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Religion - Wikiquote

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id="mw-navigation"> <nav id="mw-panel" class="vector-main-menu-landmark" aria-label="Site"> <div id="vector-main-menu-pinned-container" class="vector-pinned-container"> </div> </nav> </div> </div> </div> <div class="mw-content-container"> <main id="content" class="mw-body"> <header class="mw-body-header vector-page-titlebar"> <h1 id="firstHeading" class="firstHeading mw-first-heading"><span class="mw-page-title-main">Religion</span></h1> <div id="p-lang-btn" class="vector-dropdown mw-portlet mw-portlet-lang" > <input type="checkbox" id="p-lang-btn-checkbox" role="button" aria-haspopup="true" data-event-name="ui.dropdown-p-lang-btn" class="vector-dropdown-checkbox mw-interlanguage-selector" aria-label="Go to an article in another language. Available in 49 languages" > <label id="p-lang-btn-label" for="p-lang-btn-checkbox" class="vector-dropdown-label cdx-button cdx-button--fake-button cdx-button--fake-button--enabled cdx-button--weight-quiet cdx-button--action-progressive mw-portlet-lang-heading-49" aria-hidden="true" ><span class="vector-icon mw-ui-icon-language-progressive mw-ui-icon-wikimedia-language-progressive"></span> <span class="vector-dropdown-label-text">49 languages</span> </label> <div class="vector-dropdown-content"> <div class="vector-menu-content"> <ul class="vector-menu-content-list"> <li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ar mw-list-item"><a href="https://ar.wikiquote.org/wiki/%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AF%D9%8A%D9%86" title="الدين – Arabic" lang="ar" hreflang="ar" data-title="الدين" data-language-autonym="العربية" data-language-local-name="Arabic" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>العربية</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-az mw-list-item"><a href="https://az.wikiquote.org/wiki/Din" title="Din – Azerbaijani" lang="az" hreflang="az" data-title="Din" data-language-autonym="Azərbaycanca" data-language-local-name="Azerbaijani" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Azərbaycanca</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-bjn mw-list-item"><a href="https://bjn.wikiquote.org/wiki/Agama" title="Agama – Banjar" lang="bjn" hreflang="bjn" data-title="Agama" data-language-autonym="Banjar" data-language-local-name="Banjar" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Banjar</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-bn mw-list-item"><a href="https://bn.wikiquote.org/wiki/%E0%A6%A7%E0%A6%B0%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%AE" title="ধর্ম – Bangla" lang="bn" hreflang="bn" data-title="ধর্ম" data-language-autonym="বাংলা" data-language-local-name="Bangla" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>বাংলা</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-br mw-list-item"><a href="https://br.wikiquote.org/wiki/Relijion" title="Relijion – Breton" lang="br" hreflang="br" data-title="Relijion" data-language-autonym="Brezhoneg" data-language-local-name="Breton" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Brezhoneg</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-bs mw-list-item"><a href="https://bs.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religija" title="Religija – Bosnian" lang="bs" hreflang="bs" data-title="Religija" data-language-autonym="Bosanski" data-language-local-name="Bosnian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Bosanski</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ca mw-list-item"><a href="https://ca.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religi%C3%B3" title="Religió – Catalan" lang="ca" hreflang="ca" data-title="Religió" data-language-autonym="Català" data-language-local-name="Catalan" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Català</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-cs mw-list-item"><a href="https://cs.wikiquote.org/wiki/N%C3%A1bo%C5%BEenstv%C3%AD" title="Náboženství – Czech" lang="cs" hreflang="cs" data-title="Náboženství" data-language-autonym="Čeština" data-language-local-name="Czech" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Čeština</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-cy mw-list-item"><a href="https://cy.wikiquote.org/wiki/Crefydd" title="Crefydd – Welsh" lang="cy" hreflang="cy" data-title="Crefydd" data-language-autonym="Cymraeg" data-language-local-name="Welsh" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Cymraeg</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-de mw-list-item"><a href="https://de.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religion" title="Religion – German" lang="de" hreflang="de" data-title="Religion" data-language-autonym="Deutsch" data-language-local-name="German" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Deutsch</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-el mw-list-item"><a href="https://el.wikiquote.org/wiki/%CE%98%CF%81%CE%B7%CF%83%CE%BA%CE%B5%CE%AF%CE%B1" title="Θρησκεία – Greek" lang="el" hreflang="el" data-title="Θρησκεία" data-language-autonym="Ελληνικά" data-language-local-name="Greek" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Ελληνικά</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-eo mw-list-item"><a href="https://eo.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religio" title="Religio – Esperanto" lang="eo" hreflang="eo" data-title="Religio" data-language-autonym="Esperanto" data-language-local-name="Esperanto" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Esperanto</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-es mw-list-item"><a href="https://es.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religi%C3%B3n" title="Religión – Spanish" lang="es" hreflang="es" data-title="Religión" data-language-autonym="Español" data-language-local-name="Spanish" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Español</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-et mw-list-item"><a href="https://et.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religioon" title="Religioon – Estonian" lang="et" hreflang="et" data-title="Religioon" data-language-autonym="Eesti" data-language-local-name="Estonian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Eesti</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-fa mw-list-item"><a href="https://fa.wikiquote.org/wiki/%D8%AF%DB%8C%D9%86" title="دین – Persian" lang="fa" hreflang="fa" data-title="دین" data-language-autonym="فارسی" data-language-local-name="Persian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>فارسی</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-fi mw-list-item"><a href="https://fi.wikiquote.org/wiki/Uskonto" title="Uskonto – Finnish" lang="fi" hreflang="fi" data-title="Uskonto" data-language-autonym="Suomi" data-language-local-name="Finnish" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Suomi</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-fr mw-list-item"><a href="https://fr.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religion" title="Religion – French" lang="fr" hreflang="fr" data-title="Religion" data-language-autonym="Français" data-language-local-name="French" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Français</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-gl mw-list-item"><a href="https://gl.wikiquote.org/wiki/Relixi%C3%B3n" title="Relixión – Galician" lang="gl" hreflang="gl" data-title="Relixión" data-language-autonym="Galego" data-language-local-name="Galician" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Galego</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-he mw-list-item"><a href="https://he.wikiquote.org/wiki/%D7%93%D7%AA" title="דת – Hebrew" lang="he" hreflang="he" data-title="דת" data-language-autonym="עברית" data-language-local-name="Hebrew" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>עברית</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-hr mw-list-item"><a href="https://hr.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religija" title="Religija – Croatian" lang="hr" hreflang="hr" data-title="Religija" data-language-autonym="Hrvatski" data-language-local-name="Croatian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Hrvatski</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-hu mw-list-item"><a href="https://hu.wikiquote.org/wiki/Vall%C3%A1s" title="Vallás – Hungarian" lang="hu" hreflang="hu" data-title="Vallás" data-language-autonym="Magyar" data-language-local-name="Hungarian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Magyar</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-hy mw-list-item"><a href="https://hy.wikiquote.org/wiki/%D4%BF%D6%80%D5%B8%D5%B6" title="Կրոն – Armenian" lang="hy" hreflang="hy" data-title="Կրոն" data-language-autonym="Հայերեն" data-language-local-name="Armenian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Հայերեն</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-id mw-list-item"><a href="https://id.wikiquote.org/wiki/Agama" title="Agama – Indonesian" lang="id" hreflang="id" data-title="Agama" data-language-autonym="Bahasa Indonesia" data-language-local-name="Indonesian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Bahasa Indonesia</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-is mw-list-item"><a href="https://is.wikiquote.org/wiki/Tr%C3%BAarbr%C3%B6g%C3%B0" title="Trúarbrögð – Icelandic" lang="is" hreflang="is" data-title="Trúarbrögð" data-language-autonym="Íslenska" data-language-local-name="Icelandic" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Íslenska</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-it mw-list-item"><a href="https://it.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religione" title="Religione – Italian" lang="it" hreflang="it" data-title="Religione" data-language-autonym="Italiano" data-language-local-name="Italian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Italiano</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ja mw-list-item"><a href="https://ja.wikiquote.org/wiki/%E5%AE%97%E6%95%99" title="宗教 – Japanese" lang="ja" hreflang="ja" data-title="宗教" data-language-autonym="日本語" data-language-local-name="Japanese" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>日本語</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ka mw-list-item"><a href="https://ka.wikiquote.org/wiki/%E1%83%A0%E1%83%94%E1%83%9A%E1%83%98%E1%83%92%E1%83%98%E1%83%90" title="რელიგია – Georgian" lang="ka" hreflang="ka" data-title="რელიგია" data-language-autonym="ქართული" data-language-local-name="Georgian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>ქართული</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ko mw-list-item"><a href="https://ko.wikiquote.org/wiki/%EC%A2%85%EA%B5%90" title="종교 – Korean" lang="ko" hreflang="ko" data-title="종교" data-language-autonym="한국어" data-language-local-name="Korean" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>한국어</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ku mw-list-item"><a href="https://ku.wikiquote.org/wiki/Bawer%C3%AE_%C3%BB_d%C3%AEn" title="Bawerî û dîn – Kurdish" lang="ku" hreflang="ku" data-title="Bawerî û dîn" data-language-autonym="Kurdî" data-language-local-name="Kurdish" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Kurdî</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-la mw-list-item"><a href="https://la.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religio" title="Religio – Latin" lang="la" hreflang="la" data-title="Religio" data-language-autonym="Latina" data-language-local-name="Latin" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Latina</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-li mw-list-item"><a href="https://li.wikiquote.org/wiki/Godsdeens" title="Godsdeens – Limburgish" lang="li" hreflang="li" data-title="Godsdeens" data-language-autonym="Limburgs" data-language-local-name="Limburgish" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Limburgs</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-lt mw-list-item"><a href="https://lt.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religija" title="Religija – Lithuanian" lang="lt" hreflang="lt" data-title="Religija" data-language-autonym="Lietuvių" data-language-local-name="Lithuanian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Lietuvių</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-nl mw-list-item"><a href="https://nl.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religie" title="Religie – Dutch" lang="nl" hreflang="nl" data-title="Religie" data-language-autonym="Nederlands" data-language-local-name="Dutch" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Nederlands</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-nn mw-list-item"><a href="https://nn.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religion" title="Religion – Norwegian Nynorsk" lang="nn" hreflang="nn" data-title="Religion" data-language-autonym="Norsk nynorsk" data-language-local-name="Norwegian Nynorsk" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Norsk nynorsk</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-pl mw-list-item"><a href="https://pl.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religia" title="Religia – Polish" lang="pl" hreflang="pl" data-title="Religia" data-language-autonym="Polski" data-language-local-name="Polish" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Polski</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-pt mw-list-item"><a href="https://pt.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religi%C3%A3o" title="Religião – Portuguese" lang="pt" hreflang="pt" data-title="Religião" data-language-autonym="Português" data-language-local-name="Portuguese" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Português</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ro mw-list-item"><a href="https://ro.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religie" title="Religie – Romanian" lang="ro" hreflang="ro" data-title="Religie" data-language-autonym="Română" data-language-local-name="Romanian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Română</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ru mw-list-item"><a href="https://ru.wikiquote.org/wiki/%D0%A0%D0%B5%D0%BB%D0%B8%D0%B3%D0%B8%D1%8F" title="Религия – Russian" lang="ru" hreflang="ru" data-title="Религия" data-language-autonym="Русский" data-language-local-name="Russian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Русский</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-sk mw-list-item"><a href="https://sk.wikiquote.org/wiki/N%C3%A1bo%C5%BEenstvo" title="Náboženstvo – Slovak" lang="sk" hreflang="sk" data-title="Náboženstvo" data-language-autonym="Slovenčina" data-language-local-name="Slovak" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Slovenčina</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-sr mw-list-item"><a href="https://sr.wikiquote.org/wiki/%D0%A0%D0%B5%D0%BB%D0%B8%D0%B3%D0%B8%D1%98%D0%B0" title="Религија – Serbian" lang="sr" hreflang="sr" data-title="Религија" data-language-autonym="Српски / srpski" data-language-local-name="Serbian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Српски / srpski</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-su mw-list-item"><a href="https://su.wikiquote.org/wiki/Agama" title="Agama – Sundanese" lang="su" hreflang="su" data-title="Agama" data-language-autonym="Sunda" data-language-local-name="Sundanese" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Sunda</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-sv mw-list-item"><a href="https://sv.wikiquote.org/wiki/Religion" title="Religion – Swedish" lang="sv" hreflang="sv" data-title="Religion" data-language-autonym="Svenska" data-language-local-name="Swedish" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Svenska</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ta mw-list-item"><a href="https://ta.wikiquote.org/wiki/%E0%AE%AE%E0%AE%A4%E0%AE%AE%E0%AF%8D" title="மதம் – Tamil" lang="ta" hreflang="ta" data-title="மதம்" data-language-autonym="தமிழ்" data-language-local-name="Tamil" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>தமிழ்</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-tr mw-list-item"><a href="https://tr.wikiquote.org/wiki/Din" title="Din – Turkish" lang="tr" hreflang="tr" data-title="Din" data-language-autonym="Türkçe" data-language-local-name="Turkish" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Türkçe</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-uk mw-list-item"><a href="https://uk.wikiquote.org/wiki/%D0%A0%D0%B5%D0%BB%D1%96%D0%B3%D1%96%D1%8F" title="Релігія – Ukrainian" lang="uk" hreflang="uk" data-title="Релігія" data-language-autonym="Українська" data-language-local-name="Ukrainian" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Українська</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-ur mw-list-item"><a href="https://ur.wikiquote.org/wiki/%D9%85%D8%B0%DB%81%D8%A8" title="مذہب – Urdu" lang="ur" hreflang="ur" data-title="مذہب" data-language-autonym="اردو" data-language-local-name="Urdu" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>اردو</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-uz mw-list-item"><a href="https://uz.wikiquote.org/wiki/Din" title="Din – Uzbek" lang="uz" hreflang="uz" data-title="Din" data-language-autonym="Oʻzbekcha / ўзбекча" data-language-local-name="Uzbek" class="interlanguage-link-target"><span>Oʻzbekcha / ўзбекча</span></a></li><li class="interlanguage-link interwiki-vi mw-list-item"><a href="https://vi.wikiquote.org/wiki/T%C3%B4n_gi%C3%A1o" title="Tôn giáo – Vietnamese" lang="vi" hreflang="vi" data-title="Tôn giáo" data-language-autonym="Tiếng Việt" 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title="w:Religion">Religion</a></b> is a word which refers to approaches to <a href="/wiki/Human" title="Human">human</a> <a href="/wiki/Spirituality" title="Spirituality">spirituality</a>. These usually encompass a set of <a href="/wiki/Narratives" class="mw-redirect" title="Narratives">narratives</a>, <a href="/wiki/Symbols" title="Symbols">symbols</a>, <a href="/wiki/Belief" title="Belief">beliefs</a> and <a href="/wiki/Practices" class="mw-redirect" title="Practices">practices</a>, often with a <a href="/wiki/Supernatural" title="Supernatural">supernatural</a> or transcendent <a href="/wiki/Quality" title="Quality">quality</a>, which give <a href="/wiki/Meaning" title="Meaning">meaning</a> and guidance to the practitioner's <a href="/wiki/Experiences" class="mw-redirect" title="Experiences">experiences</a> of <a href="/wiki/Life" title="Life">life</a> through reference to a higher <a href="/wiki/Power" title="Power">power</a> or <a href="/wiki/Truth" title="Truth">truth</a>. It may be expressed through <a href="/wiki/Prayer" title="Prayer">prayer</a>, ritual, <a href="/wiki/Meditation" title="Meditation">meditation</a>, <a href="/wiki/Music" title="Music">music</a> and <a href="/wiki/Art" title="Art">art</a>, among other things. It may focus on specific supernatural, <a href="/wiki/Metaphysical" class="mw-redirect" title="Metaphysical">metaphysical</a>, and <a href="/wiki/Moral" class="mw-redirect" title="Moral">moral</a> claims about <a href="/wiki/Reality" title="Reality">reality</a> (the <a href="/wiki/Cosmos" title="Cosmos">cosmos</a> and <a href="/wiki/Human_nature" title="Human nature">human nature</a>) which may yield a set of religious <a href="/wiki/Laws" class="mw-redirect" title="Laws">laws</a>, <a href="/wiki/Ethics" title="Ethics">ethics</a>, and a particular lifestyle. Religion also encompasses ancestral or cultural traditions, writings, history, and mythology, as well as personal <a href="/wiki/Faith" title="Faith">faith</a> and religious experience. The term "religion" refers to both the personal practices related to communal faith and to group rituals and <a href="/wiki/Communication" title="Communication">communication</a> stemming from shared conviction.