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- <text id=93TT0277>
- <title>
- Sep. 27, 1993: How Man Created God
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 27, 1993 Attack Of The Video Games
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- IDEAS, Page 77
- How Man Created God
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In a provocative new book, a former nun explains how God really
- is in the details
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN ELSON--With reporting by Helen Gibson/London
- </p>
- <p> Who is God? What can we know about God? And if knowing God is
- possible, how do we comprehend him: by reason or only through
- an ecstatic epiphany of faith? These questions have tormented
- theologians and mystics in the 4,000-year history of monotheism.
- Their wildly varied answers are explored in an absorbing new
- book from Britain with a catchy title, a lode of learning and
- a challenging thesis. Whether or not one accepts the biblical
- teaching that men and women are made in God's image, argues
- the author of A History of God (Knopf; $27.50), it is clear
- the deity is a product of humankind's creative imagination.
- </p>
- <p> God may well be our most interesting idea. Down the ages, humans
- have posited a deity, or deities, in order to fulfill a pragmatic
- need: primarily, to find meaning and value in life. Man is the
- only animal that worships; religion underlies conflicts and
- economics even in the secular 20th century, the only age in
- history that has not regarded some form of faith as natural
- and normative.
- </p>
- <p> Karen Armstrong, 48, who wrote A History of God, has impressively
- wide scholarship and strong ecumenical credentials. She spent
- seven years as a Roman Catholic nun, part of the time studying
- literature at St. Anne's College, Oxford. It was there that
- she began to question the teachings of the church and decided,
- after considerable agony, to leave her order. She lives alone
- in north London and teaches at the Leo Baeck College for the
- Study of Judaism. Armstrong has written 10 books, including
- an account of her convent years, Through the Narrow Gate, and
- a well-regarded biography of Muhammad that earned her an honorary
- membership in the Association of Muslim Social Scientists.
- </p>
- <p> A request by British television's Channel 4 to write and present
- a six-part documentary series on St. Paul revived her interest
- in religion. "What I really am is a historian of ideas," she
- says, "rather than a theologian, which sounds a bit narrow."
- She considers herself an unaffiliated monotheist who appreciates
- many aspects of Eastern Orthodoxy but finds it easier to pray
- with Jews and Muslims. "Only Western Christianity makes a song
- and dance about creeds and beliefs," she says. "The authentic
- test of a religion is not what you believe. It's what you do,
- and unless your religion expresses itself in compassion for
- all living things, it is not authentic."
- </p>
- <p> Whether Jew, Christian or Muslim, believers today tend to regard
- their faith as a received whole -- that is, as a belief system
- with most of the major theoretical issues long since resolved,
- in so far as they can be. No 20th century Christian, for example,
- would bother to start an argument about the divinity of Jesus,
- a subject that obsessed 4th century bishops. But as Armstrong
- reminds us, the world's three great monotheistic religions --
- Judaism, Christianity and Islam -- did not arrive where they
- are without impassioned debates and conflicts. She contends
- that Yahweh was originally a savage, partisan god of war and
- one of several deities worshipped by the Israelites. It took
- seven centuries or more for this unpleasant being to evolve
- into the almighty Yahweh proclaimed by the prophets as the one
- and only God.
- </p>
- <p> Armstrong sees nothing amiss or unusual in this evolutionary
- process. New ideas about God have always emerged in response
- to new psychological needs. Had the great faiths lacked this
- capacity to change, they might well have withered away. "All
- religions change and develop," the author writes. "If they do
- not, they will become obsolete." Consequently, "each generation
- has to create its own imaginative conception of God."
- </p>
- <p> Some eras have been particularly critical for God's history.
- During the so-called Axial Age (800 B.C. to 200 B.C.), political
- and economic changes led to new religious ideologies throughout
- the known civilized world: Taoism and Confucianism in China,
- Buddhism and Hinduism in India, the rational philosophy of Plato
- and Aristotle in Greece, differing concepts of monotheism in
- Israel and in Iran (Zoroastrianism). Common to all these ideologies
- was what Armstrong calls "the duty of compassion," meaning authentic
- religious experiences must be integrated into everyday life.
