Monday, December 7, 2020

On Adler's "Religion," Part II

[Commentary on the essays in Felix Adler, Life and Destiny, "Religion," pp. 17-27.]

¶ Religion has been so eager to supply us with information concerning the universe outside of us, its origin and its destiny, because our life is linked with that of the universe, and our destiny is dependent on the destiny of the universe.


¶ The dependence of man on outside forces which he cannot control is the point of departure of religion.


Close, but no cigar, I would say.  


It is difficult without being flooded with images from fiction and films, not to mention Western cultural biases, to imagine that moment when our far distant ancestors became human.  What they experienced had to begin in infancy within a band that was not entirely human.  At some point, however, the first human(s) began to see the surrounding environment, to experience the impact of natural forces beyond his/her control or comprehension, and to think in a different mode from his/her own parents about self and world.  Some basic questions may already have been answered in the family band.  Where can I find food?  How can I keep warm?  I am, at this moment, keenly interested in the prospects for a sexual encounter with my neighbor.  How can I make that happen?


Such questions deal with fundamental human needs, with technology and environment, with social organization.  So does religion, but not quite, I think, in the way that Adler frames it.  Adler speaks of religion as if it is a source of authority over human lives:  Religion, he says, “supplies us” with information.  Religion is, I assert, a human construct.  As such, it is humans who construct the religion that then informs us of how we are to see the universe and live in it.  Humans, then, are the source of authority over their own human lives, reflected in a myriad of beliefs about who, what, when, where, how, and why their piece of the universe came about and continues to function.


Let’s take Adam and Eve.  In some belief systems, Adam and Eve are First Man and First Woman.  In other belief systems, there are others who fill those roles, some more ancient than Adam and his rib.  So Eve, sometimes called a temptress, decided (Genesis 3:6) to eat a fruit which had been forbidden to her and Adam.  She did so because she was informed, by The serpent, that The local deity had lied when he told her that she would die if she touched the tree or ate the fruit.  Without any particular evidence that The serpent was more trustworthy than The local god, Eve nonetheless exercised her reason on three points:  (1) the fruit was good to eat; (2) the fruit looked appetizing, and (3) both The god and The serpent said that she would gain wisdom if she ate the fruit--and she wanted to be wise.  Then she did a very human and ethical thing:  She shared the fruit with her husband.  Adam took the food from his wife’s hand, as he had presumably done before, and, without considering The god’s prohibition, ate it.


True, not true, it’s a myth (see definition 1).  The point of the story--in the tradition of those who believe it--is to assert the power and authority of the deity to command obedience, to explain the causes of certain natural phenomena (the pain of childbirth, why snakes have no legs, etc.), and to justify patriarchy (women are to be blamed for the Original Sin and can never be trusted, they have poor judgment, they lead men astray, etc.).  The earlier chapters of Genesis did link humans on the planet Earth to the vastness of the known (and unknown) universe, but the major function of the text is to lay out social order and cloak it in religious terms.  This function was a positive one as long as those in the society believed the stories, including their origin and their authority.


Believing the stories also included interpreting the stories in a particular way.  Even without reading Genesis 3:6 in the original language, we can see the various translations trending in the same direction.  Eve thought about the fruit:  She was tempted vs. she reasoned. Eve gave the fruit:  Eve shared with Adam vs. Eve tempted Adam.  Which was it? Look at the story with a different interpretation and we see Eve as caring, sharing, thinking, reasoning.  Instead of blindly following the orders of an authority figure, she gets a second opinion and decides to rely on her own agency to gain benefit for both herself and her husband.  The bad guy in the story is not the Old Deceiver who now crawls on his belly, but the deity that promised death but delivered exile.


This story is central to at least three major religious systems.  The interpretation of the role of Eve in the Garden of Eden has been determinative of social order and gender roles in those systems for millennia.  Yet it is not Religion (or even religions) that interpret Eve’s behavior as an archetype for all women:  It is humans who do so.  In those early days (centuries) when humans began to try to understand the world around them, there were observations followed by questions, questions followed by stories, stories follows by beliefs and norms and a social order that reflected and depended upon the structure created by human curiosity, ignorance, and determination to bring order out the chaos of existence--even if it was wrong.  Substitute “humankind” for “religion” (plus some grammatical finesse) and these statements come closer to what we now know of science and history.


