Magic Magnum said
3. Religion and Spirituality/Something bigger than us
Ok, during my time as a Christian (16-17 years) I never once had a spiritual moment. Nothing that ever reached out to me and made me go "Wow, this is amazing". Blind obedience? Yes, because I was raised to treat it as fact, but nothing that astonished me or influenced my life in a positive way.
But I get those kinds of "Wow" moments constantly when I do something such as watch Carl Sagan's or Neil Tysons Cosmos series. In fact that show is undoubtedly the most spiritual thing I've had in my life.
And anyone whose seen that show knows fully well what I mean, especially when it comes to something bigger than yourself. Living in a world where our own Galaxy alone has more suns than people? Each Galaxy supporting their own planets. And then the Universe as we know it contains more Galaxies than people even? That REALLY get's in perspective how small we are.
But at the same time, when we go back and look at evolution and how we evolved we also realize how special, unique and skilled we are. And our great potential for good or evil. We're not simply taught something like "we're sin and nothing compared to this divine being" removing any self-confidence a person has.
We get the sense of something far bigger than ourselves, but we do so still feeling well and happy with ourselves, rather than depressed and hateful of ourselves.
:) Now, this is an interesting sentiment, and by far (IMO) the best point you make in the OP, Magnum (do you still prefer people to call you Gwazi?).
Spirituality and profound spiritual experience are very personal, and very individual, and we don't need dogma to tell us how to do it, especially considering the unfortunate implications that arise from taking certain passages from certain holy books as entirely literal...
However, this doesn't mean that everything that every religious group has ever done or written about is detrimental. There are large numbers of people who
do find their spiritual experiences through the structure of an organized religion, and there's
nothing wrong with that.
What's needed is a universal, secular moral code, one that
builds from, but is not
bound to the traditions of the various world faiths. Thus, faith becomes something organic, something that grows within you when you have positive experiences, not something that is drilled into your head from childhood. And, honestly, I believe we're already heading in the right direction. With the amount of information available to people at younger and younger ages, all over the world, people
are expanding their ability to question the immoral aspects of their faith,
and embrace the moral and just aspects. There will always be hardliners of every sort (just like, as I said, there will always be assholes), and there will always be disagreements, but once the effects of European colonialism are finally purged from the Middle East and Africa, once China truly opens up to the world, once Vladimir Putin either dies, or forgets his Soviet power fantasies, we'll be that much closer, and I believe that all of those things are right around the corner.
:( I could be wrong, though. The point is, being hostile over the fact that religions have produced many good things in the past is unproductive, compared to absorbing the postive and attempting to spark empathy in those around you.
(EDIT: Also, thank you, Mahz, for opening this thread again.)