I'd like to respond to a very thoughtful article by Kristin Dombek, “Swimming Against the Rising Tide: Secular Climate-Change Activists Can Learn from Evangelical Christians.”1 Despite the rather specific subtitle, the essay is really about the nature of belief and understanding—and on how those of us of different beliefs read arrogance into each other's positions. I have never been able to understand what seems to me the self-willed ignorance and blind literalism of many religious people, evangelical Christians certainly included. But Dombek's discussion of why such people think secular, science-oriented people are arrogant helps me to understand what's going on here.
I am a secular, metaphorical thinker—in no way a dogmatic literalist, as so many religious people are. And I fully believe that secular, metaphorical thought is much more inclusive and universal than dogmatic literal thought. So, when I read Dombek's assertion that evangelicals think of the likes of me as “arrogant,” I was amazed. How could that label be applied to a way of thinking that is open to even evangelicals, whereas they are closed to my way of thinking—almost militantly so. Who, I had to wonder, is really arrogant?
Here's how Dombek describes her feelings as an evangelical Christian:
“My belief . . . was the bridge between my otherwise insignificant life and the universe: I was not my own, but belonged to something bigger. But it also meant I was scared a lot. Atheists, evolutionary biologists, abortionists and climate scientists wanted to tear down that bridge — or so I’d heard — by denying that the history of the planet was God’s story, not ours.
It was hard to understand who would want to do this — only arrogant people, people who presumed they could comprehend the world with merely human minds, who wanted to put their concerns at the center of the world, no matter the cost.”
This passage characterizes nicely much
of the misunderstanding between secular and religious people, I
believe. All human beings, I would assert, need to feel a part of
something larger than themselves, to different degrees. Personally,
I find great peace and consolation in the understanding that I come
from and will return to the natural world, which I often think of in
its wholeness as Gaia. Even though the natural world is, to a great
degree, under assault from human culture, it is still a whole entity,
struggling to maintain its integrity, and I am part of that process
and that whole. That's enough for me, whereas human culture, which
is so diverse and fragmented, cannot do a lot to console me or help
me feel I belong—the arts, yes, but not much else.
Here's Dombek after losing her faith
and beginning to understand a more scientific sense of the world:
“You have to trust that your individual life is linked to
something bigger: that you belong, body and soul, to a larger story
for which you are responsible.” Again, there is language here
that helps to explain differences between secular and religious modes of thought. We all want to feel part of something larger. The
difference is in what we choose to be the something larger. As the
evangelical Dombek noted, religious people tend to think secular
people are arrogant because they replace “God's story” with
“merely human minds.” This is, on the surface, true, but let's
think a bit about what “God's story” is. There is, in fact, no
one story from God. There are many, many, many, many. Even if you
accept from your own culture that God's story is the Judeo-Christian
story, as enshrined in the Bible, you are eliminating the beliefs and
stories of the majority of people on this earth, who are not Jewish
or Christian. And even if you add in the other religion of the book,
Islam, you are still talking about only half or a little more than
half the people on earth.2
Buddhists and Hindus, for example, do not on the whole believe that
there is a single divine figure who is ordering the natural world and
guiding the progress of the human race.
Isn't there indeed some arrogance here
in assuming that ONE mode of religious thinking must supersede
science in order to maintain the humility of the human race? I'm all
for keeping humans humble, but when we're talking about global
warming, for instance, which will affect all humanity eventually, the
Judeo-Christian viewpoint has no more importance than any other way
of thinking; in fact, if we go just by numbers of people in the
world, it is a minority viewpoint. Why should Judeo-Christians have
the right to willfully dismiss other ways of thinking about the
world, when we will all be affected by the results? Again, this position is,
simply, arrogant.3
And here I come back to Dombek's
language. “God's story” is precisely that—a story put together
by people to make some sense of their place in the world and to give
themselves some hope and guidance. The problem is, there are many
stories of God and gods, and also secular stories. The secular
stories at least have the strength of not rejecting the values of
other peoples, which are different from our own. The secular story
of science is the most neutral and the most universal, since it is
built on nature and the elements of nature that all of us in this
world are made of and live within. Culture is divisive; the natural world is our one common experience and inheritance.
