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Sermon - June 18, 2006
"Faith After Religion "
By the Rev. Judith E. Meyer
Unitarian Universalist Community Church
Santa Monica, California
June 18, 2006
There's a certain kind of discomfort I associate with interfaith gatherings
- earnest, constructive, and necessary as they are. The discomfort arises whenever
I hear people talk about what we hold in common. "We may have our differences," someone
will often say, but we all believe in God." This well-meaning expression
of unity always leaves me feeling awkward and somewhat dishonest. While such
an occasion is not the time to pipe up, "Actually, we don't all believe
in God," I'm quietly crossing my fingers. I understand the need to recognize
our similarities - I want to do that too - and yet I can't agree about which
ones they are.
Do I believe in God; do you? The question has become unanswerable for me. Not
because I cannot appreciate how little we know about the mystery of life; and
not because I cannot respect others' answers. I cannot answer the question
because belief - the idea of holding something to be true even though we cannot
prove it - just doesn't seem relevant to my faith. My problem is not with God,
an idea that is hard enough to grasp, but with believing in belief.
This is a key concept in Daniel C. Dennett's critique of religion, in his recent
book "Breaking the Spell." Religion asks us to believe in belief:
whether we take as truth one version of holy scripture or more simply, assume
that all people of faith believe in God. If we can't go along with these assumptions,
then is our Unitarian Universalist tradition something we can call a religion?
What are we doing here, in this sanctuary, if not affirming our faith?
If this sounds extreme, listen to this explanation. Dennett writes, "We
may be too close to religion to be able to see it clearly at first. This has
been a familiar theme among artists and philosophers for years. One of their
self-appointed tasks is to 'make the familiar strange,' and some of the great
strokes of creative genius get us to break through the crust of excessive familiarity
and look at ordinary, obvious things with fresh eyes. Scientists couldn't agree
more. Sir Isaac Newton's mythic moment was asking himself the weird question
about why the apple fell down from the tree. (‘Well, why wouldn't it?
asks the everyday nongenius; it's heavy!' - as if this were a satisfactory
explanation.)" So it is with religion. "To say that it is natural
is only the beginning of the answer, not the end," Dennett argues.
Dennett defines religions as "social systems whose participants avow belief
in a supernatural agent or agents whose approval is sought." His understanding
of religion is much the same as the one invoked at interfaith gatherings. But
where does it leave us? Whatever our varied and individual feelings about God,
prayer, or what happens after we die, we Unitarian Universalists do agree that
the scientific method is a valid search for truth. We are grounded in the same
world view that gave rise to Isaac Newton's discovery of gravity and Charles
Darwin's theory of evolution. As religious liberals, we see no conflict between
our faith tradition and scientific progress, except, perhaps, when we ask ourselves
what we really have in common with religion itself.
If that three-footed Martian were to look at our church, he or she or it would
see something very similar to the Lutheran church down the street. We have
a nicer church bell, but from the outside looking in, it's easy to see why
it looks like we belong to the same club. Our architecture, hymn tunes, and
rituals are similar to those of other Judeo-Christian faiths, not to mention
the fact that we meet on Sunday mornings. We should step back and see whether
we can reconcile who we really are with the trappings of religious tradition.
Liberal religion is grounded in the idea that faith should be open to new truth. "Revelation
is not sealed," our nineteenth-century predecessors liked to say. They
were excited about Darwin's discoveries and thought that reason and the power
of the intellect could only improve religious insights.
Our skepticism about the supernatural goes back a long way too. William Ellery
Channing preached in the early 1800's that one did not need to believe in the
divinity of Jesus in order to practice his ethical teachings. Thomas Jefferson
made himself a bible with all the miracle stories deleted. Henry David Thoreau,
Ralph Waldo Emerson, and others in the Transcendentalist movement insisted
on direct experience of the natural world as their spiritual path.
It's been a long time since we held in common anything that looked like a belief
in the supernatural. Even the theists among us are different. What many of
us might call God is much more likely to be associated with nature, than with
the deity of holy scripture.
