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Religious naturalism is an approach to spirituality that is devoid of supernaturalism. Religious naturalism, like most religions, is concerned about the meaning of life, but it is equally interested in living daily life in a rational, happy way. An alternative, more human-centric approach, is to look at it as answering the question: "What is the meaning of one's life and does it have a purpose?". Religious naturalism attempts to amalgamate the scientific examination of reality with the subjective sensory experiences of spirituality and aesthetics. As such, it is an objectivity with religious emotional feelings and the aesthetic insights supplied by art, music and literature.[1],[2]
[edit] NaturalismAll forms of religious naturalism, being naturalistic in their basic beliefs, assert that the natural world is the center of our most significant experiences and understandings. Consequently, nature is considered as the ultimate value in assessing one's being. Religious naturalists, despite having followed differing cultural and individual paths, affirm the human need for meaning and value in their lives. They draw on two fundamental convictions in those quests: the sense of Nature's richness, spectacular complexity, and fertility, and the recognition that Nature is the only realm in which people live out their lives. Humans are considered interconnected parts of Nature. [3] Science is a fundamental, indispensable component of the paradigm of religious naturalism. It relies on mainstream science to reinforce religious and spiritual perspectives. Science is the primary interpretive tool for religious naturalism, because, scientific methods are thought to provide the most reliable understanding of Nature and the world, including human nature.[4]
[edit] ReligiousReligious naturalism is religious in its approach to morality which is seen as coming from humans' biological and social evolution rather than divine revelations. Human evolution has produced a brain complex enough both for symbolic contemplation and for participating in unique human forms of social life. Since humans are hardwired for flexibility, morality varies from culture to culture. However, most world cultures adhere to the same basic 24 virtues.[7] P. Roger Gillette of Meadville Lombard Theology School says that religious naturalism is a religion "in that it is a system of belief and practice that demands and facilitates one's intellectual and emotional reconnection with one's self, one's family, one's local and global community and ecosystem, the universe of which the global ecosystem is a part, and (perhaps) the creative source of this universe". It is also a theology, an ethics, and a “full service’ belief that requires a ‘radical spiritual transformation’.[8] [edit] History
Religious naturalism is a relatively new religious movement. Early uses of the term include the American Whig Review in 1946 describing "a seeming 'religious naturalism'",[9] In 1869 "Religious naturalism differs from this mainly in the fact that it extends the domain of nature farther outward into space and time. ...It never transcends nature". was expressed in American Unitarian Association literature.[10][broken citation] Ludwig Feuerbach wrote that religious naturalism was "the acknowledgment of the Divine in Nature" and also "an element of the Christian religion", but by no means that religion's definitive "characteristic" or "tendency".[11] In 1864, Pope Pius IX condemned religious naturalism in the first seven articles of the Syllabus of Errors.[non-primary source needed] In the 1870s J.K. Huysmans was among a rising group of writers "the so-called Naturalist school, of whom Émile Zola was the acknowledged head…With Là-bas (1891), a novel which reflected the aesthetics of the spiritualist revival and the contemporary interest in the occult, Huysmans formulated for the first time an aesthetic theory which sought to synthesize the mundane and the transcendent: 'spiritual Naturalism'."[12][broken citation][unreliable source?] Many modern religious naturalists[who?] find philosophical similarity with ancient philosophers in the stoic or skeptical traditions, for example Zeno (founder of Stoicism) who said:
