“God is
dead! God remains dead! And we have killed him. How shall we comfort ourselves,
the murderers of all murderers? What was holiest and mightiest of all that the
world has yet owned has bled to death under our knives: who will wipe this
blood off us? What water is there for us to clean ourselves? What festivals of
atonement, what sacred games shall we have to invent? Is not the greatness of
this deed too great for us? Must we ourselves not become gods simply to appear
worthy of it?”
Friedrich Nietzsche, The Gay Science
It is a question which won’t leave me alone,
like a scab which keeps on itching and demanding that I scratch it. In the
ordinary course of rationality, it should be a door I closed many years ago –
at the end of a long process, I admitted to myself that I did not believe in
God and this admission was, at the same time, honest, difficult, and
liberating. So why should I find myself continually coming back to it?
My arrival at non-belief was the end of a long
journey, one which had at least as much to do with the unfolding of my personal
story as it had with the arrival at the conclusion of a rational discussion.
That rational discussion was central;
I am a person for whom the application of intellect and understanding to
questions has always been of primary importance – I’m a head-type rather than a
belly-type. It was my head, primarily, that had led me – a believing Catholic –
to join the Dominican Order in my youth; the conviction that, if the Christian
message was true, then there could be nothing more important than to dedicate
my life completely to that truth.
In the nine years I spent in the Order, I
studied history, philosophy and theology and, the more I studied these
subjects, the more problems I developed intellectually with mainstream Catholic
and Christian thinking. But, for one with growing doubts, a theology study can
be useful, for it provides one with the intellectual framework and conceptual
possibilities to redefine that which one professes as faith (within a
particular tradition) so that it continues to be intellectually acceptable. The
70s and the 80s (when I was going through this process) was a particularly good
time for such exercises – there was a tendency towards openness, intellectual
experiment, testing the borders within the Catholic Church, the consequences of
the opening of the windows with the Second Vatican Council, initiated by Pope
John XXIII. For the survival of the faith of most intelligent, reasonable
people, such an openness was vital. Can you really accept that the world was
created in seven days, six thousand years ago and that Adam and Eve, our
ultimate ancestors, fucked everything up by eating an apple? You don’t have to;
these kinds of stories were the way pre-scientific societies with very
different perception of the world explained things. The central message is that
God is responsible for the “world,” his creation, loves it, cares for it, has a
specific plan and goal for it and humanity has developed trouble in its
co-operation with the achievement of this goal. There was a lot of talk of salvation history as opposed to literal,
“real” history.
A useful – and indeed necessary – way of
thinking for intelligent believers. It allows you to make use of much wider
categories of talking about truth; symbolism, metaphor, deeper meaning, etc. It
permits the use of (more or less) scientific methodology with reference to
faith matters – archaeology, textual criticism, hermeneutics, for example. The
question arises, however, about how far you can take this mind-set. What about
the “virgin birth” of Jesus – does this really mean that Jesus didn’t
(couldn’t) have a human, biological father? Are the depictions of the miracles
of Jesus in the scriptures to be taken as literal descriptions of what really
happened? And what does it really mean to speak of the “resurrection” of Jesus;
is this some kind of proto-zombie Dawn of the Dead story or has it more to do
with the communal realisation among Jesus’ followers that the man and his
message – in some powerful sense – lives on?
There are hundreds of such questions which can
be asked and discussed, and they map out the territories in which intelligent,
thinking, questioning believers work out and define their understanding and
expression of their faith. The alternative is to become a literal,
unquestioning fundamentalist, praising Jesus and waiting for the rapture.
Such an approach brings other problems with it
though. Where do you set the boundaries? In Catholicism these are officially
set by tradition, enshrined in the “official” teaching of the Church, residing
ultimately in the Councils of the Church, the bishops, and the pope – known as
the Magisterium. However, the authority of this
Magisterium, as defined by itself, is extremely extensive and generally very
stringent and, it can be argued, implicitly not accepted in this form by the
majority of Catholics and quite a large component of theologians, priests and
people deeply engaged in the Church. It certainly wasn’t accepted in this form
by me, during my time as a “professional” Catholic.