Science is, in fact, the least arrogant
of stories, because it is available to the understanding of all
humans; it is an international language. Anyone in any country or
culture can look into a microscope or telescope and see the same
stuff. Science doesn't deal in preconceptions that rule what we can
believe or cannot believe, as virtually any religion does. In fact,
science cannot be science without challenging and testing any
preconceptions that limit understanding. This takes us to Dombek's
phrase “a larger story for which you are responsible.” Many
religious people, in rejecting human understanding and defending the
story of God as always central to understanding, are in fact turning
away from responsibility. It's nice to think that an all-powerful,
paternal God will always keep the world just the right temperature
for human beings, but in fact such a supposed being has never done so
in the past and will very likely not do so in the future. The only
way we can help save the world for our descendents is to use science
to understand what we can do to mitigate global warming. Sitting on
our hands and waiting for God to do something will not help.
The religious might answer: if the
world becomes too hot and wet for most humans, then that was God's
will. OK--or nature's response to human activity run amok. But I
really doubt that many evangelicals in the southern US, which will be
greatly affected by global warming, accept that God may be allowing
the world to become unlivable for their grandchildren or
great-grandchildren. And if they don't like that scenario, then they
are indeed being irresponsible in denying global warming just because
it does not fit nicely with their picture of God. On the other hand,
secular thinkers and scientists are doing what they can to overcome
the irresponsibility of the religious deniers, for the good of
everyone—not just for the good of people who think the way they do.
Again, where is the arrogance? Where is the irresponsibility?
Let me finally anchor this discussion
in metaphor. Scientific thinking is, essentially, metaphorical
thinking, since it looks at real, concrete things in the natural
world and derives abstract ideas from them. Religious thinking, on
the other hand, CAN be metaphorical thinking, to the extent that
religious people can understand their religious texts as
metaphorical—as story, not fact. But literal and dogmatic
religious thinkers are quite limited in their understandings of the
world. Here's an example. I recently had to deal with a bout of
poison ivy, and a phrase from the Bible kept popping into my head:
“If thine eye offend thee, pluck it out.”
I thought it must be from the Old Testament, which does often seem to
mean such things literally. But I looked it up, and it's from
Matthew in the New Testament, King James Version. The New Revised
Standard Version of this passage is also telling: “If your hand
or your foot causes you to stumble, cut it off and throw it away. . .
. And if your eye causes you to stumble, tear it out and throw it
away” (Matthew 18:8-9). (I have to wonder how many people who
read the Bible literally actually obey this injunction?)
I read the New Testament
metaphorically, and when I thought about a metaphorical reading of
this passage, I understood why it popped into my mind in reference to
poison ivy. The great itching of the rash was causing me to suffer
and taking up a great part of my conscious awareness. (This might be
a narcissistic in-dwelling contingent to sin? At least it is true
that the rash was offending me and causing me to stumble,
psychologically.) Then I thought, if your leg (site of the rash)
offend thee, banish it to the far reaches of consciousness; better
yet, cut it off from consciousness! This is not easy, but it is
possible—we all practice psychological distancing from hurtful
situations at times. One might even say that many evangelical
Christians are engaging in a kind of dissociation from scientific
truths in order to reduce the challenge those truths present to their
version of the God story.
There's a modern rejoinder to this
advice: “An eye for an eye till everyone is blind.”4
This actually refers to the Old Testament attitude: “If any
harm follows, then you shall give life for life, eye for eye, tooth
for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot, burn for burn, wound for
wound, stripe for stripe” (Exodus 21:23-25, NRSV).5
If we think literally, we are bound to end up with such blindness;
such rejection of difference hurts ourselves as much as others. If
we can think metaphorically, there can be unity and healing. I can
banish my itching to the outer limits of consciousness and focus on
something more constructive, and human beings from a wide range of
cultural and religious backgrounds can work together on the universal
problem that is global warming.
1Published
in the NY Times on 9 August
2014:
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/10/opinion/sunday/secular-climate-change-activists-can-learn-from-evangelical-christians.html?module=Search&mabReward=relbias%3As%2C{%221%22%3A%22RI%3A9%22}
2See
rough estimates of religious populations at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_religious_populations
3Webster's
definition of “arrogant”: “a feeling of superiority
manifested in an overbearing manner or presumptuous claims.”
4Variations
on this saying have been attributed to Mahatma Gandhi and Martin
Luther King; they also show up in songs and poems about the Troubles
in Ireland, and in many other cultural sources.
5Curiously,
this is all in regard to physical harm to a pregnant woman, causing
a miscarriage.
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