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I Believe . . .
It appears there has been a recent
proliferation of books published (none of which I have read) on the
subject of defending or promoting atheism or giving the case against
religion and an even greater number of words written about them in
reviews, newspaper articles and journals, of which I have skimmed a
few. My main wonder is what all the fuss is about.
Except for creationists or similar it is generally accepted that the
Universe, of which Earth is one tiny speck, has been around for many
billions of years. Of the approximately two million years that
humans in some form have inhabited the earth, it is only a few
thousand years ago that their development led some groups to believe
they could influence nature by offering prayers and/or sacrifices.
Eventually there developed the various religions as we know them around
the world today which recognise either many gods, one god or none at
all.
The Peters World Atlas 2002 reveals interesting statistics. The ‘one
god’ school has numbers for Christianity at 22 percent and Islam 11
percent with Hinduism (many deities) at 10 percent. This shows 43
percent of the world’s population have belief in a religion which
recognises a god or gods. Interestingly there is no mention of Judaism
because it accounts for less than 1 percent of world population. A
search on the web shows Judaism to be ranked 12th with about 14 million
adherents worldwide which is less than ¼ percent of world
population. With other religions factored in, Buddhism 5 percent (no
concept of God), Confucianism 3 percent (ethical principles and no
hereafter), ‘Natural’ religions 4 percent and Shintoism 1 percent
(worship of ancestors and nature), it is shown that there is about 43
percent of the world’s population with no theist faith at all.
Historically coercion has been used to persuade the masses to accept
one religion or another. Military coercion in the form of raids and
invasions to expand territory resulting in gradual conversion of
populations, economic coercion in the form of higher taxes for
non-adherents and political coercion as in England between Catholic and
Protestant monarchs and later in communist states where all religion
was supposedly banned. Helping to keep the masses under the control of
the elites included such threats as excommunication, fear of not
winning a place in heaven – or worse, everlasting hell, or even death
by execution for reneging on the faith as during the Catholic
Inquisition and also in Islam.
Presumably much of the egocentricity in the west, with so much emphasis
on the three religions of the same god, Yahweh, God and Allah (together
accounting for 33 percent of world-wide population), is geographical.
In India the antagonism is mainly between Hinduism and Islam. Different
locations reveal different local problems as currently in the Middle
East between Islam and Judaism and also the sectarianism problems
between Shi’a and Sunni.
Wherever the accident of birth sees each child born, each individual is
born totally dependent and without language or religion. A child
develops speaking the language of its home. A child raised in a
religion-free zone will not acquire religious knowledge. For this to
occur it would need to be exposed habitually to ideas, concepts and
beliefs by those around it. How many people make a conscious choice of
religion and how many simply continue with what they were born into as
part of their traditional culture, religious or not?
As evolution marched on there came a point when this particular species
– human kind – developed the power of thought, separating it forever
from other species. Then came the questions. Why? What does it all
mean? What is life’s purpose? Perhaps this is where the divergence
between believers (in a theist sense) and believers (in a non-theist
sense) causes the greatest difficulties. Religionists usually talk of
atheists or those without religion in a negative sense as if they have
no belief or have rejected their (the religionists’) notions of a god.
I see it a different way. As an atheist I do have belief, – it is a
positive belief – in the universe as it is, as it evolved and as it
will continue to do. I could accuse the religionists of denigrating my
belief when they say that isn’t enough, but why bother, I don’t need
their validation.
I believe we don’t need to be intellectuals, philosophers, academics,
students of theology or popular authors to know how we feel about
religion and why we feel the way we do about world issues.
I believe that we should try to leave the world a better place than the
one into which we were born.
JANET SURMAN
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