Responding to an atheist - Part I
Sometime ago, someone I respect wrote a note blaming religion for all evils of the world and championing atheism. I wrote him a letter in response, picking out some of the arguments. Here are parts of that letter. I welcome you to read and provide your own comments.
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Right from childhood, I have been intensely private when it comes to my personal beliefs – which is as it should be, since religion is as personal as sex. Also, religion is an ocean, where does one even begin?! Any attempt to explain would be like bringing a teaspoon to carry the ocean. In any case, god/universe/creative principle etc. does not need me to defend it. So my first reaction to most discussions on religion is to either not respond or to respond with a few generalities. I’m making an exception now, not to convince you – no one can really change anyone else’s mind – but only to present the other side objectively.
Update (16 August 2014): Part II of this letter is now up on the blog.
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Right from childhood, I have been intensely private when it comes to my personal beliefs – which is as it should be, since religion is as personal as sex. Also, religion is an ocean, where does one even begin?! Any attempt to explain would be like bringing a teaspoon to carry the ocean. In any case, god/universe/creative principle etc. does not need me to defend it. So my first reaction to most discussions on religion is to either not respond or to respond with a few generalities. I’m making an exception now, not to convince you – no one can really change anyone else’s mind – but only to present the other side objectively.
The Veda says, “ekam sat viprah bahudA vadanti” – the truth is
one, the learned call it by different names. You can find this echoed in every
religion. It is only the dark heart of man that corrupts. I can understand how
a gentle soul with a razor sharp intellect would react to the violence
perpetrated in the name of religion – condemn the apparent source of the evil
which seems to be religion. But much of the evil you condemn and lay at the
door of religion and hence the human idea of god, is really the result of man’s
greed for land, money and power.
Not only is there no essential dichotomy between religion and good
living, but also a dangerous counter productivity in creating one which doesn’t
exist. Once again, shastraya ca sukhaya ca – shastra is that which works for
your well-being.
Let’s look at some of your arguments.
Religion does not encourage
questioning:
Far from it.
Questioning – like you yourself mentioned – is not new to religion. Every
messiah worth his altar has first questioned everything else that came before
him. Swami Vivekananda was almost an atheist, he went around asking godmen if
they had really seen god. It is only when Swami Ramakrishna answered him, “Yes,
I have seen god, just as I see you now in front of me,” that he was drawn to him.
Real religion is a process of deconstructing and creating over and over again.
The Upanishads keep admonishing the seeker to question everything. Jesus
questioned the god of the jews. The problem is people are lazy. They want
moksha in 12 easy modules, just like they want a Mercedes in easy EMIs and if
someone promises them that, oh it’s time to cash in, they aren’t going to mess
with their luck.
Proof of God: There is a Tamil saying – kandavar vindilar,
vindavar kandilar – those who have seen, do not talk about it and those who
talk about it, have not seen it. There are numerous people through history who
have claimed to have seen god. As recent as the last century, there are holy
saints who have claimed to have had visions of god. Much of the atheist-theist
argument I think is centred around nomenclature. You say love nature, they say
love god in nature. If you traveled to the 4th century and
talked about mobile connectivity, they'll call you mad! Show us these waves,
they'll thunder. But you can't see the waves, they exist, you'll tell them. Ah
you're cheating people, they'll say. Lets us build towers to transmit these
waves, and let us make small devices that can receive and send these waves,
you'll say. All rubbish, you're trying to take our gold, they'll say. Some
people who believe you actually try this stuff out - and magic! They can talk
to each other over miles. Others think you are practicing black
magic. Others copy you and cheat people off their gold in turn bringing
you a bad name. Others go ahead and build their own networks. Er... the
point is, you can only experience god. Those who need proof can remain needing
proof all their lives. It's what the Oracle said in the Matrix - you
hear only what you need to hear. Similarly people believe what they
need to at that point of time in their lives, including the belief of
not-believing.
The ancient gods like Zeus, etc. are no more: And what is wrong with that? Ancient English is no more, language
has evolved. So does that mean English doesn’t exist? Or that language is an
illusion? Human expression of the divine – language, imagery, rituals and so on
– has evolved along with human evolution. Which is as it should be. Who said
God had to wear rudraksha and vibhuti? Or a beard and flowing white robes? Or
be formless with just a booming voice? One of the great gurus of the west and
an avid Siva worshipper recorded his vision of Siva in flowing white robes –
that was his conception of god. Man can only attempt to give form to the
divine, he cannot bottle and label the divine in plaster.