</p><figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Sheikh_Bashir_praying.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ae/Sheikh_Bashir_praying.jpg/220px-Sheikh_Bashir_praying.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="136" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ae/Sheikh_Bashir_praying.jpg/330px-Sheikh_Bashir_praying.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ae/Sheikh_Bashir_praying.jpg/440px-Sheikh_Bashir_praying.jpg 2x" data-file-width="800" data-file-height="495" /></a><figcaption>Islam in every era has grown through blood and weapons.<a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://lib.eshia.ir/50080/8/269">Khomeini</a></figcaption></figure><figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Zend-Avesta,_ouvrage_de_Zoroastre_cote_Fa_B_60_(2)_Biblioth%C3%A8que_d%27%C3%A9tude_et_du_patrimoine_de_Toulouse.JPG" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2c/Zend-Avesta%2C_ouvrage_de_Zoroastre_cote_Fa_B_60_%282%29_Biblioth%C3%A8que_d%27%C3%A9tude_et_du_patrimoine_de_Toulouse.JPG/220px-Zend-Avesta%2C_ouvrage_de_Zoroastre_cote_Fa_B_60_%282%29_Biblioth%C3%A8que_d%27%C3%A9tude_et_du_patrimoine_de_Toulouse.JPG" decoding="async" width="220" height="165" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2c/Zend-Avesta%2C_ouvrage_de_Zoroastre_cote_Fa_B_60_%282%29_Biblioth%C3%A8que_d%27%C3%A9tude_et_du_patrimoine_de_Toulouse.JPG/330px-Zend-Avesta%2C_ouvrage_de_Zoroastre_cote_Fa_B_60_%282%29_Biblioth%C3%A8que_d%27%C3%A9tude_et_du_patrimoine_de_Toulouse.JPG 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2c/Zend-Avesta%2C_ouvrage_de_Zoroastre_cote_Fa_B_60_%282%29_Biblioth%C3%A8que_d%27%C3%A9tude_et_du_patrimoine_de_Toulouse.JPG/440px-Zend-Avesta%2C_ouvrage_de_Zoroastre_cote_Fa_B_60_%282%29_Biblioth%C3%A8que_d%27%C3%A9tude_et_du_patrimoine_de_Toulouse.JPG 2x" data-file-width="2664" data-file-height="2000" /></a><figcaption>I’m a Koran-reciter in one circle and a dregs-drainer in another setting See how witty it is, how I ply my craft with people!~Hafez Lisan Al Gaib<a rel="nofollow" class="external autonumber" href="https://iranicaonline.org/articles/hafez-viii">[1]</a></figcaption></figure> <div role="navigation" style="margin-left: 2em;"> <p>Arranged alphabetically by author or source:<br /><a href="#A">A</a> · <a href="#B">B</a> · <a href="#C">C</a> · <a href="#D">D</a> · <a href="#E">E</a> · <a href="#F">F</a> · <a href="#G">G</a> · <a href="#H">H</a> · <a href="#I">I</a> · <a href="#J">J</a> · <a href="#K">K</a> · <a href="#L">L</a> · <a href="#M">M</a> · <a href="#N">N</a> · <a href="#O">O</a> · <a href="#P">P</a> · <a href="#Q">Q</a> · <a href="#R">R</a> · <a href="#S">S</a> · <a href="#T">T</a> · <a href="#U">U</a> · <a href="#V">V</a> · <a href="#W">W</a> · <a href="#X">X</a> · <a href="#Y">Y</a> · <a href="#Z">Z</a> · <a href="#Anon">Anon</a> · <a href="#See_also">See&#160;also</a> · <a href="#External_links">External&#160;links</a> </p> </div> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="A">A</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=1" title="Edit section: A"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Collage_Auge_im_Himmel_byL%C3%B6ser.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/49/Collage_Auge_im_Himmel_byL%C3%B6ser.jpg/220px-Collage_Auge_im_Himmel_byL%C3%B6ser.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="165" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/49/Collage_Auge_im_Himmel_byL%C3%B6ser.jpg/330px-Collage_Auge_im_Himmel_byL%C3%B6ser.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/49/Collage_Auge_im_Himmel_byL%C3%B6ser.jpg/440px-Collage_Auge_im_Himmel_byL%C3%B6ser.jpg 2x" data-file-width="800" data-file-height="600" /></a><figcaption>Children of men! the unseen Power, whose eye <br /> Forever doth accompany mankind, <br /> Hath look'd on no religion scornfully <br /> That men did ever find. ~ <a href="/wiki/Matthew_Arnold" title="Matthew Arnold">Matthew Arnold</a> </figcaption></figure> <ul><li>Twenty times in the course of my late reading have I been on the point of breaking out,"<i>This would be the best of all possible worlds, if there were no religion in it!!!</i>" But in this exclamation I should have been as fanatical as Bryant or Cleverly. Without religion the world would be something not fit to be mentioned in polite society, I mean Hell. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Adams" title="John Adams">John Adams</a>, letter (<a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/religion/vc006646.jpg">original manuscript at the Library of Congress</a>) to <a href="/wiki/Thomas_Jefferson" title="Thomas Jefferson">Thomas Jefferson</a>, 19 April 1817. The <i>italicized</i> section within the statement has <i>often</i> been quoted out of context. Earlier in the letter Adams explained that Bryant was his "Parish Priest" and Cleverly his "Latin School Master".</li> <li>"Religion maybe linked to social inequality if the religion being practiced is not the dominant religion in a particular culture or society"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Because religion is such an opinion-based topic, I had better lay my own cards on the table. I was raised a Catholic and was a strong believer until age 21. After searching other religions I became a “None,”and then an agnostic--believing one cannot say at this point whether the universe had a creator, and if so what that creator’s qualities might be (beyond the all-time highest score on the SAT-Math test). I have enough familiarity with religion that I can pass as a scholar among people who know nothing about the subject. Similarly, I know enough of the Bible to seem well informed in a room of people who have never opened the book. I don’t think any of this has affected the answers people have given to my surveys, which is what this chapter is about. But as always, you will be the judge of that. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Bob_Altemeyer" title="Bob Altemeyer">Bob Altemeyer</a>, <i>The Authoritarians</i> (2006), p. 141</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In a rational religion there is no perplexity. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Agni_Yoga" title="Agni Yoga">Agni Yoga</a>, &#160;<i>Leaves of Morya’s Garden: Book One: The Call</i>, &#160;11, (1924)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The primary concern of religion should be to provide a practical solution of life. The heavenly reward is too remote; the return should be brought within the earthly span. People can now understand as universally accessible the miracle of the renewal of possibilities. Hence, either the hand of the Invisible Friend or a sharp sword. And, remembering the advantage of immediate remuneration, people will find a new path to the Temple. There is no need to implore Divinity. One should bring to oneself the best deed. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Agni_Yoga" title="Agni Yoga">Agni Yoga</a>, <i>Leaves of Morya’s Garden: Book Two: Illumination</i>, 111. &#160;(1925)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It was after the time of <a href="/wiki/Origen" title="Origen">Origen</a>’s disciples that the false religion of the priesthood began to spread. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Agni_Yoga" title="Agni Yoga">Agni Yoga</a>, &#160;<i>Leaves of Morya’s Garden: Book One: The Call</i>, &#160;268, (1924)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>People believe they can attain perfection by many methods. This multiplicity of mirages lulls the mediocre mind. But one really has only two ways to live: either wisely and ardently to seek the realization of <a href="/wiki/Aum" class="mw-redirect" title="Aum">Aum</a>, or to lie in a coffin like a log — self-centered and impoverished in spirit — assuming that one's destiny will be taken care of by something or someone else.<br />It would seem, then, that a true striving toward realization of supreme possibilities should fill the greater part of human life as a most essential and engrossing occupation. But in reality the light of knowledge has been replaced by the conventional <a href="/wiki/Dogma" title="Dogma">dogma</a> of religion; and man, meant to be a thinker, worships his dark corner of idols, hanging amulets upon himself without even understanding the meaning of their symbols. Repeat this to all those who sleep in the darkness of the ordinary. &#160; <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Agni_Yoga" title="Agni Yoga">Agni Yoga</a>, &#160;<i>Agni Yoga</i>,&#160;158, (1929)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religions have frightened humanity with their <a href="/wiki/Dogma" title="Dogma">dogma</a> of final <a href="/wiki/Judgment" title="Judgment">judgment</a>, and have thereby deprived it of daring... Can one accept on faith the decisions of strangers who take fees for communing with heaven? &#160; <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Agni_Yoga" title="Agni Yoga">Agni Yoga</a>, &#160;<i>Agni Yoga</i>,&#160;245, &#160;(1929)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It is useful to teach about <a href="/wiki/Immortality" title="Immortality">immortality</a> in the schools. Religion that teaches about death will pass away, as will all those who believe in death. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Agni_Yoga" title="Agni Yoga">Agni Yoga</a>, <i>Agni Yoga</i>, 333, &#160;(1929)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A knowledge of <a href="/wiki/Reincarnation" title="Reincarnation">reincarnation</a> would also be helpful. But existing conditions of government and religion severely impede the development of such responsibility. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Agni_Yoga" title="Agni Yoga">Agni Yoga</a>, <i>Agni Yoga</i>,&#160;397, &#160;(1929)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The loss of religion has shaken the movement forward. Without God there is no path. Call Him what one will, the highest Hierarchic Principle must be observed, otherwise there is nothing to adhere to. Thus, one must understand how the upward aspiration of people's wills surrounds the planet like a protective net. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Agni_Yoga" title="Agni Yoga">Agni Yoga</a>, <i>Fiery World Part I</i>, 628, (1933)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In primitive religions the fear of God was taught first of all. Thus was suggested a feeling which usually ends in rebellion. Certainly, each one who contacts the Higher World experiences a trembling, but this unavoidable sensation has nothing in common with fear. Fear is cessation of creative energy. Fear is ossification and submission to darkness. Whereas turning to the Higher World must evoke ecstasy and expansion of one’s forces for the expression of the beautiful. Such qualities are born not of fear but through love. Therefore higher religion teaches not fear but love. Only by such a path can people become attached to the Higher World. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Agni_Yoga" title="Agni Yoga">Agni Yoga</a>, <i>Fiery World Part II</i>, 292, (1934)</li></ul></li></ul> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Torah_at_the_state_library_of_Victoria.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3d/Torah_at_the_state_library_of_Victoria.jpg/220px-Torah_at_the_state_library_of_Victoria.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="165" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3d/Torah_at_the_state_library_of_Victoria.jpg/330px-Torah_at_the_state_library_of_Victoria.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3d/Torah_at_the_state_library_of_Victoria.jpg/440px-Torah_at_the_state_library_of_Victoria.jpg 2x" data-file-width="4032" data-file-height="3024" /></a><figcaption>When something is done by Jews, that does not make it Jewish. Jewish [religion] is defined by what <a href="/wiki/Torah" class="mw-redirect" title="Torah">Torah</a> commands. ~ Meir Hirsch </figcaption></figure> <ul><li>In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth, and the earth was without form and void, and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the spirit of God was moving over the face of the waters."<br />It's an oral history. It was passed down, word-of-mouth, father to son, from Adam to Seth, from Seth to Enos, from Enos to Cainan, for 40 generations, a growing, changing, story, it was handed down, word-of-mouth, father to son. Until <a href="/wiki/Moses" title="Moses">Moses</a> finally gets it down on lambskin. But lambskins wear out, and need to be recopied. Copies of copies of copies of copies of copies of copies of copies of an oral history passed down through 40 generations.<br />From Hebrew it's translated into Arabic, from Arabic to Latin, from Latin to Greek, from Greek to Russian, from Russian to German, from German to an old form of English that you could not read. Through 400 years of evolution of the English language to the book we have today, which is: a translation of a translation of a translation of a translation of a translation of a copy of a copy of a copy of a copy of a copy of a copy of a copy of an oral history passed down through 40 generations.<br />You can't put a grocery list through that many translations, copies, and re-telling, and not expect to have some big changes in the dinner menu when the kids make it back from Kroger's.<br />And yet people are killing each other over this written word. Here's a tip: If you're killing someone in the name of God — you're missing the message. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nick_Annis" class="extiw" title="w:Nick Annis">Nick Annis</a> in the preface to <i>God is Good</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The religious persecution of the ages has been done under what was claimed to be the command of God. I distrust those people who know so well what God wants them to do to their fellows, because it always coincides with their own desires. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Susan_B._Anthony" title="Susan B. Anthony">Susan B. Anthony</a>, in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.thelizlibrary.org/undelete/library/library005.html">a defense</a> of <a href="/wiki/Elizabeth_Cady_Stanton" title="Elizabeth Cady Stanton">Elizabeth Cady Stanton</a> against a motion to repudiate her <i>Woman's Bible</i> at a meeting of the National-American Woman Suffrage Association 1896 Convention, HWS, IV (1902), p. 263</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A man's religion should be more in his life than on his lips. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Joseph_Arch" title="Joseph Arch">Joseph Arch</a>, <i>The Story of his Life Told by Himself</i> (1898), p. 48</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Children of men! the unseen Power, whose eye <br /> Forever doth accompany mankind, <br /> Hath look'd on no religion scornfully <br /> That men did ever find. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Matthew_Arnold" title="Matthew Arnold">Matthew Arnold</a>, <i>Progress</i>, Stanza 10 (1867; revised from 1852 publication)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Arrogance and fanatical belief had become a racial trait. The galaxy belonged to them, having been fashioned for them by their God, so <i>everything</i> belonged to them, and they could do with it what they wanted, and what they <i>wanted</i> usually involved subjugation, destruction, and death. Religion, a vicious and hearty meme at best, usually collapsed as civilizations became spacefaring, for most such belief systems, initiated when the world was still flat and thunder was the bellowing of gods, usually could not survive the realities of the universe and the steady abrasion of science. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neal_Asher" class="extiw" title="w:Neal Asher">Neal Asher</a>, <i>Shell Game</i> (2009) in <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gardner_Dozois" class="extiw" title="w:Gardner Dozois">Gardner Dozois</a> &amp; <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Strahan" class="extiw" title="w:Jonathan Strahan">Jonathan Strahan</a> (eds.) <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_Space_Opera_2" class="extiw" title="w:The New Space Opera 2">The New Space Opera 2</a></i> (mass market paperback edition, <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-06-156236-5" title="Special:BookSources/978-0-06-156236-5">ISBN 978-0-06-156236-5</a>), p. 248</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>To surrender to ignorance and call it <a href="/wiki/God" title="God">God</a> has always been premature, and it remains premature today. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Isaac_Asimov" title="Isaac Asimov">Isaac Asimov</a> <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.stephenjaygould.org/ctrl/azimov_creationism.html">"The “Threat” of Creationism"</a> in <i>New York Times Magazine</i> (14 June 1981) reprinted <i>Science and Creationism</i> (1984) edited by M. F. Ashley Montagu</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is, by definition, interpretation; and by definition, all interpretations are valid. However, some interpretations are more reasonable than others. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reza_Aslan" class="extiw" title="w:Reza Aslan">Reza Aslan</a>, in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://east-westdialogue.blogspot.com/2007/03/from-islam-pluralist-democracies-will.html">"From Islam, Pluralist Democracies Will Surely Grow" in <i>The Chronicle of Higher Education</i> (11 March 2005)</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In human life, you will find players of religion until the knowledge and proficiency in religion will be cleansed from all superstitions, and will be purified and perfected by the enlightenment of real science. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Mustafa_Kemal_Atat%C3%BCrk" title="Mustafa Kemal Atatürk">Mustafa Kemal Atatürk</a>, Speech (October 1927); quoted in <i>Atatürk’ten Düşünceler</i> by E. Z. Karal, p. 59</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religions have been basis of the <a href="/wiki/Tyranny" title="Tyranny">tyranny</a> of kings and sultans. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Mustafa_Kemal_Atat%C3%BCrk" title="Mustafa Kemal Atatürk">Mustafa Kemal Atatürk</a>, as quoted in <i>Medenî Bilgiler ve M. Kemal Atatürk'ün El Yazıları</i> [<i>Civics and M. Kemal Atatürk's Manuscripts</i>] (1998) by Afet İnan, p. 438</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A narrow religion, a sectarian religion, an exclusive religion can live only for a limited time and a limited purpose. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Sri_Aurobindo" title="Sri Aurobindo">Sri Aurobindo</a>, <i>The Uttarpara Address</i> (1909)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>How much hatred and stupidity men succeed in packing up decorously and labelling “Religion”? <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Sri_Aurobindo" title="Sri Aurobindo">Sri Aurobindo</a>, quoted from <a href="/wiki/Sri_Aurobindo" title="Sri Aurobindo">Sri Aurobindo</a>, Nahar, S., Aurobindo, ., &amp; Institut de recherches évolutives (Paris) <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://web.archive.org/web/20170826004028/http://bharatvani.org/books/ir/IR_frontpage.htm"><i>India's rebirth: A selection from Sri Aurobindo's writing, talks and speeches.</i> Paris: Institut de Recherches Evolutives. 3rd Edition (2000), Chapter II</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There is a strange idea prevalent that by merely teaching the dogmas of religion children can be made pious and moral. This is an European error, and its practice either leads to mechanical acceptance of a creed having no effect on the inner and little on the outer life, or it creates the fanatic, the pietist, the ritualist or the unctuous hypocrite. Religion has to be lived, not learned as a creed. <ul><li>Sri Aurobindo, The Hour of God and other writings. VI. Education and Art A System of National Education Some Preliminary Ideas. 3. The Moral Nature</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It seems that most religions are obsessed with <a href="/wiki/Sex" class="mw-redirect" title="Sex">sex</a>. They assume that if a religious male sees a <a href="/wiki/Woman" class="mw-redirect" title="Woman">woman</a>, whatever her age and looks, he is aroused and cannot think about anything else. So, logically, women must be hidden away. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Uri_Avnery" title="Uri Avnery">Uri Avnery</a> talking about gender segregation at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://zope.gush-shalom.org/home/en/channels/avnery/1368795841">Women of the Wall</a> (18 May 2013)</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="B">B</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=2" title="Edit section: B"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:DCmontage2.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/97/DCmontage2.jpg/220px-DCmontage2.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="300" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/97/DCmontage2.jpg/330px-DCmontage2.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/97/DCmontage2.jpg/440px-DCmontage2.jpg 2x" data-file-width="1230" data-file-height="1680" /></a><figcaption>The government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the Christian Religion. ~ <a href="/wiki/Joel_Barlow" title="Joel Barlow">Joel Barlow</a> </figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Editor_at_large_1206.svg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/49/Editor_at_large_1206.svg/220px-Editor_at_large_1206.svg.png" decoding="async" width="220" height="220" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/49/Editor_at_large_1206.svg/330px-Editor_at_large_1206.svg.png 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/49/Editor_at_large_1206.svg/440px-Editor_at_large_1206.svg.png 2x" data-file-width="512" data-file-height="512" /></a><figcaption>At the center of religion is love. I love you and I forgive you. I am like you and you are like me. I love all people. I love the world. I love creating. Everything in our life should be based on love. ~ <a href="/wiki/Ray_Bradbury" title="Ray Bradbury">Ray Bradbury</a> </figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Rainbow_droplet_630x441.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1e/Rainbow_droplet_630x441.jpg/220px-Rainbow_droplet_630x441.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="154" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1e/Rainbow_droplet_630x441.jpg/330px-Rainbow_droplet_630x441.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1e/Rainbow_droplet_630x441.jpg/440px-Rainbow_droplet_630x441.jpg 2x" data-file-width="630" data-file-height="441" /></a><figcaption>All Faith is false, all Faith is true: Truth is the shattered mirror strown in myriad bits; while each believes his little bit the whole to own. ~ <a href="/wiki/Richard_Francis_Burton" title="Richard Francis Burton">Richard Francis Burton</a> </figcaption></figure> <ul><li>There was never law, or sect, or opinion did so much magnify goodness, as the Christian religion doth. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Francis_Bacon" title="Francis Bacon">Francis Bacon</a>, <i>Essays. Of Goodness, and Goodness of Nature</i> (1625)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The greatest <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/vicissitude#Noun" class="extiw" title="wiktionary:vicissitude">vicissitude</a> of things amongst men, is the vicissitude of sects and religions. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Francis_Bacon" title="Francis Bacon">Francis Bacon</a>, <i>Essays. Of Vicissitude of Things</i> (1625)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There has been a useful and wholesome swing away from Churchianity and from orthodox religion during the past century, and this will present a unique opportunity for the restoration of true religion and the presentation of a simple return to the ways of <a href="/wiki/Spiritual" class="mw-redirect" title="Spiritual">spiritual</a> living. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Alice_Bailey" title="Alice Bailey">Alice Bailey</a>, <i>The Reappearance of the Christ,</i> Chapter Two (1947) <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/9780853301141" class="internal mw-magiclink-isbn">ISBN 978-0-85330-114-1</a>.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In the past, the keynote of the Christian religion has been death, symbolised for us in the death of Christ and much distorted by St. Paul in his effort to blend the new religion which Christ brought with the old blood religion of the Jews. In the cycle which Christ will inaugurate after His reappearance, the goal of all the religious teaching in the world will be the resurrection of the spirit in mankind; the emphasis will be upon the livingness of the Christ nature in every human being, and upon the use of the will in bringing about this living transfiguration of the lower nature. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Alice_Bailey" title="Alice Bailey">Alice Bailey</a>, <i>The Reappearance of the Christ,</i> Chapter Two (1947)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>True religion is again emerging in the hearts of men in every land; this recognition of a divine hope and background may possibly take people back into the church and into the world faiths, but it will most certainly take them back to God. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Alice_Bailey" title="Alice Bailey">Alice Bailey</a>, <i>The Reappearance of the Christ,</i> Chapter Three (1947)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is the name, surely, which we give to the invocative appeal of humanity which leads to the evocative response of the Spirit of God. This Spirit works in every human heart and in all groups. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Alice_Bailey" title="Alice Bailey">Alice Bailey</a>, <i>The Reappearance of the Christ,</i> Chapter Three (1947)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>All religions, with their gods, demigods, prophets, messiahs and saints, are the product of the fancy and credulity of men who have not yet reached the full development and complete possession of their intellectual powers. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Mikhail_Bakunin" title="Mikhail Bakunin">Mikhail Bakunin</a>, <i>God and the State</i> (1871)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the Christian Religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Joel_Barlow" title="Joel Barlow">Joel Barlow</a>, in the Treaty of Tripoli, arranged during the presidential term of <a href="/wiki/George_Washington" title="George Washington">George Washington</a>, and signed by President <a href="/wiki/John_Adams" title="John Adams">John Adams</a> (1796)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>One's religion is whatever he is most interested in. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/J.M._Barrie" class="mw-redirect" title="J.M. Barrie">J.M. Barrie</a> <i>The Twelve-Pound Look</i> (1910)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The call to religion is not a call to be better than your fellows, but to be better than yourself. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Henry_Ward_Beecher" title="Henry Ward Beecher">Henry Ward Beecher</a>, <i>Life Thoughts</i> (1858), p. 18</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Men use religion just as they use buoys and life-preservers; they do not intend to navigate the vessel with them, but they keep just enough of them on hand to float into a safe harbor when a storm comes up and the vessel is shipwrecked; and it is only then that they intend to use them. I tell you, you will find air-holes in all such life-preservers as that. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Henry_Ward_Beecher" title="Henry Ward Beecher">Henry Ward Beecher</a>, Evening sermon (12 June 1859), published in <i>595 Pulpit Pungencies</i> (1866)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>By religion I do not mean outward things, but inward states, I mean perfected manhood. I mean the quickening of the soul by the beatific influence of the divine Spirit in truth, and love, and sympathy, and confidence, and trust. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Henry_Ward_Beecher" title="Henry Ward Beecher">Henry Ward Beecher</a>, <i>The sermons of Henry Ward Beecher: in Plymouth church, Brooklyn</i> (1874)</li></ul></li> <li>A religion may be discerned in capitalism—that is to say, capitalism serves essentially to allay the same anxieties, torments, and disturbances to which the so-called religions offered answers. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Walter_Benjamin" title="Walter Benjamin">Walter Benjamin</a>, "Capitalism as Religion" (1921), translated by Rodney Livingstone in <i>Walter Benjamin: Selected Writings</i>, Volume 1 (Harvard: 1996)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Capitalism is presumably the first case of a blaming, rather than a repenting cult. ... An enormous feeling of guilt not itself knowing how to repent, grasps at the cult, not in order to repent for this guilt, but to make it universal, to hammer it into consciousness and finally and above all to include God himself in this guilt. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Walter_Benjamin" title="Walter Benjamin">Walter Benjamin</a>, "Capitalism as Religion" (1921), translated by Chad Kautzer in <i>The Frankfurt School on Religion: Key Writings by the Major Thinkers</i> (2005), p. 259</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Today's secularists too often have very little accurate knowledge about religion, and even less desire to learn. This is problematic insofar as their sense of self is constructed in opposition to religion. Above all, the secularist is not a Jew, is not a Christian, not a Muslim, and so on. But is it intellectually responsible to define one's identity against something that one does not understand? <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Jacques_Berlinerblau" title="Jacques Berlinerblau">Jacques Berlinerblau</a>, <i>The Secular Bible: Why Nonbelievers Must Take Religion Seriously</i> (2005), p. 1</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Religio peperit divitias et filia devoravit matrem.</i> <ul><li>Religion brought forth riches, and the daughter devoured the mother.</li> <li>Saying of <a href="/wiki/Bernard_of_Clairvaux" title="Bernard of Clairvaux">Bernard of Clairvaux</a>. Religio censum peperit, sed filia matri caussa suæ leti perniti osa fuit. See Reusner's <i>Ænigmatographia</i>, Ed. 2, (1602), Part I. Page 361; Heading of an epigram ascribed to Henricus Meibomius</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The primary epiphenomenona of any religion's foundation are the production and flourishment of hypocrisy, <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/megalomania#Noun" class="extiw" title="wiktionary:megalomania">megalomania</a> and psychopathy, and the first casualties of a religion's establishment are the intentions of its founder. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_de_Berni%C3%A8res" class="extiw" title="w:Louis de Bernières">Louis de Bernières</a>, <i>Birds Without Wings</i> (2004)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The <a href="/wiki/Ageless_Wisdom_teachings" title="Ageless Wisdom teachings">Divine Wisdom</a>, the true <a href="/wiki/Theosophy" title="Theosophy">Theosophy</a>... is not, as some think, a diluted version of <a href="/wiki/Hinduism" title="Hinduism">Hinduism</a>, or <a href="/wiki/Buddhism" title="Buddhism">Buddhism</a>, or <a href="/wiki/Taoism" title="Taoism">Taoism</a>, or of any special religion. It is Esoteric Christianity as truly as it is Esoteric Buddhism, and belongs equally to all religions, exclusively to none. Foreword <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Annie_Besant" title="Annie Besant">Annie Besant</a>, [<a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=26938%7C"><i>Esoteric Christianity: Or, The Lesser Mysteries</i> by Annie Besant</a>], (1914)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>What is the object of religions? They are given to the world by men wiser than the masses of the people on whom they are bestowed, and are intended to quicken human evolution. In order to do this effectively they must reach individuals and influence them. Now all men are not at the same level of evolution, but evolution might be figured as a rising gradient, with men stationed on it at every point. The most highly evolved are far above the least evolved, both in intelligence and character... Yet all the types need religion, so that each may reach upward to a life higher than that which he is leading, and no type or grade should be sacrificed to any other. Religion must be as graduated as evolution, else it fails in its object. p. 5 <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Annie_Besant" title="Annie Besant">Annie Besant</a>, <i>Esoteric Christianity: Or, The Lesser Mysteries</i>, by Annie Besant (1914)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Research has indisputably proved that the religions of the world are markedly similar in their main teachings, in their possession of Founders who display superhuman powers and extraordinary moral elevation, in their ethical precepts, in their use of means to come into touch with invisible worlds, and in the symbols by which they express their leading beliefs. This similarity, amounting in many cases to identity, proves... a common origin. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Annie_Besant" title="Annie Besant">Annie Besant</a>, <i>Esoteric Christianity: Or, The Lesser Mysteries</i>, (1914)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Comparative Mythologists contend that the common origin is the common ignorance, and that the loftiest religious doctrines are simply refined expressions of the crude and barbarous guesses of savages, of primitive men, regarding themselves and their surroundings.... A <a href="/wiki/Krishna" title="Krishna">Kṛiṣhṇa</a>, a <a href="/wiki/Buddha" class="mw-redirect" title="Buddha">Buddha</a>, a <a href="/wiki/Laozi" title="Laozi">Lao-tze</a>, a <a href="/wiki/Jesus" title="Jesus">Jesus</a>, are the highly civilised but lineal descendants of the whirling medicine-man of the savage... And so forth. It is all summed up in the phrase: Religions are branches from a common trunk—human ignorance. p. 8 <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Annie_Besant" title="Annie Besant">Annie Besant</a>, <i>Esoteric Christianity: Or, The Lesser Mysteries</i>, (1914)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Comparative Religionists consider, on the other hand, that all religions originate from the teachings of <a href="/wiki/Masters_of_Wisdom" title="Masters of Wisdom">Divine Men</a>, who give out to the different nations of the world, from time to time, such parts of the fundamental verities of religion as the people are capable of receiving, teaching ever the same morality... "Religions are branches from a common trunk—Divine Wisdom." <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Annie_Besant" title="Annie Besant">Annie Besant</a>, <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=26938%7C"><i>Esoteric Christianity: Or, The Lesser Mysteries''</i></a>, (1914)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion, n. A daughter of Hope and Fear, explaining to Ignorance the nature of the Unknowable. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ambrose_Bierce" title="Ambrose Bierce">Ambrose Bierce</a>, <i>The Devil's Dictionary</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>A l’erreur opposons la vérité, à la foi l’évidence, la science aux religions. Les propagandistes religieux ne font connaître aux enfants qu’une seule doctrine. Faisons-leur connaître toutes les doctrines, non seulement dans leur état actuel, mais dans leur genèse et dans leur développement. Instruisons-les des ressemblances et des analogies qu’elles ont entre elles, et aussi des ressemblances et des analogies qu’ont entre eux leurs fondateurs et leurs propagateurs. Puis laissons-les libres de choisir entre les hypothèses, et si aucune des anciennes ne les satisfait, libres d’en imaginer de nouvelles.</i> <ul><li>Translation: Let us oppose <a href="/wiki/Truth" title="Truth">truth</a> to <a href="/wiki/Error" title="Error">error</a>, <a href="/wiki/Evidence" title="Evidence">evidence</a> to <a href="/wiki/Faith" title="Faith">faith</a>, <a href="/wiki/Science" title="Science">science</a> to religion. Religious propagandists teach children only one doctrine. Let us make them acquainted with all the <a href="/wiki/Doctrine" title="Doctrine">doctrines</a>, not only in their present state, but in their genesis and in their development. Let us educate them about the resemblances and analogies that they have between them, and also about the resemblances and analogies that their founders and their propagators have between them. Then let's leave them free to choose between the <a href="/wiki/Hypothesis" title="Hypothesis">hypotheses</a>, and if none of the old ones satisfy them, free to imagine new ones.</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Charles_Binet-Sangl%C3%A9" title="Charles Binet-Sanglé">Charles Binet-Sanglé</a>, <i><a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://www.histoiredelafolie.fr/psychiatrie-neurologie/charles-binet-sangle-le-crime-de-suggestion-religieuse-et-sa-nouvelle-prophylaxie-sociale-extrait-des-archives-danthropologie-criminelle-et-de-medecine-legale-pari">Le crime de suggestion religieuse et sa nouvelle prophylaxie sociale</a></i> [<i>The crime of religious suggestion and its new social prophylaxis</i>], Extract from: <i>Archives d’anthropologie criminelle et de médecine légale</i>, (Paris), 16th year, n°95, 1901, pp. 453-473.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The British finally seem to have taken to heart words attributed to an anonymous British elder statesman in the 19th century: <i>We must preserve the Church of England. It's our only defense against real religion.</i> <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rob_Blackhurst" class="extiw" title="w:Rob Blackhurst">Rob Blackhurst</a>, in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://robblackhurst.com/2006/christmas-iht/">"Britain's Unholy War Over Christmas" in <i>The International Herald Tribune</i> (23 December 2006)</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In short, in whatever light we view religion, it appears solemn and venerable. It is a temple full of Majesty, to which the worshiper may approach with comfort, in the hope of <i>obtaining grace and finding mercy;</i> but where they cannot enter without being inspired with awe. If we may be permitted to compare spiritual with natural things, religion resembles not those scenes of natural beauty where every object smiles. It cannot be likened to the gay landscape or the flowery field. It resembles more the august and sublime appearances of Nature; the lofty mountain, the expanded ocean, and the starry firmament; at the sight of which the mind is at once overawed and delighted; and, from the union of grandeur with beauty, derives a pleasing but a serious emotion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Hugh_Blair" title="Hugh Blair">Hugh Blair</a>, <i>The Works: Sermons</i> (1820) Sermon XIV "On the Mixture of Joy and Fear in Religion"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The spirit of true religion breathes gentleness and affability; it gives a native, unaffected ease to the behavior. It is social, kind, cheerful; far removed from the cloudy and illiberal superstition which clouds the brow, sharpens the temper, and dejects the spirit. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Hugh_Blair" title="Hugh Blair">Hugh Blair</a>, <i>The Works: Sermons</i> (1820) Sermon X "On the Duties of the Young"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><p>I went to the Garden of Love <br /> And saw what I never had seen: <br /> A Chapel was built in the midst, <br /> Where I used to play on the green.</p><p>And The Gates of this Chapel were shut, <br /> And "Thou Shalt Not" writ over the door... </p><p>And Priests in black gowns were walking their rounds, <br /> And binding with briars my joys &amp; desires.</p> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Blake" title="William Blake">William Blake</a>, <i>The Garden of Love</i> (1866)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In the United States of America, sixty thousand (60,428) men are paid salaries to teach the Science of God and His relations to His creatures. These men contract to impart to us the knowledge which treats of the existence, character, and attributes of our Creator; His laws and government; the doctrines we are to believe and the duties we are to practice. Five thousand (5,141) of them, with the prospect of 1273 theological students to help them in time, teach this science according to a formula prescribed by the Bishop of Rome, to five million people. Fifty-five thousand (55,287) local and traveling ministers, representing fifteen different denominations, each contradicting the other upon more or less vital theological questions, instruct, in their respective doctrines, thirty-three million (33,500,000) other persons... These figures are copied from the "Religious Statistics of the United States for the year 1871.</li> <li><a href="/wiki/H.P._Blavatsky" class="mw-redirect" title="H.P. Blavatsky">H.P. Blavatsky</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isis_Unveiled" class="extiw" title="w:Isis Unveiled">Isis Unveiled</a></i>, Vol. II, Chapter III], (1877)</li></ul> <ul><li>The God of the Unitarians is a bachelor; the Deity of the Presbyterians, Methodists, Congregationalists, and the other orthodox Protestant sects a spouseless Father with one Son, who is identical with Himself. In the attempt to outvie each other in the erection of their sixty-two thousand and odd churches, prayer-houses, and meeting-halls, in which to teach these conflicting theological doctrines, $354,485,581 have been spent. The value of the Protestant parsonages alone, in which are sheltered the disputants and their families, is roughly calculated to approximate $54,115,297... One Presbyterian church in New York cost a round million; a Catholic altar alone, one-fourth as much!...<br />And now, with Pilate, let us inquire, What is truth? Where is it to be searched for amid this multitude of warring sects? Each claims to be based upon divine revelation, and each to have the keys of the celestial gates. Is either in possession of this rare truth?... These figures are copied from the "Religious Statistics of the United States for the year 1871. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/H.P._Blavatsky" class="mw-redirect" title="H.P. Blavatsky">H.P. Blavatsky</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isis_Unveiled" class="extiw" title="w:Isis Unveiled">Isis Unveiled</a></i>, Vol. II, Chapter III], (1877)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Tant de fiel entre-t-il dans l'âme des dévots?</i> <ul><li>Can such bitterness enter into the heart of the devout?</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Nicolas_Boileau-Despr%C3%A9aux" title="Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux">Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux</a>, <i>Le Lutrin</i> (1683), I, 12</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>No mere man since the Fall, is able in this life perfectly to keep the commandments. <ul><li><i>Book of Common Prayer</i>, Shorter Catechism</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>At the center of religion is love. I love you and I forgive you. I am like you and you are like me. I love all people. I love the world. I love creating. Everything in our life should be based on love. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ray_Bradbury" title="Ray Bradbury">Ray Bradbury</a>, as quoted in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://articles.cnn.com/2010-08-02/living/Bradbury_1_ray-bradbury-dandelion-wine-sam-weller?_s=PM:LIVING">"Sci-fi legend "Ray Bradbury on God, 'monsters and angels'" by John Blake, <i>CNN&#160;: Living</i> (2 August 2010)</a>, p. 1</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It doesn’t matter how often I hear: religion, religion, religion, I know deep in my heart that it is not about religion. It is about the battle of matter and spirit—the battle of the oppressed that are dispossessed— and want to possess—because they feel possessed. And they are possessed of <a href="/wiki/Spirit" title="Spirit">spirit</a>. It is the call of the oppressed to be possessed by something higher than material dispossession. After all the schisms of isms—after <a href="/wiki/Capitalism" title="Capitalism">Capitalism</a>, <a href="/wiki/Socialism" title="Socialism">Socialism</a>, <a href="/wiki/Marxism" title="Marxism">Marxism</a>, <a href="/wiki/Communism" title="Communism">Communism</a>, <a href="/wiki/Feminism" title="Feminism">Feminism</a> —after separation of church and state—it is an anachronism to call it a religious crusade when it is a global conflict between the ones who have too much and the ones who have too little, too little to lose. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Giannina_Braschi" title="Giannina Braschi">Giannina Braschi</a>, United States of Banana. (2011), p.23</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>What we have here is a war--the war of matter and spirit... The war of banks and religion. Banks are the temples of America. This is a holy war. Our economy is our religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Giannina_Braschi" title="Giannina Braschi">Giannina Braschi</a> on the war against terrorism as discussed in "United States of Banana" and in New York 1 TV <a rel="nofollow" class="external autonumber" href="http://www.ny1noticias.com/content/principales/pura_politica/149439/giannina-braschi-habla-de-su-novela--united-states-of-banana">[2]</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>You humans, most of you, subscribe to this policy of an eye for an eye, a life for a life, which is known throughout the universe for its… <i>stupidity</i>. Even your <a href="/wiki/Gautama_Buddha" title="Gautama Buddha">Buddha</a> and your <a href="/wiki/Jesus" title="Jesus">Christ</a> had quite a different vision; but nobody's paid much attention to them, not even the Buddhists or the Christians. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gene_Brewer" class="extiw" title="w:Gene Brewer">Gene Brewer</a> and <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Leavitt" class="extiw" title="w:Charles Leavitt">Charles Leavitt</a>, lines for the character "prot" in <i><a href="/wiki/K-PAX" class="mw-redirect" title="K-PAX">K-PAX</a></i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion as a whole is but a form of loyalty to the interests of <a href="/wiki/Ruling_class" title="Ruling class">English property</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_Briffault" title="Robert Briffault">Robert Briffault</a>, <i>The Decline and Fall of the British Empire</i> (1938), p. 116</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Maia recognized a look of true religion in the other woman’s eyes. A version and interpretation that conveniently justified what had already been decided. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/David_Brin" title="David Brin">David Brin</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glory_Season" class="extiw" title="w:Glory Season">Glory Season</a></i> (1993), chapter 14</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Yet where were answers to the truly <i>deep</i> questions?<br />Religion promised those, though always in vague terms, while retreating from one line in the sand to the next. <i>Don't look past this boundary,</i> they told Galileo, then Hutton, Darwin, Von Neumann, and Crick, always retreating with great dignity before the latest scientific advance, then drawing the next holy perimeter at the shadowy rim of knowledge. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/David_Brin" title="David Brin">David Brin</a>, <i>Kiln People</i> (2002), Chapter 57 <small> (<a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-765-34261-8" title="Special:BookSources/0-765-34261-8">ISBN 0-765-34261-8</a>, </small> p. 482)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Vain are the thousand creeds <br /> That move men's hearts: unutterably vain; <br /> Worthless as withered weeds, <br /> Or idlest froth amid the boundless main, <br /> To waken doubt in one <br /> Holding so fast by Thine infinity; <br /> So surely anchored on <br /> The steadfast Rock of immortality. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Emily_Bront%C3%AB" title="Emily Brontë">Emily Brontë</a>, <i>No Coward Soul Is Mine</i> (1848)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Curva trahit mites, pars pungit acuta rebelles.</i> <ul><li>The crooked end obedient spirits draws, <br /> The pointed, those rebels who spurn at Christian laws.</li> <li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Broughton" class="extiw" title="w:Thomas Broughton">Thomas Broughton</a>, <i>Dictionary of all Religions</i>. (1756). The croisier is pointed at one end and crooked at the other. "Curva trahit, quos virga regit, pars ultima pungit"; is the Motto on the Episcopal staff said to be preserved at Toulouse</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Persecution is a bad and indirect way to plant religion. <ul><li>Sir <a href="/wiki/Thomas_Browne" title="Thomas Browne">Thomas Browne</a>, <i>Religio Medici</i>. XXV</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Speak low to me, my Saviour, low and sweet <br /> From out the hallelujahs, sweet and low, <br /> Lest I should fear and fall, and miss Thee so <br /> Who art not missed by any that <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/entreat#Verb" class="extiw" title="wiktionary:entreat">entreat</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Elizabeth_Barrett_Browning" title="Elizabeth Barrett Browning">Elizabeth Barrett Browning</a>, <i>Comfort</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It were endless to enumerate all the passages both in the sacred and profane writers, which establish the general sentiment of mankind, concerning the inseparable union of a sacred and reverential awe, with our ideas of the divinity. Hence the common maxim, <i>primos in orbe deos fecit timor</i> [fear brought the first gods into the world]. This maxim may be, as I believe it is, false with regard to the origin of religion. The maker of the maxim saw how inseparable these ideas were, without considering that the notion of some great power must be always precedent to our dread of it. But this dread must necessarily follow the idea of such a power, when it is once excited in the mind. It is on this principle that true religion has, and must have, so large a mixture of <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/salutary#Adjective" class="extiw" title="wiktionary:salutary">salutary</a> fear; and that false religions have generally nothing else but fear to support them. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Edmund_Burke" title="Edmund Burke">Edmund Burke</a>, <i>A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful</i> (1757), Part II, Section V.</li> <li>The Latin maxim quoted by Burke is from <a href="/wiki/Statius" title="Statius">Statius</a>, <i>Thebaid</i>, iii, 661</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>But the religion most prevalent in our northern colonies is a refinement on the principle of resistance, it is the <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/dissident#Noun" class="extiw" title="wiktionary:dissident">dissidence</a> of dissent, and the protestantism of the Protestant religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Edmund_Burke" title="Edmund Burke">Edmund Burke</a>, <i>Speech on Conciliation with America</i> (1774)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The writers against religion, whilst they oppose every system, are wisely careful never to set up any of their own. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Edmund_Burke" title="Edmund Burke">Edmund Burke</a>, <i>A Vindication of Natural Society</i> (1756) Preface. Vol. I. p. 7</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The body of all true religion consists, to be sure, in obedience to the will of the Sovereign of the world, in a confidence in His declarations, and in imitation of His perfections. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Edmund_Burke" title="Edmund Burke">Edmund Burke</a>, <i>Reflections on the Revolution in France</i> (1790)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>People differ in their discourse and profession about these matters, but men of sense are really but of one religion. — "What religion?" — the Earl said, "Men of sense never tell it." <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert_Burnet" class="extiw" title="w:Gilbert Burnet">Gilbert Burnet</a>, <i>History of his Own Times</i>. Vol. I, Book I. Sec. 96. Footnote by Onslow, referring to Earl of Shaftesbury</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>An Atheist's laugh's a poor exchange <br /> For Deity offended! <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_Burns" title="Robert Burns">Robert Burns</a>, <i>Epistle to a Young Friend</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>G__ knows I'm no the thing I should be, <br /> Nor am I even the thing I could be, <br /> But twenty times I rather would be <br /> An atheist clean, <br /> Than under gospel colours hid be, <br /> Just for a screen. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_Burns" title="Robert Burns">Robert Burns</a>, <i>Epistle to Rev. John M'Math</i>, Stanza 8</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>All Faith is false, all Faith is true: <br /> Truth is the shattered mirror strewen <br /> In myriad bits; while each believes <br /> his little bit the whole to own. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Richard_Francis_Burton" title="Richard Francis Burton">Richard Francis Burton</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Kasidah" class="extiw" title="w:The Kasidah">The Kasîdah of Hâjî Abdû El-Yezdî</a></i> (1870), Section VI</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>One religion is as true as another. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_Burton" title="Robert Burton">Robert Burton</a>, <i>The Anatomy of Melancholy</i> (1621), Book III. Sec. IV. Memb. 2. Subsec. 1</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I believe that Islam is a great religion that preaches peace. And I believe people who murder the innocent to achieve political objectives aren’t religious people. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/George_W._Bush" title="George W. Bush">George W. Bush</a>, Interview of the President by Al Arabiya in Oval Office, White House News, (October 4, 2007)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It is only religion, the great bond of love and duty to God, that makes any existence valuable or even tolerable. Without this, to live were only to graze.… Without this, the beauties of the world are but splendid <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/gewgaw#Noun" class="extiw" title="wiktionary:gewgaw">gewgaws</a>, the stars of heaven glittering orbs of ice, and, what is yet far worse and colder, the trials of existence profitless and unadulterated miseries. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Horace_Bushnell" title="Horace Bushnell">Horace Bushnell</a>, <i>Sermons for the New Life</i> (1859) ch. XI, "Obligation a Privilege" pp. 221-222</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>What but the mighty mastership of religion has ever led a people up through civil wars and revolutions into a regenerated order and liberty? What has planted colonies for a great history but religion? The most august and beautiful structures of the world have been temples of religion; crystallizations, we may say, of worship. The noblest charities, the best fruits of learning, the richest discoveries, the best institutions of law and justice, every greatest thing the world has seen, represents more or less directly the fruitfulness and creativeness of religious talents. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Horace_Bushnell" title="Horace Bushnell">Horace Bushnell</a>, <i>Sermons for the New Life</i> (1859) ch. IX, "Extirpated by Disguise" p. 170</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>As if Religion were intended <br /> For nothing else but to be mended. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Samuel_Butler_(poet)" title="Samuel Butler (poet)">Samuel Butler</a>, <i>Hudibras</i>, Part I (1663-64), Canto I, line 205</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/synod#Noun" class="extiw" title="wiktionary:synod">Synods</a> are mystical <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beargarden" class="extiw" title="w:Beargarden">Bear-gardens</a>, <br /> Where Elders, Deputies, Church-wardens, <br /> And other Members of the Court, <br /> Manage the Babylonish sport. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Samuel_Butler_(poet)" title="Samuel Butler (poet)">Samuel Butler</a>, <i>Hudibras</i>, Part I (1663-64), Canto III, line 1,095</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>So 'ere the storm of war broke out, <br /> Religion spawn'd a various rout <br /> Of petulant capricious sects, <br /> The maggots of corrupted texts, <br /> That first run all religion down, <br /> And after every swarm its own. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Samuel_Butler_(poet)" title="Samuel Butler (poet)">Samuel Butler</a>, <i>Hudibras</i>, Part III (1678), Canto II, line 7</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There's naught, no doubt, so much the spirit calms as rum and true religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Lord_Byron" title="Lord Byron">Lord Byron</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/Don_Juan_(Byron)" title="Don Juan (Byron)">Don Juan</a></i> (1818-24), Canto II, Stanza 34</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="C">C</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=3" title="Edit section: C"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Joseph_Campbell_%26_Joan_Halifax.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cb/Joseph_Campbell_%26_Joan_Halifax.jpg/220px-Joseph_Campbell_%26_Joan_Halifax.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="152" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cb/Joseph_Campbell_%26_Joan_Halifax.jpg/330px-Joseph_Campbell_%26_Joan_Halifax.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cb/Joseph_Campbell_%26_Joan_Halifax.jpg/440px-Joseph_Campbell_%26_Joan_Halifax.jpg 2x" data-file-width="5168" data-file-height="3578" /></a><figcaption>To read a <a href="/wiki/Poem" class="mw-redirect" title="Poem">poem</a> as a chronicle of <a href="/wiki/Fact" title="Fact">fact</a> is — to say the least — to miss the point. ~ <a href="/wiki/Joseph_Campbell" title="Joseph Campbell">Joseph Campbell</a> </figcaption></figure> <ul><li>All religions make me wanna throw up.<br />All religions make me sick.<br />All religions make me wanna throw up.<br />All religions suck.<br />They all claim that they have the truth<br />That'll set you free.<br />Just give 'em all your money and they'll set you free.<br />Free for a fee.<br />They all claim that they have the Answer<br />When they don't even know the Question.<br />They're just a bunch of liars.<br />They just want your money.<br />They just want your consciousness.<br />All religions suck.<br />All religions make me wanna throw up. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlos_Cadona" class="extiw" title="w:Carlos Cadona">Carlos Cadona</a>, "Religious Vomit," <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_God_We_Trust,_Inc." class="extiw" title="w:In God We Trust, Inc.">In God We Trust, Inc.</a></i> (1981)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is not a perpetual moping over good books. Religion is not even prayer, praise, holy ordinances — these are necessary to religion — no man can be religious without them. But religion, I repeat, is, mainly and chiefly the glorifying God amid the duties and trials of the world; the guiding of our course amid adverse winds and currents of temptation by the star-light of duty and the compass of divine truth, the bearing up manfully, wisely, courageously, for the honor of Christ, our great Leader, in the conflict of life. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Caird" class="extiw" title="w:John Caird">John Caird</a>, <i>Religion in Common Life</i> (1856) pp. 24-25</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Carry religious principles into common life, and common life will lose its transitoriness. "The world passes away!" The things seen are temporal. Soon business, with all its cares and anxieties — the whole "unprofitable stir and fever of the world" — will be to us a thing of the past. But religion does something better than sigh and moan over the perishableness of earthly things; it finds in them the seeds of immortality. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Caird" class="extiw" title="w:John Caird">John Caird</a>, <i>Religion in Common Life</i> (1856) pp. 55-56</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is poetry misunderstood. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Joseph_Campbell" title="Joseph Campbell">Joseph Campbell</a>, “Mythology and the Individual,” Lecture 4</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion has actually convinced people that there's an invisible man living in the sky who watches everything you do, every minute of every day. And the invisible man has a special list of ten things he does not want you to do. And if you do any of these ten things, he has a special place, full of fire and smoke and burning and torture and anguish, where he will send you to live and suffer and burn and choke and scream and cry forever and ever 'til the end of time... But He loves you. He loves you, and He needs money! He always needs money! He's all-powerful, all-perfect, all-knowing, and all-wise, somehow just can't handle money! Religion takes in billions of dollars, they pay no taxes, and they always need a little more. Now, you talk about a good bullshit story. <i>Holy Shit!</i> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/George_Carlin" title="George Carlin">George Carlin</a>, <i>You Are All Diseased</i> (1999)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>His religion at best is an anxious wish; like that of Rabelais, "a great Perhaps". <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Carlyle" title="Thomas Carlyle">Thomas Carlyle</a>, <i>Essays</i> (1828) "Burns"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>On the whole we must repeat the often repeated saying, that it is unworthy a religious man to view an irreligious one either with alarm or aversion; or with any other feeling than regret, and hope, and brotherly commiseration. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Carlyle" title="Thomas Carlyle">Thomas Carlyle</a>, <i>Essays</i>. Voltaire</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It seems to me a great truth … that human things can not stand on selfishness, mechanical utilities, economics, and law-courts; that if there be not a religious element in the relations of men, such relations are miserable, and doomed to ruin. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Carlyle" title="Thomas Carlyle">Thomas Carlyle</a>, letter to <a href="/wiki/Thomas_Chalmers" title="Thomas Chalmers">Thomas Chalmers</a> (11 October 1841)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The world is full, also, of great traditional books tracing the history of man (but focused narrowly on the local group) from the age of mythological beginnings, through periods of increasing plausibility, to a time almost within memory, when the chronicles begin to carry the record, with a show of rational factuality, to the present. Furthermore, just as all primitive mythologies serve to validate the customs, systems of sentiments, and political aims of their respective local groups, so do these great traditional books. On the surface they may appear to have been composed as conscientious history. In depth they reveal themselves to have been conceived as myths: poetic readings of the mysteries of life from a certain interested point of view. But to read a poem as a chronicle of fact is — to say the least — to miss the point. To say a little more, it is to prove oneself a dolt. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Joseph_Campbell" title="Joseph Campbell">Joseph Campbell</a>, <i>Occidental Mythology: The Masks of God</i> (1964)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The church has been so harsh with heretics only because she deemed that there is no worse enemy than a child who has gone astray. But the record of Gnostic effronteries and the persistence of Manichean currents have contributed more to the construction of orthodox dogma than all the prayers. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Camus" title="Albert Camus">Albert Camus</a>, in "Absurd Creation" in <i>The Myth of Sisyphus</i> (1942), as translated by Justin O'Brien,<small> Vantage International, 1991, <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-679-73373-6" title="Special:BookSources/0-679-73373-6">ISBN 0-679-73373-6</a>, p. 113</small></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion… is such a belief of the Bible as maintains a living influence on the heart. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Richard_Cecil" class="mw-redirect" title="Richard Cecil">Richard Cecil</a>, <i>The works of the Rev. Richard Cecil</i> vol. 3 (1825) "On Scriptures", p. 359</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>If you are seeking the comforts of religion rather than the glory of our Lord, you are on the wrong track. The Comforter meets us unsought in the path of duty. There is something in religion, when rightly comprehended, that is masculine and grand. It removes those little desires which are "the constant hectic of a fool." <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Richard_Cecil" class="mw-redirect" title="Richard Cecil">Richard Cecil</a>, <i>The works of the Rev. Richard Cecil</i> vol. 3 (1825) p. 290</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>O Heavenly Father! convert my religion from a name to a principle. Bring all my thoughts and movements into an habitual reference to Thee. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Chalmers" title="Thomas Chalmers">Thomas Chalmers</a>, diary entry, 14 March 1812</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The sum and substance of the preparation needed for a coming eternity is that you believe what the Bible tells you, and do what the Bible bids you. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Chalmers" title="Thomas Chalmers">Thomas Chalmers</a>, <i>Lectures on the Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Romans</i> vol. 1 (1837) pp. 29-30</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is faith in an Infinite Creator, who delights in and enjoins that Rectitude which conscience commands us to seek, This conviction gives a Divine Sanction to duty. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Ellery_Channing" title="William Ellery Channing">William Ellery Channing</a>, <i>The Perfect Life</i> (1873) "The Perfecting Power of Religion"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The true office of religion is to bring out the whole nature of man in harmonious activity… <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Ellery_Channing" title="William Ellery Channing">William Ellery Channing</a>, <i>The Perfect Life</i> (1873) "The Perfecting Power of Religion"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It was religion which, by teaching men their near relation to God, awakened in them the consciousness of their importance as individuals. It was the struggle for religious rights which opened men's eyes to all their rights. It was resistance to religious usurpation which led men to withstand political oppression. It was religious discussion which roused the minds of all classes to free and vigorous thought. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Ellery_Channing" title="William Ellery Channing">William Ellery Channing</a>, <i>Self-Culture</i> (1838)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><b>Religion assures us that our afflictions shall have an end; she comforts us, she dries our tears, she promises us <a href="/wiki/Afterlife" title="Afterlife">another life</a>.</b> On the contrary, in the abominable worship of atheism, human woes are the incense, death is the priest, a coffin the altar, and annihilation the Deity. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Fran%C3%A7ois-Ren%C3%A9_de_Chateaubriand" title="François-René de Chateaubriand">François-René de Chateaubriand</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%A9nie_du_christianisme" class="extiw" title="w:Génie du christianisme">The Genius of Christianity</a></i> (1802), Part I, Book VI, Chapter V. Translated by Charles I. White, D.D. Baltimore: John Murphy, 1871, p. 202.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I realized that ritual will always mean throwing away something; Destroying our corn or wine upon the altar of our gods. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/G._K._Chesterton" title="G. K. Chesterton">G. K. Chesterton</a>, <i>Tremendous Trifles. Secret of a Train</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It is the test of a good religion whether you can joke about it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/G._K._Chesterton" title="G. K. Chesterton">G. K. Chesterton</a>, "Spiritualism", <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Things_Considered" class="extiw" title="w:All Things Considered">All Things Considered</a></i> (1908)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The rigid saint, by whom no mercy's shown <br /> To saints whose lives are better than his own, <br /> Shall spare thy crimes; and Wit, who never once <br /> Forgave a brother, shall forgive a dunce. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Charles_Churchill" class="mw-redirect" title="Charles Churchill">Charles Churchill</a>, <i>Epistle to Hogarth</i> (July 1763) l. 25</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Deos placatos pictas efficiet et sanctitas.</i> <ul><li>Piety and holiness of life will propitiate the gods.</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Cicero" title="Cicero">Cicero</a>, <i>De Officiis</i>. II. 3</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Res sacros non modo manibus attingi, sed ne cogitatione quidem violari fas fuit.</i> <ul><li>Things sacred should not only be untouched with the hands, but unviolated in thought.</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Cicero" title="Cicero">Cicero</a>, <i>Orationes in Verrem</i>. II. 4. 45</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is the most malevolent of all mind viruses. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Arthur_C._Clarke" title="Arthur C. Clarke">Arthur C. Clarke</a>, <i>The Onion AV Club</i> interview (18th February 2004)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I for one would never be a party, unless the law were clear, to saying to any man who put forward his views on those most sacred things, that he should be branded as apparently criminal because he differed from the majority of mankind in his religious views or convictions on the subject of religion. If that were so, we should get into ages and times which, thank God, we do not live in, when people were put to death for opinions and beliefs which now almost all of us believe to be true. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Duke_Coleridge" class="mw-redirect" title="John Duke Coleridge">John Duke Coleridge</a>, Lord Chief Justice, <i>Regina v. Bradlaugh and others</i> (1883), 15 Cox, C.C. 230</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Forth from his dark and lonely hiding place, <br /> (Portentous sight!) the owlet atheism, <br /> Sailing on obscene wings athwart the noon, <br /> Drops his blue-fring'd lids, and holds them close, <br /> And hooting at the glorious sun in Heaven, <br /> Cries out, "Where is it?" <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Samuel_Taylor_Coleridge" title="Samuel Taylor Coleridge">Samuel Taylor Coleridge</a>, <i>Fears in Solitude</i>. ll. 81-86 (1798)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Too soon did the Doctors of the Church forget that the <i>Heart</i>, the <i>Moral</i> Nature, was the Beginning and the End; and that Truth, Knowledge, and insight were comprehended in its expansion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Samuel_Taylor_Coleridge" title="Samuel Taylor Coleridge">Samuel Taylor Coleridge</a>, <i>Aids to Reflection</i> (1825)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Like all great theologies, Bill [O'Reilly]'s can be boiled down to one sentence: There must be a god, because I don't know how things work. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Stephen_Colbert" title="Stephen Colbert">Stephen Colbert</a>, on <cite style="font-style:normal" class="">"<a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/370183/january-06-2011/bill-o-reilly-proves-god-s-existence---neil-degrasse-tyson">Bill O'Reilly Proves God's Existence - Neil deGrasse Tyson</a>",&#32;<i>The Colbert Report</i>&#32;(Comedy Central), 6 January 2011</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&amp;rft.genre=article&amp;rft.atitle=Bill+O%27Reilly+Proves+God%27s+Existence+-+Neil+deGrasse+Tyson&amp;rft.jtitle=The+Colbert+Report&amp;rft.date=6+January+2011&amp;rft.pub=Comedy+Central&amp;rft_id=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.colbertnation.com%2Fthe-colbert-report-videos%2F370183%2Fjanuary-06-2011%2Fbill-o-reilly-proves-god-s-existence---neil-degrasse-tyson&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Life and the Universe show spontaneity; <br /> Down with ridiculous notions of Deity! <br /> Churches and creeds are lost in the mists; <br /> Truth must be sought with the Positivists. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Mortimer_Collins" title="Mortimer Collins">Mortimer Collins</a>, <i>The Positivists</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Men will wrangle for religion; write for it; fight for it; die for it; anything but — live for it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Charles_Caleb_Colton" title="Charles Caleb Colton">Charles Caleb Colton</a>, <i>Lacon</i>, Volume I (1820), #25</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The best thing about religion is that it's so transparently absurd it can't possibly last forever. I'm convinced it will only take a small shift in human consciousness for it to be laughed off the planet, and I hope I'm still around when that happens. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Pat_Condell" title="Pat Condell">Pat Condell</a>, in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://freethinker.co.uk/2008/02/27/laughing-religion-off-the-planet-an-interview-with-pat-condell/">Laughing religion off the planet - an interview with Pat Condell</a> (27 February 2008)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>For the majority of English people there are only two religions, Roman Catholic, which is wrong, and the rest, which don't matter. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duff_Cooper" class="extiw" title="w:Duff Cooper">Duff Cooper</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Men_Forget" class="extiw" title="w:Old Men Forget">Old Men Forget</a></i> (1953). London: Rupert Hart-Davis, p. 128</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In America the taint of sectarianism lies broad upon the land. Not content with acknowledging the supremacy as the Deity, and with erecting temples in his honor, where all can bow down with reverence, the pride and vanity of human reason enter into and pollute our worship, and the houses that should be of God and for God, alone, where he is to be honored with submissive faith, are too often merely schools of metaphysical and useless distinctions. The nation is sectarian, rather than Christian. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/James_Fenimore_Cooper" title="James Fenimore Cooper">James Fenimore Cooper</a>, "On Religion" <i>The American Democrat</i> (1838)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion, if in heavenly truths attired, <br /> Needs only to be seen to be admired. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Cowper" title="William Cowper">William Cowper</a>, <i>Expostulation</i>, line 492</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion does not censure or exclude <br /> Unnumbered pleasures, harmlessly pursued. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Cowper" title="William Cowper">William Cowper</a>, <i>Retirement</i>, line 782</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Pity! Religion has so seldom found <br /> A skilful guide into poetic ground! <br /> The flowers would spring where'er she deign'd to stray <br /> And every muse attend her in her way. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Cowper" title="William Cowper">William Cowper</a>, <i>Table Talk</i>, line 688</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="D">D</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=4" title="Edit section: D"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>Sacred religion! Mother of Form and Fear! <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Samuel_Daniel" title="Samuel Daniel">Samuel Daniel</a>, <i>Musophilus</i>, Stanza 47</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Do you, good people, believe that Adam and Eve were created in the Garden of Eden and that they were forbidden to eat from the tree of knowledge? I do. The church has always been afraid of that tree. It still is afraid of knowledge. Some of you say religion makes people happy. So does laughing gas. So does whiskey. I believe in the brain of man. I'm not worried about my soul. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Clarence_Darrow" title="Clarence Darrow">Clarence Darrow</a> in a debate with religious leaders in Kansas City, as quoted in a eulogy for Darrow by Emanuel Haldeman-Julius (1938)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Usbek can be as brilliant and satirical on occasion as his younger companion, but his aim is to probe to the heart of things, and he knows that truth will only reveal itself to a reverent search. To him all religions are worthy of respect, and their ministers also, for “God has chosen for Himself, in every corner of the earth, souls purer than the rest, whom He has separated from the impious world that their mortification and their fervent prayers may suspend His wrath.” He thinks that the surest way to please God is to obey the laws of society, and to do our duty towards men. Every religion assumes that God loves men, since He establishes a religion for their happiness; and since He loves men we are certain of pleasing Him in loving them, too. Usbek’s prayer in Letter XLVI. Is not yet out of date. “Lord, I do not understand any of those discussions that are carried on without end regarding Thee: I would serve Thee according to Thy will; but each man whom I consult would have me serve Thee according to his.” He insists that religion is intended for man’s happiness; and that, in order to love it and fulfil its behests, it is not necessary to hate and persecute those who are opposed to our beliefs – not necessary even to attempt to convert them. Indeed, he holds that variety of belief is beneficial to the state. A new sect is always the surest means of correcting the abuses of an old faith; and those who profess tolerated creeds usually prove more useful to their country than those who profess the established religion, because, being excluded from all honours, their endeavour to distinguish themselves by becoming wealthy improves trade and commerce. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Persian_Letters" class="extiw" title="s:Persian Letters">Persian Letters</a> introduction by <a href="/w/index.php?title=Author:John_Davidson&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1" class="new" title="Author:John Davidson (page does not exist)">John Davidson</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Many of us saw religion as harmless nonsense. Beliefs might lack all supporting evidence but, we thought, if people needed a crutch for consolation, where's the harm? September 11th changed all that. Revealed faith is not harmless nonsense, it can be lethally dangerous nonsense. Dangerous because it gives people unshakeable confidence in their own righteousness. Dangerous because it gives them false courage to kill themselves, which automatically removes normal barriers to killing others. Dangerous because it teaches enmity to others labelled only by a difference of inherited tradition. And dangerous because we have all bought into a weird respect, which uniquely protects religion from normal criticism. Let's now stop being so damned respectful! <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Richard_Dawkins" title="Richard Dawkins">Richard Dawkins</a> <i>Has the world changed?</i>, The Guardian (October 11, 2001)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I think that what really matters about a religion is whether it's true. <ul><li>Richard Dawkins <cite style="font-style:normal">&#32;(January 14, 2024)"<a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gaRVzooavRI&amp;t=81s">Religion Is Still Evil - Richard Dawkins</a>". <i>Alex O'Connor, YouTube</i>.</cite> (quote at 1:21 of 1:04:44 in video)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>If all enlightened men were, like us, to point out, in an impartial spirit, various defects found in different religions, it is not at all impossible that all quarrels should cease, that people should live together in peace all following one religion, and that truth should thus triumph. <ul><li>Maharishi Dayanand Saraswati (1824-1883) Dayanand Saraswati, “The religion of Moslems,” Ch. 14 of 'The Light of Truth', Published by Sarvadeshik Arya Pratinidhi Sabha, 3/5, Maharishi Dayanand Bhawan, Ramlila Ground New Delhi – 110002.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><b>I was frightened even by God.</b> I could not believe in his love, only his punishment. Faith. That, I felt, was the act of facing the tribunal of justice with one's head bowed to receive the scourge of God. <b>I could believe in hell, but it was impossible for me to believe in the existence of heaven.</b> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Osamu_Dazai" title="Osamu Dazai">Osamu Dazai</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_Longer_Human" class="extiw" title="w:No Longer Human">No Longer Human</a></i> (1948), The Third Notebook: Part One</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Evolution’s logical, unlike religion. Even the Church will agree with that. You have to take religion on faith and you can’t test it by common sense. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Lester_del_Rey" title="Lester del Rey">Lester del Rey</a>, <i>The Eleventh Commandment</i> (1962), Chapter 8</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In the latter case it is often government that organizes the conquest, and religion that justifies it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Jared_Diamond" title="Jared Diamond">Jared Diamond</a>, <i>Guns, Germs, and Steel</i> (1997) "From Egalitarianism to Kleptocracy", p. 266<small> <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-393-31755-8" title="Special:BookSources/978-0-393-31755-8">ISBN 978-0-393-31755-8</a></small></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Once he saw the officials of a temple leading away some one who had stolen a bowl belonging to the treasurers, and said, "The great <a href="/wiki/Thieves" class="mw-redirect" title="Thieves">thieves</a> are leading away the little thief." <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Diogenes_La%C3%ABrtius" title="Diogenes Laërtius">Diogenes Laërtius</a>, vi. 45</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>"As for that," said Waldenshare, "sensible men are all of the same religion." "Pray what is that?" inquired the Prince. "Sensible men never tell." <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Benjamin_Disraeli" title="Benjamin Disraeli">Benjamin Disraeli</a>, <i>Endymion</i> (1880), Chapter LXXXI. Borrowed from Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper (Lord Shaftesbury)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion, in its most general view, is such a Sense of God in the soul, and such a conviction of our obligations to Him, and of our dependence upon Him, as shall engage us to make it our great care to conduct ourselves in a manner which we have reason to believe will be pleasing to Him. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Philip_Doddridge" title="Philip Doddridge">Philip Doddridge</a>, in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.ccel.org/d/doddridge/rise"><i>The Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul</i></a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Our love, when it is without counting the cost, leads the other toward God. Our love makes straight the paths of the Lord. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Catherine_Doherty" title="Catherine Doherty">Catherine Doherty</a> in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.madonnahouse.org/mandate/living.html">"Living The Little Mandate" in <i>Unfinished Pilgrimage: The Little Mandate and How It Came to Be</i></a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religious experiences which are as real as life to some may be incomprehensible to others. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_O._Douglas" title="William O. Douglas">William O. Douglas</a>, <i>United States v. Ballard</i>, 322 U.S. 78 (1944)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>You can and you can't — You shall and you shan't — You will and you won't — And you will be damned if you do — And you will be damned if you don't. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorenzo_Dow" class="extiw" title="w:Lorenzo Dow">Lorenzo Dow "Crazy Dow"</a>, defining <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calvinism" class="extiw" title="w:Calvinism">Calvinism</a> in <i>Reflections on the Love of God</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Gardez-vous bien de lui les jours qu'il communie.</i> <ul><li>Beware of him the days that he takes Communion.</li> <li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques_Du_Lorens" class="extiw" title="w:Jacques Du Lorens">Jacques Du Lorens</a>, <i>Satires</i>, I</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>L'institut des Jesuites est une épée dont la poigée est à Rome et la pointe partout.</i> <ul><li>The Order of Jesuits is a sword whose handle is at Rome and whose point is everywhere.</li> <li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andr%C3%A9_M._J._Dupin" class="extiw" title="w:André M. J. Dupin">André M. J. Dupin</a>, <i>Procès de tendance</i> (1825). Quoted by him as found in a letter to Mlle. Voland from Abbé Raynal. Rousseau quotes it from D'Aubigné–Anti-Coton, who ascribes it to the saying of the Society of Jesus which is "a sword, the blade of which is in France, and the handle in Rome".