One well known example makes this clear. The official
teaching on birth control is clear and has been pretty consistently propagated by
almost every official incidence of the Magisterium ever since Pope Paul VI
published the encyclical Humanae Vitae in 1968. Basically, it teaches that the use of artificial contraception – the
pill and condoms in particular – is wrong. Period. Millions of Catholics – and
tens of thousands of their pastors – have simply ignored this for over forty
years.
I would like to be able to claim that my break
with the Catholic Church came as a result of the development of my thinking
with regard to Catholic doctrine and my own intellectual journey to a stage
where I finally reached the conclusion that my rational convictions had reached
the point at which I could no longer reconcile my position with that of the
Catholic Church in a number of fundamental areas and thus felt myself forced to
formally sever my connections with that organisation. It’s not true. Rather, in
common with not a few others, I fell in love, found that it was impossible for
me to continue living according to the Catholic requirement of priestly
celibacy (even if interpreted in a very “liberal” fashion, as a prohibition of
a deeper relationship with another person, expressed sexually, rather than a
complete blanket prohibition of any kind of sexual activity), and just quit.
In the end, a decision based on the heart and
not on the head.
* * *
Fast
forward, fourteen years later. During this time, my religious faith, my
obsession with God, has receded somewhat; I’ve been too busy dealing with more
practical aspects of life. I had formally converted to the Lutheran-Reformed
denomination of Christianity, the mainstream variety of Protestantism in the
region of Germany
in which I live, but had never really become seriously involved in the life of
that church. To be honest, part of my motivation to this step was purely
practical; I had trained as a geriatric nurse, and around three quarters of the
institutions involved in this work in Germany were church-run – I had a
family to take care of and a career to get going.
Things
weren’t going well; my marriage had broken down, work was going badly and I was
coming to the realisation that my long-time, deep relationship with alcohol had
also become completely destructive (for me, the alcohol would certainly
survive). After a lot of suffering, I finally put my hands up and took my first
shaky steps down the road generally characterised by regularly meeting others
with the same problem in a group and saying, “I’m Francis and I’m an alcoholic.”
It’s a
stage of your life – if you’re unfortunate enough to finish up there – where
you really hit bottom. In this situation, there’s a strong tradition of
throwing yourself into God’s hands; admitting that you don’t have the power to
cure yourself and that you need help from a higher power. The first three of
the famous Twelve Steps formulated by the founders of
Alcoholics Anonymous are as follows:
1. We admitted we were powerless over
alcohol—that our lives had become unmanageable.
2. Came to believe that a Power greater than
ourselves could restore us to sanity.
3. Made a decision to turn our will and our
lives over to the care of God as we understood Him.
Fortunately,
I was desperate enough at that stage to try anything – fortunately, I say,
because I am convinced that the only way to recovery is the absolute admission
that you are incapable of dealing with this problem on your own and need help.
If someone had told me then that planting cabbages upside-down in the garden
and then dancing around them naked waving a feather-rattle would help, I’d have
been prepared to try that too.
But in
another sense I was also fortunate because I found a self-help group (and,
believe me, if you’re trying to kick an alcohol addiction, a self-help group is
almost essential to survive those first few “dry” years), which, although it
took a lot from the AAs, was consciously non-religious and non-theistic. I
describe this as fortunate, because there was one aspect of the AA concept
which definitely didn’t apply to me – the “Higher Power” thing.
It is the
classic approach to that rock-bottom phase of alcohol addiction that when you
find yourself in that empty, desolate wasteland of the realisation of what
alcohol has done to you, where you look around that inner desert and see only the
various parts of your life and soul that you have wrecked and poisoned under
the influence of alcohol, you finally cry out to that “Higher Power” and find
yourself, in some sense, supported, carried, borne up by It.
