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******The*E-Zine*of*Atheistic*Secular*Humanism*and*Freethought*****
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===================================================================
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###################################################################
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########## Volume I, Number 5 ***A Collector's Item!***##########
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###################### ISSN 1198-4619 ###########################
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########################## SEP 1994 ###############################
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###################################################################
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In the mythology and symbolism of our name, "Lucifer" is not to be
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confused with ha-Satan, the mythological source of evil. Lucifer's
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ancient identity was a bearer of light, the morning star, and it is
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as such that this journal intends to publish.
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As the religion virus depends on obscurity, obfuscation, confusion,
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irrationality and darkness in order to flourish, it is natural that
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it would see light as an enemy. Rational, skeptical inquiry has
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ever been the enemy of all religions and is ultimately fatal to all
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gods.
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The purpose of this magazine is to provide a source of articles
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dealing with many aspects of humanism. Humanists have been
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vilified by the religious as immoral. Apparently, the most
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horrible thing they can think of is an atheist.
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As we find their values, such as faith in the non-existent,
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obedience to the imaginary and reverence of the ridiculous,
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repulsive, we adopt the name of their ancient antagonist with
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pride.
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We are atheistic as we do not believe in the actual existence of
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any supernatural beings or any transcendental reality.
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We are secular because the evidence of history and the daily
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horrors in the news show the pernicious and destructive
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consequences of allowing religions to be involved with politics and
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nationalism.
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We are humanists and we focus on what is good for humanity, in the
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real world. We will not be put off with offers of pie in the sky,
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bye and bye.
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==><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><==
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|| Begging portion of the Zine ||
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==><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><==
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This is a "sharezine." There is no charge for receiving this, and
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there is no charge for distributing copies to any electronic
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medium. Nor is there a restriction on printing a copy for use in
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discussion. You may not charge to do so, and you may not do so
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without attributing it to the proper author and source.
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If you would like to support our efforts, and help us acquire
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better equipment to bring you more and better articles, you may
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send money to Greg Erwin at: 100, Terrasse Eardley / Aylmer, Qc /
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J9H 6B5 / CANADA. Or buy our atheist quote address labels, see below.
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==><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><==
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|| End of Begging portion of the Zine ||
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==><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><==
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Articles will be welcomed IF:
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(
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they are emailed to: ai815@FreeNet.Carleton.CA; or,
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sent on diskette to me at the above Aylmer address in any format
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that an IBM copy of WordPerfect can read; ) and
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they don't require huge amounts of editing; and
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I like them.
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If you wish to receive a subscription, email a simple request to
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It will be assumed that the "From:" address is where it is to be
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sent. We will automate this process as soon as we know how.
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1994-05-08 Yes, please DO make copies! (*)
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Please DO send copies of Lucifer's Echo to anyone who might be
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interested.
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The only limitations are:
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You must copy the whole document, without making any changes to it.
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You do NOT have permission to copy this document for commercial
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purposes.
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The contents of this document are copyright (c) 1994, Greg Erwin
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and are on deposit at the National Library of Canada
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You may find back issues in anyplace that archives alt.atheism,
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specifically mathew's site at ftp.mantis.co.uk. Currently, all
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_________________________________________________
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|"Reality is that which, when you stop believing |
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|in it, doesn't go away." [Philip K. Dick] |
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|Greg Erwin 100 Terrasse Eardley |
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|Aylmer, Qc J9H 6B5 Canada |
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| email: ai815@FreeNet.Carleton.CA |
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|________________________________________________|
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_________________________________________________
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|"...and when you tell me that your deity made |
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|you in his own image, I reply that he must be |
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|very ugly." [Victor Hugo, writing to clergy] |
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|Greg Erwin 100 Terrasse Eardley |
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|Aylmer, Qc J9H 6B5 Canada Ph: (613) 954-6128 |
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| email: ai815@FreeNet.Carleton.CA |
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|________________________________________________|
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Other stuff for sale:
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Poster 8x11: WARNING! This is a religion free zone!
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All religious vows, codes, and commitments are null & void
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harmful memes through prayer, reverence, holy books,
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4. Ingersoll poster: "When I became convinced that the
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/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\
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|
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-TABLE OF CONTENTS-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
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1. Can a Christian Be a Moral Person? Greg Erwin
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2. Ernest Thompson Seton, BSA's first Chief Scout, a Freethinker
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ltaylor@denali.CS.UCLA.EDU
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3. THE PROMISE OF HUMANISM by Frederick Edwords
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|
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4. How Things Get Started on Internet Greg Erwin
|
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|
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5. OUR SUNDAY CHAPTER:THE INHABITANTS OF THE MOON, O. B. Huntington
|
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|
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6. ABORTION, A Humanist Response to the Bible Argument
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===================================================================
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|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
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===================================================================
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Can a Christian be a moral person?
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Generally speaking it is not possible for a Christian to be a
|
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completely moral person, as history bears out, for the following
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reasons:
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Many Christians have believed in predestination, therefore they
|
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feel that they are not responsible for their actions, as God has
|
|
destined what these are to be and what the consequences are.
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Many Christians believe in demonic possession, therefore they feel
|
|
that they are not personally responsible for their actions, but can
|
|
blame what they have done on possession by an evil spirit.
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Christians do not understand the difference between damage, harm
|
|
and simple violation of taboo. They equate a harmless act, such as
|
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masturbation, or heavy petting, with a harmful crime such as theft,
|
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rape or murder. As these are all equally "sinful" to the Christian
|
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mind, they cannot be trusted to refrain from criminal activities.
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Christians believe that they have been forgiven in advance for all
|
|
of the sins that they may commit. All a Christian has to do is
|
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"believe in Jesus Christ" and the Christian's sins are forgiven.
|
|
Over the centuries, this horrifying doctrine has been responsible
|
|
for innumerable criminal acts by Christians who believe they can
|
|
"sin" and evade responsibility through confession or believing
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afterwards.
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Christians believe that the "afterlife" is more important than the
|
|
real world. They feel that any injustices they may commit will be
|
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straightened out in some supernatural way, so it is not necessary
|
|
to try to fix things here and now.
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Christians believe that they can find an accurate guide to their
|
|
code of conduct in a 2,000 year old book, which favors slavery,
|
|
misogyny, tyranny and religious intolerance, but contains no
|
|
reference to environmental caretaking, population control or
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democratic civic responsibility. With no incentive to be good
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citizens or to make this a better world, many Christian groups live
|
|
a hermit-like existence, divorced from society, or as
|
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uncomprehending parasites on society.
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Christians are taught that they are sheep, and that their "pastor"
|
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or shepherd is the one ultimately responsible for their actions.
|
|
They are specifically relieved from rationally thinking about the
|
|
consequences of their religious doctrines and are taught not to
|
|
question religious or civic authority but, rather, to delude
|
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themselves by pretending that everything is OK. This is called
|
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"faith."
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Christians believe that "God's Law" is higher than "man's law."
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Therefore they feel that they can violate national and local
|
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criminal codes with impunity. No Christian can really be trusted
|
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hold a position of responsibility in government or law enforcement,
|
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as they do not believe in enforcing merely "man-made" laws. Many
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Christians have gladly committed murder and other heinous acts,
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justifying their actions as defence of "God's Law," or "punishing
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sinners."