</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Puritanism and paganism — the repression and the expression of the senses and desires — alternate in mutual reaction in history. Generally religion and puritanism prevail in periods when the laws are feeble and morals must bear the burden of maintaining social order; skepticism and paganism (other factors being equal) progress as the rising power of law and governments permits the decline of the church, the family, and morality without basically endangering the stability of the state. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Will_Durant" title="Will Durant">Will Durant</a> and <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ariel_Durant" class="extiw" title="w:Ariel Durant">Ariel Durant</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lessons_of_History" class="extiw" title="w:The Lessons of History">The Lessons of History</a></i> (1968)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There is no significant example in history, before our time, of a society successfully maintaining moral life without the aid of religion. France, the United States, and some other nations have divorced their governments from all churches, but they have had the help of religion in keeping social order. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Will_Durant" title="Will Durant">Will Durant</a> and <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ariel_Durant" class="extiw" title="w:Ariel Durant">Ariel Durant</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lessons_of_History" class="extiw" title="w:The Lessons of History">The Lessons of History</a></i> (1968)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>We frolic in our emancipation from theology, but have we developed a natural ethic — a moral code independent of religion — strong enough to keep our instincts of acquisition, pugnacity, and sex from debasing our civilization into a mire of greed, crime, and promiscuity? Have we really outgrown intolerance, or merely transferred it from religious to national, ideological, or racial hostilities? <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Will_Durant" title="Will Durant">Will Durant</a> and <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ariel_Durant" class="extiw" title="w:Ariel Durant">Ariel Durant</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lessons_of_History" class="extiw" title="w:The Lessons of History">The Lessons of History</a></i> (1968)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Science" title="Science">Science</a> and religion are two human enterprises sharing many common features. They share these features also with other enterprises such as art, literature and music. The most salient features of all these enterprises are <a href="/wiki/Discipline" title="Discipline">discipline</a> and <a href="/wiki/Diversity" title="Diversity">diversity</a>. Discipline to submerge the individual fantasy in a greater whole. Diversity to give scope to the infinite variety of human souls and temperaments. Without discipline there can be no greatness. Without diversity there can be no <a href="/wiki/Freedom" title="Freedom">freedom</a>. Greatness for the enterprise, freedom for the individual—these are the two themes, contrasting but not incompatible, that make up the <a href="/wiki/History_of_science" title="History of science">history of science</a> and the history of religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Freeman_Dyson" title="Freeman Dyson">Freeman Dyson</a>, <i>Infinite in All Directions</i> (1988) pp. 5-6 (paperback, 1989).</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion to me is really not about belief — it's about belonging. It's about a way of life. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Freeman_Dyson" title="Freeman Dyson">Freeman Dyson</a>, <cite style="font-style:normal">&#32;(27 July 2016)"<a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwoVrSICaTA">Freeman Dyson - Science and Religion (151/157)</a>". <i>YouTube</i>.</cite> (published by Web of Stories - Life Stories of Remarkable People)</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="E">E</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=5" title="Edit section: E"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>We do not want a religion that deceives us for our own good. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Arthur_Eddington" title="Arthur Eddington">Arthur Eddington</a>, <i>Science and the Unseen World</i> (1929)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>If our so-called facts are changing shadows, they are shadows cast by the light of constant truth. So too in religion we are repelled by that confident theological doctrine... but we need not turn aside from the measure of light that comes into our experience showing us a Way through the unseen world. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Arthur_Eddington" title="Arthur Eddington">Arthur Eddington</a>, <i>Science and the Unseen World</i> (1929)</li></ul></li></ul> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:ReligijneSymbole.svg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/38/ReligijneSymbole.svg/220px-ReligijneSymbole.svg.png" decoding="async" width="220" height="220" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/38/ReligijneSymbole.svg/330px-ReligijneSymbole.svg.png 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/38/ReligijneSymbole.svg/440px-ReligijneSymbole.svg.png 2x" data-file-width="1200" data-file-height="1200" /></a><figcaption>If the believers of the present-day religions would earnestly try to think and act in the spirit of the founders of these religions then no hostility on the basis of religion would exist among the followers of the different faiths. ~ <a href="/wiki/Albert_Einstein" title="Albert Einstein">Albert Einstein</a> </figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:The_Earth_seen_from_Apollo_17.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/97/The_Earth_seen_from_Apollo_17.jpg/220px-The_Earth_seen_from_Apollo_17.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="220" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/97/The_Earth_seen_from_Apollo_17.jpg/330px-The_Earth_seen_from_Apollo_17.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/97/The_Earth_seen_from_Apollo_17.jpg/440px-The_Earth_seen_from_Apollo_17.jpg 2x" data-file-width="3000" data-file-height="3002" /></a><figcaption>God created men to enjoy, not destroy, the fruits of the earth and of their own toil. ~ <a href="/wiki/Dwight_D._Eisenhower" title="Dwight D. Eisenhower">Dwight D. Eisenhower</a> </figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Love_heart.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/ea/Love_heart.jpg/220px-Love_heart.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="217" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/ea/Love_heart.jpg/330px-Love_heart.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/ea/Love_heart.jpg/440px-Love_heart.jpg 2x" data-file-width="1280" data-file-height="1261" /></a><figcaption>I see that sensible men and conscientious men all over the world were of one religion. ~ <a href="/wiki/Ralph_Waldo_Emerson" title="Ralph Waldo Emerson">Ralph Waldo Emerson</a> </figcaption></figure> <ul><li>Try and penetrate with our limited means the secrets of nature and you will find that, behind all the discernible concatenations, there remains something subtle, intangible and inexplicable. Veneration for this force beyond anything that we can comprehend is my religion. To that extent I am, in point of fact, religious. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Einstein" title="Albert Einstein">Albert Einstein</a>, in response to atheist, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Kerr" class="extiw" title="w:Alfred Kerr">Alfred Kerr</a> in the winter 1927, who after deriding ideas of God and religion at a dinner party in the home of the publisher <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Fischer" class="extiw" title="w:Samuel Fischer">Samuel Fischer</a>, had queried him "I hear that <i>you</i> are supposed to be deeply religious" as quoted in <i>The Diary of a Cosmopolitan</i> (1971) by H. G. Kessler.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>For any one who is pervaded with the sense of causal law in all that happens, who accepts in real earnest the assumption of causality, the idea of a Being who interferes with the sequence of events in the world is absolutely impossible. Neither the religion of fear nor the social-moral religion can have any hold on him. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Einstein" title="Albert Einstein">Albert Einstein</a>, as quoted in <i>Has Science Discovered God?&#160;: A Symposium of Modern Scientific Opinion</i> (1931) by Edward Howe Cotton, p. 101</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>All religions, arts and sciences are branches of the same tree. All these aspirations are directed toward ennobling man's life, lifting it from the sphere of mere physical existence and leading the individual towards freedom. It is no mere chance that our older universities developed from clerical schools. Both churches and universities — insofar as they live up to their true function — serve the ennoblement of the individual. They seek to fulfill this great task by spreading moral and cultural understanding, renouncing the use of brute force. <br /> The essential unity of ecclesiastical and secular institutions was lost during the 19th century, to the point of senseless hostility. Yet there was never any doubt as to the striving for culture. No one doubted the sacredness of the goal. It was the approach that was disputed. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Einstein" title="Albert Einstein">Albert Einstein</a>, "Moral Decay" (1937); Later published in <i>Out of My Later Years</i> (1950)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>While religion prescribes brotherly love in the relations among the individuals and groups, the actual spectacle more resembles a battlefield than an orchestra. Everywhere, in economic as well as in political life, the guiding principle is one of ruthless striving for success at the expense of one's fellow men. This competitive spirit prevails even in school and, destroying all feelings of human fraternity and cooperation, conceives of achievement not as derived from the love for productive and thoughtful work, but as springing from personal ambition and fear of rejection. <br /> There are pessimists who hold that such a state of affairs is necessarily inherent in human nature; it is those who propound such views that are the enemies of true religion, for they imply thereby that religious teachings are Utopian ideals and unsuited to afford guidance in human affairs. The study of the social patterns in certain so-called primitive cultures, however, seems to have made it sufficiently evident that such a defeatist view is wholly unwarranted. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Einstein" title="Albert Einstein">Albert Einstein</a>, in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.einsteinandreligion.com/irrec.html">"Religion and Science: Irreconcilable?"</a> in <i>The Christian Register</i> (June 1948); republished in <i>Ideas and Opinions</i> (1954)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I have repeatedly said that in my opinion the idea of a personal God is a childlike one. You may call me an agnostic, but I do not share the crusading spirit of the professional atheist whose fervor is mostly due to a painful act of liberation from the fetters of religious indoctrination received in youth. I prefer an attitude of humility corresponding to the weakness of our intellectual understanding of nature and of our own being. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Einstein" title="Albert Einstein">Albert Einstein</a>, in a letter to Guy H. Raner Jr. (28 September 1949), from article by Michael R. Gilmore in <i>Skeptic</i> magazine, Vol. 5, No. 2 (1997)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A human being is a part of the whole, called by us "Universe," a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings as something separate from the rest — a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. The striving to free oneself from this delusion is the one issue of true religion. Not to nourish it but to try to overcome it is the way to reach the attainable measure of piece of mind. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Einstein" title="Albert Einstein">Albert Einstein</a>, in "a letter to a distraught father who had lost his young son and had asked Einstein for some comforting words" (12 February 1950), quoted in <i>The New Quotable Einstein</i> (2005) by Alice Calaprice, p. 206</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I have found no better expression than "religious" for confidence in the rational nature of reality, insofar as it is accessible to human reason. Whenever this feeling is absent, science degenerates into uninspired empiricism. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Einstein" title="Albert Einstein">Albert Einstein</a>, in letter to Maurice Solovine, (1 January 1951) [Einstein Archive 21-174]; published in <i>Letters to Solovine</i> (1993).</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Einstein" title="Albert Einstein">Albert Einstein</a>, in a letter to an atheist (1954) as quoted in <i>Albert Einstein: The Human Side</i> (1979) edited by Helen Dukas and Banesh Hoffman.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I said before, the most beautiful and most profound religious emotion that we can experience is the sensation of the mystical. And this mysticality is the power of all true science. If there is any such concept as a God, it is a subtle spirit, not an image of a man that so many have fixed in their minds. In essence, my religion consists of a humble admiration for this illimitable superior spirit that reveals itself in the slight details that we are able to perceive with our frail and feeble minds. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Einstein" title="Albert Einstein">Albert Einstein</a>, as quoted in <i>The Private Albert Einstein</i> (1992) by Peter A. Bucky and Allen G. Weakland, p. 86</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I can understand your aversion to the use of the term "religion" to describe an emotional and psychological attitude which shows itself most clearly in <a href="/wiki/Baruch_Spinoza" title="Baruch Spinoza">Spinoza</a>... I have not found a better expression than "religious" for the trust in the rational nature of reality that is, at least to a certain extent, accessible to human reason. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Einstein" title="Albert Einstein">Albert Einstein</a>, as quoted in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.einsteinandreligion.com/spinoza.html"><i>Einstein&#160;: Science and Religion</i></a> by Arnold V. Lesikar</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>These proposals spring, without ulterior purpose or political passion, from our calm conviction that the hunger for peace is in the hearts of all peoples--those of Russia and of China no less than of our own country. They conform to our firm faith that God created men to enjoy, not destroy, the fruits of the earth and of their own toil. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Dwight_D._Eisenhower" title="Dwight D. Eisenhower">Dwight D. Eisenhower</a> in his <a href="https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Chance_for_Peace" class="extiw" title="s:The Chance for Peace">The Chance for Peace</a> speech shortly after taking office and following the death of <a href="/wiki/Joseph_Stalin" title="Joseph Stalin">Joseph Stalin</a>.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I do not find that the age or country makes the least difference; no, nor the language the actors spoke, nor the religion which they professed whether Arab in the desert or Frenchman in the Academy, I see that sensible men and conscientious men all over the world were of one religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ralph_Waldo_Emerson" title="Ralph Waldo Emerson">Ralph Waldo Emerson</a>, <i>Lectures and Biographical Sketches</i> (1883), <i>The Preacher</i>, p. 215</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I like the church, I like a cowl, <br /> I love a prophet of the soul; <br /> And on my heart monastic aisles <br /> Fall like sweet strains or pensive smiles; <br /> Yet not for all his faith can see, <br /> Would I that cowlèd churchman be. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ralph_Waldo_Emerson" title="Ralph Waldo Emerson">Ralph Waldo Emerson</a>, "The Problem", <i>Poems</i> (1847), Stanza 1</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In the matter of religion, people eagerly fasten their eyes on the difference between their own creed and yours; whilst the charm of the study is in finding the agreements and identities in all the religions of humanity. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ralph_Waldo_Emerson" title="Ralph Waldo Emerson">Ralph Waldo Emerson</a>, as quoted in Jennifer Leigh Selig, <i>Thinking Outside The Church&#160;: 110 Ways to Connect with Your Spiritual Nature</i> (2004), p. 53</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="F">F</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=6" title="Edit section: F"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li><i>Die Theologie ist die Anthropologie.</i> <ul><li>Theology is Anthropology.