AMEN!

Happy New Year

Norman

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Friday, December 30, 2011 8:09 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] [ RC ] Why do we need faith at all?

 

Why do we need faith at all ? 

 

 

Mike :

Your's is one of the best questions that has been asked here, ever.

What I don't have is an off-the-shelf answer. But maybe a few part-answers

might make a little sense.

 

First of all, though, how do you define "faith" ?  Personally, I do not
define it

as belief. To me, while maybe there is some element of belief as part of the
picture,

or more like various "what ifs,"  belief is anything but the crux of faith.

 

Is faith a matter of supplication to a higher being ?  Not at all.

 

The Zoroastrians have a custom of praying while standing, " face to face
with the Almighty "
as it were, on the view that God does not want servants as followers, he
wants human

beings who have courage and integrity, who can take responsibility and show
initiative.

Who can say if God exists ? I don't know. In any case, this attitude strikes
me as 

all for the good, and wholesome, based on really excellent values.

 

The ancient Sumerians had another approach. For them God was supposed to be

their protector. They took responsibility for the institutions of religion,
all of which

played some vital part in community maintenance ( like temple banking,
distribution of surplus

where needed, helping widows and orphans, organizing community festivals and
markets,

facilitating love between men and women,  and etc ), and they also
maintained family altars 

to show their attachment to the various deities who they believed were part
of an extended 

divine family. However, if there were setbacks, if times got really tough,
etc, they would 

complain loudly to God / Goddess and express their displeasure. Maybe not
always, 

sometimes they might think that bad fortune was  deserved for their own
failures, 

but when problems were perceived as unjustly falling on them they let their 

God or Goddess know that they were most unhappy, and "just who do you 

think you are, God, making life so miserable for me / us ? "

 

Personally, I find this attitude most refreshing. It is honest, shows spunk,
and is not

filled up with pious emotions to the effect that humans are always wrong and

God is always right. I don't think that such a model of Spirit is valid,
sometimes

people do get shafted, and where is "God" when this kind of thing happens ?:

 

Groveling before God has always struck me as unjustifiable.

 

Sometimes the question needs to be addressed to  God : " Hey, where were you

when I needed you the most ? "

 

"God" it seems to me, is imperfect, limited, and only an approximation of
our ( anyone's )

Ideal image of deity. In effect, while far greater in various ways than any
mortal, 

God is human-all-too-human. Faith, then, must be conditional.

 

Rabbi Harold  Kushner's book "When Bad Things Happen to Good People"

is crucial.  I think Kushner gives too much benefit of doubt to God, but his
argument

makes a lot of sense otherwise. Who says that God is omnipotent ?  Satan
exists, after all.

and by that fact, God's powers are less than total. This being the case,
some things

God cannot do, or can only do them in the long run. Sometimes Satan calls
the shots

and that is that. 

 

Still, this, to me, features some obvious question begging.  How was it that
God allowed 

Satan to exist in the first place ?  To "test" human beings ?  What a crock.
I don't buy

that explanation for one minute. What, then, really accounts for Satan ?
God's incompetence ?

A bad mistake God made aeons ago ?  I don't know, but Satan's existence is
completely

unjustifiable, immoral, wrong, and intolerable. By not destroying Satan, God
has at least

some responsibility for Satan's existence.

 

Does Satan really exist ?

 

Just heard some recollections on the part of, I think, he son of a soldier
who fought

in WWII and who had taken part in the liberation of Buchenwald. If I
remember this

correctly, the soldier said to the son, "I'm not a religious man, but after
seeing the

concentration camp and what  --who-- was in it, I can tell you that I am
completely

convinced that Satan exists."

 

My view exactly. Not just because of the Nazis and their atrocities, also
because

of Stalin and his, Mao and his, Pol Pot and his, because of the genocides
committed by

Muslims since the beginnings of Islam, and on and on, to include countless
acts of cruelty 

by street gangs, organized criminals, corrupt politicians  and including
such things

as all those responsible for the mess on Wall Street of 2007 -2011, so far,
with more

millions of lives ruined. Not even counting the huge problems caused by
sexual nihilism.

 

All of this is caused by pure chance or random mistakes ?  I don't buy that
for one minute

either. There is huge evil in the world and it has its own source.

 

So, where does this leave us miserable worms, as Luther once put it,
basically helpless

against the worst that can be thrown against us, whether natural disasters
or the actions

of dirty sons-of-bitches, sometimes commanding armies ?