And yet, the impulse to come together for worship; the need to celebrate rites
of passage - to name our children, sanctify the love of two persons, say farewell
to those who have died; the yearning to make a difference in the world through
service and prophetic witness - what is all this activity, if not our religion?
According to Daniel C. Dennett, it is a highly developed cultural idea, which
has evolved just as genes have evolved, and we are its stewards and hosts. "Breaking
the Spell" is all about how "the great ideas of religion," to
use Dennett's words, "have been holding us human beings enthralled for
thousands of years . . . ideas that spread from mind to mind, surviving translation
between different languages, hitchhiking on songs and icons and statues and
rituals, coming together in unlikely combinations in particular people's heads,
bearing family resemblances to the ideas that inspired them but adding new
features, new powers, as they go." We Unitarian Universalists have differed
in some significant ways from other faith traditions, but we are not immune
to the contagion of religious ideas.
I recommend this book to you all. It is a good reminder that the search for
truth is bracing and intensely honest, unsettling though that may be. Where
does that search lead us?
I ask these questions because I sense, at least in myself, some hesitancy about
the answers. I am, as the Martians observed, one of those "specialist
practitioners" supported by religion. As the shepherd of cultural ideas
grazing on our minds, I have an obligation to be clear about what this means
to me. Liberal religion as we Unitarian Universalists practice it may well
be a transition out of religion altogether. It's for a reason that we have
the old joke that Unitarian Universalism is a way station for people who have
left the Methodist church and are on their way to the golf course. The egalitarian,
life-affirming values we cherish are cultural ideas just as religious ideas
are, but they are open to examination and debate. When we come together for
services or celebrations, we strive to take the best of the old traditions
and enact them with contemporary meanings and language.
We are evolving too. Everything does. What we haven't quite articulated to
ourselves or others, however, is that we are evolving by what we learn - knowledge
of the world, of the self, of life, not by what we believe. We have a direction
- moving forward - that is leading us further and further away from traditional
understandings of religion. Something is going to be left behind, but much
more will be gained.
The faith we are in the process of creating - in the same manner, most likely,
as all cultural ideas have come about - is actively committed to the search
for truth, whatever the challenges. If this choice only heightens the difference
between us and other religious traditions, I say, so be it.
The benefits of traditional religion have lost out (in my mind) to its capacity
for violence, malevolence, and hate. I am tired of living in a world in which
religious wars and culture wars destroy lives and communities. Heightened religious
fervor seems to generate intolerance, not tolerance, resulting in a clash of
beliefs and people who will stop at nothing to enforce them.
I'm casting my lot - and my faith - with those who are willing to live without
the assurance of belief and willing to work with others to learn, understand,
and grow as human beings. I'm not going to give up on people.
I put my faith in our astonishing ability to search for truth, to see the world
in new ways, and to learn how to make it better. Is that a religion? It is
now. Why can't we set religion free from its dependence on belief, and help
it evolve so that it will free us all?
If we look again at this church, as a Martian might do, and listen to what
people say and watch what we do, we might understand quite quickly how different
we are. The human need to gather in community, to replicate rituals and customs
that comfort us and tie us to our ancestors, is only one facet of our faith.
We do share it with others, regardless of our other differences. But we are
here together because we are committed to the values by which we learn and
grow; the value of tolerance and an open mind, the value of searching for -
and facing - the truth, the value of cooperation not only for survival but
for peace, and the value of life itself, a gift we try to use wisely. There's
enough here to create a whole new faith, evolving out of our liberal religious
heritage, and leading to a new and better day. I won't go back. Then there
is only going forward.
The book on which this sermon is based is "Breaking the Spell: Religion
as a Natural Phenomenon," by Daniel C. Dennett (New York: Viking, 2006)
Copyright 2006, Rev. Judith E. Meyer
This text is for personal use only, and may not be copied
or distributed without the permission of the author.
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