Religion deceives the gullible: So does science. There are ample quacks selling
remedies for everything from acne to balding – even modern ones with
multistoreyed hospitals. Do we ask to shut down all hospitals? There are
financial quacks who promise get-rich-quick schemes, you know the infamous ones
here and abroad. Do we ask to shut down the stock market? The truth is:
gullible people will be cheated by quacks of all kinds. As usual, man lays his
faults at the feet of someone else, in this case god is a convenient scapegoat.
Anyone who claims to represent god is
a fraud:
If you are filled with compassion for the world, and you found a way out of the
world’s misery, would you get out and help yourself or would you come back and
help your fellow man? Real people of god are filled with compassion, they only
want to help. They want you to see what they can see so clearly. You say you
are hungry, they want to lead you to a feast. But as in all fields, there are
quacks – buyer beware! The student has to test the master.
Religion is not absolute like science. It says, True for me – may not
be true for you: That’s
right. It is so because no two people are at the same stage of evolution.
Science cannot measure the location and velocity of an electron with any
precision, right? The smallest subatomic particles are not really particles but
strings. The tennis ball is really a macrocosmic universe to the atoms in it.
Everything is relative. Nothing is an absolute truth – in fact, science is
still searching for that unified truth. Religion is more honest and practical.
Everybody needs a different pill. My headache cannot be cured by your antacids.
Even within a particular religion there are countless paths. Some people need
to serve and work out their energy. Some need to meditate and quieten their
minds. Some need to just integrate good practices in their daily life, some
need to get away from it all. Arjuna cannot be prescribed ahimsa, he had war in
his heart. Mother Theresa cannot be prescribed atheism – she helped thousands
of children through her faith. To each his own.
Science is the new God:
That’s exactly the fanaticism atheists could be prone to – only their god has a
new name called science. But religion in fact has aided science – much
astronomy and mathematics of ancient India, much botany of medieval Europe were
due to religion. In a vibrant society, religion and science are two sides of
the same coin. Many practices that you call superstitious are actually quite
brilliant – the only pity is that those who practice them do not attempt to
understand them deep enough. Making rangoli early in the morning translates to
investing in good health, practicing kindness to the ants (offer them rice
powder) and starting the day with a burst of creativity (an intricate kolam can
really kickstart your brain, better than coffee!). But people stick kolam
stickers outside their homes and call it tradition! Is that the fault of
religion? I can give several examples of so-called superstition which is actually
phenomenally scientific but that would need a separate book.
If there is any lack, it is that the people who really understand,
do not speak of it much. And those who have half-baked info, start hawking
amulets on TV.
Children shouldn’t be taught religion: Far from it! They shouldn’t be taught
greed, materialism, vanity, superficiality, hatred, racism, sexism. Religion
puts the world in perspective. The best preparation for a child is a strong
grounding of Religion –including a view of all the religions of the world as
they get older. You know I don’t mean the dinning of scriptures, or the fear of
god. But showing them the wonder of creation, the beauty of the world, the
sacredness of all life, the ephemeral nature of existence, the value of truth,
love, honesty, the meaninglessness of money, power, greed – real religion does
a beautiful job of building character. I can vouch for it, because I had just
such a wonderful childhood. I also know traumatic childhoods filled with fear
of god – that is not religion I am afraid.
Atheism is the answer to the world’s
problems:
First, atheism is not new to the world. Richard Dawkins has but scratched the
surface. The ancient atheist philosophers were called charuvaka (charu – beautiful
, vak – speech) – those who spoke beautifully. And really, the arguments for
atheism are quite attractive, only they aren’t true. The problem is, they throw
the baby out with the bathwater. We didn’t ban electricity because the Nazis
misused it. We didn’t ban nuclear science because America bombed Japan. Don’t
ban god because man misused the word. In any case, whether man believes or not
in electricity, it exists. Likewise god. Or the principle of creation. Or the
beautiful symmetry of the world. Or the wondrous laws that hold up the cosmos.
