Saturday September 15, 2007
Faith and Practicing - Belief and Worshipping - Thoughts about Religions
My oldest daughter Keren (17) and I had a long
conversation this week. It started somewhat confrontational - she
asked about the way I would celebrate the Holidays, and then continued
to ask why I celebrate at all, given that I don't really believe. At
this point I was all wired for a good argument, but stopped for a
second to think: this girl is opinionated, well educated and read, she
states her opinions clearly and she backs them up with evidence. My
kind of girl. I was really proud. In fact, if she was on a debating
team, I would very much hate to be on the opposite side... That said,
we could continue our discussion...
I grew up in a religious household. I haven't been practicing religion
for many years, yet the topic is always on my mind. I read about it,
talk about it, and think about it on occasion. Don't get me wrong, I
am not in a soul searching mode, and I'm not looking for "answers". I
was always fascinated, intrigued by and sometimes even jealous of
people who believe. Emphasis on belief, not practice. After thinking
about it for
so long, I am confident that the belief has almost nothing to do with
the practicing of religion. The belief helps those who practice, but
it isn't a prerequisite. Some believe but don't practice, and some
practice, but don't believe.
I come from Israel, the birth bed of some of the world's major
religions. Naturally I was always exposed to practicing
and believing Jews. I realized that many are doing what they perceive
as "the word of God", without ever thinking if there's a basis to doing
it, or not. Think about it. Some follow very strict rules, dress
code, dietary, dating and mating restrictions and many others, and many
don't even stop and ask whether there's any proof that the source of
all those is actually divine. Over the years, a couple of thousand in
the case of Christianity, and a couple of thousand more in the case of
Judaism, a very large variety of stories, myths, scriptures and
writings were developed and accepted as "the word of God". Some, when
submitted to scientific scrutiny are marked as mythology, others are
inconclusive. Yet people still believe in them as if they were the
word of God himself.
There's a big discussion (and a book) about proving that the story of
the Exodus - the
flight of the Hebrew slaves from Egypt, roaming through the Sinai
desert for
forty years, receiving the Ten Commandments and eventually coming to
the Holy Land is true or myth. One of the "proofs" suggests that it
would be impossible to stage such mass deception, and the fact that it
was passed from father to son for thousands of years, assuming that
parents don't lie to their children, proves that it actually happened.
Otherwise, how would it survive for so many years? Not a bad argument
at all. I thought about it for years. How is it possible to convince
a large community that their ancestors took part in something so big
without having the evidence to support the story?
Then I read "The Last Templar" and I realized that indeed, it was
possible.
The first and foremost requirement is the story you are trying to pass
as truth is retrospective.
It had already happened, preferably years before. It would be
extremely difficult to convince people that the Flood had happened
yesterday. Much easier to convince them that it happened many years
before.
The recipe would be, find a mystery, which happened sometime in the
past, for
which witnesses exist (not necessarily reliable witnesses), and
combine it with some spiritual benefit - like resolution, forgiveness,
heaven, and you got yourself a religion. Easy enough. You may say:
"but that means that it should have happened many times?". And the
truth of the matter is - it did. But not all are successful. And
also, the environment, circumstances, charisma, and some luck help
tremendously.
If you, for example, wanted to unite a bunch of tribes living in a
state of war for decades, how would you go about in doing it? How
about creating a common history? Add some glorifying moments of
marching out of slavery, lead by an omnipotent God, a fearless leader
with a magic wand, and suddenly you
got yourself a new People. If, for example, you lived under
occupation, and you wanted to win a rebellion, what would be better
than to unite behind a very charismatic person who had the vision and
the leadership to go with it?
In both cases, there's not much supporting evidence. In the case of
the Jewish people, it's been so long, that there's a very serious
disconnect between the time of establishing the religion, to today's
observers of the faith. Stories which did not support the underlying
message, disappeared. It is a well known fact, that books that were
not "in the right spirit" were simply not included in the official
edition of the Bible. They
are called "External Books". Some of them are still with us, others
disappeared. (Mind you that a few thousand years ago, to eliminate a
book or a scripture would not have been such a colossal job. Usually
there were very few hand-written copies. One small fire, and the
not-so-supportive evidence is poof... CNN or Google were absent from
the scene as well). The faith was always very
careful with uncomfortable evidence. The church did, and still doing
the same. There's nothing between the shape of the earth and the
existence of God. Yet, when Galileo stated that the earth is round,
and is not the center of the universe, the uncomfortable church tried
hard to make that story disappear. It was not successful that time,
but how many times was it very successful in eliminating evidence?
Anyway, this isn't the point. The point is that if you believe,
nothing can change that. You don't really care if the virgin was
indeed, and if Noah actually built an ark and saved the animals. You
don't know if
Jesus was resurrected, but you believe He was, and the truth is - it
doesn't matter. The reason is that many accept religion as a way of
life, and not necessarily as a set of beliefs. Religion is, at least
in my mind, very comfortable. You have a community, a set of rules
that you have to follow, and a lot of benefit. You get comfort at
times of need, assistance when you're in trouble, guidance when you
lose your way. You can pray when you think that
all other alternatives have been consumed. Religion and community are
excellent safety nets.
where's the jealousy coming from? I am not a person who likes to
congregate. I have friends, but no community. I don't believe in God,
and so I don't have Him on my side at times of trouble. I am curious,
and independent, and therefore, the set of rules I live by is
completely self defined. The jealousy? simple, it's a lot easier to
practice. I pray to God I was a believer. Contradiction? Indeed, and
so is the Mezuzah on each of the doors in our house...
Posted at 09:56AM Sep 15, 2007 by Amiram Hayardeny in Personal | Comments[0]
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