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Christians routinely practice discrimination against non-
|
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Christians, believing themselves to be superior. Christians
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|
constantly attempt to divert public tax money to specifically
|
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Christian purposes. Christians attempt to force others to abide by
|
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their taboos, such as forcing people to observe the sabbath, to
|
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pretend to pray, or to practice Christian sexual morality. As
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well, they have denied everyone access to information on
|
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contraception and abortion, and censored or destroyed works of art
|
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and literature.
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Christians believe that their religious organization (the "church")
|
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is more important than the state. When the laws of the state
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conflict with the taboos of their church, they will violate the
|
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laws of the state. When men in their church organization violate
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the laws of the state, Christians attempt to exempt them from
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justice. If they are in the law enforcement system, they conspire
|
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to evade the law.
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Visions; talking to invisible entities; superstition; inability (or
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refusal) to understand history, geology, cosmology and biology;
|
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complete misunderstanding of causality; glorification of ignorance
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and denigration of reason; all point to the pernicious effects of
|
|
this deleterious doctrine on the minds of its deluded followers.
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Not all of the reasons stated above apply to every Christian, and,
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of course, some Christians have lead reasonably crime-free lives
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despite the teachings of their religion. However, it is likely
|
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that they are the exception, rather than the rule. I believe that,
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|
just to be on the safe side, all those professing to be
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"Christians" should be barred from public office, and perhaps,
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denied the vote.
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Of course, they should not be harmed or mistreated in any way.
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Just because it is necessary for a secular society to take
|
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reasonable precautions against Christians' irrational behaviour, is
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no excuse for atheists, people with a rationally based morality, to
|
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begin behaving like them.
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===================================================================
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|| END OF ARTICLE ||
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===================================================================
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AFTERWORD
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This was originally published as a posting to soc.religion.
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christian. (And I would like to point out that the moderator of
|
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that group has never hesitated to post articles which have often
|
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been severely critical of christianity in general, fundamentalism in
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particular, and which were often rather sarcastic in tone. The
|
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group exists to *discuss* christianity, not simply to promote it.)
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Response was so overwhelming that the moderator of the group had to
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cease posting replies. I personally received about 50 email
|
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messages from outraged christian defenders of the faith. If you
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are an outraged christian, and wish to communicate that emotion,
|
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please say something original.
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===================================================================
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|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
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===================================================================
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Ernest Thompson Seton, BSA's first Chief Scout, a Freethinker
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>From ltaylor@denali.CS.UCLA.EDU
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(Originally distributed on InterNet.)
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The Boy Scout Handbook, tenth edition (1990),
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p. 582, acknowledges Ernest Thompson Seton as a
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pioneer in boy scouting, and the first chief
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scout of the Boy Scouts of America.
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E. T. Seton, artist and naturalist, was more than
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that. A great part of _Scouting for Boys_, by
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Lord Baden-Powell, was taken directly from Seton's
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_Birch Bark Roll_. Many of the games were taken
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from Seton's book, with just the names changed.
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Seton invented the merit badge system for his
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group, _Woodcraft Indians_.
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When Baden-Powell's version of Boy Scouting came to
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the United States, Seton wrote large sections of
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the BSA manual (1911). Soon BSA became led, not
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by a naturalist, or a ``boy-man,'' but by lawyer
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and bureaucrat James E. West. Due to personality
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conflicts and underhanded manipulation, E. T. Seton
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was finally forced out as Chief Scout in 1915, despite
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having dedicated years of his life to the advancement
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of the Boy Scouts of America.
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Guess what. Ernest Thompson Seton, first Chief Scout
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of the BSA, originator of the spirit if not the form
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of scouting, did not believe in a personal God, and was
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antagonistic to traditional forms of religion.
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If he applied today as a scout leader, he would likely
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be rejected.
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Occasionally using the word God, or more likely, Great
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Spirit, it may be quibbled that he was not technically
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an atheist. I will give you a section of his autobiography
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verbatim, in which Seton defines his terms, as well as
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reveals his character (pp. 355-6).
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Seton and an Archbishop Corrigan had attended the same
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social function, and had inadvertently switched coats.
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The clergyman invited Seton over, and after drinks were
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served, asked (begin quote),
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... ``To what church, may I ask, do you belong?''
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I replied: ``I was brought up in the worship of
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Moloch.''
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``_What!_'' he exclaimed in loud horror.
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``Yes,'' I answered, ``the demon-god of fire -- burn
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your children -- the more of them you burn alive,
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the greater your merit and likelihood of favor from
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the grim fire-god.''
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For a moment he gazed in astonishment; then his
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expression changed to one of understanding and
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amusement, as he said: ``I see. You mean Scottish
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Calvinism.''
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I nodded. Then he went on: ``I wish I could bring
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you into the True Church.''
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``There's no reason why you should not try,'' I
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responded.
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``What would you give me for a starting point?'' he
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asked.
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``Well,'' I said slowly, ``I will grant you that I
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exist, because I think. I will grant you that you exist,
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because we are here facing each other, and exchanging
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ideas; and we must postulate the reliability of our
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senses.
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``I will grant that the universe exists, because if we
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exist, we must exist somewhere. That is all I will grant.''
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``Will you,'' he said, ``grant that this universe whose
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existence you admit, must have a first cause?''
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``Yes, as a necessity of debate, not as a proven fact.''
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``Will you let me go another step, and call that first
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cause by the name of `God'? ''
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``Merely as a polite, but dangerous, concession to one's
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respect for terminology.''
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``Since you grant that the first cause is God, will you
|
|
further concede that God is a personal God?''
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``No, I will not,'' I said firmly. ``And I see no reason
|
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in logic, biology, or dynamics to justify any such
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assumption.''
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``Oh, bother,'' laughed His Grace, ``let's have another
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glass of wine.''
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End quote.
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Seton's version of atheism/ nature spiritualism/ whatever
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is enough for me. I hereby claim him as a Humanist.
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Welcome, Chief. You won't believe what your boys are up to.
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**********************************************************
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Ernest Thompson Seton. _Trail of an Artist-Naturalist:
|
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Autobiography of Ernest Thompson Seton_.
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New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1940.
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|
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Ernest Thompson Seton. ``The Spirit of the Woods.''
|
|
_Century_ 103 (Dec. 1921): 213-24.
|
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|
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H. Allen Anderson. _The Chief: Ernest Thompson Seton
|
|
and the Changing West_. Texas A&M University Press, 1986.
|
|
|
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Betty Keller. _Black Wolf: The Life of Ernest Thompson Seton_.
|
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Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 1984.
|
|
|
|
**************************Editorial Comment************************
|
|
Why is it no surprise that the religionist is guilty of plagiarism,
|
|
theft and then lying about it, and yet the religious organization
|
|
continues to refuse to admit atheists because the basis of morality
|
|
must be a belief in god?
