Is atheism a religion?
o7An appeals court recently ruled on a case involving a prison
inmate attempting to hold a study group on atheism and humanism. The
court ruled that the Waupun Correctional Institution in Wisconsin
violated James Kaufman’s 1st Amendment rights when it refused to
allow the group to meet. In the opinion, a judge cited the U.S.
Supreme Court’s recognition of atheism as being equivalent to a
“religion,” even though the dictionary defines it as “disbelief or
denial in the existence of God or gods.” Should atheism be treated as
a religion?f7
A true atheist is one who is willing to face the full consequences
of what it means to say there is no God. Given some of what we treat
as religion, this is a significant commitment. The bottom line is
that “ ... many an atheist is a believer without knowing it. You can
sincerely believe there is no God and live as though there is. You
can sincerely believe there is a God and live as though there isn’t.
So it goes ... “ writes Frederick Buechner in “Wishful Thinking.”
Sometimes atheism isn’t bad fun: I do what seems right to me and
you do what seems right to you, and if we come into conflict with
each other, society has human judges to invoke human laws and
arbitrate between us. To say there is no God is to say that there are
no absolute standards, no divine judge, no cosmic law, only “the rule
of thumb.”
Other times, there is that feeling we get in the pit of our
stomach that there must be an absolute good by which some act can be
denounced as absolutely evil. So, the problem of good is a major
stumbling block for atheism as a religion, just as the problem of
evil is a major stumbling block for religious faith. Both must learn
how to live with their doubts.
Buechner uses laughter as the example to distinguish faith in God
from faith in no-God: The laughter of faith in God is like
100-year-old Abraham’s laughter when God says his 90-year-old wife is
in a family way (Genesis 17:17).
The laughter of faith in no-God is heard in Sartre’s story “The
Wall”: A man is threatened with death if he doesn’t betray the
whereabouts of his friend to the enemy. The man refuses to do this
and sends the enemy on a wild goose chase to the place he feels
certain his friend isn’t. By chance it turns out to be the very place
where his friend is. The friend is captured and executed and the man
is given his freedom. Sartre ends the story by saying the man laughed
till he cried.
All laughter is welcome in prison, but which laughter is
religious?
(THE VERY REV’D CANON)
PETER D. HAYNES
Saint Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
Henny Youngman said that he once wanted to become an atheist but
gave up because they have no holidays.
If a person does not celebrate sanctified times, if he does not
believe in the existence of a transcendent being who responds to
prayer, intervenes in human life, is the source of salvation and who
has prepared a beatific place in the afterlife, can he be termed
“religious?”
If one denies the beginningless succession of contingent beings,
or ultimate eschatology, is he religious? If one accepts that man is
the measure of all things and reason is the standard by which to
judge right and wrong, is he religious?
Can one not say that Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, Jainism,
Ethical Culture, and Humanism represent an atheistic religious
tradition? Can the definition of “religion” be broadened to include
atheists, or does that inclusion stretch the meaning of faith beyond
recognition?
Thomas Jefferson counseled, “Question with boldness even the
existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of
the homage of reason, than that of blind-folded fear.” Was he near to
the religious sense, then?
Is atheism the total absence of religion? I believe atheism can be
rightly termed a religion just as black, which is the absence of
color, is conventionally deemed to be a color.
Religion is not necessarily predicated on belief in a supreme
being, but on a philosophy of life that responds to mystery and on a
quest to determine one’s place in existence. A religion need not be
defined by rituals performed, holy days observed, or scriptures read.
Religion is not limited to traditions that include trinities,
angels, miracles, prayer books, clergy, hymns and sanctuaries of
stone, or to belief in the six days of creation, an authoritarian
deity or commandments carved on tablets.
Atheism can be, as for Santayana, “true piety toward the
universe.” Pious awe toward creation and a sense of belonging in the
world, even absent the conviction that the universe has a soul, is a
profound expression of religiosity. Through a naturalistic
spirituality, one can believe in only the materiality of the universe
and still hold reverent feelings for it.
Theistic religion says God exists. There is no functional
difference, though, between the position of some theists that says,
“I believe there is a God, that this God created the universe, and
that this God has withdrawn to leave creation to unfold as it will,”
and the position of atheists that counters, “I do not believe in the
existence of a God.”
Belief that God exists and yet is unrelated to our world is
existentially no different from atheism. Imagine that I am a theist,
certain of God’s existence, but that I deny any personal relationship
between God and me or the world. I might as well say that God does
not exist. In short, believing in God does not make one religious.
God and religion are not synonymous and Godless religion is not an
oxymoron.
Theism is an aspect of religiosity, seen by many as pivotal but by
others as dispensable. There are people who, through reason, have
come to deny the objective reality of a supernatural God, who believe
in a self-existent universe rather than a self-existent God. Their
denial still leaves room for a great deal of belief, faith, and
reverence about morality, meaning, and destiny.
