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In the fine spirit of L. Ron Hubbard, the Pentecostals, and Aleister Crowley, I'm here today to start a new religion. Fortunately for everyone involved (all none of them), there are no silly initiations, hidden costs, or even tax loopholes. No, this is much more insidious.

Everyone Think.

Honestly, I think one of my biggest stumbling blocks to religion, among both those who discount it and those who practice it, is the branding of the Big G. Is there something out there? Maybe, but don't go slapping a crucifix logo or a six-pointed star logo or pentacle logo on it. Home-Brewed, For Personal Use Only.

People need divinity in a plain brown wraper. It'd keep them from having to smite the Joneses.

If everyone contemplated what they saw as the divine (capitalized or not) on a personal level, it wouldn't matter if the guy across the street did it a different way, as long as each person's version worked for them.

Not everyone needs something bigger than themselves to turn to; looking inwards, towards self-reliance, is just as valid.

From a conversation:
H: Turning to oneself--the centerpoint of my atheism-- made me arrogant and self-righteous and at times utterly unbearable to be around.
Me: Hey, I resemble that remark! ;-)
H: It was like faith out of tune. Sounded right to my ears, but everyone around me was cringing.
Me: What's that old line about dancing and insanity. . . ?

Nobody needs to prove that their god can beat up somebody else's god.

It's the same impossible approach I have to politics - delete the lazy intellectual shorthand of the formal parties, and make everyone reach for their own conclusions instead of blindly ascribing to a label that encompasses things inaccurately and incompletely.

Initially, people will probably feel lonely and isolated, "I don't have anyone else to share my faith with, or show me the way." But that will change. As people discover their own personal take on the divine, be it Buddy Christ, Foamy the Squirrel, or a small glow in the vicinity of their fourth rib, they will cherish how precise and perfect their discovery is for them. Church would be supplanted by get-togethers where people could talk about how their faith works for them, rather than being told how to do it, and that they'd be punished for doing it wrong.

Encourage somebody to craft something for themselves, and it will be more meaningful. Any boob with opposable thumbs and $68.75 can slap together something from IKEA. But there's pride in craftsmanship when make it yourself, and that can never be stripped away.

That's what's going to be weird about evanglizing - with nothing to market it, the idea needs to sell itself.

"I have the body of a God. Bacchus was a God, right?"
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Date/Time: 2005-07-27 17:29 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] trystbat.livejournal.com
Me personally? Sure. I just don't think the generic "you" would dig it. Finding your own way was big for the hippies in the '60s, but it hasn't been a mainstream thing, & I rather doubt it ever would be.

There's also a lot of ppl who say they've found peace & joy thru the exact same way s'one else did. For all of organized religion's many faults, lots of ppl say it gives them comfort & their own spirituality is happily in line w/what some book or preacher sez. Some of them might say they *are* sharing their own personal happiness w/others who also have.

Just playing devil's advocate here. I'm not anti-religion; while I don't believe in one for myself, I've always been fascinated by the tendency towards belief.
Date/Time: 2005-07-27 17:33 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] etcet.livejournal.com
I know you are, and what's tricky is that, one the one hand, I agree with you completely, but at the same time, I hope we're both wrong. :-)

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