It is our contention that there is no call to study man's religious
tendency. We hold that man has by nature a propensity for religion. Human
nature, in the aspects of mind and spirit, has an innate attraction towards
reverence for God and the Oneness. Materialism, on the other hand, is in
contradiction to the innate tendency of human nature. Instead of wasting
time and effort asking: "How did man develop a religious sense?", science
should investigate how anyone ever came to develop a materialist tendency.
Materialists claim that their beliefs stem directly from the scientific
and philosophical advances of the 18th and 19th centuries after Christ.
They forget that every epoch from remotest antiquity has thrown up materialist
views; in all classes, literate and illiterate, cultured and savage, wise
and foolish. Today, in what boasts itself to be "the scientific age", some
in all strata of society, learned and ordinary, hold metaphysical ideas,
and are convinced of the existence of God. Were the materialist claims
correct; we should find the more learned the more atheist. The facts are
otherwise. Some of the greatest savants are the most godly of persons.
"Science has come! God is dead!" they cried. Simplistic! Unscientific!
A baseless affirmation! It contains the half-truth that in our age unknown
secrets of nature and facts about the universe have been brought to light.
It also contains the false premise: "Faith in God was spawned by the marriage
of ignorance with fear of the unknown."
In fact we find today that it is the enlightened men of faith who welcome
the discoveries of facts about nature and increase their faith thereby.
Wonder at the works of the Creator produces worship. The more you know
of the complexities of creation and its functioning, the more profound
your reverence for the Creator. Awareness of the marvels of the chain of
causality increases your awe of the Prime Cause.
It was only yesterday that man expanded horizon of observation and measurement
beyond himself. Hitherto mankind had no notion of the complexity of the
works of creation around him. Today new discoveries follow one right after
another; e. g. that 10 million milliard (10 ^15) cellules compose each
physical human body. These discoveries reveal creation's splendour to a
degree unimagined by any former age.
Must not the recognition of these causes, factors, events, and phenomena
of nature lead inevitably to recognition of the Prime Cause whose Word
started off the chain reaction of continuous creation?
Where is the logic in claiming that belief in God is confined to persons
unaware of the processes of creation? Should the scientist, who is aware
of the natural causes and of the factors determining each step of creation
towards perfection, of mankind's evolution, of the minute accuracy and
exactitude that rules every change in the nature that surrounds us, come
to believe that these wondrous laws and amazing interactions have somehow
fortuitously emerged out of mindless matter? Have his discoveries and insights
merely brought him to a stage of thought which sees only blind concomitance
and chance conjunctures in the exactly interacting phenomena?
Close study shows that the rise of materialism in Europe was due to
certain historical facts. Among these must be counted mistakes made by
the Church authorities.
(1) At the start of the Renaissance, Church authorities showed undue
severity against partisans of the "new learning". This was because, alongside
its purely religious doctrines, the Church had inherited from the philosophers
of earlier ages, both Hellenic and non-Hellenic, various views about the
world, and judged it as heretical to question these views as to deny religious
tenets. But "new learning" exposed the falsity of previously held cosmogonic
theories. Scientists who had discovered the facts, and expressed them in
formulae which the Church declared heretical, in disgust turned against
the Church, and discarded not merely the secondary views but also the Faith
itself. To curb this mounting revolt the Church pressed harder. A desire
for revenge rose in the hearts of the excommunicated. This illogical passion,
seeking not to establish objective truth but simply to avenge, led the
learned to "throw out the baby with the bathwater"; not merely the institutions
which claimed to stand for God, but God as well. To seek revenge on a group
of people with ecclesiastical claims is one thing. To revolt against religion
in the true sense of the word is quite another. This dichotomy they failed
to grasp. Yet it is obvious that revenge is not a rational or scientific
reaction. Emotion has no place in intellectual pursuits.
(2) The Church used anthropological and materialist images in describing
God, and employed them to teach children both in homes and in institutions.
But as they grew up, young people realised in the course of study that
such images were inept, unscientific, and false. Sadly, the Western Churches'
misleading teachings thus used caused youth to deviate towards materialism.
They failed to grasp that rational, truly objective concepts concerning
the question of the existence of God could be found. Thus the Church gravely
erred in its anthropological approach, to its own to humanity's grievous
loss.
Walter Oscar Lundberg, physiologist and biochemist in America, writes:
"There are numerous reasons why scientists are sceptical about God, and
in particular (1) politics intervenes or sociology or nationalist considerations,
by which the State or some institution claims priority over all loyalties.
