Human beliefs, like man's knowledge, science and technology, advance
with the centuries. Religion predates history, and has always engaged mankind's
particular affection and attention. Language, writing, and means of livelihood
have all progressed in parallel with man's mental and spiritual growth.
They wax and wane, as is the human condition. Religions multiplied; deities
proliferated. Some were represented as imaginary beings, some as animals,
then some as humans; and so step by step ascended towards the metaphysical,
the spiritual, and the transcendent, to the ultimate reality of the Unity.
Knowledge and religion had similar lowly origins. It is debatable whether
man's road to spirituality was harder than his path to science and morality.
Tangible entities are easier to accept than ideas; the seen world easier
to grasp than the unseen. Aeons are required for minds to rise to the heights
needed for knowledge of the Divine. The sun, the most obvious of objects,
shines on all. Yet analysis of its composition and conformation has been
reached only after the creation and abandonment of innumerable hypotheses.
Despite the sun's light, the truth behind the hypotheses remained in darkness.
This darkness was not due to depravity or depression of thought. Science
and knowledge were equally backward and had to go through the same eras
of myth and superstition as the philosophies and beliefs of our forebears.
Myths and legends gave savage tribes their creeds and developed their
morality. Slowly knowledge and experience attained a level capable of grasping
the unity and orderliness of creation and the mathematical perfection of
relations between natural phenomena.
From these man deduced that all obeyed the will of a single unique Creator,
One Totally Other, unlike any visible object. He deduced that every effect
has its own separate cause, and posed an independent creation for each
phenomenon. They went further. In early stages they imagined that such
creations, or creators, had the form or appearance of animals. Speculations
advanced through man to spirits and eventually to the One.
Research through all regions and eras shows that this progress is an
expression of the essence of the nature of man as much as language, thought,
and customs.
The faculty which distinguishes man from all other animals is his mind.
A newborn infant manifests this power of mind. As its body grows, so do
its mental muscles. They develop as observation, reflection, comparison,
deduction, imagination, prognosis and cognition. Just as the physical must
be tended and trained, so must the mind. And just as the physical community
of the political and world state must be advanced by united effort, so
also must the intellectual ethical, philosophical, and scientific community-mind
of mankind be advanced by mutual endeavour.
During the millennia of human existence, man has developed a store of
ideas which had deepened, widened, and enhanced century by century. Finally
this store became so enriched and supplied that faith and conviction were
generated. This was a great advancement for man as each discovery in turn
had been.
It brought into being a new era in history, giving purpose to existence
in pursuit of values not before recognised.
Despite science's admission, on the basis of historical research, that
the religious sense is one of the oldest of human qualities, differing
ideas are held as to its origins and how it arose. Some hold that humanity
felt the sense of oppression at its weakness and impotence vis-à-vis
the forces of nature and of living creatures, and so turned to religion.
But weakness cannot explain religion. The source of faith is not feebleness.
The firmest believers are not feeble and frail. The saints and prophets
who put humanity on the road to faith and assurance were people of greater
resolve, will, force, and religious faith than anyone else.
What power could have armed these noble personalities in their holy
strife against rebellion, evil, and corruption? Could expectation of material
gain or of political success strengthen them to endure the bitterness of
tragedy, persecution, and opposition? Never!
So it is not the sense of weakness which gives strength to faith. The
pioneers who led humanity onto the path of religion could not have done
so from a position of weakness, inferiority, and impotence.
The more man grasps the glory of the world and penetrates the secrets
of the universe, the stronger grows his faith.
Religion is no malady. No healthier person can be found than the one
who searches for reality, both about the world and within himself. Illness
makes a man forget all other realities except his own pain and suffering.
Faith and conviction are too large a subject to be contained within
the scope of one treatise. It is a vast domain. Exploration of it must
range far and wide. Like the study of every quality in human nature, no
single treatise can cover the entire sphere of their causes and effects.
The rich storehouse of the treasures of faith and conviction cannot
be inventoried in any single treatise; no more than can any of the deepest
movements in the human heart. No single definition can cover any one of
them. For instance, 'love' is more than affection for another, 'attraction
by beauty', 'altruism' or even a combination of all three. What treatise
can probe the depths of the reality of what love is in its entirety? How
much less, then, can it explain the universe of existence and the reality
of its entirety?
The science and art of medicine progressed from superstition and magic
into becoming a useful craft. Chemistry progressed from alchemy and fantasy
to modern science. Inevitably, research starts with erroneous hypotheses,
and by trial and error seeks and finds truth.
"Religions have been erroneous", many say. True, but that is not an
adequate argument - despite its use by enemies of God - to disprove God's
existence. The errors are merely mankind's stumbling steps in its search
for truth.
Bertrand Russel says that religion is rooted in human fear; fear of
the unknown, of death, of destruction, of mysteries. [Why I Am Not a
Christian, p. 37] He gives no reasoning to support his contention nor
can he answer the question: "If fear was the only motive that prompted
man to turn towards the Creator, does that prove that no Creator exists?"
Even if it was in search of a refuge from fear that man discovered God,
does that invalidate His reality? Would it invalidate the reality of any
other truth that man should discover under the impulse of fear? If it was
fear of lightning which drove man to discover the secrets of electricity,
is electricity any less real for that?
It is true that faith in an omniscient, omnipotent Providence which
is very apparent in time of trouble. That is one subject. Whether man's
first impulse towards seeking some such refuge sprang from fear is a different
subject. The two questions must be handled quite separately.