defined).
Inasmuch as these three methods exhaust the
scope of formal proof or disproof, it follows that the existence of God cannot
be disproved in principle. Thus, given the above definition of “God” (i.e., as
absolutely simple – without intrinsic or extrinsic boundaries or restrictions),
it would seem that atheism could not be a rational enterprise in the same way
as theism.
The Tenuous Rationality of Atheism
As will be shown, atheism frequently arises
out of definitional problems. The most prominent ones throughout history are
restricted and inadequate definitions of “God,” “love,” and “evil.” We will
consider each in turn.
(1) Restricted Definition of God.
At this juncture, the reader might ask, “If
the existence of God cannot be disproved, what is the foundation of atheism?”
The brief answer is that it cannot be grounded in a formal argument based upon
the definition of “God” given above (“absolutely simple” or “unrestricted,” or
“infinite” – in the sense of an A-infinity). If a proof against the existence
of God is to be formulated, it would have to have an alternative definition of
God which introduces exclusionary properties, restrictions, or finitude into
the definition.
For example, if one defines “God” as a being
which would necessarily interfere with human freedom (which would be contrary
to the purely inclusive properties of perfect love and perfect
goodness/justice, etc.), then one might be able to formulate an argument which
says, “If human beings are absolutely free,[2] then ‘god’ (defined as
necessarily interfering with freedom) cannot exist.”
But the definition of God in this argument is
arbitrarily restricted (and contradicts the absolute simplicity and
unrestrictedness of the unconditioned Reality -- see Encyclopedia Units E-F).
Furthermore, if one understands a purely inclusive God to be perfectly loving
and good, one would have to say that God helps human freedom in every way
possible to be complete and perfect, and therefore, would not undermine human
freedom.
(2) Suffering and “Love.”
One might have had a terrible experience of
suffering or grief, and think to oneself, “How could God allow this to happen?
My grief is incompatible with a perfectly loving God!” One might go on to think
that this is a disproof of the perfect love of God which might suggest that God
is not purely inclusive or that pure inclusivity does not include love; and if
pure inclusivity does not include love, and God is not perfectly loving, then
there is no point in affirming His existence.
There can be little doubt that the primary
reason for atheism is the inability to answer the question of human suffering.
The importance of this question has led me to write yet another volume entitled
Suffering and the God of Love. For the moment, I will endeavor a brief answer,
though this is quite dangerous because the superficiality intrinsic to brevity
may cause resentment on the part of readers who have suffered greatly. Nevertheless,
I will proceed in the hopes that the reader will forgive this unavoidable flaw,
and direct attention to my other volume on suffering for a lengthier treatment.
Once again, atheism arises out of an assumed
definition – but this time it does not arise out of a definition of “God;” it
arises out of a definition of “love” which is attributed to God. The effect is
essentially the same because when the inadequate definition of love is
attributed to God, it seems to mitigate the perfect inclusivity of God. So,
what is this so-called inadequate definition of “love”? It is one that holds
that love is incompatible with suffering. In my view, this definition is overly
simplistic for several reasons. I will mention only two of them here.
First, the above definition does not consider
the interrelationship between freedom and love. If our love is to be our own,
then we must be free to do acts of unlove (which could cause great harm,
suffering, or evil). Stated conversely, if we are not free to do anything but
love, then our love is not our own. It is merely a program of behavior that has
nothing to do with our choice. Our love would not be self-initiated. Thus, if
God wants to create loving creatures (in imitation of His perfect love), God
has to create free beings who can cause suffering and evil in the world by
their choices. The dynamics of love and freedom require that God allow us the
latitude to grow in love through our human freedom. God’s only alternative to
allowing free beings to choose unloving acts is to completely refrain from
creating loving creatures. Is that something that perfect Love would do?
The second problem with defining love as
incompatible with suffering is that it does not allow for suffering to purify
freedom toward love. I will speak solely for myself, here; but often I have
contented myself with an incredibly superficial view of life’s meaning (e.g.,
material well-being, ego-satisfactions, status, etc.) and incredibly
superficial views of human beings (as material beings instead of transcendental
beings; as problems instead of mysteries) during the “good” times. It was only
when I was challenged by real suffering that I began to ask more probative
questions, to search for deeper purpose in life, and to let go of what was then
manifestly superficial (underliving my life).
These moments of suffering led me to the
discovery of love as the purpose of life – to the enjoyment of others’
companionship and friendship, to the recognition of the goodness and lovability
of others, to the depth of empathy and compassion; indeed, to the discovery of
my heart. I do not think I could have let go of my more superficial,
materialistic, egocentric views of happiness and meaning without having
experienced suffering, deprivation, and need for others.