- The Axial Age was a time of prosperity, when power was passing
- from kings and priests to the merchant class. "Strange as it
- may seem," Armstrong writes, "the idea of `God' developed in
- a market economy in a spirit of aggressive capitalism."
- </p>
- <p> In different ways, all three monotheisms generated the idea
- of a personal God who sees and hears, rewards and punishes.
- The concept, among other virtues, helped establish the dignity
- of the individual and led ultimately to liberal humanism. There
- was, however, a liability: a personal God could easily become
- no more than a projection of humankind's limited hopes and fears;
- in short, an idol. Seeking to escape this dilemma, mystical
- traditions, which emerged in all three religions, taught that
- God was to be experienced -- albeit by a dedicated elite --
- rather than defined. In the 12th and 13th centuries, the mystical
- Sufi movement was the dominant force within Islam. In the 15th
- century, facing persecution and exile, European Jews found solace
- in the mystical writings known as the Cabala. Even Western Christianity,
- which has been strongly suspicious of ineffability, had its
- mystical tradition, exemplified by such figures as the German
- Dominican Meister Eckehart and the Spanish saint, Teresa of
- Avila.
- </p>
- <p> Armstrong considers herself a feminist. But she argues that
- while it might not be right to call God exclusively "he," it
- is equally mistaken to regard God as "she." This makes God into
- a being. She notes, however, that much of the gender politics
- of God may come from the inflexibility of English. Other languages
- allow God to transcend sex. In Arabic, for example, the supreme
- name for God, al-Lah, is masculine, but his other names, "the
- Compassionate" (al-Rahmat) and "the Merciful" (al-Rahim), are
- feminine.
- </p>
- <p> One of the delights of Armstrong's book is her exploration of
- some relatively unfamiliar pathways to God. She is much taken
- with a Muslim movement devoted to Falsafah (roughly, philosophy)
- that emerged in the 9th and 10th centuries. Its advocates, known
- as Faylasufs, believed that the God of Greek philosophy was
- identical to Islam's. "Instead of seeing God as a mystery,"
- Armstrong writes, "the Faylasufs believed he was reason itself."
- But they also acknowledged the chaos and disorder of the universe
- and recognized that their quest for ultimate meaning was a difficult
- one. Indirectly, the Faylasufs influenced such medieval thinkers
- as the Jewish sage Maimonides and the greatest Catholic theologian,
- St. Thomas Aquinas.
- </p>
- <p> Modern monotheism, as Armstrong sees it, has had two main flaws.
- One is a tendency toward "belligerent righteousness," which
- has led to pogroms, inquisitions and other shameful manifestations
- of intolerance that defile the image of God as a benevolent
- creator. The other -- most apparent in Western Christianity
- -- is a tendency to define God in terms compatible with secular
- thinking. Thus the Jesuit theologian Leonard Lessius (1554-1623)
- argued that the existence of God could be demonstrated scientifically,
- like any other fact. Similarly, the 19th century German exponents
- of the Science of Judaism argued that their religion was a wholly
- rational faith. Alas, the end result of treating the deity as
- just another provable fact was to marginalize God, thereby making
- it easier for unbelievers to proclaim that he did not exist.
- </p>
- <p> What of the present and the future? Armstrong notes the ever-growing
- strength of secularism, which makes it possible for more and
- more people to think of God as an idea that belongs to the past.
- She also notes in all three faiths a surging counterrevolutionary
- fundamentalism that to her represents a problem rather than
- a solution: its proponents "use `God' to prop up their own loves
- and hates." In short, this kind of religiosity is simply a new
- idolatry and thus represents a retreat from God.
- </p>
- <p> Armstrong acknowledges that the anthropomorphic personal God
- of monotheism is obsolete (hence dead), as is the remote Supreme
- Being posited by religious philosophers. A more plausible alternative
- is the God of mysticism, experienced as a reality that lies
- beyond human concepts, much the way that great art is felt.
- Not that this will be easy in an age of anomie, symbolized by
- handgun violence, hip-hop quality and an MTV attention span.
- Human kind cannot bear very much reality, T.S. Eliot wrote,
- but it also cannot endure too much emptiness and desolation.
- In her book's dying fall, Armstrong suggests that the ancient
- quest for life's meaning will go on.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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