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
|| END OF ARTICLE ||
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
THE PROMISE OF HUMANISM
|
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|
|
by Frederick Edwords
|
|
|
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|
|
Every religion has its promise, the special reward it offers
|
|
to the faithful. Such a promise is often the main feature that
|
|
attracts outsiders in. As such, it can become a primary selling
|
|
point and motivator.
|
|
|
|
The ancient promise of Christianity is eternal life in
|
|
heaven. I can remember a number of years ago listening to one
|
|
radio preacher describing it in detail with vivid word pictures as
|
|
he rhapsodized over how wonderful it would feel to be there. I
|
|
can remember as a child learning about the streets paved with gold
|
|
and rivers flowing with milk and honey.
|
|
|
|
Different denominations also offer secondary promises, such
|
|
as wealth and happiness in this life, God's helping hand in times
|
|
of trouble, and even physical healings.
|
|
|
|
In Buddhism, the promise is somewhat different. If you
|
|
follow the Noble Eightfold Path of conduct, you will experience
|
|
inner peace and eventually, through a series of rebirths, the
|
|
state of Nirvana. This state is the blowing out of all craving,
|
|
attachment, and desire.
|
|
|
|
New Age religions tend to promise increased powers of mind
|
|
that will bring about inner peace, happiness, power over external
|
|
events, cosmic knowledge, and ultimate union with God.
|
|
|
|
Like in politics, so in religion: the key is PROMISE BIG.
|
|
|
|
In the past, Humanists have sometimes thought of themselves
|
|
as too noble and honest to stoop to such strategies for gaining
|
|
converts. So, instead of offering our own "campaign promises," we
|
|
used to prefer to run down the promises of all the other groups.
|
|
Instead of focusing on a better way of our own, we kept the
|
|
spotlight on those ideas we disagreed with. Only we didn't seem
|
|
able to do it with the captivating music of Omar Khayyam:
|
|
|
|
Of threats of Hell and Hopes of Paradise!
|
|
One thing at least is certain--This Life flies;
|
|
One thing is certain and the rest is Lies;
|
|
The Flower that once has blown for ever dies.
|
|
|
|
This seemed to be our message, and to some it still is.
|
|
But, if this is our message, are Humanists merely the consumer
|
|
crusaders of the metaphysical world, the Ralph Naders of the
|
|
religious realm? Is our only role that of protecting the gullible
|
|
from the purveyors of spiritual Florida swamp land?
|
|
|
|
This is, of course, a noble calling, worthy of the best
|
|
efforts of talented individuals. But is it ALL we should be
|
|
about? From much of our older rhetoric, you would think so. On
|
|
the other hand, today many Humanists are directing their focus
|
|
on what HUMANISM has to offer.
|
|
|
|
And when that is done, the relevant question becomes "What is
|
|
the promise of Humanism?"
|
|
|
|
Well, we already know what we can't promise. As sober
|
|
realists and no-nonsense straight-shooters, we're experts in
|
|
throwing the wet blanket of rationalism over the fondest hopes of
|
|
our fellows. We know the "bad news," but what's our "good news,"
|
|
what is the gospel of Humanism?
|
|
|
|
One way to find out is to ask ourselves how we would present
|
|
Humanism to someone who has never been exposed to traditional
|
|
religion. Here would be a person in no need of disillusionment
|
|
and possessing no idols in need of smashing. We could now go
|
|
directly to the goal of offering the "good news" of Humanism.
|
|
|
|
If some Humanists would find themselves speechless in a
|
|
situation like this, it could be because they believe Humanism is
|
|
simply the "default" condition of humanity, the "natural state"
|
|
that prevails when no brainwash is present. And I've known a
|
|
number of Humanists who have put it to me in exactly those terms.
|
|
|
|
But, if that's the case, then the solemn duty of every
|
|
Humanist when confronting a person unexposed to religion is to
|
|
immediately teach him or her all about it! In this way, the
|
|
person will learn what to watch out for, will be prepared, and
|
|
will be put on guard.
|
|
|
|
But I don't accept that Humanism is the default condition of
|
|
humanity. And I am indeed confronted with individuals unexposed
|
|
to traditional religion. I confront them every day. They are my
|
|
children.
|
|
|
|
How do I teach my children Humanism? Well, I don't do it by
|
|
running down religions they have never heard about. I don't do it
|
|
by exposing them to the varieties of religious experience.
|
|
Instead, I expose them to the varieties of worldly experience. My
|
|
children, ages 4 and 5, already enjoy travel, pictures, movies,
|
|
music, people, animals, flowers, daydreams, stories, words,
|
|
numbers, shapes, colors, and the joy of learning. I want them to
|
|
live the good life envisioned by Humanism, to experience the
|
|
promise first hand. That's why, when I asked my eldest daughter,
|
|
Livia, what the praying hands in front of the Oral Roberts medical
|
|
complex were doing, she exclaimed, "They're clapping!"
|
|
|
|
Are my children Humanists yet? Time will tell, but other
|
|
Humanist parents I know who have used a similar approach have been
|
|
pleased with the results. And the implication is clear. The
|
|
promise of Humanism is a good life here and now.
|
|
|
|
So, let's discuss it in detail. What IS the "good life?"
|
|
Can it be pursued directly? Can EVERYONE have it (that is, do we
|
|
have a promise we can keep; can Humanism deliver the goods)? And
|
|
finally, will it play in Peoria?
|
|
|
|
Lloyd and Mary Morain talked about the good life in their
|
|
1954 Beacon Press book, Humanism as the Next Step, when they
|
|
wrote:
|
|
|
|
As a starting point let us take the idea that this life
|
|
should be experienced deeply, lived fully, with sensitive
|
|
awareness and appreciation of that which is around us.
|
|
|
|
This was the first of their seven key ideas of Humanism. They
|
|
elaborated further, saying:
|
|
|
|
Back through the centuries whenever people have enjoyed
|
|
keenly the sights and sounds and other sensations of the
|
|
world about them, and enjoyed these for what they were--not
|
|
because they stood for something else--they were experiencing
|
|
life humanistically. Whenever they felt keen interest in the
|
|
drama of human life about them and ardently desired to take
|
|
part in it they felt as humanists.
|
|
|
|
Referring to this attitude as "zest for living," they were
|
|
following the lead of Bertrand Russell who, in his book The
|
|
Conquest of Happiness, referred to "zest" as "the most universal
|
|
and distinctive mark" of the happy individual. People with this
|
|
quality, Russell argued, are those who come at life with a sound
|
|
appetite, are glad to have what is before them, partake of things
|
|
until they have enough, and know when to stop.
|
|
|
|
This vision reminds us again of Omar Khayyam:
|
|
|
|
A Book of Verses underneath the Bough,
|
|
A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread--and Thou
|
|
Beside me singing in the Wilderness--
|
|
Oh, Wilderness were Paradise enow!
|
|
|
|
Ah, make the most of what we yet may spend,
|
|
Before we too into the Dust descend;
|
|
Dust into Dust, and under Dust to lie,
|
|
Sans Wine, sans Song, sans Singer, and--sans End!
|
|
|
|
Which sounds like the hedonistic doctrine Humanists are accused of
|
|
advocating:
|
|
|
|
Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die.
|
|
|
|
Or, as Mad magazine once put it --
|
|
|
|
A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread, and Thou--
|
|
Pretty soon I'll be drunk, fat, and in trouble.