¶ [Humankind] has been so eager to supply us with information concerning the universe outside of us, its origin and its destiny, because our life is linked with that of the universe, and our destiny is dependent on the destiny of the universe.


¶ The dependence of [humankind] on outside forces which [we] cannot control is the point of departure of [our creative construction of] religion.


In the former statement, as edited, I think that we are now looking at a simple truth. Humans are part of the universe, curious about it, and are understandably interested in finding out more about it. Looking at the material universe as a scientific puzzle to be solved, we eagerly await the news of space exploration and and the new understandings we may gain.  We are not reliant on some outside source (religion) for our understanding of what is discovered through science.  We know that there is more to discover, and we can live with lack of information while we seek our answers.

The latter statement is my own conception of religion, something closer to home, something  more directly related to our daily lives, which are subject to forces of nature in our environment and in our bodies, where we still seek understanding within our desire to be better persons and live better lives.  In Ethical Culture that desire includes the added dimension of becoming better persons through the work of making the world better for others.  For other religions, that desire may include dependence on a deity for guidance and security, clear statements of permission and prohibition, set rewards and punishments for behaviors that meet (or fail to meet) prescribed standards.  As a religion, Ethical Culture may seem uncomfortably unstructured, but it is a religion that forces us to be self-reliant, to seek understanding, but also to adjust our thoughts and actions as we learn.  Our responsibility is not to a deity but to each other.  I can live with that.


Friday, December 4, 2020

Context for Comments on Adler's "Religion"

I should have written a context post to explain my commentary on Felix Adler's statements in "Religion," a collection of bon mots from his various lectures published in Life and Destiny in 1908.  Ethical Culture Leader Randy Best is now (December 2020) leading a seminar (Fundamentals of Ethical Culture) focusing on Life and Destiny.  I joined with 20-odd others to participate in the first session this week, and "Religion" was one of the two collections of quotations that we discussed.

The quotations collected are from Adler's early career as an Ethical Culture Leader and do not necessarily reflect his views as he developed as a Leader and philosopher.  These early thoughts were, nonetheless, sufficient to spark a movement that grew both in the US and abroad.  Reading them, I found much to inspire--and some to argue with.  

As a comparative neophyte in Ethical Culture, I have developed some understanding of what EC is about at the same time I recognize that my own experiences and personal history affect and inform that understanding.  I have, while neglecting this blog in the busy-ness of working within my own Society and the American Ethical Union, continued to read and study various writings that reflect the history and development of EC.  

Two things have now converged to inspire me to write again:  This seminar and the resurrection of the Ethical Humanist Study Group.  The seminar has been a pleasure, allowing for discussion among several individuals dedicated to learning more about its topic.  The stimulus of Adler's writing could happily lead us into hours of discussion.  Unfortunately, after two hours, we must part ways and go back to our lives. I found myself reluctant to do so.  I wasn't through thinking about these quotations.  Lacking the opportunity for further discussion in the seminar, I felt a strong pressure to begin writing about what I was thinking.  I publish my thoughts here in the hope of some further dialogue.  

I can't honestly say that I will return to regular blogging now or that I will "respond" to each and every one of Adler's statements in Life and Destiny or even in this particular section on Religion.  I do, however, think that I will try to write as many responses as I can because it helps me clarify my thoughts and is, above all, a means to learn more about Ethical Culture.

EHSG starts on December 20.  I have "challenged" my partner in this work, Jasmine Morris, to write complementary essays on what we learn/discover/think as we go through our syllabus.  She's a fine writer and a keen thinker, so that will be an interesting complement to our study.