In the
words of Psalm 130 (De Profundis), “Out of the depths I cry to you, O Lord,
Lord, hear my voice.” In my desperation I called out to the God, my obsession
with whom had determined so much of what had happened in my life and, I like to
believe, my call was honest and sincere. And the answer I received was … Nothing. Nada. Zilch. I felt alone; the God to whom I had called in honest
despair was supremely absent.
The strange
thing was the result of the realisation that God was not there for me, that the
Loving Father in whom I thought I believed was not giving me his grace, his
comfort, his support – it was a feeling of deep relief, of liberation. Much of
the conflict, the intellectual, moral and emotional struggles which had
influenced my life so deeply, fell away in that moment. I felt like an
astronomer at the end of the 16th century, driven half mad by the complicated
mathematics involved in predicting the movements of the planets according to a
geocentric model, first encountering Copernicus’ heliocentrism. Following this deeply subjective
experience, I was able to revisit all the intellectual discussions and
positions I had taken up to now and apply my new, improved, personalised model
of Occam’s razor. I accepted that, as I did not believe in either the divinity
or resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth, I could no longer call myself a
Christian. Moving on from that, I realised that I did not find the rational arguments
for the traditional theistic arguments for a God personally concerned for and
involved in the universe he/she had putatively created intellectually
convincing. I spent a while longer in a kind of minimalist “watchmaker” deism, before realising that – for me
– the various arguments pointing out the flaws in this analogy (and other
formulations of the teleological argument for God’s existence) made
sense.
And so, I
realised that, for all practical purposes, I had become an atheist.
* * *
This essay
has become more personal (and lengthy J) than I had envisaged when I began
writing it: That the question of “God” still fascinates me has, I think, much
to do with my own personal history – and this is how it should be. For we are
formed in our deepest attitudes, beliefs and intellectual positions by much
more than just the rational part of our selves. In the end, it is our whole
experience and history which make us what we are and, much as we often like to
deny it, all the various aspects of our personality – including our “rationality”
– are not hermetically sealed off from each other but are constantly dialoguing
with and influencing each other.
It is this
realisation which makes so many of the arguments between “believers” and “atheists”
(and you can find a plethora of them on the web) so unsatisfying. Ostensibly
rational, in fact nearly all of the protagonists have no real interest in
seriously listening to what their opponents are saying, which is why one of the
most common debating fallacies trotted out by both sides is that of the strawman. Proponents of the New Atheism (particularly Richard Dawkins) are
just as guilty of resorting to this position as their opponents, who regularly
resort to describing atheists as “immoral” and “spiritually impoverished” –
though I will readily admit that the tone taken by believers with (dis)respect
to atheists can frequently be seen as extreme provocation of the latter. And if
you have trouble believing this, then I recommend that you just tune in to the
current fight for the Republican presidential nomination in the USA , where,
apparently, for a large proportion of Americans, atheists are in the same category
as rapists.
At the
beginning of this post, I placed Nietzsche’s famous “God is dead” quotation,
intentionally extending it beyond its first three words so as to show something
more of what the author was trying to say. The “killing” of God is not an easy option; it is a challenge to
find grounds for order, morality, beauty and transcendence without
short-cutting to a “Heavenly Father” (whose existence, purpose and will – in the
Christian iteration at any rate – are ultimately more a matter of faith than
reason). And it is a challenge to which most atheist thinkers rise
magnificently.
Pictures retrieved from:
This was very interesting to read. What interests me most is the fact that people actually care whether or not another person believes in God. People believe in God for a reason, whether that reason be that they were raised in church or had some life-altering event that made them rethink their priorities. Regardless, it doesn't really matter because: 1. God is relevant. 2. The foundation of our country no longer --if it ever did-- depends on God or religion as a base. God is a loosely based term that is different for anyone. It could be a different religion, or God could just be perceived and embraced differently by others. So it seems that the ones who are advocating the following of God are only doing so because they don't like the idea that someone isn't doing what they think is right; all the while being completely ignorant of the fact that the other persons opinions matter. Secondly, our country is no longer based on a religion. We do not operate based on a religious viewpoint and we certainly do not act as a christian would supposedly act. Instead we seem to only touch on the idea of religion when it is convenient. This can be both in political debates (because I see it to be reasonable to assume that an atheist would not refuse to vote for a christian, but a christian would want to vote for another christian), or when attempting to make our country seem better. Any thoughts?
