Religioso
Religioso is a marking in music: it seems to call on the
player to perform the piece in a hushed, meditative manner that evokes
religious awe or deep contemplation. I suppose this is pars pro toto. We like to think that religion is at its best in
things like deep contemplative awe even though much religious behavior is
simply pro forma and other religious behavior is simply nasty. For the same
reason we tend to associate religion with things like theism as religion, at its
best, should put us in touch with the best and highest causes. It should make
us conscious of the absolute because that is the best kind of consciousness.
This is the case in spite of the fact that much religion puts us in contact
which beings on much lower levels like saints and ancestors. We idealize
certain moments of religion, abstract them from the embodied totality, and
identify them as the essence or core. There is nothing wrong with this as it is
absolutely one way to define things. A true dog is a dog at his very best.
However, it will not quite do for public discussions of religion for here we
have to speak not normatively but descriptively to the extent that description
can ever be separated from judgment (it cannot but that is another matter). The
first thing that you notice when you make this shift is that the term
‘religion’ covers such a range of different even contrary things that one
wonders if the term has any intension at all or just a vast nebulous extension
with fuzzy boundaries (rather like the concept ‘English’). Religion, for
instance, overlaps with the arts and with philosophy. It also overlaps with
politics and nationalism. It encompasses behaviors that are routine and
ordinary and others that are exalted or weird. It encompasses the most
antithetical of positive and negative emotions and reactions. We might say that
the word religion is about as precise as the word culture and religion may just
be, at bottom, another word for culture: a symbol system which orders our experience
mythically and ritually, conceptually and socially and does this in different
proportions and relations at different times. Sometimes as with Buddhism, this
seems to begin with a conceptual discovery which embodies itself in social,
political and aesthetic forms. Sometimes, as with Christianity it goes the
other way: an ‘event’ gives rise to a speculative tradition.
With apologies to Telltale and his friends, though, I think the
first thing to do is expunge ‘supernaturalism’ from any conception of what a
religion is. ‘Supernatural’ is a term in Catholic theology and that is the only
context in which it has any use and meaning. It refers to certain effects of
grace that transcend natural agency. There are no ‘supernatural’ entities. Once
one drops this burdensome notion the relationship between things like Marxism,
Buddhism and Stoicism becomes clear. These systems have no ‘transcendent’
deities as such but certainly have world immanent principles like the Dharma,
the Dialectic or the Logos. It becomes possible to understand things like
polytheism where the deities are, far from being supernatural, as natural as
can be. Indeed, it is a pretty weird definition of ‘religion’ that leaves out
Pantheism. Pantheists do not recognize a ‘supernatural’ God because they hold
God to be nature. However, there is a certain use in this error as there is in
many errors. In the west we have come to consider ‘absolutes’ as transcendent
thanks to the Hebraism at the base of our culture. This, word, transcendent, is
the correct term to use of the Hebraic god rather than the inept ‘supernatural’. For this reason we think that all other cultures conceptualize
their absolutes as prior to or above nature although it is easy to discover
that they don’t. The Egyptian God Ra is nothing a more and nothing less than
the sun though the Egyptian saw so much more in the sun than we can, including
the perfection and beauty of his discoid form. But, what our western
misunderstanding reveals is that when religion moves beyond the immediate social world it
produces something, we in the west,
happen to value: enlightenment. By this I mean it becomes speculative and
betrays the unified process behind external and internal events. It gives us
knowledge of the causes not in an immediate sense but in the unconditional
sense. It raises our minds to the condition of conditions, the first given.
Thus we have God, the Good, the One, Brahman, Nirvana,
the Dharma, the Dao, Moira, Maat, the Logos and so on. Sometimes these
principles are objects of longing and the drive to erotic fusion: we then have the phenomenon of mysticism. Sometimes
they are objects of external fear and respect. Sometimes their function is
largely conceptual (though they may still be objects of secret worship!) and
here we may put concepts like the dialectic, natural selection, the invisible
hand of the market and other supposedly ‘secular’ concepts (secular is another
term that may be useless but that is for another day) which function
analogously to the ancient concepts referred to above. Since comparative
religion (as far as I can tell at least) is really about describing
these functional analogies I suppose I have no problem describing Capitalist or
Socialist ideologies as religions in the broad sense I am laying out here. I
say this especially as they fuse the conceptual and material with personal,
moral, affective and even sacramental concerns (fossil fuels anoint Kings
nowadays and also anoint the purified nation!) exactly as religions are
supposed to do. Finally these principles
are variously figured as towering above the world in majesty or as acting
cunningly within it as the world-immanent reason of things. It is, I suppose,
in the latter mode that they can be conceived in ‘secular’ terms for all this
word really means is ‘temporal’. However, sophisticated thinkers in the
Judeo-Christian, Pagan, Islamic and Hindu traditions realize that the absolute,
whatever it is, should encompass both modes in its ineffable manner as it is
beyond dualistic thinking and structured, finite opposition.
This, of course, raises the problem that everything may
be religion and if so then religion is surely a useless concept as it marks out
nothing in particular from the realm of culture and simply swallows the whole
of it. We might think of religion as involving ‘the sacred’ but all the sacred is, is the unconditionally good, potent and true, that which elicits ultimate loyalty, respect, fear and concern. I think most every culture has some such notion and indeed things
as mundane as a football team can step in this role. It may then be that I have
no answer at all to the question of whether Pastafarianism is a religion or
Atheists religious. It may really be that I have to leave this question to
politicians and lawyers who have to grant a certain tax status to some groups
and a different one to others.
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