|
|
|
|
But there is much more involved in the Humanist notion of the
|
|
good life. The physical pleasures are only a part of it, not to
|
|
be denied of course, but far from representing the whole. For the
|
|
Humanist there are also the pleasures of an unfettered mind making
|
|
new discoveries, solving problems, and creating. There is the
|
|
enjoyment of art, music, dance, and drama. There is the joy of
|
|
helping others and the challenge of working to make the world a
|
|
better and more peaceful place. And, of course, there are the
|
|
joys associated with love and family. The Humanist seeks the
|
|
enjoyment of as many of these as possible.
|
|
|
|
In this, we are clearly at one with the ancient Greek ideal
|
|
of wholeness and the integration of life. For example, in the
|
|
ancient Olympic games, competition included not only athletics but
|
|
drama, music, poetry, and philosophy. And the whole combination
|
|
was viewed as a religious event. The Greeks put it together and
|
|
did it all. So can we.
|
|
|
|
In having zest for living, we join with the ancient Chinese
|
|
who, in following Confucius, saw much of life as play--which
|
|
accounted for their enjoyment of ceremony and especially their
|
|
love of toys.
|
|
|
|
This worldly and good-natured view of life that claims no
|
|
ultimate knowledge, stands out when contrasted with Hinduism.
|
|
Whereas the Yogi is often seen as renouncing desire, living an
|
|
ascetic life-style, and acquiring eternal knowledge, Socrates,
|
|
the sage of the ancient Greeks, deliberately provoked certain
|
|
appetites in himself, lived a social and active life, and
|
|
professed to have no knowledge whatever!
|
|
|
|
It is also radically different from traditional Christianity,
|
|
which has sometimes called this world a veil of tears, has seen
|
|
pleasures as vanity, and seems to find the goal of human life
|
|
beyond the grave. Such believers might quote Ecclesiastes--
|
|
|
|
Better to go to the house of mourning
|
|
than to the house of feasting;
|
|
for to this end all men come,
|
|
let the living take this to heart.
|
|
Better sadness than laughter,
|
|
a severe face confers some benefit. Jerusalem Bible
|
|
|
|
As an antidote, Robert Louis Stevenson offered these words in
|
|
his Christmas Sermon:
|
|
|
|
Gentleness and cheerfulness, these come before all morality:
|
|
they are the perfect duties. If your morals make you dreary,
|
|
depend on it they are wrong. I do not say, "give them up,"
|
|
for they may be all you have; but conceal them like a vice,
|
|
lest they should spoil the lives of better men."
|
|
|
|
Edwin H. Wilson, the grand old man of religious Humanism who,
|
|
for 90 plus years, lived the promise, summed it up when he wrote:
|
|
|
|
The Humanist lives as if this world were all and enough. He
|
|
is not otherworldly. He holds that the time spent on the
|
|
contemplation of a possible afterlife is time wasted. He
|
|
fears no hell and seeks no heaven, save that which he and
|
|
others created on earth. He willingly accepts the world that
|
|
exists on this side of the grave as the place for moral
|
|
struggle and creative living. He seeks the life abundant for
|
|
his neighbor as for himself. He is content to live one world
|
|
at a time and let the next life--if such there may be--take
|
|
care of itself. He need not deny immortality; he simply is
|
|
not interested. His interests are here.
|
|
|
|
The way those interests should be carried out here is
|
|
described by Havelock Ellis in his book, The Dance of Life. There
|
|
he presents living as an art, one best characterized as a dance.
|
|
In this, he follows the ancient Greeks who chose the image of
|
|
dancing because, unlike walking or running, dancing is not
|
|
generally viewed as a goal-oriented activity leading from point A
|
|
to B. One dances for the sheer joy of the activity. It is the
|
|
process more than the product that counts. And this is how the
|
|
Humanist good life is to be lived.
|
|
|
|
So, when someone asks a Humanist, "What is the purpose of
|
|
life?" the Humanist should answer, "Life is not purpose, life is
|
|
art." The meaning is found in the doing.
|
|
|
|
This is a revolutionary and truly unique way of looking at
|
|
the world. It is a way that finds the question of cosmic purpose
|
|
irrelevant, one that is unmoved by the author of Ecclesiastes who,
|
|
in contemplating the question of ultimate value, writes--
|
|
|
|
I have seen everything that is done under the sun, and what
|
|
vanity it all is, what chasing of the wind!
|
|
|
|
The Humanist response is that Solomon missed the point. The
|
|
people, ideas, things, and actions we love do not depend for their
|
|
worth on how long they last or their supposed cosmic significance.
|
|
They are things in themselves to be enjoyed for their own sakes.
|
|
Life is an art, not a task. Life is for us, not for the universe.
|
|
And life is for now, not for eternity.
|
|
|
|
But there's more. We can take Edwin Wilson's statement that
|
|
this life is all and enough and beef it up a bit to declare that
|
|
this life is more than enough. Then it will express the Humanist
|
|
optimism of Robert Louis Stevenson when he wrote:
|
|
|
|
The world is so full of a number of things,
|
|
I'm sure we should all be as happy as kings.
|
|
|
|
(We ought to get some rosary beads and repeat this every day.)
|
|
|
|
There is more in this world than I could experience in a
|
|
thousand different lifetimes. There is a richness here, a
|
|
cornucopia of choices, a wealth of opportunities. There is so
|
|
much to see, to do, to read, to learn. The question is not, "What
|
|
shall I do with my life?" but "What shall I do next?!"
|
|
|
|
Different people choose different things. Most Humanists
|
|
will choose a life oriented outward, not only to enjoying the
|
|
good life, but sharing the good life through helping others. Yet
|
|
other people may choose the inner life of meditation. By making
|
|
such a choice, each one misses something the other is enjoying.
|
|
But that can't be helped. Any time one makes a choice in the use
|
|
of one's time, one fails to engage in all the other possible uses
|
|
for that time, including having other experiences.
|
|
|
|
So, if a monk or celibate priest speaks to me about the
|
|
ecstasies of spiritual contemplation, I respond by sharing how
|
|
thrilled I was in the birthing room watching my children being
|
|
born. If a young fundamentalist describes to me the experience of
|
|
being "born again," I can't wait to talk about the exciting moment
|
|
when I first appreciated geometry. If heaven is described to me
|
|
in graphic detail, I immediately want to show my slides of
|
|
sunsets, seascapes, and mountain ranges.
|
|
|
|
I'm in love with life, and too busy with it to find time for
|
|
things allegedly outside it.
|
|
|
|
But now we can ask, if this is the promise of Humanism--if
|
|
this is the promise of liberal religion--is it a promise limited
|
|
only to the affluent, the intelligent, the educated? If so, then
|
|
are we making a promise we can't always keep? This is the
|
|
criticism leveled against us by the otherworldly religions. While
|
|
we say that they can't keep their otherworldly promises, they
|
|
explain that they turned to this other world because we Humanists
|
|
didn't keep our worldly promises.
|
|
|
|
Otherworldly faiths offer the "joys of the spirit" to those
|
|
who have been denied "the pleasures of the flesh." And the claim
|
|
is that such spiritual joys are more permanent and universal than
|
|
is our pleasure. But why give up so easily, denying oneself
|
|
worldly pleasure to feed on a mirage in its stead? Isn't this
|
|
settling for less, and retreating into an unwarranted resignation?