Furthermore, I do not believe that I would
have discovered my own transcendental identity without this same deprivation
and need. Much like Saint Augustine, my contentment with material and
ego-satisfactions distracted me from noticing that I had desires for perfect and
unconditional Truth, Love, Goodness/Justice, Beauty, and Home (See Encyclopedia
Unit C). Though I went to church and had some religious sensibility, I tended
to live life on a material-ego level. Suffering not only led to a discovery of
my heart, but also of my transcendental desires; and this discovery, in turn,
led not only to a discovery of my transmaterial being (what might be termed my
“soul”), but also of my yearning for unconditional Love – my yearning for God.
In retrospect, I am grateful for the suffering
that led me to the discovery of love, my heart, my soul, and the loving God. I
did not like my suffering while I was experiencing it, but the journey – the
journey in freedom – that led to the discovery of what is truly pervasive,
enduring, and deep, made the suffering worthwhile; for it led to an eternity’s
worth of purpose, a true respect for the transcendent other, and the discovery
not merely of my heart, but of my transcendent heart and my call to
unconditional Love. No, for me, suffering was not incompatible with love.
Suffering was the instrument of Love.[3]
(3) Inadequate Definitions of Evil
Another issue has recurrently emerged
throughout the history of philosophy, namely, the problem of evil. It would
seem that if God is perfect Goodness and Love, He would not permit evil in the
world; and furthermore, it would seem that anything evil should be excluded by
God (who was defined above to be a perfectly inclusive Reality). Again, the
seeming incompatibility between a perfectly good God (a perfectly inclusive
God) and evil arises out of an assumed definition. This time, the definition of
“evil” seems incompatible with perfect Goodness and inclusivity. Since evil
seems to be evident, it seems to mean either that God is not perfectly good or
that a perfectly good (perfectly inclusive) God does not exist.
Let us consider the first point, namely, that
if God is perfectly good, He would not allow evil in the world. This contention
has already been addressed above with respect to the definition of “love,” so I
will only briefly repeat the germane point: if God were to disallow all human
evil, then God would have to disallow the free choice to act in an evil way;
and if God disallowed the free choice to act in an evil way, He would not allow
our good actions to be self-initiated. He would essentially have programmed us
for good behaviors, but not allowed us to choose good behaviors over against
the option of choosing evil ones; therefore, He would have foreclosed the
possibility of our good actions truly being self-initiated, and therefore truly
being our own.
Furthermore, acts of human evil can purify
our freedom toward perfect Love, for when evil actions are perpetrated against
us, we are challenged to respond with a gift of self (love) in forgiveness,
mercy, and compassion. These selfless actions (which are frequently undeserved
by the perpetrators) are the highest manifestations of human generosity and love.
Ironically, they are elicited by evil. The story of my life, as well as world
history and literature, are replete with examples of how forgiveness of evil
has led to the intensification of goodness and love. Would Europe be the same
without the Marshall Plan in which America forgave the debt (and built up the
economies) of the nations with whom it had been at war?[4] Would Viktor Hugo’s hero,
Jean Valjean, have existed without the forgiveness of the priest from whom he
had stolen the candles?[5] Would the great ideas of
human rights and economic rights have occurred without the forgiveness of
centuries of oppression? The list goes on and on.
Evil elicits vengeance, and vengeance begets
vengeance, unless a free agent intervenes and lets go of the just offense in a
recognizable act of compassion. This act not only stops the cycle of vengeance
begetting vengeance, but also calls collective human consciousness to a higher
ideal, a higher sense of collective self, which is at once intrinsically
beautiful, while allowing the real possibility of peace. Ironically, this
greatest of human choices can be induced by evil.
We may now proceed to the second point of
tension between God and evil, namely, that if God is perfectly good, He must
exclude evil (which seems to contradict His pure inclusivity). Again, the
problem is definitional, for the definition of “evil” seems to get in the way
of God being both perfect goodness and perfect inclusivity. However, the
definition of “evil” which does this views “evil” as something positive – as
something existing in itself.
A brief summary of the volumes which have
been written on this since the time of Plato shows a more comprehensive view of
“evil” which does not view it as something positive or existing in itself. In
this view, evil is seen to be a negation of a free being’s power to love.
Obviously, the free being exists, and his power to love exists (and is
positive). But evil does not exist apart from this free being and his positive
capacity to love. Evil occurs when the existing free agent negates (ignores or
undermines) his positive power to love.
