Pondering the Mystery of Life
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About this ebook
A Book for Seekers of Spiritual Truth.
If knowledge is power, then self-knowledge is perhaps even more so. Clarifying your beliefs will help you gain that self-knowledge.
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Pondering the Mystery of Life - Audrey C. Shields
Introduction
Over millennia, spiritual leaders and philosophers have devoted their lives to developing worldviews that could help us achieve enlightened and happier lives. While religious worldviews are most frequently inculcated in childhood, other secular or spiritual viewpoints can be developed as we mature and question the meaning of life.
This study, while hardly exhaustive, will explore a variety of spiritual experiences, including those of a religious nature, that human beings have found meaningful. It includes the speculations of some of our deepest thinkers.
One of the most significant questions we struggle with as human beings is, Does God exist? Is it reasonable to believe or to not believe in the existence of a Creator? The existence of a Divine Being is not provable as an objective truth. We have rational inquiry (philosophy) and we have faith, but neither would satisfy scientific scrutiny. On what evidence and experience do individuals rely in deciding how to respond to the mystery of our existence?
A corollary question that we ask ourselves is, Who or what is God? What concept of Divinity do I believe in or perhaps reject? God
means different things to different people; thus, the question—Do I believe in God? — needs qualifying. Do I believe in a personal God or any other supernatural Force?
Some of the faithful, known as Fundamentalists, believe in an anthropomorphic God.
Fundamentalists rely on a literal interpretation of their sacred texts and/or believe they were inspired by God. Other believers, sometimes referred to as Progressives, interpret the same sacred texts metaphorically or symbolically, as stories or myths told by enlightened writers to explain the workings of the universe and mankind’s role in it. Nonetheless, Progressives believe in an Ultimate Reality, which they call God.
A growing number of Americans and Western Europeans, sometimes called nones,
or non-affiliated, have abandoned religion.
While they are not unanimous in rejecting some higher power,
nearly thirty percent of adult Americans "describe themselves as atheists, agnostics, or ‘nothing in particular’ when asked about their religious identity¹."¹ Among the nonreligious there are many who turn to alternative, secular paths for spiritual growth.
Our questions and answers are, of course, nothing new. They have roots in the ancient past, as well as in more recent centuries, often giving rise to religious belief, which can be consoling in a troubled world, and experience tells us that material goods alone are insufficient for our happiness. We wonder if there isn’t something more substantial on which we can rely for well-being.
It is quite amazing how varied are people’s responses to the challenge of understanding life. Researchers have counted thousands of religions. The one thing apparently ubiquitous is the need to make some sense of life. The mystery of the universe may be eternal, but thinking people will continue to search for meaning and try to live accordingly. Let us keep open minds and hearts while exploring some of the ways that one can respond to the challenge.
Literal Belief
In each of the monotheistic religions there are those who claim certitude in their belief in the existence of God because they subscribe to the literal truth of their sacred texts.
For example, traditional Christians cite the biblical account of Christ’s Resurrection as proof that there is a God. Resurrection from the dead would, of course, involve a supernatural intervention.
Traditional Muslims, who comprise nearly ninety percent of all Muslims, believe that the stories and moral guidance contained in their sacred text, the Koran, were revealed by Allah to the Prophet Mohammed in visions.
Mohammed is believed to have been visited by the archangel Gabriel in a cave in 600 CE.
Mormons, too, base their belief in God on revelation, specifically on a series of visions experienced by one Joseph Smith in nineteenth century America. Again there is no objective evidence, unless one believes, as Mormons do, that an angel directed Joseph to the location of buried golden plates that he ultimately translated into the Book of Mormon before returning them, as he said, to the angel.
Judaism became a monotheistic religion about 4000 years ago through the Prophet Abraham, the patriarch of Judaism. Many ultra-orthodox Jews believe that Abraham had frequent conversations with God and that God appeared to him. They believe that some centuries later the Torah, comprising the first five books of the Old Testament, was dictated to Moses by God on Mount Sinai and that it has been preserved without error for three millennia². It includes the story of the Creation, as well as that of Adam and Eve.
Nonbelievers and even some believers in God do not accept the literal truth of such miracles. Certain twenty-first century atheists known as New Atheists
have taken issue with the supernatural nature of such Fundamentalist claims. Richard Dawkins, an evolutionary biologist, for example, has protested against the central tenet of Christianity, the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, suggesting that the four versions of the Resurrection in the gospels contradict one another.³ A further observation is that in the myths of the ancient world, supernatural events such as rising from the dead and virgin births are not all that rare, even commonplace.⁴
As to the cause of dreams and consciousness, Dawkins suggests that it is possible that our brains have not yet sufficiently evolved to understand their cause. While scientists continue to research the origin of dreams and visions, our uncertainty, these thinkers proclaim, is not a reason to give them a supernatural origin.
Progressive (Non-literal) Ways of Defining God
Many believers are not insistent on the literal truth or the directly inspired nature of the Scriptures.
They believe in Divinity, but they believe we can speak of God
only metaphorically. Some of the ways in which they can define God, for example, are the following: God is beauty; God is a force; God is the ground of being
; God is the primary thing
; God is immaterial essence
; and God is the being greater than which none can be conceived.
⁵
One of the most important theologians of the twentieth century, the American Protestant Reinhold Niebuhr, wrote, for example, that he believed in a transcendent God who, he says, is at once the creator of the world (source of its meaning) and judge of the world (that is, goal of its perfection.)
⁶ In other words, Niebuhr extends the anthropomorphic interpretation of creator
and judge
to the more metaphorical source of existence
and reason for being.
While his theology is called Christian Realism, Niebuhr worked within the movement that is known as neo-orthodoxy,
insisting on the mysterious nature of God and on a non-literal interpretation of the Bible. He was, nonetheless, a person of faith. Theology is … a rational explication of man’s faith,
Niebuhr once told an interviewer.⁷ Faith undergirds reason.
Another American Protestant who turns to Scripture both in her life and in her work is the prize-winning American novelist Marilynne Robinson (Gilead). Her reading of the Bible is likewise non-literal. Concerning God, Robinson has said it is a widespread intuition
that there is a profound Intelligence behind everything.
⁸ God‘s character, she says, can be conceived by way of intuition, as well as by considering human morality. Her thinking is akin to the reasoning of the German philosopher Immanuel Kant (1724-1804). Kant believed that we are designed to have intuitions, that it is natural for human beings