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In every survey of UU’s I have
seen the majority identify themselves as religious humanists. Religious humanism in
Unitarian Universalism now has a history of about 85 years. During that time it has
evolved and changed somewhat.
I want to mention what I consider to be the eight most
important changes between the humanism of approximately the first 70
years and the new humanism that has been emerging for the last 15 or
so years. For purposes
of discussion I will
call them the old and the new humanism. It is the new humanism that
we at Meadville/Lombard stress with our ministerial students who are
humanist, but there is very little here that does not also apply to
all our students, humanists and theists alike. These are some of the
qualities and values we want our students to emphasize in their
future ministries.
First, the old humanism emphasized
the single individual with very little emphasis on the importance of
the community.
Contemporary religious humanism must stress the importance of
the covenanted religious community. We are not independent,
isolated individuals.
We become individuals in community, starting with the
community of the family.
And we become truly human only in authentic community with
others. I define
authentic community as people who covenant to walk together for
common purposes. A
humanistic religious community will be a caring community in which
each person cares about and to some extent for others within the
community and outside the community as well. Community does not destroy
individuality; it makes it possible. The Xhosa of southern Africa
have a saying that puts it well. They say, “I am because we
are.”
If the older humanism
over-emphasized the individual and individualism to the neglect of
community, the new religious humanism regards the individual as
fully human only within community, a community of caring and
responsible people. One
of the major differences between secular humanism and
religious humanism is that religious humanism emphasizes the
importance of the covenanted religious
community
Second, the old humanism was
exceedingly rational often to the point of being rationalistic and
ignoring the affective aspect of our humanness. Today’s humanism will
recognize the importance of the non-rational factors in human
experience. We are not
only thinking beings; we are also feeling beings, and our feelings,
our emotions play an important role in our values and how we got
those values. I am a
committed social activist because I feel outrage at injustice and
oppression and the pain and suffering they bring upon people. I am a humanist in part
because of my strong feelings about the suffering of innocent
people. However, our
feelings ought not to be in the service of irrational beliefs; emotions are non-rational,
not necessarily irrational, but they can also feed our
rationality.
On the other hand, I reject the
current view in our culture that if you feel something, that
something has got to have objective reality. I am thinking, for example,
of people who say they feel the presence of a loved one who is dead
and therefore they say that that person is alive in another
world. Or the current
fad of believing in angels because you feel that an angel is helping
or guiding you.
Feelings have to be tested with reason and especially with
the principle that a feeling is a personal thing that does not
necessarily have its source in objective
reality.
I am suggesting that there is a
place in religious humanism for emotional expression, the expression
of both joy and sorrow, for the expression of love and caring. There is even a place for
mystical experience, the feeling of oneness with the universe that
many of us sometimes have when we are in the woods or walking along
an ocean beach or gazing at the stars on a clear night. Humanism should not be cold
and sterile. We can
experience emotions and even to some extent be guided by them
without giving up the importance of reason. We can express feelings that
are not rational but not based on irrational beliefs either. Our emotional life is just
as much a part of us is our reason, and if we sometimes regard
feelings with suspicion, that is because they are sometimes linked
with the irrational.
Humanists are whole people, beings
who feel and experience as well as think, and all aspects of our
being have a role to play in our
humanism.
Third, the old humanism was far
too optimistic, seeming to ignore the reality of tragedy and evil in
human nature. Religious
humanism today needs to take seriously the tragic dimension of life
and the role evil often plays in human tragedies. Human beings suffer and die,
sometimes prematurely and almost always before we are ready. Sometimes we suffer or die
because of humankind’s inhumanity to one another. Since the Nazi holocaust we
can never again be as optimistic about human nature as the old
humanism was. The
tragic dimension includes the fact that life and the universe are
not necessarily friendly and benevolent to human beings but are
really indifferent to us and sometimes even hostile. It includes the fact that
life is not necessarily meaningful and purposeful. We must create our own
meaning and purpose.
Fourth, if the old humanism seemed
closed to a sense of wonder and mystery and to any form of
transcendence, the new humanism can be an open humanism—open
to wonder and mystery and transcendence in a naturalistic
framework. We can
admit that there are limits to what human beings can know and
understand, and that even things we think we understand can still
call forth awe and wonder in us.
If the old humanism tended to be
somewhat arrogant, self-assured and even dogmatic, the new humanism
can be more modest.
Instead of proclaiming “this is the way things are,” we can
say “This is how it looks to me.” We can speak for ourselves
without trying to seem to legislate for
others.
And that leads to the fifth
point. The new humanism
must be tolerant of other perspectives and willing to engage with an
open mind in conversation with people who hold other
perspectives. In
particular I would hate to see humanist regard Unitarian
Universalist theists as somehow irrational or inferior. Humanists need to work
together with those who have somewhat different views. “Agreed to differ, but
resolved to love.”
Sixth, the new humanism must
understand and appreciate the importance of the aesthetic dimension
in religion and in life.
The old humanism gave the impression of being rather lacking
in aesthetic interests.
Services in explicitly humanistic congregations often were
simply lectures and discussion sometimes embellished by special
music.
Today’s religious humanism can
appreciate the value of art, poetry, symbols, myth and ritual and of
music including congregational singing. I think of such
rituals as the lighting of the chalice at the beginning of each
service, a visual symbol of the goal of enlightenment and of
religious freedom through its history. I think also of the ritual
of the sharing of joys and concerns including the lighting of a
candle by the person sharing a joy or concern. I believe the sharing of
joys and concerns is important to a community of religious humanists
because it is a way of building a caring community, community that cares about
humans and that after all is what humanism stands
for.
The aesthetic dimension speaks to
the whole person, not just the mind, and that is why it is so
important if religious humanism is to affirm that we are whole
persons and if our humanism is to impact our affections. Moreover, I believe that if
humanism is to appeal to people other than intellectuals it must
speak to the whole person through the arts, through ritual and
symbol.
Seven, the old humanism often
seemed to deify human beings and in the process ignored other values
especially the value of the natural world. Religious humanism today
includes an emphasis on the environment, what our seventh principle
calls the interdependent web of all existence. Religious humanism must be
ecologically conscious, environmentally concerned and
committed. We know that
if human life is to survive for many more generations, we must honor
the natural world far more than humankind has done in recent
years. In a word, it is
possible to build an environmental ethic on humanist
foundations.
Eighth,
the old humanism was committed to social justice and to the ideals
and values of democracy, but it too often dealt with social justice
issues in a paternalistic way. A religious humanism
for today and tomorrow must be committed to liberating oppressed
people and to economic justice. We ought to have a bias
toward the poor and disadvantaged and oppressed. It must be emphatically
committed to women’s rights and equality, to gay rights and
equality, to economic justice and to opposing racism. Humanism is by definition
truly committed to human well being, and that means we must be
socially responsible and active in the work of justice.
A religious humanism that
emphasizes these eight points answers most of the criticisms leveled
at it by postmodernism, the women’s movement, and the environmental
movement. But it does
more than that. It
honors its own inner principle, its own fundamental dedication to
human betterment.
The goals of religious humanism is
fully and truly human beings, people who are free of the
fictions and illusions that diminish the self, and who are free and
independent within the context of a loving and caring community
working together to transform the world. The religious humanist
believes that human beings must rely on our own minds and hearts to
achieve these goals, but that together we can make progress toward
them. The new religious
humanism brings together the latest contemporary understandings of
what it means to be human with the best values of our liberal
religious tradition to achieve that goal.
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