Now, these evil actions could have, say,
angry feelings embedded in them. But these feelings are not identifiable with
evil itself; they are the result of evil (that is, a free agent’s choice to
ignore or undermine his capacity for love). Furthermore, destructive (evil)
behaviors may come from this free agent, but these behaviors are also not
identifiable with evil itself; they are the result of evil (i.e., a free
agent’s choice to ignore or undermine his capacity for love). Thus, the
occurrence of evil is not something which exists in itself; rather, it is the
result of a free agent’s choice to ignore or undermine the capacity for
affection, empathy, compassion – love.
In sum, evil can occur through an existing
free agent, and it arises out of the ignoring or undermining of an existing
capacity for love. It can give rise to feelings and destructive behaviors which
have ontological status. However, the evil of the free agent, of the feelings,
and of the destructive behaviors does not exist of itself. It occurs through
the negating of the positive power to love in the free agent. If this
definition of evil is correct, then it is not excluded by God; for it has no
existence which can be excluded. God’s perfect goodness and perfect inclusivity
remain completely compatible.
There are other kinds of atheism not
connected to the notion of “God,” and therefore not concerned with
incompatibility between God and a particular phenomenon (say suffering or
evil). For example, socio-political atheism generally tends to be more
irreligious than atheistic. It objects to religion because it is, say, an
“opium of the people”[6] (a distraction from needed
socio-political change). Philosophers who proffer these claims frequently do
not offer any argument against the existence of God, but rest their case on
their sense of religion as antithetical to human progress.
Many such philosophers frequently ignore the
fact that religion is responsible for social progress in many arenas, such as
the initiation and advancement of laws, legal systems, social welfare systems
(through, say, prophets who exhorted the populace to care for widows and
orphans), schools and educational systems, hospitals and health care systems,
etc. This makes those philosophers’ selective view of history quite suspect.
I would like to conclude this section by
returning to an important point made earlier – namely, that I do not want my
brief treatment of suffering and evil to convey in any way a disregard for the
true suffering that so many have endured in their lives. Grief at the loss of a
loved one, debilitation at the loss of one’s faculties, indignity at the hands
of callous individuals, should never be underestimated. My sole purpose in
treating the above topics was to show how careful we must be in our definitions
of “love,” “evil,” and “God.” As we attempt to translate our deepest emotions
and experiences into concepts, we will want to remember that the more nuanced
and complete the definitions, the more they will correspond to the truth; and
the more they correspond to the truth, the more they will present the path to
healing and deliverance within the horizon of unrestricted Love, Goodness,
Justice, Beauty, and Home.
We are now in a position to objectively and
comprehensibly consider the age old objection to theism that belief in God is
near wishful thinking.
Is Belief in God Mere Wishful Thinking?
Even though many of us believe in a
beneficent God, we are hesitant, if not fearful, about manifesting this
conviction in public. We then find that this absence of public conviction
redounds back to us. We begin to be reticent about believing what we do not
declare in public, and this reticence turns into interior doubt, and then we
find ourselves declining in hope and subtly inclining toward skepticism and
even cynicism. Thus, we may find ourselves taking on a perspective which is
opposed to our beliefs and convictions. Why would we do this?
After 35 years of teaching university
students, young adults, and business leaders, I have come to the conclusion
that the reason we do not publicly declare our belief in God is because of our
fear of being branded as “naïve optimists,” “dependent on a crutch,” “too weak
to face reality,” or “ignorant fools.” Readers familiar with the history of
modern philosophy will recognize the ghosts of Ludwig Feuerbach, Sigmund Freud,
and Karl Marx in these brands.
First, with respect to Freud, I think it is
fair to say that secularists have brought Freud’s rejection of religion as mere
“projection,” “wish fulfillment,” and illusion to a significant level within
popular culture:
To assess the truth-value
of religious doctrines does not lie within the scope of the present enquiry. It
is enough for us that we have recognized them as being, in their psychological
nature, illusions. … We know approximately at what periods and by what kind of
men religious doctrines were created. If in addition we discover the motives
which led to this, our attitude to the problem of [the truth of] religion will
undergo a marked displacement. We shall tell ourselves that it would be very
nice if there were a God who created the world and was a benevolent Providence,
and if there were a moral order in the universe and an after-life; but it is a
very striking fact that all this is exactly as we are bound to wish it to be.
