The Hideous Grind of Life; the Wondrous Effect of Faith.

Last week I received the following message from a facebook friend:

“A Catholic high school classmate of mine posted this: ‘The only way to find happiness in the grind of life is by faith. A faith-filled life means all the difference in how we view everything around us. It affects our attitudes towards people, toward circumstances, toward ourselves. Only then do our feet become swift to do what is right.’ How would you counter this?”

My reply follows:

It’s unfortunate that some people are so shallow, their lives so unfulfilling, their grasp on reality so loose, and their willingness to surrender their personal responsibility for morality and ethics to an imaginary being is so strong; and that is precisely what that childlike testimony of your friend expresses. That he disparages life as a “grind” as opposed to a marvelous and wonderful experience to be savored and enjoyed to its fullest all by itself, is the mindset of so many Christians whose pained existence and/or perspective on life as just god’s waiting room causes them to seek escape into the fantasy realm of religion.

Did Mother Teresa’s faith influence her “attitude toward people?” Indeed it did. And it caused her to glorify the pain of her patients as “god’s gift, a blessing.” As a result her order withheld pain medication that would have eased the misery of her patients in their final weeks, days and hours. This in spite of the millions of dollars her order amassed. Somehow I don’t see that as a good attitude towards people, or doing what is right by any measure of reasoned thinking. Your friend will likely rationalize that to have been a wonderful thing, for such is the affect of faith on the mind.

A “Faith-Filled Life” effects how religionists view everything. Some faithful view the unnecessary death of a child caused by parents withholding medication in favor of prayer as “God’s Will.” Others view competing religions as from the devil and provoke hatred and inspire terror by mindless acts of book burning for Jesus. Others encourage the spread of AIDS among third world peoples by rejecting the effectiveness of condoms and the reality of the human sex drive. Still more reject scientific evidence and proofs of the natural world- passing along the foolishness and intellectually crippling their children – because it contradicts an ancient myth written by Bronze Age misogynists.

Faith causes some people to fly airplanes into buildings; blow up clinics; discriminate against their fellow human beings for their sexual preference; mutilate genitals; kill apostates; justify sexism; disparage all other beliefs or lack there of because THEIR faith is the “true” faith and the only way to properly live and die.

Yes, it takes the expectation of a supernatural reward for them to be moved to “do what is right.” That or their “doing what’s right” is motivated by the proselytizing agenda of their imagined man-god or church shaman. Their sense of right is not out of pure empathy, compassion and humanity. To them it can’t exist without make-believe. The fact that empathy exists in all humans, save sociopaths, is lost on them. No, only when their minds are willingly vacated of all personal responsibility and the void filled by make believe do their “feet become swift” to do the right thing. That is what they call happiness, and doing what’s right; it’s what I call zombie like denial of reality and crediting natural human emotion to the supernatural.

We the thinking can do what’s right, and we do. We can enjoy life to its fullest and experience happiness, and we do. And we do it without the fallacy of life after death rewards, the mind-numbing drug of religious delusion, or attributing our charity, happiness and personal success to a boogie man.

But all this will be lost on the religiously deluded, your friend included. The ignorance of faith is indeed bliss to them. They cannot see beyond what they have been programmed to see … and that never included questioning their belief, or challenging their tiresome platitudes.

* * * * *

Editor’s note: Although Bart Centre is not a Filipino, he is an active member of the Filipino Freethinkers Forum, and he was kind enough to share an article with us. He is a lifelong activist in the culture war between theist demagoguery and freethinkers, and frequent outspoken contributor and guest columnist to various newspapers and periodicals. He is the co-creator of the celebrated post rapture pet rescue website Eternal Earth-Bound Pets, USA. A New York native, he now lives in New Hampshire with his saintly and much-put-upon Episcopal wife of thirty-nine years and two atheist dogs. You can check his other posts here:

http://atheistcamel.blogspot.com/

11 comments

  1. I agree the easiest test is if you can SEE god now. In the case of burden of proof, can we directly see god now. If this requires Inference of a GOD then it is the Theist's Burden of Proof.

      • No, there were already more scientific and reasonable arguments presented above, but instead you chose this one to attack. Probabaly because you have no valid response?

        • all the "scientific and reasonable arguments" you are referring to are summarized by what justin aquino said. they all rest upon the condition of physical "seeing".

          and by the way how is it an attack? i guess that explains the demeanor of most people who replied.

    • PS: Since the existence of god or the supernatural has never been demonstrated by objective reasoning, in spite of the failed attempts by Aquinas, to continue to maintain that reason can prove god is more Catholic self delusion. Reason that is reduced to subjective absurdit,y distorted by the infusion of faith (i.e. "the proof of god is all around you.") is not reason. That would be like calling astrology "science."

  2. Reynor, in deed… the catholic church has been willing to allow a certain degree of reality among its adherents. They are willing to accept evolutionary teory, with certain caveats. They ultimately rejected the geocentric model of the universe.

    But unless and until all philosophies / belief systems retain the fundamental precepts of religion that are good, and abandon those things that are in diametrical opposition to reason, then reason will always be the enemy of faith, as Martin Luther said.

    What kind of things? Things like saying condoms spread AIDS; masturbation is a "sin"; homosexuality is a choice and a "sin"; having someone reinact having nails hammered into their bodies during Easter holiday is na good thing; dead thngs reanimate; killing someone,or their committing suicide, inorder to pay for the trespases of others is rational; non-believers are tortured for an eternity in a hideous place "god" created for them and that they are immoral at face; that man is here for a greater reason than any other plant or animal life; belief in the supernatural in general.

    None of those things permit reason to seep into their illogic and fantasy. None of these things represent reason. All of them reject scientific proofs, objective reason, history, zoology, evolutionary morality, prima fasia evidence of both statistical and observable evidence and common sense.

    To suggest that any religion, including Catholocism, promotes reason as equal with faith is patently self delusion. If Christians read the bible in its intrity (which the majority do not), without Catholic apologetic sites to smooth its obscene and unreasoned acts in order to transform tyem… make their "context"… seem reasoned and palitable, their reason would overwhelm their faith. Catholocism / Christianity would disolve even faster than it is now in the industrialized world.

    No, sorry… saying Catholicism opposes fideism is simply ignoring the facts of what superstitious belief demands of its adherents. The church HAS to discredit reason in order to stay viable, just like any other religion, sect, or cult.

    • "The church HAS to discredit reason in order to stay viable, just like any other religion, sect, or cult." -Bart Centre

      I am not sure which church are you referring to because this is not the case with the Church.
      "The courage to engage the whole breadth of reason, and not the denial of its grandeur – this is the programme with which a theology grounded in Biblical faith enters into the debates of our time. " -Meeting with the Representatives of Science, Pope Benedict XVI http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/sp

  3. "The ignorance of faith is indeed bliss to them. They cannot see beyond what they have been programmed to see … and that never included questioning their belief, or challenging their tiresome platitudes."

    the response just describe what we Catholics are also against, fideism.

Leave a reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here