|
|
Bertrand Russell thought so when, in chapter 2 of The Conquest of
|
|
Happiness, he took the author of Ecclesiastes to task for
|
|
denouncing the very things that make happiness possible and give
|
|
life meaning.
|
|
|
|
Nonetheless, I must admit that I benefit from growing up in a
|
|
middle-class environment in a wealthy country where I have access
|
|
to such variety. But all is not lost in more impoverished
|
|
environments in less wealthy countries. At the Atheist Centre in
|
|
Vijayawada, India, an extended family of Humanists teach the poor
|
|
the joys of traditional folk dance, music, athletics (especially
|
|
acrobatics), science, animal husbandry, occupational skills, and,
|
|
most important of all, the vast world made possible only through
|
|
reading. Many of the beneficiaries of this effort are not only
|
|
poor and uneducated, but are often crippled and abandoned. Yet in
|
|
a country steeped in an ancient tradition of other-worldliness due
|
|
to just such harsh realities, the promise of Humanism is offered
|
|
and met. The International Association for Religious Freedom, the
|
|
world organization of liberal religions, has similar projects in
|
|
India and is getting similar results. The promise is no illusion.
|
|
|
|
And I look at my own life, asking myself how useful the
|
|
promise of the good life would be to me if I suddenly went deaf,
|
|
or blind, or couldn't walk. And yet I can answer with Robert
|
|
Louis Stevenson that the world is indeed so full of things that
|
|
can make me happy. A calamity is a limitation, but if I were
|
|
limited only to reading, I would find the world is so full of a
|
|
number of books that I could not read them all in this lifetime.
|
|
If I were limited only to seeing, I could not see all I want to
|
|
see in this lifetime. If I were limited only to hearing, I could
|
|
not hear all I want to hear in this lifetime. I have not tested
|
|
all the thoughts I want to test, or worked out all the ideas I
|
|
have started but don't have time to develop. I haven't written
|
|
all the speeches I want to write. I haven't met all the people I
|
|
could meet or faced all the challenges I could face. Calamities
|
|
destroy the promise usually because we concentrate on what we have
|
|
lost instead of letting the misfortune simply focus our pursuits
|
|
in a new direction.
|
|
|
|
The Stoic remedy for misfortune is as much a part of this
|
|
promise as is the Cyrenaic enjoyment of good fortune. When
|
|
misfortune limits you, shift your focus and move on. I would
|
|
argue that we can, in most cases, keep the promise of joy in the
|
|
here and now. And even when all cannot be joy--for life indeed
|
|
includes a large share of obligations, struggles, sorrows, and
|
|
pain--the larger context can still be that of an artful life.
|
|
|
|
And when, in those rare instances, we find that the
|
|
realization of the promise is futile, as in the case of an
|
|
agonizing terminal illness, Humanism offers the freedom to exit
|
|
this life at will and with dignity. This is voluntary euthanasia,
|
|
an area of great importance to Humanists, so much so that there
|
|
will be two major workshops on this topic at the national
|
|
conference of the American Humanist Association next weekend.
|
|
|
|
So, in the end, the promise is not a perfect one. But we
|
|
admit that. Others may seem to offer more perfect promises, but
|
|
can they deliver? I have no evidence that anyone has ever gotten
|
|
to heaven, realized Nirvana, or merged with God. But I see
|
|
evidence every day that the promise of the good life is no mirage.
|
|
|
|
So, I'll stick with the honesty of Humanism, that this life
|
|
is all there is, and with the promise of Humanism, that this can
|
|
be more than enough. And this promise will serve as my motivation
|
|
to make life better when all is not as it should be. For I can
|
|
better enjoy the promise on a clean rather than a dirty planet.
|
|
And I can enjoy it better when I am helping others to participate
|
|
in it.
|
|
|
|
This is a philosophy I can be proud of. And, being proud of
|
|
it, I can confidently share it with others. I can offer the "good
|
|
news" of its promise and know I am doing something valuable
|
|
for others.
|
|
|
|
As a result, Humanism need no longer be a philosophy
|
|
exclusively for those bold enough to face an uncaring cosmos with
|
|
defiance, for those fearless enough "to go where no one has gone
|
|
before," and for those impudent enough to call the majority of
|
|
humanity cowards for fleeing to a sweeter tale. Most people are
|
|
moved by exciting promises. They are captivated by thrilling
|
|
visions. And this philosophy can be for them to.
|
|
|
|
There's nothing wrong with offering a zesty promise if we
|
|
have one. And have one we do. So let us Humanists stress it,
|
|
publicize it, and present it as our entry in the religious/
|
|
philosophical sweepstakes. I submit to you that this one shift in
|
|
our focus will do more to counter the harmful effects of
|
|
otherworldly belief than all the rationalistic arguments of
|
|
history's greatest freethinkers. So let's give it a shot.
|
|
|
|
We have nothing to lose but our minority status.
|
|
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
This is the text of a talk presented to various audiences over the
|
|
years. Its author is the executive director of the American
|
|
Humanist Association.
|
|
|
|
(C) Copyright 1989 by Frederick Edwords
|
|
|
|
So long as profit is not your motive and you always include this
|
|
copyright notice, please feel free to reproduce and distribute
|
|
this material in electronic form as widely as you please.
|
|
Nonprofit Humanist and Freethought publications have additional
|
|
permission to publish this in print form. All other permission
|
|
must be sought from the author through the American Humanist
|
|
Association, which can be contacted at the following address:
|
|
|
|
AMERICAN HUMANIST ASSOCIATION
|
|
PO BOX 1188
|
|
AMHERST NY 14226-7188
|
|
|
|
Phone: (800) 743-6646
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
|
|
How Things Get Started on Internet
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Step #1 I receive a message from Colin requesting help in a calm,
|
|
rational debate.
|
|
|
|
Message #26 (28 is last):
|
|
Date: Sun Aug 7 07:47:35 1994
|
|
From: ag250@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Colin T Downie)
|
|
Subject: Catholic Basher Needed
|
|
To: ai815
|
|
Reply-To: ag250
|
|
|
|
|
|
Here's a favor you can do for me .
|
|
Respond to this thread which has been going in uk.misc and
|
|
alt.religion but started off in scot.general when someone posted a
|
|
message on the perils of Scientology . If you do post a response
|
|
make sure you post to all the affected boards .
|
|
Colin
|
|
|
|
Step #2 I look up the posting in question, which follows.
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Article #980 (980 is last):
|
|
From: cultxprt@indirect.com (Jeff Jacobsen)
|
|
Newsgroups: alt.religion.scientology,uk.misc,uk.politics,
|
|
news.misc,scot.general
|
|
Subject: Re: Campaign to Ban SellMoreSundayMails cult in the UK
|
|
Date: Sat Aug 6 19:20:52 1994
|
|
|
|
Stuart McGinnigle (smcginni@cs.strath.ac.uk) wrote:
|
|
|
|
|
|
[stuff deleted]
|
|
|
|
: Get your priorities right. if you really want to investigate : a
|
|
religion that screws up people's lives try the Catholic
|
|
: Church for a start off.
|
|
|
|
What is the Catholic Church doing that is so destructive?
|
|
|
|
[stuff deleted]
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
cultxprt@indirect.com
|
|
Jeff Jacobsen
|
|
PO Box 3541
|
|
Scottsdale, AZ 85271 YOWZA! (ack!poo!)
