BY ERROL A. GIBBS
How did the world arrive at its current state of crises, despite exponential growth in the religions of the world, academia, human knowledge, scientific and technological achievements in engineering and medicines, and material and financial wealth? Can religion help to manage or reverse the nature of the crises (Reference: Part 1. Paragraph 2.).
“This most beautiful system of the sun, planets, and comets, could only proceed from the counsel and dominion of an intelligent and powerful Being” — Sir Isaac Newton (1643–1727) (Mathematician, Physicist, Astronomer, and Theologian).
There is a “spiritual hunger,” a sort of “spiritual starvation” that is occurring throughout the world. This spiritual starvation has underpinned each epoch, from premodern, to modern, and postmodern. It often manifests in a search for religion, but religion is a predicate of dogma, birthplace, race, color, heritage, and culture.
Religion is mainly a cultural system underpinned by moral codes of behavior and visible practices, as ways of life to their adherents. Billions throughout the world follow some form of religion, underpinned by God, gods, creator, and even earthly deities. Adherents.com, an independent, non-religious organization indicates that there are some 4,300 religions of the world.
Furthermore, nearly seventy-five percent of the world’s population are adherents to one of the five major religions of the world — Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, and Judaism (alphabetically). It is also worth noting that Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, are three major monotheistic religions — a belief in one God.
Near universally, people believe that religion (faith) is essential to unify humanity. Paradoxically, religion has failed in its capacity to transform human behavior — communally, nationally, and consistently. Enlightened thinkers of the 18th century believed that the “reign of reason” could free human beings from superstition from religious tyranny.
Ironically, the “Age of Enlightenment” was an era that began at the close of the Thirty Years’ European War (1618 – 1648) and ended with the French Revolution (1789). It was a watershed moment in France, although it failed to achieve all of its goals and degenerated into a chaotic bloodbath (Reference: French Revolution ― History).
The French Revolution played a critical role in shaping modern nations by showing the world the power inherent in the will of the people. Global authority and wealth have failed to satisfy an inner emptiness, a secret struggle, and innate hunger for a life of peaceful coexistence among individuals and nations.
Although religion is not the principal agent of all wars, religions, up through the ages, have been the catalyst for incalculable violence in the world. Religion is often polarizing, within, and amongst its denominations. Typically, Christianity with its 43,000 denominations (Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary), though they have placid agreement among them.
Many individuals that profess a religious heritage often find unity in support of secular wars. Religion plays a significant part in the breakdown of relationships in the global religious culture that belie any evidence of its potency to unify humankind. Consequentially, religion does not hold the key to the unity of the human family — the “oneness” of humanity.
What would it take to unify humanity? Despite the division among religions, most adherents would agree that their search is for God, regardless of how each religion personify God. Has God been overly personified by the religions of the world? Hinduism has 33 million personifications, Christianity has 953, Islam has 99, and Judaism has seven personifications, God.
The question then becomes, “Who is God?” Is God a person, a Spirit, or an infinite Spirit? Is God an intellectual probability? Nonetheless, most individuals would agree on the three dimensions to human existence — body, mind, and spirit. Therefore, our search for a connection to God should be in the spiritual realm, underpinned by a “life of spirituality.” What is spirituality? How would human beings know that we have attained a life of spirituality?
We can know a person who is spiritual — definitively by the lived “attributes of the spirit.” The evidence is in the consistent, practical demonstration of the life of the individual such as love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control (Galatians 5:22-23) (Circa CE 57-58).
The essential foundation of spirituality is love (agape), which is absolute and unconditional. This form of love requires us to bring our “thoughts” (Reference Part 1. Para, 3-5) under subjection, to liberate us to a higher state of spirituality, humanity, and purpose. Likewise, from mere belief — to faith, belief, and practice.
The result is the liberation of human lives in the physical realm and the imposition of “new” enlightenment of the 21st century. A world, unified could then blossom into a “new” era of high civilization with social and economic equity, fairness and justice, and the sovereignty of nations. This path calls for a different form of spiritual awareness to broaden our belief systems from religion — to spirituality.
Follow us — as we briefly re-explore these five salient paths — Philosophy, Religion, Education, Authority, and Leadership for new understandings and solution perspectives that can lead to a better world for future generations.