ReplyDeleteYou wrote: "I accepted that, as I did not believe in either the divinity or resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth, I could no longer call myself a Christian."
ReplyDeleteI didn't know belief in divinity or resurrection was required for one to call himself or herself a Christian. I thought all I had to do was follow the teachings of the man called Christ, to do my best to live a life as close to his example.
In either case, though, after reading your post here, I would have to say I am not a Christian, either. As for the Christ's progenitor, I haven't a clue as to what, who, or even if, God is.
Good post.
Hey Frances, I have always liked that Joan Osborn song. I’m not sure why.
ReplyDeleteBut yours and my story are loosely similar. I grew up very religious and had the same thought as you. If God was real, what could be better to study than him. In high school and early college I spent a lot of time think about God. For me it was not all the reasons for or against God that made me stop believing, it was that despite my sincere beliefs and efforts, God did not answer my prayers. I’ve never had problems with alcohol but I had some difficult social problems and lots of depression. Thinking back, I never felt any help from praying, I only felt desperation.
Twenty-five years later, I too am still fascinated by God. Or perhaps more precisely I am fascinated in the belief of God, that so many believe in him. I have become an amateur student of ancient religion, religion before the first century CE. I think you might find it interesting too. Almost everything about Jesus was borrowed from other from the common religions of that time and mystery religion cults of that time. I suggest reading Harold R Willoughby, especial his article on Isis, a very popular cult of Jesus’ time.
Anyway, the point is that I know where you are coming from. I think the one thing religion does well is give hope. It is hard to give that up.
Karen Armstrong has been one of my favorite writers for a long time. Among a number of other books about spirituality and religion 'A History of God', 'Muhammed', and 'Buddha' are in my permanent baggage/collection. Your essay reminded me of her second autobiography, 'The Spiral Staircase' - the first, 'Through The Narrow Gate' was about her early experience during seven years becoming a Catholic nun. I'm sure you must know her work but you may not have read either of them. In case you haven't I'll try to summarize as briefly as I can.
ReplyDeleteBy the time she left the convent she was an emotional and physical wreck who described herself a few years later: "I was an ex-nun, a failed academic, mentally unstable, and now I could add epileptic to this dismal list. ... Even God, for whom I had searched so long, is simply the product of a faulty brain, a neurological aberration."
Although she tried to put God behind she found he would never quite go away and she eventually faced her demons by writing about religion. Faith, she learned, is not an intellectual understanding but an act of will, a deliberate choice to believe. Believers (she states many times she isn't one although does add that every so often she feels a little frisson of grace) can't prove or disprove their doctrines, but must consciously decide to take them on trust.
As a nun she had never been able to connect with God through prayer as there was no one at the other end. It wasn't until many years later she came to understand religion as a moral aesthetic that required practice rather than belief. In other words, if you behave certain way you will be transformed. The myths and laws of religion aren't true because the conform to some scientific or historical reality but because they are life enhancing.
On the very last page, Karen looks down to find that, while she has climbed out of darkness, she has come full circle. The Spiral Staircase. "As I go up, step by step, I am turning, again, round and round, apparently covering little ground, but climbing upward, I hope, toward the light."
I found her story and conclusions to be very helpful for my own spiritual search and practice.
