Tuesday, April 11, 2006

The Myth of Religious Neutrality

Some beliefs are obviously not religious, such as my belief that I'm going to have noodles for lunch. That's not religious, even though it elicits thanksgiving. I think it's true, however, that everyone has some sort of religious belief. As Chesterton, like always, once said, if man refuses to worship God, the result is not that he will worship nothing, but that he'll worship anything. But even when it doesn't result in worship, I think everyone has religious beliefs. What makes a belief religious? This is the question Roy Clouser asks in the first chapter of his book The Myth of Religious Neutrality.

To answer this question, we need to determine what all religious beliefs, and no other beliefs, share. Usually, people tie in religious beliefs with worship. However, in some religious traditions, worship is non-existent, for example, in some forms of Buddhism and Hinduism. Others think that religious beliefs serve the purpose of giving a group an ethic. Again, though, many groups which aren't religious have ethics. From what I understand, Confucianism is only a code of ethics for a well ordered society.

These obvious definitions fail us. Continuing on, then, one might define religious belief as belief in God or in gods. Once more, though, we are foiled by counter-examples. Pythagoreans did not believe in God or in gods. They believed that numbers were the primary things in the universe, the stuff of which everything else was made. They held, as a religious belief, that 1+1 = 2.

Roy Clouser proposes another definition of religious belief, one which I think covers the basics. He calls it primary religious belief. It covers the whole spectrum of religions, and only religions. It is this:

A religious belief is belief in something as diving per se no matter how that is further described, where “divine per se” means having unconditionally non-dependent reality.

This definition does not assimilate the different ideas of what is divine. It says that every religious belief is about what is divine per se, but allows that different religions believe different things are divine per se. Pantheists believe one thing, Christians believe another, and atheists believe yet another. This definition, as the last sentence revealed, includes even the supposedly non-religious. Some people don't like to include atheism as a religion, but we should. Atheism and theism are enemies, after all, in a way that theism and, say, the PTA are not, or that Atheism and the Engineering society are not.

This is only the first chapter of this book, but I'm really excited about it. Clouser promises to prove that all theories necessarily depend on one religious belief or another. Such an argument would disarm opponents who try to devalue Christian arguments because they are religious. We can rejoice, as we always should have, that our arguments are religious. They are inevitably so.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sorry to hijack your blog with my own ramblings, but I've been thinking about this all evening and needed an outlet.

-Andrew
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Then He came and found them sleeping, and said to Peter, “Simon, are you sleeping?
Could you not watch one hour?”


I had a small epiphany this evening. It is Maundy Thursday, the day much of Christendom remembers and celebrates Christ’s institution of communion, his evening of prayer in the garden, his betrayal by Judas, his arrest, and his disavowal by Peter. The liturgy tonight began with a ceremony of foot-washing in commemoration of Christ’s same act of service to his disciples before the Last Supper and continued on with singing, prayer, rather lengthy (by my Baptist standards) scripture readings, and other ceremonies commemorating the events of the day prior to Christ’s crucifixion. The service ended without song or benediction and the congregants dispersed in silence as a symbolic remembrance of how Christ’s disciples scattered and abandoned Him in the garden following His arrest. (Only Peter went with Him; and even that was at a distance, secretly.) The service was beautiful - full of deep symbolism and meaning, but as its length approached the two hour mark my focus began to wane and I began to think of my own fatigue, hunger, and general discomfort. It was not until I was finally walking out the door, car keys in hand and bag over my shoulder, that the irony hit me: here I was in church remembering Christ’s selfless act of humility and service to his disciples, reflecting upon those same disciples’ dismal performance at Gethsemane when they could not stay awake to pray with Him, recalling with indignation how one betrayed him and the others fled with only a single disciple secretly following Him before finally denying even knowing Him, and yet I couldn’t even maintain proper focus for two hours without letting selfishness take over. How quick we are to judge the actions of others and how slow we are to truly see ourselves.

In the sermon this evening it was said that there is more than a little Judas and more than a little Peter in all of us. I think I agree. But we were also reminded that it was for the sake of the unfaithful and the selfish, the corrupt and the cowardly, the Peters and the Judases, that Christ said, “Father…Your will be done”, drank the cup, and walked the path to Calvary.


And Peter remembered the word of Jesus, who had said to him, “Before
the rooster crows you will deny Me three times.” Then he went out and wept bitterly.

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Scott or Deborah said...

No problem. Hijack anytime; I really liked this one. Its familiarity is humiliating..