An online store dedicated to inspiring Buddha statues, art, jewelry, malas and more.
The R Word
Fundamentalists here and abroad have been giving religion a bad rap lately, and so-called militant atheists have used the opportunity to take up the offensive. But according to prominent sociologist Robert N. Bellah, both sides have it wrong: they are mistaken about what religion actually is.
In our current atmosphere of cultural polarization, the term religion has become highly contested. Just how contested was brought home to me in April 2006, when, during a public lecture I gave at the University of Montana in Missoula, a man in the audience sharply questioned my very use of the word. I said that I was simply following a long history of usage, that I knew that some people contrast spirituality, which they see as good, with religion, which they believe is bad, but that I had never found that dichotomy helpful, as spirituality until recently was always considered an aspect of religion, not a rival to it. But he was adamant. Religion, he insisted, is a terrible thing and if I didn’t want to use the term spirituality, I should think of some new word. Like what? I queried. He had no answer but insisted I come up with one. It was his fervor rather than the content of his remark that struck me.
It seems that the biologist Richard Dawkins, the author of the 2006 book The God Delusion, doesn’t just dislike the word religion, he dislikes the very thing, attributing many of the ills of the world to it and advocating its early demise. As one reviewer pointed out, echoing my experience in Montana, it is the strength of Dawkins’s conviction rather than his argument that is striking. Indeed, for a scientist accustomed to arguments based on evidence, Dawkins’s book contains remarkably little in the way of proof. In the case of the man in Montana, I think the problem was that religion to him meant “institutional religion,” that is, churches and such, and institutions are, to his mind, intrinsically alien and oppressive, whereas spirituality is the free expression of individuals. Dawkins’s problem is somewhat different.
Religion for Dawkins is a cognitive system, a kind of science, but bad science with bad consequences. Therefore it should be gotten rid of. For a social scientist, on the other hand, religion is not primarily a scientific theory at all: it is the many ways humans have sought to find meaning, to make sense of their lives. As such, it is an inescapable sphere of life, like economics and politics. Because there is much wrong with our economy—social injustice and environmental degradation, to mention two major effects of our capitalist sytem—can we just abolish the economy? Because there is much political corruption and incredibly incompetent political leadership, can we just abolish politics? Like other spheres of human life, religion—the meaning-making sphere—is often subject to distortion and can become horribly destructive. But getting rid of it isn’t an option. Religion meets a human need, and if you get rid of it in one form, it will come back in another.
Dawkins’s idea of religion as theory is widespread among educated people, and this might partly account for the popularity of his book and other equally silly ones by so-called militant atheists, who are attempting to respond to religious extremism armed only with half-understandings and misconceptions about what religion actually is. After all, they say, isn’t Christianity just a set of beliefs? Christianity has in fact emphasized belief more than any other of the great religious traditions, and Protestantism more than other forms of Christianity, so this understanding has some historical foundation. Yet belief is not the same as theory. Religious belief is not a kind of quasi-science, even though that is how people like Dawkins view it.
Religion isn’t about theory; it’s about meaning. Religious texts and statements are not, in their basic function, about imparting information with which one must agree or disagree. What they impart is meaning, and meaning doesn’t tell us something new; it seems just to be saying the same old thing, though in a deeper understanding it makes sense of the new. Meaning is iterative, not cumulative. If someone in an intimate relationship says to the other, “Do you love me?” and the other replies, “Why do you ask? I told you that yesterday,” we can say that he doesn’t get it. The request was not for information or some new bit of knowledge but for the reiteration of meaning. Similarly, if someone said, “Why do we have to say the Lord’s Prayer this Sunday?—we already said it last Sunday,” again, we would say that the person is missing the point, that he or she is making what philosophers call a category mistake. For Christians, the Lord’s Prayer is not news that we can forget once we’ve heard it; it is an expression of who we are in relation to who God is, and its reiteration is not redundant but a renewed affirmation of meaning, an invocation of a total context.
We are inclined to think that sacred texts, canonical texts, have in themselves an intrinsic meaning and are by nature qualitatively different from other texts, but this is an error. In fact, sacred texts must be read or listened to in the context of a community for which they are sacred: it is in the ritual practices of a living community that they become sacred. Ritual is the place where meaning occurs. Saying “I love you” to an intimate other is indeed a ritual, but it contributes more than we imagine to maintaining the meaning of the intimate relationship, just as the ritual of reciting the Lord’s Prayer reiterates the meaning of our worship of God.
While it is good to regard religion as that sphere of life where we seek to make sense of the world, it is also good to recognize that it is not a neatly demarcated sphere with clear boundaries, even in our society, where we tend to try to separate the spheres more than earlier societies have done. In most societies until modern times, the spheres have largely overlapped. Economics and politics were saturated with religion and vice versa. Because religion gave expression to the meaning of life, it was hard to separate it from a way of life as a whole.