 

It leaves us under protection of a God / Gods  who may or may not give a
damn, or

even if someone up there cares, a God who is incompetent, or weak, or has

other priorities. Concerning such a God, I , for one, am not impressed.

 

However, this is not the end of the story. Not at all.

 

What about us as people ?  What about you or anyone you care about ? 

What about rising to the level of being and doing your best ?

Isn't that something of the highest possible value ?

 

How do you get there ?  By putting "me" first ?  By pure selfcenteredness ?

You know the answer. People who put themselves first , last, and always are
looked down on

for good reason. They are rotten bastards or, at best, brain damaged. They
are, if not 

in all things, in a number of important things, immoral. And everyone knows
it.

 

How do we conceive what is best in any man or woman ?

 

There are a number of ways, but I think the most important is the example of
Christ.

It does not matter to me if Jesus is son-of-God, or divine or whatever. Nor
does it

matter if there is life after death, although that might be really nice. But
no point in

worrying about it. 

 

Let's say that when we die, that's it. The reward for all our sacrifices
lifelong

is a big fat zero. 

 

For me, however, this changes nothing. Christ, clearly, in many ways, shows
us

the best in us, in any of us. And he gave his life for what he believed was
right.

The least I can do is my bit to help out in some way in a "project" that now
is

2000 years old. Admitting that I screw up repeatedly and have a thousand

flaws of one kind or another :  Some shortcomings  I really wish I did not
have,

included. Yet, I also have some actual talents and at a minimum I want to
pitch in.

 

 

Faith ?  Maybe not the usual way to use the term, but perhaps you get the
point.

Sign me up. This is the side I want to be on. It is what I believe in. 

But I have no idea if God exists or any of that. Yes it would matter

if there was some way of knowing, but there isn't, so, in another sense

it really doesn't matter at all. 

 

The counterpart is Goddess, or Holy Spirit. At the very least this is a
reminder

that we should live our lives in such a way that we bring beauty into the
world,

or safeguard or nourish beauty when it exists. This is also something that
is best in us.

Making the world a little more beautiful  --or the same thing, a place where

there is more knowledge, more truths are learned, and people are better able

to think for themselves, and apply wisdom to their problems.

 

Faith also is identifying with people who share these kinds of values. 

It doesn't have to be exact.   But shared values matter greatly.

This is very important and it is where the importance of building on faith

seems to be most meaningful.

 

All in all, it is a very Buddhist inspired view of Christian faith, but it
is my view.

It is the very best that I have been able to think through and reach a
conclusion

that makes real sense. Not just intellectually, but in terms of meaning in
life

that reaches deep inside. Sometimes this is very inspirational. And it
allows

me to really be me, "just as I am."

 

No magic, no pie-in-the-sky-by-and-by. No illusions nor self delusions.

No piousness, or very, very little.  No pretense. No nonsense. 

And no damned lies.

 

For me, this is faith.

 

Why have faith ?  For all of these reasons. And maybe for more reasons

even if  I  don't know what they are.

 

And, O yeah, the Bible  --for all of its imperfections, and there are many--

it puts you in touch with all of this in innumerable ways and is a treasure.

 

Not to be really literate in the Bible, well, that would be like

never having read Shakespeare, or never having studied philosophy,

life would be incredibly disadvantaged for the absence. 

 

There is one qualification : It is necessary to make informed judgements  

about what you read. I look at  the Bible the way that Zoroastrians or
Sumerians 

regard the Holy.  Every last word is on trial as far as I am concerned
--even if 

past tense is better for many parts that I no longer can argue with. Heck,
some parts

I can no longer live without. But it wasn't always like that. And some parts

I now know exactly why I disagree strongly. So it is plus and minus, 

although with much more plus than minus. 

 

I am glad that I took the time and made the effort to be sure. 

 

Billy

 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

 

12/30/2011  [email protected]   writes:

 

 

Question: Why do we need faith at all? Pragmatically speaking, faith
can have positive effects on one's psyche, and even just that alone
can justify the concept, but why do we need to build upon that faith?
Can't we just accept the positive effect that it give us, that it
gives us a sense of comfort, and dispense with the mechanics?

We build upon knowledge because it's grounded and tied to empirically
verifiable and testable theses, but to live on rational leaps of faith
and expecting those leaps to be as true as what is directly in front
of us can lead to abstractions.  Granted, it's not as bad as the
divine command theory that extremists abide by, but it's still an
unaccountable form.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

 

 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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