Similarity is also found[by whom?] with certain rationalist philosophers beginning with Benedictus de Spinoza. Spinoza proposed that God was the totality of existence rather than external to it ("God, or substance…. is the indwelling, and not the transient cause of all things" [14]). Others[who?] find both philosophical and religious resonance in certain Eastern traditions, particularly modern schools of Buddhism and Taoism (being one with the'Tao' is not a union with an eternal spirit but rather living in accordance with nature). However, the roots of religious naturalists today are found in thinkers who used the term in the 1940s and 1950s and writers since then.[citation needed] Mordecai Kaplan (1881-1983) has been considered[by whom?] one of the great rabbis of the 20th century and the founder of the Jewish reconstructionism movement.[15] He was an early advocate for religious naturalism. He believed that a naturalistic approach to religion and ethics was possible in a desacralizing world. He saw God as the sum of all natural processes.[16][non-primary source needed] Another of the currently verified usages was in 1940 by George Perrigo Conger[17] and Edgar S. Brightman.[18] Shortly thereafter, H.H. Dubs wrote an article entitled Religious Naturalism – an Evaluation (The Journal of Religion, XXIII: 4, October, 1943), which begins "Religious naturalism is today one of the outstanding American philosophies of religion…" and discusses ideas developed by Henry Nelson Wieman in books that predate Dubs's article by 20 years. These articles and books draw not only on Wieman, but also on ideas developed by the Chicago School of theology and by at least the 1950s Wieman and Bernard Meland in Chicago were frequently using the term to designate their own views.[improper synthesis?] In 1991 Jerome A. Stone wrote The Minimalist Vision of Transcendence explicitly "to sketch a philosophy of religious naturalism".[19] Use of the term was expanded in the 1990s by Loyal Rue, who was familiar with the term from Brightman's book. Rue used the term in conversations with several people before 1994, and subsequent conversations between Rue and Ursula Goodenough [both of whom were active in IRAS (The Institute on Religion in an Age of Science)] led to Goodenough's use in her book "The Sacred Depths of Nature" and by Rue in "Religion is not about god" and other writings. Since 1994 numerous authors have used the phrase or expressed similar thinking. Examples are: Chet Raymo, Stuart Kauffman and Karl Peters.[improper synthesis?] Mike Ignatowski states that "there were many religious naturalists in the first half of the 20th century and some even before that" but that "religious naturalism as a movement didn’t really come into its own until about 1990 [and] took a major leap forward in 2000 when Ursula Goodenough published The Sacred Depths of Nature, which is considered one of the founding texts of this movement."[20] Biologist Ursula Goodenough states:
Donald Crosby’s Living with Ambiguity published in 2008, has, as its first chapter, Religion of Nature as a Form of Religious Naturalism.[23] Also in December 2008, an in depth look at the history of this worldview was published.[citation needed] In addition a few modern theologians with liberal orientations have rejected some of the historical claims of some biblical doctrines and moved to progressive forms of Christianity and Judaism akin to neo-theistic religious naturalism. Examples are: Mordecai Kaplan, John Shelby Spong, Paul Tillich, John A. T. Robinson, William Murry and Gordon D. Kaufman.[citation needed] Some of those into process theology[24] may also be included in this movement.[citation needed] Religious Naturalism Today: The Rebirth of a Forgotten Alternative is a history by Dr. Jerome A. Stone (Dec. 2008 release) that presents this paradigm as a once-forgotten option in religious thinking that is making a rapid revival. It seeks to explore and encourage religious ways of responding to the world on a completely naturalistic basis without a supreme being or ground of being. This book traces this history and analyzes some of the issues dividing religious naturalists. It covers the birth of religious naturalism, from George Santayana to Henry Nelson Wieman and briefly explores religious naturalism in literature and art. Contested issues are discussed including whether nature’s power or goodness is the focus of attention and also on the appropriateness of using the term "God". The contributions of more than twenty living Religious Naturalists are presented. The last chapter ends the study by exploring what it is like on the inside to live as a religious naturalist.[25][non-primary source needed] Chet Raymowrites that he had come to the same conclusion as Teilhard de Chardin had: "Grace is everywhere",[26] and further states that naturalistic emergence is in everything and far more magical than religion-based miracles. A future humankind religion should be ecumenical, ecological, and embrace the story provided by science as the "most reliable cosmology".[27] As P. Roger Gillette summarizes:
[edit] TenetsDue to the rationality and feelings provided by science and a naturalistic spirituality, some religious naturalists have a strong sense of stewardship for the Earth. Luther College professor Loyal Rue has written:
Tenets and rules are not an inherent part of the religious naturalist worldview. However, some organizations have suggested different tenets and sets of rules. The principle tenets and ethics of ReligiousNaturalism.org are:[30]
