An ex-neighbour of mine once asked me to talk to her about
religion because, she said, she wanted to ‘find a faith.’ Well now, the concept
of ‘finding’ a faith raises serious considerations of its own, but that can be
left to another time. What interests me for present purposes is the fact that I
thought about her request this morning (heaven knows why) and I was suddenly
struck by a notion of no known provenance:
God and religion are
not inseparable. Neither needs the other.
Since I wasn’t at all sure that I’d originated this notion,
I thought it would be fun to examine the concept and see whether I could make
sense of it. This is what I’ve come up with so far:
Religions have two functions. The first is to address a
fundamental suspicion (for which read ‘belief’) that material reality is only
one part of a wider span of existence, and that the human animal, at least,
contains an invisible presence which is capable of experiencing the wider
reality. Further, that this invisible reality, usually referred to as the soul,
continues to exist and be sentient after the material body has ceased to
function. I see no reason to have a God as part of that function, and indeed
Buddhism doesn’t include one.
But religions are also systems of life management, and I think
we can be fairly sure that they were formulated by humans in far off times as a
way of providing structure and stability to ancient civilisations. I’m prepared
to accept that the sages who devised the systems might well have had a level of
knowledge which later generations lost, but it doesn’t alter the fact that the
systems themselves were man-made. (‘Man’ being non-gender specific, of course.)
And so the rules and the protocols and the practices were laid down and the
less enlightened beings who formed the majority of the population learned to
follow them slavishly.
But in order to have sufficient authority, these systems
needed a distant and all-powerful chief who was omnipresent, omniscient,
omnipotent, indefatigable, and unquenchable. In other words, the ultimate
embodiment of the supreme leader whose will was absolute and could not be
challenged. And this is where it gets interesting.
I suspect that the early sages were aware of the notion that
reality was created by some supreme, unfathomable intelligence who (or which,
if you prefer) decided one day to create light, sound, and the energy on which
to build individualised expressions of itself (I gather that ancient Hindu
scriptures referred to what we now call sub atomic particles thousands of years
before modern science discovered them, and their creation ‘myth’ is much closer
to the view of Universal Consciousness than people are routinely taught today,
at least in the exoteric Judaic tradition to which we in the west have become
habituated.) And so they would have held the view that every fragment of
material reality was a fragment of the creator who created it in order to
observe itself. So I am part of God, you are part of God, every tree, every
stone, every animal, every blade of grass, is part of God. Forget the
‘transcendent’ in ‘Immanent and Transcendent’. God is not a separate being, but
rather we are God, all of us right
down to the tiniest grain of sand on Blackpool
beach. The ancient sages probably saw it that way.
But this didn’t quite fit certain practical considerations
with regard to the mass of the great unwashed who simply wanted to know the best
way of killing a mastodon and a reason not to fear death while making the
attempt. And so they encouraged the notion that up there somewhere was a divine
and all powerful being who watched and made rules and judged and punished the
transgressor and rewarded the virtuous and demanded to be worshipped
unquestioningly. And they gave It a name which varies from tradition to
tradition. And when the time came to fight wars and grab land, this supreme and
separate being was the ultimate in convenient scapegoats. Do whatever you want
to suit the exigencies of the tribe, no matter what level of depravity, cruelty,
and abuse may thus be occasioned, and justify it on the grounds that you are
acting in accordance with God’s will. And that, it appears to me, is a major
component of what religion has become. It’s evident that such an organisation
needs no concept in God, only a convenient, conditioned belief in such a being.
(And if you choose to believe that the earth was seeded by
beings created by a superior race of aliens, the argument still holds because
the aliens are also fragments of It.)
And I’m sure I’m saying nothing entirely new here, but it’s
as far as I’ve got off he top of my head.
Does that explain the sudden thought that God and religion
are not mutually inclusive? I have no idea. It’s just a ramble that spilled out
of my ageing brain, and I’m sure it doesn’t matter a jot what I think anyway.
* * *
I’m a tiny bit preoccupied at the moment, having just read
that David Lynch died today. I think I would have liked to know him.