Since religious practices have been central to human life from the beginning of our species, and are really coexistent with our being as a species, they must be considered as a whole. As one of my own mentors, Wilfred Cantwell Smith, put it in Toward a World Theology, they are, historically speaking, singular. This is not to say that all religions are the same. Far from it. Wilfred championed diversity before the word ever became fashionable. His sense that the history of religion is singular does not mean that in their particularities religions are the same. In fact, he didn’t even think the same religions are the same, and therefore he urged the abandonment of such terms as Christianity, Buddhism, Islam, and so forth. For Wilfred, it would be absurd to suppose that all people have been religious in the same way: “No two centuries have been religious in the same way; certainly, no two communities, in the end, no two persons.” But while recognizing the variety of humankind’s religious life, he also discerned that this life was contained within a historical continuum. To consider religious practices as historically singular is also “to affirm that they are all historically interconnected; that they have interacted with the same things or with each other, or that one has ‘grown out of’ or been ‘influenced by’ the other; more exactly, that one can be understood only in terms of a context of which the other forms a part.”
It is, of course, obvious that while all religions may be related, the family of religion is not a happy one. Even so, without ever denying the enormous complexities in this field, the recognition that we are all part of a single history, may move us closer to mutual intelligibility, even toward a recognition that we are all ultimately members one of another.















I have little formal religious training, perhaps a good thing, but a great admiration for the billions who use ritual to give their lives meaning. Monotheistic or Atheistic can only separate two groups that would in any other way of thinking be equal. My hope for humanity is to build bridges between humans like the picture of The Dalai Lama hugging Pope John Paul on the wall of the monastery I stayed at during a retreat in Assissi, Italy.
Robert Bellah claims an exceedingly broad purview for religion, “it is the many ways humans have sought to find meaning, to make sense of their lives” while marginalizing from his discussion a connotation of religion that also has a long history of usage, that is, it’s identification with belief in (a) supernatural being(s). It is precisely rejection of this belief that is at the heart of much atheist sentiment as well as disdain at religionist’s claims that they have privileged access to knowledge of the wishes and commands of such beings as may exist and the institutional imposition of these understandings on non-adherents or socially disempowered individuals. Atheists by and large, in my experience, do not disdain finding meaning, making sense of life or the exploration of transcendent aspects of human experience, they simply reject superstition and irrational beliefs as foundational to these pursuits.
Interesting,but...
It's wonderful to see a reasoned argument against Dawkins. As a long time atheist, I find Dawkins's specious arguments give atheism a bad name, and make it more difficult to be an atheist--everyone argues against Dawkins's postion, and can't her any other atheist arguments through his shouting.
As Bellah points out, one of the greatest errors is to mistakenly assume that religion is attempting a (bad) scientific explanation of the world. Of course, as Bellah explains, "it is the many ways humans have sought to find meaning, to make sense of their lives. As such, it is an inescapable sphere of life." It is not the description of the material world we find in ideology, but our way of living in that world. This is one definition of ideology--and we cannot have an "ideology-free" world, although we can make better ideologies (religions, politics, educational systems, etc.).
As for "spiritual not religious," that has always seemed to me to mean that the existing ideology is fine, or assumed to be unchangeable, and we should just cultivate an attitude of happy acceptance.
Of course, another of Dawkins's errors is assuming that all evils done in the name of religions would not have happened without religion. Just because a culture has to find a way to make its atrocities appear acceptable to its religion does not mean the religion motivated them--we might want to consider how many atrocities were not committed because they could not be justified to the existing religion.
Yes, Brendar, I agree. Religions not only seem to be the "politics of spirituality" but the ongoing script as sentient beings are seen as not capable of writing their own, always needing a master for direction. Although it could be said that the Buddha (a symbolic form for me) has provided a script as Jesus and many other masters have done, the wisdom is in the individual practice so simply defined as kindness and compassion. I like the "reiteration of meaning" idea which occurs in most practices, the ritual practice. It offers more clarity to the loveliness of it, the sitting, chanting, the reminder too that it is ritualistic to say "I love you" as a practice and an affirmation.
After this lenghty article, i am still not sure why one cannot prefer spirituallity to religion. Religion appears to be the "politics" of spiritually. And not necessary! Even the example of the so called deity terrorizing the young men! Good enough reaon to abolish religion. It seems to condone barbaric and unkind practices. I, for one, will stick with the Buddha, and seek kindness and compassion. Buddhism, i believe, is not a religion!
I think, in essence, he is saying that religion and spirituality cannot be separated and so you can't prefer one over the other. I suppose one might say that spirituality is an individual's participation in religion.
I think that your dichotomous view is the same as the questioner of the audience mentioned at the beginning of the article which the author finds an unhelpful false dichotomy.
Besides that, the author rightly points out that there is no such thing as "Christianity", or "Buddhism", or "Islam": Life is always particular, never general.
As an aside, Zen (Buddhism) has the barbaric practice of sneaking up behind people who are minding their own business quietly meditating and hitting them forcibly with sticks.
Touché!