And (2) human thought in every generation is bound in the trammels of preconceptions,
both spiritual and physical, so that thought is never truly free, at a
person's own choice, but to some extent conditioned by circumstances and
environment and the spirit of the age. And (3) the Church's use of anthropological
and materialist concepts in the education of children quoted the text:
'God made man in His own image.' But as they grow up, these young people
reject the thought of a man-like God as illogical, and unscientific. Unable
to reconcile their childhood beliefs with the scientific method, they end
up by abandoning the idea of God altogether. Instead of rethinking what
they mean by the term in the light of their scientific researches, and
raising it on to a rational plane in line with their higher learning, they
merely discard their earlier teachings altogether." [The Evidence of
God in an Expanding Universe, p.60. A collection of articles by 40
of the world's leading scientists, edited by John Clover Monsma.]
A fourth factor might be named as the call to asceticism and to a celibate
life. In human nature are certain God-implanted instincts. They are not
for nothing. Their aim is inherent in creation. Man must not allow himself
to be their blind slave. But nor must he close his eyes to their existence,
in denial. No natural instinct may be wholly ignored. Nor is there any
justification for enjoining continence on everyone. Man's duty is to acknowledge,
to steer, and to govern his instincts in balanced and equable exercise.
To condemn the natural instincts in the name of religion and God, to sanctify
monkery and celibacy, to decry wedlock, when the survival of human kind
depends on the founding of families; to call all sex dirty and irreligious,
to sanctify poverty and indigence, and to proclaim that man should seek
the happiness of soul and spirit in the next world while abjuring this,
is to make a tragic error and to fall into the most serious of heresies.
Religion's task is to acknowledge the instincts; to improve, to steer,
and to govern them; not to deny or obliterate them. Man's nature is such
that the spiritual and the physical instincts must be kept in perfect balance.
Both are essential to human nature. They must not fight each other for
pre-eminence. By equable synthesis they must make life on earth a natural,
logical, happy, and harmonious existence. There is no dichotomy between
happiness in this world and happiness in the next. The Christian preachers
who declared that man must choose between worldly joys and heavenly bliss
erred gravely and promoted the revolt which followed their teachings.
Justifiably, many rose in revolt against doctrines which they said promised
them "pie in the sky by-and-by", while urging them to allow themselves
to be exploited and treated as things for the advancement of the class
which was very far from abjuring earthly joys for the sake of heavenly
bliss. The false doctrine which denied the instincts promoted materialism
and bankrupted religion. But what is the truth? It is that which some call
joys – gambling, drunkenness, fornication and the like – lead to earthly
misery and darkness. Religions frowns on such excesses for that very reason
that they destroy earthly happiness. They make here miserable not only
for those who do them, but those around them as well. It is a lie to say
that men must choose between happiness here and happiness hereafter. Eternal
life begins here. It is a quality of living which contains the natural
joys of earth and the natural joys of heaven.
Islam's Shari'ah has five ethical categories of human actions. The first
and highest of these is "obligatory". This means duties which all must
perform. Among these are, naturally enough, "worship" and "good deeds"
and "seemly conduct". These are obligatory in their own right. Their object
is not the production of happiness here on earth. But there is happiness
here on earth. This is the fruit they bear. They are done for themselves
and for God's sake because they are highest expression of human nature
as God made it. They are not done for the sake of the enjoyment of the
good fruits they bear. Worship educates and edifies the human being. It
acts as a cleansing force that washes away corruption and filth and enhances
man's true humanity. This is why there is no conflict between questions
of morals and questions of practical living. For ethical principles are
guidelines for successful living.
It may be that these illogical teachings and misleading doctrines led
thinkers like Bertrand Russell to be against God. Considering godliness
to be a cause of happiness, Russell writes: "Church doctrines place man
between two norms of unhappiness, one of which he is bound to bear. Either
he deliberately renounces what this world might give him in favour of joys
to come, or he must abjure the joys of the hereafter to wallow in this
world's Lucullan groves."
Russell has it all wrong. True religion does not teach that man is condemned
to bear one or other of two alternative norms of unhappiness. God's grace
and power is limitless. The treasury of His bounty is inexhaustible. He
wishes all His servants to enjoy both this world and the next to the full.
Permissiveness and unbridled indulgence also lead to materialism, which
is also their origin. It is the idea which determines conduct. The idea
of godliness uplifts man's spirit into a realm of purity and growth, clear
air and healthy living.