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Step #3 I post a calm, rational response to the inquirer's
|
|
question.
|
|
|
|
Date: Sun Aug 7 20:22:15 1994
|
|
Newsgroups: uk.misc,alt.atheism,scot.general,etc.
|
|
Subject: Re: Campaign to Ban SellMoreSundayMails cult in the UK
|
|
Reply-To: ai815@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Greg Erwin)
|
|
References: <3215sk$hf8@herald.indirect.com>
|
|
<005311Z04081994@anon.penet.fi> <31t51t$hsk@dunlop.cs.strath.ac.uk>
|
|
Organization: The National Capital FreeNet
|
|
|
|
In a previous article, cultxprt@indirect.com (Jeff Jacobsen) says:
|
|
|
|
>Stuart McGinnigle (smcginni@cs.strath.ac.uk) wrote:
|
|
>
|
|
>
|
|
>[stuff deleted]
|
|
>
|
|
>: Get your priorities right. if you really want to investigate >:
|
|
a religion that screws up people lives try the Catholic
|
|
>: Church for a start off.
|
|
>
|
|
> What is the Catholic Church doing that is so destructive?
|
|
|
|
1) The Catholic church is the world's largest haven for
|
|
pedophiles. When children or their parents have complained, the
|
|
Church protects the priest, threatens the parents with damnation,
|
|
and transfers the priest to another parish where he can commit the
|
|
same crimes again. Only after years of losing expensive lawsuits
|
|
and being forced to pay millions in court settlements, has the
|
|
Church begun to take any action at all (obviously to save itself
|
|
money, not out of any concern for children).
|
|
|
|
2) In the US, the Catholic Church, along with the Mormons and an
|
|
alliance of other fundamentalists, provided the funding to defeat
|
|
the Equal Rights Amendment which would have put gender equality in
|
|
the US Constitution. Throughout the world the Catholic Church
|
|
works against women's rights.
|
|
|
|
3) Similar to the last, the Catholic Church has made it virtually
|
|
impossible to provide contraception information or abortion
|
|
services to women as part of international projects. Through this
|
|
method, the Catholic Church is responsible for killing tens of
|
|
thousands of women each and every year.
|
|
|
|
4) In the Americas, the Catholic Church provided the ideology
|
|
justifying the genocide of Native Americans. When given lands to
|
|
be held in trust for Native nations, the Church cheated the
|
|
Natives, and used the lands to benefit itself, as in Oka; Catholic
|
|
duplicity is the basis for the recent trouble with the Mohawk
|
|
nation there. The Catholic Church ran "Indian Residential Schools"
|
|
which were designed to aid in the genocide of Indian culture.
|
|
Death, sexual abuse and physical abuse, as well as simple
|
|
humiliation and garden variety racism were the order of the day in
|
|
these church-sponsored institutions.
|
|
|
|
5) In Ireland, the Catholic Church ran the Magdalen Laundry up to
|
|
1988, women who were sent there as "immoral" were imprisoned,
|
|
abused and kept as slaves. Many died.
|
|
|
|
6) The Church is responsible for the spread of AIDS through its
|
|
ridiculous prohibition of condom use. The Pope has stated that it
|
|
is better morally for a man with AIDS to forego the use of condoms
|
|
and infect his wife, if he cannot remain celibate. Add a few
|
|
thousand more women to the church's total.
|
|
|
|
7) The Church promotes dictatorships and anti-democratic
|
|
governments wherever it can as long as it can either protect itself
|
|
or, preferably, control them.
|
|
|
|
8) Catholic monasteries and nunneries in France (and possibly
|
|
throughout Europe) hid and protected Nazi war criminals for decades
|
|
after World War II.
|
|
|
|
9) Through its alliances and concordats with Mussolini and Hitler,
|
|
the Catholic Church gave both Nazism and Fascism the respectability
|
|
they needed to become established. Catholic support helped defeat
|
|
the elected democratic Spanish Republic and install the Fascist
|
|
dictator Franco.
|
|
|
|
10) Through its magical thinking and peddling of trinkets, selling
|
|
blessings, and extorting money from the ignorant by threatening the
|
|
dead, it drains billions of dollars from the world's economies.
|
|
|
|
These are just off the top of my head, I am sure there are more.
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Step #4 A grateful public responds
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Message #29 (47 is last):
|
|
Date: Mon Aug 8 09:03:42 1994
|
|
From: ar@zeus.uk.mdis.com (Alastair Rae)
|
|
Subject: Re: Campaign to Ban SellMoreSundayMails cult in the UK
|
|
To: ai815@freenet.carleton.ca (Greg Erwin)
|
|
Newsgroups: uk.misc,alt.atheism,alt.religion.scientology
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thanks for your excellent 10 bones of contention with the RC cult.
|
|
I was raised as a Catholic in Northern Ireland by liberal parents
|
|
who taught me to respect the religious beliefs of others. So when I
|
|
became an atheist I still held onto that tolerance and still find
|
|
it very hard to criticise actions motivated by strong religious
|
|
belief. It's refreshing to have someone do it with such well
|
|
informed flair.
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
Alastair Rae <arae@uk.mdis.com>
|
|
|
|
Message #30 (47 is last):
|
|
Date: Mon Aug 8 09:37:04 1994
|
|
From: ag250@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Colin T Downie)
|
|
Subject: Catholic Bash
|
|
To: ai815
|
|
Reply-To: ag250
|
|
|
|
|
|
Saw your post . Good Work - thanks .
|
|
|
|
Colin
|
|
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
Message #33 (47 is last):
|
|
Date: Mon Aug 8 16:08:36 1994
|
|
From: eiaze@cent1.lancs.ac.uk (Zack Evans)
|
|
Subject: Re: Campaign to Ban SellMoreSundayMails cult in the UK
|
|
To: ai815@FreeNet.Carleton.CA
|
|
Reply-To: Z.Evans@cent1.lancs.ac.uk
|
|
Newsgroups: uk.misc,alt.atheism,alt.religion.scientology
|
|
|
|
|
|
In article <Cu6xzw.Eqq@freenet.carleton.ca> you write:
|
|
|
|
>> What is the Catholic Church doing that is so destructive?
|
|
|
|
<your most excellent attack on the activities of organized
|
|
religion>
|
|
|
|
Can I use this in my web pages please? (URL in signature...) It's
|
|
only polite for me to ask first. :)
|
|
|
|
Thanks,
|
|
Zack
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
Opinions are mine and not the University's. Of course, it's fairly
|
|
unlikely that a square mile or so of concrete, bricks, and glass is
|
|
going to have any sort of significant world view in the first
|
|
place.
|
|
Zack Evans -
|
|
Z.Evans@lancaster.ac.uk
|
|
|
|
Step #5 I offer this to the world
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Zack does indeed have permission to use the article. As well I
|
|
will send this into _Fighting Back_ via the CODESH mailing list,
|
|
suggesting the topic, "What have you got against religion/churches,
|
|
anyway?"