I feel greatly honoured that you lay bare so many layers of your life in this space, and that I'm allowed – amongst your other readers – to delve into your story time and again. I was deeply touched by this post exactly because of its very personal point of view. And I agree with you when you say that "Killing God" is a difficult and hard step for each and every one of us. It seems so strange, somehow, that believers have so often reproached me to "have chosen the easy road". "My relationship with God is like any other relationship," someone has once said to me, "I have to work hard, every day, constantly, to make it work out." That happened back when I had that job in the Catholic publishing house here in Paris; the speaker was a German theologist, and he was adamant about him trotting done, barefoot, the long and winded path whereas I was driving down the easy highway. He was arrogant and smug. He had all the answers. And he made me loose my job in the end, plotting and scheming like a real Jesuit (although he was benedictine). I've never understood his strange double-morals and hypocrisy. I've never understood why he looked down on me. I mean, I've always found it hard to cope with being so utterly alone, so utterly the sole responsible for what's going on in my life and where this my life is heading. I would have liked to be able to kneel down, fold my hands, say a prayer. And – most importantly – BELIEVE IN IT. But I can't. My father died, buried under an avalanche? My, tough for me, but I had to go through it alone, all the while trying to be there for my mother and sister. I was diagnosed with a long-term illness? Well, I'll have to cope with it, all alone, till the end of my life. No soothing ritual for me. Because I can't, I just can't believe. I was raised a lukewarm Catholic, Austrian-style, and left the Church when I was 21 because it had been years that I had stopped having faith.
ReplyDeleteNow, today, do I have faith? Yessir, in me, most of the time. And, without too much hope, in mankind. And in God? Uhm, no, sorry, it won't work for me.
I wish you the very best, as always. D.
This has to be a fascinatingly written essay, as I don't think otherwise I'd read one with this very topic from start to finish.
ReplyDeleteAs for Nietzsche's "Fröhliche Wissenschaft" (1882): One cannot kill what does not exist, can one?
123 years later (2005), according to the blurb gracing the German edition, "der große Radikale unter den Denkern der Gegenwart" (the great radical amongst the contemporary thinkers), Michel Onfray proudly presents his 'Traité d'athéologie. Physique de la métaphysique', and thus gives evidence of that seemingly / obviously still (most) intellectuals are intelligent people without sanity, as:
to believe that something non-existent does not exist and write books against this very non-existant something, is at least as strange as worshipping what does not exist. Hm?
May I add that (it is said) my German is less bad than my English?
Your essay on God or “god” was comforting to me. Comforting may seem like a strange word to use, but I find so few people including myself, ready to share at the level you are capable of sharing. Growing up, God was the focus, the hub of life with my ultra Catholic Dad. Perhaps religion took on such importance to him because it was all he had of the Ireland he left behind. For him, the local Catholic Church became a home away from home. It protected him from Pub life, and provided a celibate social support network. What more does a good Irishman want of life but to keep those irascible instincts under control.
ReplyDeleteIn retrospect, I know that the decisions I made in my life – not all great decisions, and a few that would guaranteed an eternity in hell if I accepted that premise, were circumscribed by my upbringing and my genes. I can look back now and realize that I was either trying to conform to, or react against the messages I absorbed (rightly or wrongly) while growing up. It took many decades of searching for what I believed was a meaningful life before I was ready to let go of a “god” who ran the gamut of being severely judgmental, irresponsibly narcissistic or callously uncaring. Slowly I began to come to the realization that I won the lotto by being alive. Just think of the odds of a “you” being born in this universe of ours! Amazing! Gradually I began to feel OK about letting go of “GOD” and not find I had created a vacuum in my psyche. It would be ever so nice to have answers to the questions of life. I don’t expect I ever will, and that’s OK with me. What I do believe is that each person’s journey is unique, and can tell us something about our humanity. And even if these billions of bits of information could be fitted together as pieces of a puzzle, I doubt our brains could fathom the mega view that the finished product presented.
But that doesn’t lessen the intrigue of our life journeys. Each time we bump into charisma –that transcendent energy that enlightens us- and maybe even rewires us, whether the source of the charisma be an experience, an idea, a person, a group, a practice, our journey is changed. Unfortunately, one’s charisma can be another’s terror. And so the struggle continues. I just hope for us all that we can relax a little more, fight a little less, replace the stupidity of being judgmental with the wisdom that emanates from a good belly laugh, and simply try to focus on the brevity of our lives.
“A life spent making mistakes is not only more honorable, but more useful than a life spent doing nothing. ”
ReplyDeletethis was a quote by George Bernard Shaw. ...one if my favorites.