And it would be more remarkable still if our wretched, ignorant and downtrodden
ancestors had succeeded in solving all these difficult riddles of the universe.[7]
Freud derives this argument almost completely
(and unquestioningly) from Ludwig Feuerbach, a German philosopher and
anthropologist (1804-1872)[8]who held
that in every respect, God corresponds to some need in human nature: “If man is
to find contentment in God, he must find himself in God.” Thus, for Feuerbach,
God is an outward projection of our inner world.[9] Freud condenses Feuerbach’s
argument by essentially holding that a benevolent God is the sole result of
wishful thinking.
The popularization of this declaration has
caused fearfulness about public disclosure of belief in God and eternal life.
Most college students and college-educated adults are aware of the “crutch
argument” which they have received from popular culture and even some teachers.
No one wants to be accused of relying on a crutch, or of naively refusing to
face reality which implies being either a coward or a fool, or both; and if
they are not intellectually prepared to challenge the factual or logical
adequacy of Feuerbach’s and Freud’s claim, many prefer to hide their beliefs or
to pretend that they have opposite beliefs from the ones they really hold. The
desire for acceptance by the supposed intellectuals and sophisticates of the
culture is so strong that they mask their true inclinations, intuitions, and
identity in favor of platitudes given them by pseudo-intellectuals. This causes
the slow erosion of hope (and the subtle increase of skepticism and cynicism
described above).
The truth is that Freud’s claim is logically
inadequate and factually inaccurate. We may begin with its logical inadequacy.
Prima facie, Freud’s argument cannot be proven, and that is why it must remain
arbitrarily asserted and a leaping non-sequitur. The argument runs as follows:
“Since my ‘wretched, ignorant, and downtrodden ancestors’ could not help but
believe in a God that would protect them from the forces of nature, they
invented a benevolent God.” Freud presumes we will conclude from this that God
does not exist. Even if it were true that our ancestors invented a benevolent
God (which it is not – see below), it does not follow that God does not exist.
Just because I want something to be true does
not mean that it is not true. I would like the day to be warm and sunny outside
as I rise in the morning; this does not necessitate a cold and gloomy day. I
would very much like to complete this book and see it published; this does not
mean that it will not see the light of day. I think it would be wonderful if a
striped horse-like creature existed; this does not eliminate zebras from the
realm of possible existents. So also I would like God to exist; this does not
necessitate His nonexistence. Indeed, if God existed, why wouldn’t He give me
some clues to His existence that I might be aware of Him and even seek Him?
Alister McGrath notes in this regard:
Freud’s theory concerning
the origins of religion in the individual is, like that of Feuerbach, generally
incapable of being tested. It is a hypothesis, not a fact. Freud could be said
to lend psychoanalytical support to Feuerbach, but not to provide the crucial
experimental data which would convert a hypothesis into a fact. On the
relatively few points at which Freud’s hypothesis is capable of being tested
experimentally, it is generally accepted that it is wrong. … Freud’s
psychoanalytical atheism must now be regarded as a hypothesis that has not
been, and indeed cannot be, proved.[10]
There is a tremendous body of evidence from
contemporary physics and philosophy validating a creation of the universe and
the existence of God about which I and many other authors in the late 20th and
21st centuries have written (see above Encyclopedia Units A-H).[11] There is also a significant
body of historical evidence supporting the historicity of Jesus’ resurrection[12] (see Encyclopedia Units
K-L), as well as experientially verifiable evidence based on near-death
experiences (see Encyclopedia Unit B) and rational evidence based on human
transcendental desires (see Encyclopedia Unit C). In view of this evidence,
Freud’s declaration is revealed to be not only arbitrary and unprovable, but
also invalid. But the problems with Freud’s declaration do not end here. He
grounds his invalid argument in the proposition that our “wretched, ignorant,
and downtrodden ancestors” invented a benevolent God to assuage their fears of
the uncontrollable forces of nature. This contention is not factually accurate.
Mircea Eliade, after an exhaustive study of
world religions,[13] found that religion is
grounded almost universally in a sense of the sacred which is not reducible to
a mere subjective projection. Rather, the sacred is a source or cause of human
striving to live in a spiritual and transcendent domain. This domain is not a
sterile concept, but rather is filled with transcendent awareness and emotion
frequently resembling what Rudolf Otto terms the sense of “creatureliness,”
“mysterium tremendum,” “awesomeness,” “overpoweringness” (or “majesty”),
“energy” (or “urgency”), “fascination,” and “transcendent otherness.”[14] Our awareness of the sacred
must be symbolically expressed because symbols point beyond themselves, and the
sacred is precisely beyond the ordinary world. As such, it moves us to our most
pervasive, enduring, and deep principles, ideals, meanings, and beliefs.[15]
Four points are significant here.