|
|
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
|
|
For your edification, a direct, unmodified excerpt from _The
|
|
Young Woman's Journal_, vol. 3, published by the Young
|
|
Ladies' Mutual Improvement Associations of Zion in 1892.
|
|
That is, the Mormons.
|
|
|
|
OUR SUNDAY CHAPTER
|
|
|
|
THE INHABITANTS OF THE MOON, O. B. Huntington
|
|
|
|
Astronomers and philosophers have, from time almost
|
|
immemorial until very recently, asserted that the moon was
|
|
uninhabited, that it had no atmosphere, etc. But recent
|
|
discoveries, through the means of powerful telescopes, have
|
|
given scientists a doubt or two upon the old theory.
|
|
|
|
Nearly all the great discoveries of men in the last half
|
|
century have, in one way or another, either directly or
|
|
indirectly, contributed to prove Joseph Smith to be a
|
|
prophet.
|
|
|
|
As far back as 1837, I know that he said the moon was
|
|
inhabited by men and women the same as this earth, and that
|
|
they lived to a greater age than we do -- that they live
|
|
generally to near the age of a 1000 years.
|
|
|
|
He described the men as averaging near six feet in height,
|
|
and dressing quite uniformly in something near the Quaker
|
|
style.
|
|
|
|
In my Patriarchal blessing, given by the father of Joseph
|
|
the Prophet, in Kirtland, 1837, I was told that I should
|
|
preach the gospel before I was 21 years of age; that I
|
|
should preach to the inhabitants upon the islands of the sea,
|
|
and--to the inhabitants of the moon, even the planet you can
|
|
now behold with your eyes.
|
|
|
|
>From the first two promises we may reasonably expect the
|
|
third to be fulfilled also.
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
One truth after another men are finding out by the wisdom
|
|
and inspiration given of God to them.
|
|
|
|
The inspiration of God caused men to hunt for a new
|
|
continent until Columbus discovered it. Men have lost
|
|
millions of dollars, and hundreds of lives to find a country
|
|
beyond the north pole; and they will yet find that country--
|
|
a warm, fruitful country, inhabited by the ten tribes of
|
|
Israel, a country divided by a river, on one side of which
|
|
lives the half tribe of Manasseh, which is more numerous
|
|
than all the others. So said the Prophet. At the same time
|
|
he described the shape of the earth at the poles as being a
|
|
rounded elongation and drew a diagram of it in this form:
|
|
|
|
[crude drawing like a circle with handles at each side]
|
|
|
|
which any one can readily see will allow the sun's rays to
|
|
fall so near perpendicular to the center that that part of
|
|
the earth may be warmed and made fruitful. He quoted
|
|
scripture in proof of his theory which says that "the earth
|
|
flieth upon its wings in the midst of the creations of God,"
|
|
and said that there was a semblance in the form of the earth
|
|
that gave rise to the saying.
|
|
|
|
CEDAR FORT, Utah, Feb. 6, 1982
|
|
|
|
________________________________________
|
|
|
|
This is in _Mormonism - Shadow or Reality?_ by Jerald and
|
|
Sandra Tanner. Their addresss is:
|
|
|
|
Utah Lighthouse Ministry
|
|
1350 S. West Temple
|
|
P.O. Box 1994
|
|
Salt Lake City, Utah 84110
|
|
|
|
their catalog can be heartily recommended for anyone seeking
|
|
information about the Mormons, or how Mormon doctrine
|
|
differs from and is contrary to standard Christian doctrine.
|
|
As you may suspect from the organization's title, they are
|
|
Christians, and their primary concern is to influence
|
|
Mormons to leave the false Mormon church and accept "true"
|
|
Christianity. However, the method they use is to reprint
|
|
accurate information about early Mormon history, accurate
|
|
information about Mormon doctrines which have been changed
|
|
and hidden over the years, and accurate information about
|
|
current Mormon business, political and doctrinal
|
|
shenanigans. Their information is good.
|
|
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
|| END OF ARTICLE ||
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
ABORTION
|
|
|
|
A Humanist Response to the Bible Argument
|
|
|
|
When faced with a moral dilemma, many people turn to a book like the
|
|
Bible, in the belief that it will offer them some sort of guidance.
|
|
This is particularly true for those who believe the Bible to be the
|
|
literal world of God and the only authority on morality. However,
|
|
their enthusiasm for what they believe the Bible says, rarely equates
|
|
with what it actually does say.
|
|
|
|
What Does the Bible Say About Abortion?
|
|
|
|
This is a very easy question to answer, because the word abortion does
|
|
not appear anywhere in the Bible. Out of the over 600 Mosaic Laws,
|
|
covering everything from the shape of a man's beard to the minutest
|
|
details of sabbath observance, not even one of them comments on
|
|
abortion. One of the only references to this issue at all may be
|
|
found in Exodus 21:22-25 "If men strive, and hurt a woman with child,
|
|
so that her fruit depart from her, and yet no mischief follow: he
|
|
shall be surely punished according as the woman's husband will lay
|
|
upon him and he shall pay as the judges determine. And if any
|
|
mischief follow, then thou shalt give life for life, eye for eye,
|
|
tooth for tooth..."
|
|
|
|
Far from being any kind of pronouncement against abortion, this
|
|
passage suggests that the miscarriage is only punishable by a fine,
|
|
and is of little or no consequence and certainly does not involve any
|
|
loss of life. It is only in the case of harm to the woman that the
|
|
biblical rule of "an eye for an eye" is to be used. Other references
|
|
to untimely births occur in Hos. 9:14; Job 3:16; Psalms 58:8; and
|
|
Eccles. 6:3; but none of these imply in any way that abortion was
|
|
considered contrary to any religious or moral law. Nowhere is there
|
|
any reference to abortion that implies that it is in any way contrary
|
|
to the will of God.
|
|
|
|
What About "Thou Shalt Not Kill"?
|
|
|
|
The sixth of the "Ten Commandments" is to be found in Exodus 20:13 and
|
|
states quite explicitly "Thou Shalt Not Kill." Does this include
|
|
abortion?
|
|
|
|
Although this commandment is the most widely used argument in the
|
|
anti-abortionists' biblical arsenal, its meaning is nowhere near as
|
|
clear as they might like to think, because it does not explain just
|
|
what it is that must not be killed.
|
|
|
|
We use the word kill to refer to the ending of the life of anything
|
|
that lives. We kill the weeds on our lawns, we kill the pests on our
|
|
crops, we kill to eat, in fact we literally cannot live without
|
|
killing something. To understand what this passage really means, we
|
|
obviously have to see what the Bible says about different sorts of
|
|
killing.
|
|
|
|
I doubt that anyone would argue that the killing of plants is
|
|
considered unacceptable in the Bible. Likewise there is nothing to
|
|
suggest that the lives of domestic or wild animals were in any way
|
|
considered of value. In fact the very opposite is the case as
|
|
demonstrated in Mark 2:14 where Jesus is said to have cast out demons
|
|
into a herd of swine which then drown themselves by running into the
|
|
sea, or Exodus 9:3-6 where God reportedly killed all of the Egyptian
|
|
cattle. Not to mention the Old Testament passion for sacrificial
|
|
slaying and burnt offerings.
