Religious Fundamentalism and the New Atheists

James Wood literary critic, exposed some of the main flaws of the new “militant atheism” including its relentless attacks on any kind of belief, its denying that there could ever be any value in personal religious practice, and its considering all Western religions abhorrent. Children, Wood remarked, are sometimes “stuck in a strict literalism, out of which they eventually grow.” However, he noted:

The New Atheism is locked into a similar kind of literalism. It parasitically lives off its enemy. Just as evangelical Christianity is characterized by scriptural literalism and an uncomplicated belief in a “personal God,” so the New Atheism often seems engaged only in doing battle with scriptural literalism. The God of the New Atheism and the God of religious fundamentalism turn out to be remarkably similar entities.

From a lecture entitled  The New Atheism given by James Wood at Oxford University.
Reprinted in the British newspaper The Guardian.

Hand of God


Scripture was never meant to be read literally. The original Hebrew text of the Old Testament and the Greek of the New Testament are elegantly poetic. But the aggressive New Atheists tend to take every work literally in ways that no rational reader would ever do…To be sure, the New Atheists were not the first to stick to uncompromisingly and unimaginative literalism. The Catholic Church, for one, historically adopted such literalism and unyieldingly defended it in the face of scientific discoveries and theories about the movement of the Earth, famously persecuting Galileo and many others for maintaining the nonbiblical heliocentric view. One would have hoped that the New Atheists, living in the twenty-first century, would know better.

Why Science Does Not Disprove God
Why Science Does Not Disprove God
Amir D. Aczel

 

Modern Man is Transcultural

Modern Man, owing perhaps to the changes that have taken place in human geography and history, can no longer belong to a homogenous or isolated culture. He is bombarded by ideas, images, and sounds from all four corners of the world. He may have a superficial and even erroneous knowledge of other people, yet cultures mix, ideas intermingle, religions encounter one another, and languages interact and borrow from one another as perhaps never before in human history. The culture of modern Man may not be very stable; in fact he may even be threatened with the loss of all culture, but he is undoubtedly transculturally influenced — and this is true not only for minority groups but for the passive and suffering majority as well.

The Vedic Experience
The Vedic Experience
Raimon Panikkar

 

 

The Vedic Experience collects the most crucial texts of the Indian Sacred Scriptures and shows how they manifest the universal rhythms of nature, history and man. Excerpts are taken from the Rig-veda, Brahmanas, Aranyakas, and Upanishads, which represent the mystical and philosophical culmination of the Vedas. This anthology offers the primary sources and an invitation to personal reflection.

Christ the Redeemer

Christ the Redeemer

Christ the Redeemer is a symbol of Brazilian Christianity. The statue has become an icon for Rio de Janeiro and Brazil.

The statue depicts Jesus Christ overlooking Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on the peak of the 2,300 foot Corcovado mountain in the Tijuca Forest National Park.

Christ the Redeemer is massive:

  • 98 feet tall, not including its 26 foot-high pedestal
  • arms stretch 92 feet wide
  • weighs 718,000 pounds
  • made of reinforced concrete and soapstone
  • constructed between 1922 and 1931

The statue was created by French sculptor Paul Landowski.

 

Modern Man is Secular

Modern Man is a secular Man, which does not mean that he is not religious or that he has lost his sense of the sacred. The statement means only that his religiousness and even any sense of sacredness he may possess are both tinged with a secular attitude. “Secular attitude” means a particular temporal awareness that invests time with a positive and real character: the temporal world is seen as important and the temporal play of Man’s life and human interactions is taken seriously; the saeculum, the ayas, is in the foreground. Man can survive on earth, both as a species and as a person, only if he pays careful attention to everything secular. Otherwise he will be swallowed up by the machinery of modern society or the mechanism of cosmic processes. Secular Man is the citizen of the temporal world.

The Vedic Experience
The Vedic Experience: Mantramanjari
Raimon Panikkar

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Raimon Panikkar says in the Introduction:

This anthology aims at presenting the Vedas as a human experience that is still valid and capable of enriching and challenging modern Man, as he seeks to fulfill his responsibility in an age in which, for better or worse, he is inseparably linked with his fellows and can no longer afford to live in isolation.


An abridged version of The Vedic Experience: Mantramanjari, called simply The Vedic Experience, and written by Ramion Panikkar, is available for free download.