Oh, and one more thing.  After four years in Ethical Culture, I look back at this blog, as brief as its existence has been, with some pride.  I am not so thrilled with the title.  I cannot without a great deal of effort change the URL, so I am stuck with "hoedown" for the foreseeable future.  I did change the title to be more reflective of present circumstances:  I am even more of a happy human than ever; I hope I am more Ethical.

On Adler’s “Religion," Part I

[Commentary on the essays in Felix Adler, Life and Destiny, "Religion," pp. 17-27.]


¶ Religion is a wizard, a sibyl. She faces the wreck of worlds, and prophesies restoration. She faces a sky blood-red with sunset colours that deepen into darkness, and prophesies dawn. She faces death, and prophesies life.


The poetry of this passage is achingly beautiful.  It provides an apt description of the solace that one’s own religious beliefs can provide in times of trial and uncertainty.  Humans are almost always anxious in their inability to see the future and need hope to survive the present moment.  Adler reminds us that religious belief offers hope when we are most fearful.  Whether the hope is realistic or practical is irrelevant.  The emotional need to believe that things might get better, that the crisis might pass, that harm might be averted is deep.  Without hope we can be paralyzed by our fears, unable to think or act in any productive way.  If we can see disaster and hope for restoration, we are more able then to begin the work of restoring.  


So, too, faced with death--for ourselves or for those we care about--the promise of a new life in some other dimension can ease the passage from one state to another.  We face the loss of a parent, but are comforted that our mother has “gone to a better place,” without pain or suffering.  We can see ourselves without her, ourselves transformed into a new role or status (orphan, adult, bereaved), and begin the work of living in ways that include the certainty that our loved one is now safe, our lives no longer directly intertwined or interdependent, our responsibility for care and protection now ended.


While the hope that religion provides is a positive function, Adler labels religion in magical and mythical terms.  A wizard--a magician--is no scientist.  Rather she (as Adler characterizes her) is a deceiver, who distorts our sense of reality with ritual words and artifacts and actions to see what is not there, what did not happen, at least not by the forces and powers represented as active in the event.  A sibyl--an oracle, a fortune teller--is the product of legend and literature.  Also a deceiver, a sibyl, inspired by some supernatural being while in a trance state, predicts the future.  Religion gives us a certain future as a promise from a higher power, but a future from a point in time when we will no longer be able to report the truth of the prediction.


In elegant images, Adler presents us with a clear understanding of the nature of religion as beautiful, comforting, and false.  One wonders if he got carried away with his rhetoric.  Taken alone, this statement would condemn all religion for all time as a mere crutch for the gullible.  Yet we know that Adler was founding a new religion for a new time--one which could even change as its practitioners changed with new knowledge and new experience.  


Ethical Culture is definitely a religion (although not all Ethical Culturists identify themselves as religious). Even in terms of these glowing images prefaced by the names of charlatans, Ethical Culture gives us “restoration,” “dawn,” and “life.”  Restoration, we know, can come in several forms; Ethical Culture invites us to repair and restore our lives, our environment, our community--to build and make better that which time and recklessness and cruelty have damaged.  We are invited to restore our neighbor in her loss so that our own spirit can be restored by sharing the loss as well as the work of repair and renewal.  Dawn comes with each new day and the new knowledge it brings, the new opportunities it presents, the new experiences it dispenses.  Beyond the literal rising of the sun, there is the dawning of understanding as we commit ourselves to learning more about our world, each other, ourselves.  Ethical Culture invites us to new dawns--to see the day as a rich library for the spirit and the mind and to open each hour, as a book, with a will to discover the insights it can provide.  As for life, Ethical Culture allows us to seek our own answers to the question of “What happens after I die?” while it challenges us to use the time until that moment to live life today--mindfully, intentionally, joyful in the moment.  None of these “gifts” of Ethical Culture come with magic or supernatural sanction.  Instead they come from within ourselves and our connection to community.


Adler did condemn religions that are static, frozen in time, unable to meet the demands of change and progress and any new facts of science.  He did not, however, condemn Religion, seeing the human need for hope and having a practical idea for meeting that need in this world, this life.