My last reflection was on Faith, Belief, and Spirituality drawing on the work of theologian Harvey Cox in his book, The Future of Faith. I want to follow up on that with thoughts and reflections by theologian Diana Butler Bass from an interview on the CBC program Tapestry. The episode is entitled, Finding god in HGTV: a spiritual revolution http://www.cbc.ca/radio/tapestry/finding-the-sacred-in-unexpected-places-1.3765363/finding-god-in-hgtv-a-spiritual-revolution-1.3765366
Diana Butler Bass looks at Spirituality and Religion as they
are manifest today and raises a number of interesting questions and
comments.
Bass first poses the question, is Religion keeping up with
the longings and questions of and for the 21st Century e.g. What are
people longing for – compassion and companionship/neighbourliness. How do
we embody compassion?
The God of 100 years ago – hierarchical remote was manifest
in the establishment and practice of religion. This is a God who is a
being sitting on a throne somewhere in outer space. This is contrasted
with a God who is imminent, creative, with us; a God who is
compassionate. Do our hymns and architecture need to reflect that?
Is it enough to just reflect this in our theology and sermons and
teaching? A tension between the memory i.e. an idealized view of a golden
age of Religion which can be just a few decades ago in some of our lifetimes
when Sunday Schools were overflowing and church services were standing room
only versus the apparent yearning for something beyond the materialism and
competition of Western society today.
What is missing for the way the 21st Century does
religion? Concepts of science e.g. the Big Bang – all matter created some
14 billion years ago – we are stardust – what has been happening since is the
rearranging of the matter – is this God’s plan? What might this be
leading to us to – perhaps a future like one envisioned by the Omega Point of
Teilhard de Chardin.
Is Spirituality opening the door for individualism? A
charge by those who primarily care about religious institutions, that the
spiritual movement is a base about self-indulgence. How does
religion connect with what people are longing for? Does spirituality
allow you to sidestep those things that challenge you? Short answer,
yes. But organized religion is no guarantee that doesn’t happen in a
church community.
Bass proposes that one manifestation of spirituality today
can perhaps be seen in the popularity of HGTV. People are longing for
home. Bass notes that when she refers to her little home in her
back yard where she does her writing and puts a picture of it on social
media. She is inundated with requests about where they could get the
plans for it. It is a sign of the desire for a ‘Room of one’s own’ to use
the phrase by Virginia Woolf who wrote about it almost a hundred years
ago.
In reflecting on this, I am left with the question of the
viability and future of a spirituality that is amorphous and all-inclusive that
it means everything and nothing at the same time. Can region in its
structure and practice include and incorporate the aspects of spirituality
which will enable people to explore and develop a mature spirituality that will
bring them closer to the God which they are seeking.
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