|
|
|
|
So, we are left with just human life to consider, but again the
|
|
meaning is not clear. Many passages in the Bible detail the mass
|
|
slaughter of various enemies of the chosen people or their God. 2
|
|
Kings 8:12, "dash their children, and rip up their women with child",
|
|
or Isaiah 13:16 "Their children also shall be dashed to pieces before
|
|
their eyes; their houses shall be spoiled and their wives ravished."
|
|
In fact if all of these divinely approved deaths were added up, the
|
|
victims wold probably number in the millions.
|
|
|
|
Time and time again, after making such an apparently unambiguous
|
|
statement in favour of not killing, the Bible documents and apparently
|
|
condones the killing of men, women and children for committing such
|
|
crimes as picking up sticks on the sabbath (Numbers 15:32-35) or being
|
|
a stubborn son (Deut. 21:18-21). The examples are almost endless and
|
|
a thorough reading of the Bible indicates that killing was not only
|
|
condoned but encouraged for such apparently trivial offenses and to a
|
|
degree that no civilized person would accept.
|
|
|
|
Surely Killing An Innocent Unborn Child Was Considered Wrong?
|
|
|
|
Abortion is not new, it has been practised with varying degrees of
|
|
success for thousands of years. However, there is not a single
|
|
reference in the Bible to any woman being guilty of having or aiding
|
|
an abortion and it is inconceivable to suppose that during the period
|
|
that the Bible was written, not one abortion was performed. Likewise,
|
|
it is inconceivable to imagine that this is merely an oversight, since
|
|
the Bible goes to such lengths to identify supposedly sinful acts.
|
|
|
|
If you believe that the Bible is the literal word of God, then you are
|
|
left with the inevitable conclusion that God does not condemn abortion
|
|
(which may explain the high number of natural spontaneous abortions).
|
|
If you believe that the Bible was written by ordinary human beings,
|
|
you are left with the conclusion that they placed no value at all on
|
|
the unborn human fetus and not a whole lot more value on it even after
|
|
it was born.
|
|
|
|
Without the Bible as a Guide, How Can I Make Such a Decision?
|
|
|
|
Even many dedicated Christians no longer regard the Bible as their
|
|
only source of guidance, and an increasingly large proportion of the
|
|
population are rejecting all religious beliefs and biblical authority.
|
|
|
|
Whether they know it or not, and whether they use the name or not,
|
|
these people are using humanistic principles as their guide. Simply
|
|
stated, humanism promotes the use of rational thought, human
|
|
experience and compassion to determine the most appropriate course of
|
|
action to be taken.
|
|
|
|
Some Christians ask how they can make a difficult decision on their
|
|
own without relying on a source of supposed authority such as the
|
|
Bible. However, most humanists would argue that once you have finally
|
|
rejected mystical or religious thinking, the real issues become much
|
|
clearer. You are able to rationally consider the likely outcome of
|
|
each available course of action and make your decision based on the
|
|
particular circumstances rather than on some religious dogma.
|
|
|
|
Humanists acknowledge that the exercise of their free will requires
|
|
the courage to accept that they may make the wrong decision sometimes.
|
|
They may not have all of the relevant facts, or may incorrectly
|
|
predict the outcome of certain events, but they regard the occasional
|
|
failure as the inevitable cost of their own humanity. They would
|
|
rather strive to be the best that they can be, even when they know
|
|
that they may suffer failures, than blindly sacrifice their
|
|
responsibilities to a rigid dogma.
|
|
|
|
What is the Humanist View of Abortion?
|
|
|
|
Humanists recognize that there are no absolute answers to this
|
|
question.
|
|
|
|
Each case is different and the decision must be based on individual
|
|
circumstances. A rational and scientific analysis of the issue
|
|
clearly indicates that there is a progression from single human cell
|
|
to fully developed fetus during the course of a pregnancy, which may
|
|
imply a changing value to that life. Likewise, not all children face
|
|
a life of equal value. Many are not wanted and cannot be supported,
|
|
or they may face a life of hunger, disease, neglect or abuse.
|
|
|
|
Humanists agree that every woman has the inherent right to decide for
|
|
herself whether to carry a pregnancy to term, or whether to terminate
|
|
it. They trust women to care about the quality of life of their
|
|
future children, and to be capable of making the best decision. They
|
|
believe that nobody has the right to impose their wishes or opinions
|
|
on a woman facing this decision, no matter what their motivation may
|
|
be.
|
|
|
|
Humanists believe that women can only exercise their rights in a free
|
|
society where there is easy access to a speedy and safe abortion, and
|
|
this is why humanists like Dr. Henry Morgentaler have fought and even
|
|
gone to prison in support of a woman's right to freedom of choice.
|
|
|
|
____________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
This is a pamphlet distributed by the Humanist Association of Canada.
|
|
I am a member-at-large of the executive.
|
|
|
|
To find out more about Humanism, you may write to:
|
|
|
|
The Humanist Association of Canada
|
|
P.O. Box 3736, Station C,
|
|
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
|
|
K1Y 4J8
|
|
|
|
or email me at ai815@FreeNet.Carleton.CA
|
|
|
|
____________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
Membership application and <<Humanist in Canada>> quarterly
|
|
subscription form.
|
|
|
|
Name:______________________________________
|
|
|
|
Address____________________________________
|
|
Postal
|
|
City___________________Prov/State___________ code/ZIP_______
|
|
|
|
Phone, Home: (____)_________ Work: (____)_________
|
|
|
|
I am sending
|
|
|
|
$500 for a Life Membership
|
|
$ 45 for a Household Membership
|
|
$ 40 for an individual membership
|
|
$ 30 for a full-time Student membership
|
|
(indicate institution _________________
|
|
student # _________________
|
|
|
|
$____ additional donation
|
|
|
|
Life membership does not include a subscription to <<Humanist in
|
|
Canada>>; however, all other memberships do.)
|
|
|
|
All HAC members receive the HAC Newsletter. Those who do not wish to
|
|
subscribe to the Humanist in Canada Quarterly (for example, where a
|
|
new member is already a direct subscriber or does not wish to read the
|
|
magazine) please deduct $15 from the membership fee. Membership fees
|
|
and additional contributions (except the $15 subscription portion) are
|
|
eligible for Revenue Canada income tax credits for persons with income
|
|
from Canadian sources.
|
|
|
|
Members with mailing addresses outside Canada please add $4 to cover
|
|
additional shipping costs for foreign mail.
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
|| END OF ARTICLE ||
|
|
===================================================================
|
|
==================================================================
|
|
|| END OF ISSUE ||
|
|
==================================================================
|
|
|
|
Once again: ISSN: 1198-4619 Lucifer's Echo.
|
|
Volume I, Number 5: SEP 1994.
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
nullifidian, n. & a. (Person) having no religious faith or belief. [f.
|
|
med. L nullifidius f. L nullus "none" + fides "faith";] / If this is a
|
|
humanist topic then I am President of the Humanist Association of Ottawa.
|
|
Greg Erwin. ai815@FreeNet.Carleton.CA
|