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Religion is a failed attempt to explain WHY

There are two qualities inherent in the human mind that made it possible for our species to evolve and develop into its present position of dominance on our planet: curiosity and imagination.

Curiosity made humans probe into everything they observed, to find out how things began, how they worked, and how they could be used for practical purposes. Imagination supplied explanations for things that were beyond human understanding.

Children grow up asking thousands of WHY questions. Parents and teachers try to supply answers. Frequently, parents who don’t know a specific answer will offer an imaginary one, made up by the ancestors of our own culture, or manufactured in our own richly imaginative heads. Humans know themselves to be creative, and thus attribute creation of all nature’s mysteries to human-like but better entities — the superparents who know everything and can do anything. Therefore, gods and goddesses become an integral part of the religious imagination now called mythology, which has historically supplied answers to the most essential WHYs: Why does the universe exist? Why are we here? Why must we die? Why should we behave in certain ways? Why must we communicate with these alleged superior beings?

Once a mythology becomes established, it flourishes and grows with every generation. Different kinds of immortal beings are created: angels, demons, vampires, fairies, goblins, elves, gnomes, ghosts, demigods, mermaids, monsters, spirits of the sea, the sun, the moon, the sky, the underworld — everything. Monotheists have clumped them all together into one and have violently removed all female-based concepts. Yet somehow the underworld god (devil) remains separate, as do angels, saints and demons. And since motherhood is an irrefutable fact of human existence, the mother symbol that Catholicism declared merely human, Mary, has now achieved a definite aura of divinity.

Theology is taught to children from as soon as they learn to talk. Churches and other religious institutions insist on their faithful attendance at every opportunity because every attendance not only enforces the dictated beliefs, it brings more and more tax-free profit into the religion business. Worldwide, it has become the most profitable business ever created; it receives lavish payment for promises that it never has to keep, and dire threats that never have to be carried out. It lives richly, feeding on the human imagination because human beings love to envision things: stories, fiction, drama, sci-fi, folktales, entertaining lies that sound believable. Our brains are always ready to imagine and envision not only the possibilities of useful creativity, but also idle entertainments of every description. Our experience of dreams and fantasies can seem as real as the experience of life — even more so at times. When a fantasy is believed, it can easily become a faith.

For all of these reasons, religion maintains its ever-so-lucrative grip on human culture. Our childlike faiths war with each other, try to destroy all the nonbelievers, and bring on catastrophic evils such as crusades, inquisitions and holocausts, not to mention the everyday nastiness inherent in prejudice.

Yet there is hope that reason may at last prevail, and sensible people will be able to cultivate and broaden the sane distinction between faith and knowledge. If the human race is still in its cultural childhood, may we set a new faith in such a hope, that after more generations it will eventually grow up?

WHY not?


FFRF Life Member Barbara G. Walker is a researcher, lecturer and author of 24 books on comparative religion, history, mythology, symbolism, mineral lore, knitwear design, the tarot, the I Ching, a collection of original Feminist Fairy Tales, an autobiography, a novel, and two essay collections: Man Made God and Belief and Unbelief. Her Woman’s Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets has been in print since 1983 and was named Book of the Year by the London Times.
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Charity · 56-60
I've heard that same thing at least a decade ago Christianity is a failed attempt to explain why things are as they are why this occurred or that occurred. Understandable how it could be looked at that way.

But when I pick up my Bible I find 6, 000 plus years ago the ancient Hebrew people had good knowledge of science, what is written in Genesis chapter 1 coincides with what is called scientific evidence. 1) The creation from when God said let there be light / The Big Bang singularity actually had a burst of microwave radiation late that lit up the entire universe 2) God separated the waters from the waters and put them in one place and then told dry land to appear / science now believe the Earth was a water world and no land was visible 3) then he told the Earth to bring forth plants, he told the Earth to bring forth plants came from the Earth / evolution of plants are now said to be millions of years older than what initially thought and some believe plants are indeed older than the first formed animal, the sponge. But definitely older than the other named animals 4) God created the Sun and the Moon so that the Earth could measure days and time / science indicates the Earth, the moon, and the sun are relatively the same age a few million years difference maybe. BUT when you look at the Earth, the Earth's water is older than the Sun science has now found out and Earth was once a water world which makes the Earth older than the Sun and the Moon, **which makes the earth created first**. And the plants all that microwave radiation light that lit up the universe with intense light aided the plants to grow before the sun was put in place to seal it. 5) God told the waters to bring forth life after it's kind abundantly meaning many, many, many, different kinds, with some more many's / according to science whether One believes in abiogenesis or panspermia, life started in the water, they have called it a primordial soup mix 6) God told the Earth to bring fourth beast and cattle after their kind. Dinosaurs were the Beast and what we see today is the cattle / in science various fish left the waters and evolved into every land animal that's visible both past and present. Now man, God DID NOT tell the Earth to bring forth man. God formed man from the (chemicals minerals of the earth) dust. GOD BREATHED THE BREATH OF LIFE INTO MAN, he didn't breathe life into no other creature on Earth but man. Then God placed man in the garden in the East of Eden. Could it be man wasn't even created on Earth, but formed elsewhere then put on Earth?

The ancients of many cultures understood and created astrology, they're understanding of nature was far better than the understanding that people have today.

They also had their gods who were all came from the sky. Like what we call aliens or extraterrestrials or UFOs today. And today people are not are educated holding high offices and have seen and reported strange events going and coming from the sky.

The ancients knew a whole lot more than the people of today knew the only difference is people of today have a different type of technology that's actually taking a toll not only on man but on the earth herself, then that type of technology was not meant for ancient man. And whatever it is they had a mind to do they found a way to do it and we're still looking as much of the marvels they created, and living with their limited technology they had and passed down through the ages, which enables much of what we have in existence today.