This is not a complete listing of the key goals of religious naturalism but the main consensus ones. Some religious naturalists may disagree with these tenets and different sectors within this worldview also have their own tenets. [edit] VarietiesThe literature related to religious naturalism includes many variations in conceptual framing. This reflects individual takes on various issues, to some extent various schools of thought, such as basic naturalism, religious humanism, pantheism, and spiritual naturalism that have had time on the conceptual stage, and to some extent differing ways of characterizing Nature. Current discussion often relates to the issue of whether belief in a God or God-language and associated concepts have any place in a framework that treats the physical universe as its essential frame of reference and the methods of science as providing the preeminent means for determining what Nature is. There are at least three varieties of religious naturalism, and three similar but some what different ways to categorize them. They are: Michael Cavanaugh – God-language[31]
Jerald Robertson – Theistic spectrum[32]
The first category has as many sub-groups as there are distinct definitions for god. Believers in a supernatural entity (transcendent) are by definition not religious naturalists however the matter of a naturalistic concept of God (Immanence) is currently debated. Strong atheists are not considered Religious Naturalists in this differentiation. Some individuals call themselves religious naturalisms but refuse to be categorized. Jerome A. Stone – God concepts[34]
Stone emphasizes that some Religious Naturalists do not reject the concept of God, but if they use the concept, it involves a radical alteration of the idea such as Gordon Kaufman who defines God as creativity. Ignatowski divides RN in to only two types – theistic and non-theistic.[20] [edit]There are several principles shared by all the aforementioned varieties of religious naturalism:[35]
The concept of emergence has grown in popularity with many Religious Naturalists. It helps explain how a complex Universe and life by self-organization have risen out of a multiplicity of relatively simple elements and their interactions. The entire story of emergence is related in the Epic of Evolution - the mythic scientific narrative used to tell the verifiable chronicle of the evolutionary process that is the Universe. Most religious naturalist consider the Epic of Evolution a true story about the historic achievement of Nature.[36][37][38] “The Epic of Evolution is the 14 billion year narrative of cosmic, planetary, life, and cultural evolution—told in sacred ways. Not only does it bridge mainstream science and a diversity of religious traditions; if skillfully told, it makes the science story memorable and deeply meaningful, while enriching one's religious faith or secular outlook.”[39] A number of naturalistic writers have used this theme as a topic for their books using such synonyms as: Cosmic Evolution, Everybody’s Story, Evolutionary Epic, Evolutionary Universe, Great Story, New Story, Universal Story. ‘Epic of evolution’ is a term that, within the past three years(1998), has become the theme and title of a number of gatherings. It seems to have been first used by Harvard biologist Edward O. Wilson in 1978. ‘The evolutionary epic,’ Wilson wrote in his book On Human Nature, ‘is probably the best myth we will ever have.’ Myth as falsehood was not the usage intended by Wilson in this statement. Rather, myth as a grand narrative that provides a people with a placement in time—a meaningful placement that celebrates extraordinary moments of a shared heritage. The epic of evolution is science translated into meaningful story.”[40] Evolutionary evangelist and Pentecostal Evangelical minister Michael Dowd uses the term to help present his position that science and religious faith are not mutually exclusive (a premise of religious naturalism). He preaches that the epic of cosmic, biological, and human evolution, revealed by science, is a basis for an inspiring and meaningful view of our place in the universe. Evolution is viewed as a spiritual process that it is not meaningless blind chance.[41] He is joined by a number of other theologians in this position.[42][43][44] [edit] Notable people[edit] Proponents[edit] Critics[edit] Prominent communitiesReligious naturalists sometimes use the social practices of traditional religions, including communal gatherings and rituals, to foster a sense of community, and to serve as reinforcement of its participants' efforts to expand the scope of their understandings. Some known examples of religious naturalists groupings are:
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