In this series:
Related topics: |
"Can I Worship God in My Own Way?" |
||
IS "PRIVATE RELIGION"
|
|||
|
|
Our power of reason also tends to shy away from things that seem hopelessly vague and undefinable. However, when asked whether they believed in "God or a divine power," most people interviewed answered that "Something" of that sort might exist. One said: "I believe in something supernatural but not necessarily a God figure." Those who did believe in God felt that he "played a rather insignificant role in their life." The report thus described private religion as a "diffuse conceptual world," and it concluded by quoting one of the most common answers: "I believe in something, but I am not sure what."
A study of private religion in Canada showed similar results. The magazine Alberta Report observes: "We now see a high level of belief in almost anything imaginable, but there's no rhyme or reason to it. And when we then try to measure the sort of guidance these private beliefs play in people's lives, there's really nothing there. There's no ultimate moral authority. So it really doesn't add up to anything." The magazine spoke of "the fragmented god" because those espousing such beliefs are "grasping bits and pieces of the traditional creed." Does it strike you as sound reasoning to base religious beliefseven a hope for the futureon such vague, tenuous, and fragmentary ideas?
Fellowship, brotherhood, and solidarity have long been cherished by religious believers. (Acts 2:42, 46) But since private religion is just thatprivatehow can it fill these needs?
Doesn't private religion, with "every man his own church," only multiply and deepen the religious divisions among people? "Religion is now a matter of private
Swedish Bishop Martin Lönnebo points out in an interview with the newspaper Svenska Dagbladet that "private religion cannot enrich our age, and it has trouble transferring its values to a new epoch." This opinion finds a measure of confirmation in a common attitude among Swedish parents toward raising children. Svenska Dagbladet summarizes the attitude this way: "Believe what you want! And don't force your children to decide. But let them choose when they are old enough."
The newspaper acknowledged that providing children with religious values may be considered indoctrination. Yet, the paper concluded: "This handing over to children can be something good and may be the only way for
It seems, then, that private religion cannot offer reliable, consistent answers to life's questions, nor can it unite people or fill mankind's need for moral guidance. The previously quoted article in Svenska Dagbladet expressed this view of private religion: "When 'faith' contains everything, it contains nothing. And when freedom never needs to be defined, it is weakened."
Clearly, in many respects private religion falls short of satisfying the spiritual needs of people. Really, how could a person reasonably expect to fill such needs by simply selecting beliefs from various traditions, as if picking the most enticing dishes at a buffet table or smorgasbord? It also seems clear that organized religion has failed to fill such needs. Where, then, can we turn?
* Jesus did not teach that the dead are reincarnated. Rather, he taught that the dead are in a sleeplike state of nonexistence, awaiting a future resurrection.John 5:28, 29; 11:11-14.
Hindu idol: Photograph taken by courtesy of the British Museum
Appeared in Awake! April 22, 2002 |
Home | Beliefs | Future | Medical | Topics | Contact Us | Publications | Languages | Search | Index
Copyright © 2006 Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania. All rights reserved.