First, Eliade’s assessment of religion is
grounded in much, much more data than Feuerbach’s or Sigmund Freud’s.
Secondly, it suggests that religion was not
motivated by our need to alleviate fear moving us to invent a benevolent God.
As Otto (and, by implication, Eliade) explain, there is a sense of
“creatureliness,” “tremendum,” “awesomeness,” “overpoweringness,” and
“transcendent otherness” embedded in the sacred. The experience of these
transcendent phenomena are as likely to cause fear as alleviate it. This could
lead as easily to thoughts about non-benevolence as much as benevolence in the
sacred domain (and in the deity). This makes Freud’s contention of God being a
result of wish fulfillment to be unlikely. Furthermore, the idea that God was
invented by humans to control the seemingly uncontrollable natural forces is
also unlikely, for the sacred could be just as uncontrollable as nature –
perhaps more.[16]
Thirdly, the sense of the sacred seems to
have a source outside of ourselves, for it gives rise to a sense of
transcendent otherness, overpoweringness, and creatureliness. This seems to fly
in the face of Feuerbach’s contention that God is a projection of man’s powers,
needs, and desires. How does the idea of transcendent otherness, awesomeness,
and overpoweringness come out of a projection of my own powers, needs, and
desires?
Fourthly, Feuerbach’s and Freud’s contentions
do not account for the human strivings borne out of the sense of the sacred,
such as sacred duties, self-sacrifice for a transcendent good, the desire to
order society according to sacred principles, the urge to develop religious
symbols, art, architecture, music, and ritual, etc. Do these elements of
virtually every tribe and civilization really come from the desire to alleviate
fear, or rather out of a striving to be closer to the domain of the sacred, or
to be closer to a God who is the highest principle, highest law, highest
beauty, highest harmony, and highest unity? The sense of transcendent otherness
(with its accompanying awareness of mystery, sacred duty, sacred principle, and
awesome majesty) seems in many respects to be unrelated to the projection of
human needs and powers, and the alleviation of human fears. Indeed, it appears
to be the very converse of these Feuerbachian/Freudian constructs, and as such,
is not reducible to them.
Eliade goes on to explain that this sense of
the sacred seems to be irreducible to any social, historical, or cultural
conditioning. Though it is true that religion involves “the social man, the
economic man, and so forth…all these conditioning factors together do not, of
themselves, add up to the life of the spirit.”[17]
Eliade’s significant study of particular
religions in particular cultures and times[18] led him to the conviction
that humanity has a general sense of the transcendent/sacred beyond any
particular culture, society, or historical epic. He notes that human
consciousness transcends its historical and cultural conditioning,[19] and that it has at least a
tacit awareness of certain universal images and symbols.[20] Eliade’s critics claim that
this contention is difficult to prove (even though Eliade assembled a
considerable amount of data to support it). Eliade responded by noting that his
“historicist” critics’ position (reducing religion to historical-cultural
conditioning) was equally, if not more difficult to prove than his own, because
it requires disregarding the remarkable unity (amidst exceedingly diverse
cultures and times) of human consciousness of the sacred. Whatever one may
think about the verifiability of Eliade’s position, the mere existence of the
debate between Eliade and his critics reveals the position of Feuerbach and
Freud to be lacking in empirical data and incredibly naïve.
Therefore, religion was very likely not an
invention of our ancestors to alleviate fear. Neither was it a mere projection
of our ancestors’ innermost needs, nor a product of mere
social-historical-cultural conditioning. It seems to be a consciousness –
perhaps an altogether irreducible consciousness – of its own. So what can we
say about contemporary belief in God – especially the Christian belief in a God
of unconditional love? Is belief in this benevolent God simply a crutch? The
answer to this question would have to be “no” (even if the alleviation of fear
is involved in some people’s belief in God) because religion is very likely our
response to our awareness of the sacred or spiritual. This awareness awakens
within us both fear and the alleviation of fear, evil and good, cosmic evil and
cosmic good, guilt and the alleviation of guilt, creatureliness and
transcendence, God’s call to responsibility and God’s promise of love. If
anything is clear from the considerable data assembled by Eliade and others,
religion is a remarkably complex phenomenon and certainly cannot be reduced to
the alleviation of fear or to a “crutch.” It involves self-awareness, courage,
a sense of co-responsibility and duty, humility and self-sacrifice, principles,
ideals, and love. In many of these respects it is the precise antithesis of a
crutch or fear-alleviator, calling forth from us the very highest commitment of
ourselves and our character. Believers should have no fear about being accused
of fearfulness, for the very accusation is groundless and ignorant.
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