The bumper sticker on the dirty Chevy S-10 in front of me
says simply, “Jesus is the answer.” Its simplicity belies the enormity of its
message: Jesus is the answer, so stop asking questions.
“Jesus is the answer,” and its equivalent thinking in other
religions, is what’s wrong with religion in the early 21st century:
it presumes to answer what cannot be answered; it presumes to know what cannot
be known; it shuts down the human capacity to imagine and create and think
outside the box whose very self-proclaimed importance depends on never opening
it, let along thinking outside of it.
Religion up until now has been about answers. Wars were
fought over competing answers. And once an answer got control of a society,
that society’s ability to think and evolve died.
If religion has a future—and that may be a big “If”—it will
have to reclaim the power to question. If clergy have a future, it will have to
shift from being the caste with the answers to the caste that helps you sharpen
your questions. If churches, synagogues, mosques, and temples have a future
they will have to reinvent themselves from communities with answers to
communities of shared questioning.
1 comment:
Yes!!!
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