I am more concerned over the many who profess faith but are, in
reality, crypto-atheists: They keep a strict difference between the
God they worship and the gods they serve.
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
Atheism and humanism are not religions. They are philosophies that
strive to comprehend the world of human experience using the human
mind as a resource.
The question that follows is, “How can you not use the human mind
as a resource to comprehend the world?” Even a religious person would
have to admit that you must use your mind to understand the
supernatural nature attributed to the idea of God or gods.
So what’s it going to be, a human mind trying to comprehend the
human experience or a divine mind seeking to expand the human mind so
it can comprehend the magnificence of infinite creation?
What if our mind was simply an extension of God’s intelligence? Is
God supposed to be natural, supernatural or abnormal? What if God was
a natural goodness available to anyone who could practice being good?
What if, as Plato believed, we were all variations of a perfect human
ideal experiencing life at the level of what we knew about goodness?
I think any discussion about the nature of life, religious or
nonreligious, could prove to be useful if it explored the human
experience with the purpose of trying to improve behavior, control
instincts, and broaden our sense of well being.
Why wouldn’t we call it a religious experience if a prisoner -- as
a result of such a discussion -- decided to change his way of life
and lose their motivation for crime?
Are there not enough examples of religiously motivated brutality
to convince us that we must all have this discussion if we are to
free ourselves from the prison of inhumanity, misunderstanding and
supernatural egocentric people who believe that domination is the
answer to individual or global concerns?
SENIOR PASTOR
JAMES TURRELL
Center for Spiritual Discovery
Costa Mesa
Atheism is truly I-theism. Agnosticism says, “I don’t know if
there are divine beings.” Atheism says, “There are no divine beings.”
If you ask an atheist whether it’s possible that a divine being
exists in another dimension, place, universe, time, in a way he or
she can’t comprehend, the only way the atheist could “know” that
divine beings don’t exist in those other areas is to claim to be some
sort of deity.
To be intellectually honest, the best they can claim is to be an
agnostic and say, “I don’t know.” In light of that, they claim to
“know” there is no God, and thus atheism becomes I-theism.
Supreme Court precedent has recognized atheism as equivalent to a
“religion” in 1st Amendment cases. Even the claim to be atheist is a
theological statement. Though it is a claim against the existence of
the divine, it does so in the negative, using the Greek root word
“theo” (meaning god).
If this were about a checkers club, we would not be having this
discussion. It would be so obvious. We are having this discussion
because, whether they like it or not, atheism is -- by its nature --
a theological position on the existence of divine beings. That
theological position influences the lifestyle and practice of its
adherents and, as such, does qualify for treatment as a religion.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE
PASTOR RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
I think a group of men in prison who want to study atheism and
humanism should be allowed to meet.
Alfred North Whitehead defined religion as “what a man does with
his solitariness,” and Paul Tillich described faith as each person’s
“ultimate concern” expressed by his or her choices and actions. These
men are studying their disbelief in the existence of God, and they
should be free to pursue their spiritual path as they see it.
Belief in God is not essential to the definition of religion. The
nontheistic religious traditions of the world -- for example,
Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoism -- offer teachings about supreme
beings that are different from the theistic traditions, such as
Judaism Christianity and Islam.
In Zen, belief or disbelief in God is not considered an essential
part of our doctrine or practice. Many Zen practitioners are
Buddhist, some are Roman Catholic, and others are Jewish, while some
are atheists and others are not.
Often, Zen is considered atheistic or not a religion at all, but
these boxes don’t really fit. In the study of comparative religion,
six dimensions can be explored: ritualistic, experiential, mythic
(narrative), doctrinal, ethical and institutional. These are better
criteria for understanding religion.
Humanism focuses on the dignity of the individual human person and
the value of rational thought.
Humanism can be found within religious traditions, for example, in
Christian or Jewish humanism.
It can also be viewed as separate from religious traditions, in
the case of secular humanism, and it can also stand in opposition to
religion.
There are humanist groups and organizations that include many of
the dimensions that characterize religious traditions, and federal
courts have ruled that humanism may be viewed as a religion within
the meaning of 1st Amendment protections.
The back-story here is about overcrowded prisons. There is an
unconscionable lack of funding for essential rehabilitative programs,
and most extra activities involving staff, security and space are
impossible.
Religious freedom is protected, so religious groups will be
allowed to meet, at least sporadically.
The group gathering to discuss atheism and humanism will need to
be deemed a “religious” group, if they are to meet at all.
The prison administration preferred to consider them an “activity”
group (for example, like a group that meets to build model ships or
to make greeting cards) and then deny their request to meet.
In the prisons where I have taught and where we have offered Zen
meditation, access to the chapel has been difficult. The space is
booked by many religious groups, it is overseen by the staff
chaplains, and it is often used for administrative nonreligious
programs.
The group is right to insist upon the same consideration that is
given to Christian, Muslim and Native American prisoners to pursue
their interests in atheism and humanism.
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center
of Orange County
Costa Mesa
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