In whatever way you dress your idea of the spiritual – it is equivalent to the
believer’s god.
Yes, many evils are perpetrated in the name of religion. Children
are bullied and scarred for life, adults kill each other. But let us assume for
a moment that are no religions in the world as of this moment. Collective human
memory of religion has been wiped out. Do you think people will not fight? That
there won’t be racism, sexism, bigotry, prejudice, discrimination? They will be
perpetrated in the name of a new identity – language, country, skin colour etc.
Humans gather in groups and subgroups, the instinct of group supremacy is
ancient, tribal and goes back to the time the monkeys came down and settled in
small groups and fought each other for resources. The real problem of man is
his quest for identity.
In conclusion: I love your ideas of spirituality, love, truth,
poetry, justice. My heart fills with dread when I see mindless violence on
little babies committed in the name of religion. But all evil perpetrated in
the name of religion is actually because of atheism. You know why? The Jews
were Christian-atheists, so they crucified Jesus. The Christians are
Islamic-atheists, hence the crusades. The Muslims are Hindu-atheists, so they
destroyed magnificent temples and sculptures. And so on. Real religion is
inclusive, vast, as expansive as the whole universe. If you want to change
politics, you have to get in it. Similarly, if you want to change religion, you
have to get into it. I wish we could start conversations around the real
meaning of our religions so they can be open for interpretation and questioning
for the next generation, so that religion can be rescued from the hardliners
who now claim it as if it is their property.
You say the problem with the world is there isn’t enough love. I
say the problem with the world is there isn’t enough god. But we are both
saying the same thing because my god is equal to your love.
--Update (16 August 2014): Part II of this letter is now up on the blog.
Comments
I guess multiplicity leads to choices and not all are equipped to make the right calls!
The fabric of religion has the same shades but they seem different to those who you term as the 'kolam' sticker users - who perhaps take pride in calling themselves believers!
Having a difference of opinion is good not knowing the bearing of opinion is the problem. The so called fundamentalists are given more by ignorance that belief.
The question is not about definitions or the difference in love and religion to me its about how do we drive change en-mass....
- Bedi
"...hose who have seen, do not talk about it and those who talk about it, have not seen it..."
So by that reasoning, Swami Ramakrishna hadn't seen. :-)
"But you can't see the waves, they exist, you'll tell them."
A callous misrepresentation of science. When a scientist claims the existence of waves, he/she can demonstrate the existence, through scientific experiments. The intersection between science and religion is the NULL set. To claim that the process of religion is "similar" to the process of science by making up a thought experiment which deliberately, willfully removes the ability to USE the scientific method (based on the move back in time) and putting the THOUGHT experiment (which is NOT the scientific method) to the test of popularity is plain dishonest. Mental gymnastics to argue science is a religion. It's not.
"...So does science."
Science doesn't deceive people.
People deceive people. Science is a tool to guard oneself against deception. Religion is a tool with which to deceive people.
"Real people of god are filled with compassion..."
The 'No True Scotsman' non-argument. Not acceptable as a defense. People may go through suffering. Every murderer can claim that he/she only wants to ensure the victim doesn't go through suffering. Claims of intentions are not useful when comparing religion with science.
"Science is the new God"
Science is based on evidence, following the scientific process. Religion is based on non-evidence, imagination. The intersection is the NULL set.
"Children shouldn’t be taught religion: "
Morality is more important than religion.
Religion may work for some people as a convenient substitute for morality, but at the core, religion is not equivalent to morality, much as the defenders of religion would try to claim otherwise.
"Atheism is the answer to the world’s problems:"
Doubt you'd find many atheists who claim so. Strawman.
"...he Jews were Christian-atheists, so they crucified Jesus. The Christians are Islamic-atheists, hence the crusades."
Oh my goodness. A killed B with a gun. You're saying the gun wasn't used by A as a tool to kill B, but that A was a "killing gun owner" rather than a "non-killing gun owner".
"my god is equal to your love"
And your god is not the god of the guy next door.
Thanks for reading and commenting!
- Deepa
My grouse is not with atheism - I accept all forms of belief and disbelief. My only contention is that religion is a useful tool for morality, goodness, love, peace, etc. All mischief comes from people. Like you said, people deceive people.
- Deepa