The Modern Relevance of God
Finding Meaning in an Inverted World
This is episode 12 of the Modern Relevance of God audio course here on Thinking with Somebody Else’s Head. I’m Richard Lloyd Jones.
I think one of the greatest difficulties I’ve had in coming closer to spirituality has been a pretty common one: mixing up God with religion. If God was all the mess stirred up by the church over the centuries, I wanted nothing to do with Him. It’s a frequent oversimplification, one which doesn’t require that much thinking actually. Just a knee jerk generalization in the same vein as all Chinese people look the same. And just as lacking in sophistication.
God never created a church after all. Neither did Jesus. This is something we do a lot. A phrase uttered by a politician whose party we don’t like is worthless and evil, by definition. The Montreal Canadians are hated by Toronto Maple Leafs fans automatically.
And vice versa.
I heard a Serbian soldier in Bosnia back in the war years there say, “The Croatians are animals. I can’t even bear to breathe the same air as them.” And that after centuries of integration and intermarriage.
We have this black and white mentality, which serves us well in life threatening situations: “The fire is there, so I’m going over here,” but this on/off, zero/one digital mind is very poor at the more complex and subtle abstractions we require when considering meaning of life questions. So lumping God and religion together as one pathological partnership to be vehemently discarded is a little too smug.
Anyway, I want to suggest that this attack is not only against the Church; it’s against the spiritual values that the church — for all its faults — preserves for us. And that is much more problematic.