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June 1987
Secular Humanism
Its Roots And What It's Become Today; From Freud to Prime-Time TV, This Egocentric Faith Has Countermanded Man's Belief in Things Divine
In March, when Federal District
Judge W. Brevard Hand ruled that 45 widely used textbooks promote the
"religion of secular humanism" and banned them from Alabama schools, he
brought attention to what we teach our children. Even more dramatically,
the case brought secular humanism into the open. But what does this
"religion" believe. And why should you, as a Hindu, or a seeker, even
care? The reason is that secular humanism is such an active and dominant
intellectual force in the modern world. It influences you in a thousand
ways every day. What's more, secular humanist groups actively malign all
forms of belief in the supernatural, standing as a bold enemy to the magic
of Hinduism. In this article. Hinduism Today's correspondent gives a brief
history of this stream of thought. Part Two, next month, will juxtapose
secular humanism and Hindu dharma.
Secular humanism is humanistic;
it puts man at the center of the cosmos. The human spirit, not God, fills
the world with meaning. The development of man, his potential and his
spirit is what is worshipful. This system of thought is secular in holding
that life is not informed by any divine or sacred intention.
From
early days in Western history, the Greeks saw man as the measure of all
things. They formulated ways for humankind to flourish and reach the
heights from which their religious legends told them man had come. Later
the Roman church took on St. Augustine's teaching that nature is evil,
that man is flawed and only the kingdom of God offers peace and
love.
Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance balanced that teaching.
Leonardo, a brilliant student of life, strove to view man objectively. But
he did not remove himself from his Christian faith in the process.
Instead, he developed an anteroom in his mind in which to study and
worship man as a great work of God. The Dutch theologian Erasmus did the
same, as did Michelangelo. By the fifteenth century, "humanism," the
glorification of the human spirit, was in full bloom.
Christianity
and humanism worked together for the most part until the astronomer
Galileo. The Catholic church censored his new view of the universe.
Galileo recanted, but his theory finally prevailed. And the influence of
humanism, with its rational new approach, grew larger. No longer an
anteroom, it was now the library, and as such it nurtured scientific
inquiry. Thus began humanism's distrust of the sacred institution of the
church. In fact, the more the Christian church objected to the findings of
science, the stronger humanism grew.
Sigmund Freud's founding of
modern psychology in the dawn of the twentieth century signalled the
beginning of a full break with Christianity. Freud discovered the
subconscious mind, which he saw filled with the same demonic energy that
St. Augustine had found in nature. According to Freud, man has an
irrational and potentially evil force within him which is contained and
harnessed by the negotiating power of the Ego, the "I." This unconscious
force Freud called the Id. In its struggle with the Id, said Freud, the
Ego has the help of the Superego, that part of the mind formed by cultural
traditions. Religion serves a great part in forming the Superego, said
Freud, but its values may sometimes hinder human potential.
Thus
the standards of "secular humanism" were set. The "I" was at the center;
its development foremost. Carl Jung, a early disciple of Freud's, said
that the soul, not the Id, was man's true center. But World War II and the
Holocaust soon convinced many that Freud had been right. The tremendous,
irrational, malignant power which emerged showed that man is indeed
capable of the great evil Freud had described.
Some thinkers even
declared that "God had died" and, therefore, man was on his own. Men could
only trust what came to them through their five senses. "Prove it." Became
the catch phrase of the day. Religious expression was viewed as a product
of imagination and an unbalanced mind, rather than the real experience of
a soul living in a world permeated by God.
Short of the Mark: A
religion serves two important functions. First, it answers the central
questions: "Who am I? Where did I come from? And where am I going?"
Second, religion provides the tools to work with these questions in the
most expanded arena possible. Hinduism, for example, answers these
questions. And it provides temples and effective rituals through with to
communicate with God, Gods and devas. It provides scriptures proclaiming
the soul's immortality and oneness with God. And it provides great saints
and gurus to show the path toward God's Holy Feet. These tools enable
devotees to see themselves in the fullness of the life/reincarnation
process and understand that they need not despair in one of life's
difficult experiences.
Secular humanism does not provide a complete
package. Most secular humanists nowadays see mankind as having evolved
from the workings of the universe. Either a comet brought the "stuff of
life" to the planet, or some atomic event started the carbon molecules
moving and melding until they formed the complex proteins necessary for
rudimentary life. These rudiments grew in complexity until eventually, as
chance would have it, mankind evolved. "Who am I?" is answered by saying,
"I am the result of this process, the result of a fomenting universe." Nor
does secular humanism presume to know where mankind is going. After WWII,
lead by the secular humanistic philosophy, men and women in the West
strove to make their conscious mind comfortable and orderly. That became
life's purpose.
Those who were beautiful and lived "well" were
worshipped: movie stars, political leaders, television personalities. God
no longer was seen as holding sway over life, permeating it with His
energy and intelligence. Artists and inventors had taken over. With the
greatness of the human spirit foremost, and religious experience seen as
an aberration, the year moved from one celebration of human achievement to
another.
Today the television set has become the altar in the
secular world. People surrender their attention to the tube to be moved
through humor and sadness and important issues: to have, with few
exceptions, the value of secular life constantly reinforced. The human
spirit is held up as it wrestles with issue after issue. TV viewers are
not taught to think or feel deeply, to be sentimental. Charisma is more
important than character. Self-confidence supercedes
self-knowledge.
Most damaging among the central tenets of modern
secular humanism is the primacy of feeling good in the moment. Couples
divorce when they reach a stand-off because they no longer "feel good"
with their vows. A moment of depression leads teenagers to suicide, or
drugs.
When secular humanism was an adjunct to Christianity, it did
not have to hold a moral center or provide deep meaning to people's lives.
It did offer fresh air. Now, on its own, it is unable to hold the social
order in place. Because of that, people of all religions need to learn
about what secular humanists believe and how deeply woven into the fabric
of live in the modern world those beliefs are woven. We explore that next
month.
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