</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Ludwig_Feuerbach" class="mw-redirect" title="Ludwig Feuerbach">Ludwig Feuerbach</a>, <i>The Essence of Christianity</i> ["Wesen des Christenthums"], Preface to the 2nd Ed. (1843)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is the <a href="/wiki/Dream" class="mw-redirect" title="Dream">dream</a> of the human <a href="/wiki/Mind" title="Mind">mind</a>. But even in dreams we do not find ourselves in emptiness or in heaven, but on <a href="/wiki/Earth" title="Earth">earth</a>, in the realm of <a href="/wiki/Reality" title="Reality">reality</a>; we only see real things in the entrancing splendor of <a href="/wiki/Imagination" title="Imagination">imagination</a> and caprice, instead of in the simple daylight of reality and <a href="/wiki/Necessity" title="Necessity">necessity</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ludwig_Feuerbach" class="mw-redirect" title="Ludwig Feuerbach">Ludwig Feuerbach</a>, <i>The Essence of Christianity</i> (1841)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is an illusion and it derives its strength from the fact that it falls in with our instinctual desires. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Sigmund_Freud" title="Sigmund Freud">Sigmund Freud</a>, <i>New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis</i> (1915 - 1917)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A religion, even if it calls itself a religion of <a href="/wiki/Love" title="Love">love</a>, must be hard and unloving to those who do not belong to it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Sigmund_Freud" title="Sigmund Freud">Sigmund Freud</a>, <i>Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego</i> (1921)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The different religions have never overlooked the part played by the sense of <a href="/wiki/Guilt" title="Guilt">guilt</a> in <a href="/wiki/Civilization" title="Civilization">civilization</a>. What is more, they come forward with a claim...to save mankind from this sense of guilt, which they call <a href="/wiki/Sin" title="Sin">sin</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Sigmund_Freud" title="Sigmund Freud">Sigmund Freud</a>, <i>Civilization and its Discontents</i> (1931)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is an attempt to get control over the sensory world, in which we are placed, by means of the wish-world which we have developed inside us as a result of biological and psychological necessities. … If one attempts to assign to religion its place in man's evolution, it seems not so much to be a lasting acquisition, as a parallel to the neurosis which the civilized individual must pass through on his way from childhood to maturity. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Sigmund_Freud" title="Sigmund Freud">Sigmund Freud</a>, <i>Moses and Monotheism</i> (1939)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There are at bottom but two possible religions — that which rises in the moral nature of man, and which takes shape in moral commandments, and that which grows out of the observation of the material energies which operate in the external <a href="/wiki/Universe" title="Universe">universe</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/James_Anthony_Froude" title="James Anthony Froude">James Anthony Froude</a>, <i>Short Studies on Great Subjects. Calvinism</i>, p. 20</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Sacrifice is the first element of religion, and resolves itself in theological language into the love of God. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/James_Anthony_Froude" title="James Anthony Froude">James Anthony Froude</a>, <i>Short Studies on Great Subjects</i>. Sea Studies</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I am a lover of <a href="/wiki/Truth" title="Truth">truth</a>, a worshipper of <a href="/wiki/Freedom" title="Freedom">freedom</a>, a celebrant at the altar of <a href="/wiki/Language" title="Language">language</a> and <a href="/wiki/Purity" title="Purity">purity</a> and <a href="/wiki/Tolerance" title="Tolerance">tolerance</a>. That is my religion, and every day I am sorely, grossly, heinously and deeply offended, wounded, mortified and injured by a thousand different blasphemies against it. When the fundamental canons of truth, <a href="/wiki/Honesty" title="Honesty">honesty</a>, <a href="/wiki/Compassion" title="Compassion">compassion</a> and decency are hourly assaulted by fatuous bishops, pompous, illiberal and ignorant priests, politicians and prelates, sanctimonious censors, self-appointed moralists and busy-bodies, what recourse of ancient <a href="/wiki/Laws" class="mw-redirect" title="Laws">laws</a> have I? None whatever. Nor would I ask for any. For unlike these blistering imbeciles my <a href="/wiki/Belief" title="Belief">belief</a> in my religion is strong and I know that <a href="/wiki/Lies" class="mw-redirect" title="Lies">lies</a> will always fail and indecency and intolerance will always perish. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Stephen_Fry" title="Stephen Fry">Stephen Fry</a>, in his "Trefusis Blasphemes" radio broadcast, as published in <i>Paperweight</i> (1993)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>But our captain counts the image of <a href="/wiki/God" title="God">God</a> — nevertheless his image — cut in ebony as if done in ivory, and in the blackest Moors he sees the representation of the King of <a href="/wiki/Heaven" title="Heaven">Heaven</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Fuller" title="Thomas Fuller">Thomas Fuller</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Holy_State_and_the_Profane_State" class="extiw" title="w:The Holy State and the Profane State">The Holy State and the Profane State</a></i> (1642), The Good Sea-Captain. Maxim 5</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Indeed, a little skill in antiquity inclines a man to Popery; but depth in that study brings him about again to our religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Fuller" title="Thomas Fuller">Thomas Fuller</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Holy_State_and_the_Profane_State" class="extiw" title="w:The Holy State and the Profane State">The Holy State and the Profane State</a></i> (1642), The True Church Antiquary, Maxim 1</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is the best armour in the world, but the worst cloak. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Fuller_(writer)" title="Thomas Fuller (writer)">Thomas Fuller</a>, <i>Gnomologia</i> (1732), line 4011</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="G">G</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=7" title="Edit section: G"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Galileo_Galilei" title="Galileo Galilei">Galileo Galilei</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_to_the_Grand_Duchess_Christina" class="extiw" title="w:Letter to the Grand Duchess Christina">Letter to the Grand Duchess Christina</a></i> (1615)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In reality there are as many religions as there are individuals.... Religions are different roads converging to the same point. What does it matter that we take different roads, so long as we reach the same goal. Wherein is the cause for quarrelling? <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Mahatma_Gandhi" title="Mahatma Gandhi">Mahatma Gandhi</a>, <i>Hind Swaraj</i> (1909)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A <i>religion</i> is (1) a system of symbols which acts to (2) establish powerful, pervasive, and long-lasting moods and motivations in men by (3) formulating conceptions of a general order of existence and (4) clothing these conceptions with such an aura of factuality that (5) the moods and motivations seem uniquely realistic. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clifford_Geertz" class="extiw" title="w:Clifford Geertz">Clifford Geertz</a>, "Religion as a Cultural System," in <i>Anthropological Approaches to the Study of Religion</i> (1966), p. 4</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>[Gustave LeBon argues] religion originates in the most peremptory of human instincts, namely “the need to submit oneself to a divine, political, or social faith, whatever the circumstances.” [and] “This sentiment has very simple characteristics, such as worship of a being supposed superior, fear of the power with which the being is credited, blind submission to its commandments, inability to discuss its dogmas, the desire to spread them, and a tendency to consider as enemies all by whom they are not accepted. Whether such a sentiment apply to an invisible God, to a wooden or stone idol, to a hero or toa political conception, its essence always remains religious. A person is not religious solely when he worships a divinity, but when he puts all the resources of his mind, the complete submission of his will, and the whole-souled ardour of fanaticism at the service of a cause or an individual who becomes the goal and guide of his thoughts and actions.” The religious beliefs produced by this sentiment are the primordial force that created and established empires and civilizations. Religion’s strength is to be found in its power to mold and transform the character of a human mass by inculcating shared feelings, interests, and ideas in the individuals that make it up. It thus produces a formidable power to generate enthusiasm and action and to channel individual and collective energies toward a single purpose, the triumph of their beliefs: “The majority of historical events were created indirectly by the variation of religious ideas. The history of humanity is parallel to that of the gods. The birth of new gods has marked the dawn of a new civilization…</li></ul> <ul><li><ul><li>Emilio Gentile, "A Never-Never Religion, A Substitute for Religion, or a New Religion?"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Benedetto Croce wrote ….”Religion derives from the need for a concept of reality and life, and for direction in relation to them. Without religion and without this direction, you cannot live or you live unhappily with a divided and confused spirit. Of course, it is better to have a religion that conforms to philosophical truth than a religion based on myth, but it is better to have any religion based on myth than no religion at all. Given that no one wishes to live unhappily, everyone in their own way endeavors consciously or unconsciously to create a religion for themselves." <ul><li>Emilio Gentile, "A Never-Never Religion, A Substitute for Religion, or a New Religion?"</li></ul></li></ul> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:18th_National_Congress_of_the_Communist_Party_of_China.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/98/18th_National_Congress_of_the_Communist_Party_of_China.jpg/220px-18th_National_Congress_of_the_Communist_Party_of_China.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="147" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/98/18th_National_Congress_of_the_Communist_Party_of_China.jpg/330px-18th_National_Congress_of_the_Communist_Party_of_China.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/98/18th_National_Congress_of_the_Communist_Party_of_China.jpg/440px-18th_National_Congress_of_the_Communist_Party_of_China.jpg 2x" data-file-width="3456" data-file-height="2304" /></a><figcaption>A nation without a religion - that is like a man without breath. ~ <a href="/wiki/Joseph_Goebbels" title="Joseph Goebbels">Joseph Goebbels</a> </figcaption></figure> <ul><li>A nation without a religion - that is like a man without breath. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Joseph_Goebbels" title="Joseph Goebbels">Joseph Goebbels</a>, <i>Michael: a German fate in diary notes</i> (1926)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>And when we take our last remove, I fear that we shall find that a great deal which we call religion, and which we were at the trouble of lugging about with us through our whole pilgrimage, is perfectly worthless, fit only to be burned… <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Goodell" class="extiw" title="w:William Goodell">William Goodell</a>, <i>Forty Years in the Turkish Empire. Or, Memoirs of Rev. William Goodell</i> (1876)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The religious instinct, at its best, builds vast cathedrals and motivates people to be empathic, to help others, to share, to do no harm. At it worst, it is a means of creating sharply defined classes of people—those in power, who can bully with impunity, and those without power, without human rights, who must submit or be hurt, ostracized, or even killed. This is the history of all religions through all time. In an initiate, pathways of thought are established in the mind that, is some cases, claim to obviate the need for deep thought regarding morally complex issues. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kathleen_Ann_Goonan" class="extiw" title="w:Kathleen Ann Goonan">Kathleen Ann Goonan</a>, <i>Girl in Wave&#160;: Wave in Girl,</i> in Ed Finn &amp; <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kathryn_Cramer" class="extiw" title="w:Kathryn Cramer">Kathryn Cramer</a> (eds.) <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Hieroglyph" class="extiw" title="w:Project Hieroglyph">Hieroglyph: Stories and Visions for a Better Future</a></i> (2014), <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-06-220469-1" title="Special:BookSources/978-0-06-220469-1">ISBN 978-0-06-220469-1</a>, p. 67</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Four kinds of answer are standardly given to the question why&#160;religion&#160;exists. One is that it provides explanations—of the origin of the universe, of the way it works, of the apparently inexplicable things that happen in it, and of why it includes evil and suffering. Another is that religion provides comfort, giving hope of life after death, providing reassurance in a hostile world, and a means (by supplication, propitiation, and the practice of one or another form of prescribed behaviour) to get a better deal in it. A third is that it makes for social order, in promoting morality and social cohesion. And a fourth is that it rests on the natural ignorance, stupidity, superstitiousness and gullibility of mankind. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/A._C._Grayling" title="A. C. Grayling">A. C. Grayling</a>, <i>Life, Sex, and Ideas: The Good Life Without God</i> (2002), <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-19-517755-X" title="Special:BookSources/0-19-517755-X">ISBN 0-19-517755-X</a>, Chapter 5, "Religion"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There is no greater social evil than religion. It is the cancer in the body of humanity. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/A._C._Grayling" title="A. C. Grayling">A. C. Grayling</a>, <i>Life, Sex, and Ideas: The Good Life Without God</i> (2002), <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-19-517755-X" title="Special:BookSources/0-19-517755-X">ISBN 0-19-517755-X</a>, Chapter 9, "Evil"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Outside the formal disciplines of logic and mathematics there are no absolute certainties—except of course in religion, which abounds in them, to the extent that people commit murder for their sake. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/A._C._Grayling" title="A. C. Grayling">A. C. Grayling</a>, <i>Life, Sex, and Ideas: The Good Life Without God</i> (2002), <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-19-517755-X" title="Special:BookSources/0-19-517755-X">ISBN 0-19-517755-X</a>, Chapter 43, "Experience"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><b>Religion humanizes this universe, makes us feel important and loved. We are not animals governed by uncontrollable drives, animals that die for no apparent reason, but creatures made in the image of supreme being.</b> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_Greene_(American_author)" title="Robert Greene (American author)">Robert Greene</a>, <i>The Art of Seduction</i> (2001)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is the great balm of existence because it takes us outside ourselves, connects us to something larger. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_Greene_(American_author)" title="Robert Greene (American author)">Robert Greene</a>, <i>The Art of Seduction</i> (2001)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Die Irreligiösen sind religiöser als sie selbst wissen, und die Religiösen sind's weniger, als sie meinen.</i> <ul><li>Translation: The irreligious are more religious than they themselves know, and the religious are less so than they think.</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Franz_Grillparzer" title="Franz Grillparzer">Franz Grillparzer</a>, aphorism (1857), in <i>Studien zur Philosophie und Religion. Historische und politische Studien</i>. Hamburg: Tredition, 2011, p. 32. <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-3-8424-1558-4" title="Special:BookSources/978-3-8424-1558-4">ISBN 978-3-8424-1558-4</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The so-called religious convictions of many people [amount to] a few notions learnt by heart, in a purely mechanical and schoolboy way, which they have never assimilated, to which they have never devoted serious thought, [and] which they store in their memory and repeat on occasion as part of a certain convention or formal attitude which is all they understand by the name of religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ren%C3%A9_Gu%C3%A9non" title="René Guénon">René Guénon</a>, <i>The Crisis of the Modern World</i> (Sophia Perennis, 2001; originally published in 1942 in French as <i>La Crise du Monde Moderne</i>), p. 85 (Ch. 7, "A Material Civilization"). <a rel="nofollow" class="external autonumber" href="https://archive.org/details/the-crisis-of-the-modern-world_rene-guenon/page/85/mode/2up?q=convictions">[3]</a></li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="H">H</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=8" title="Edit section: H"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:NorthRidge_church_Plymouth_Michigan.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0f/NorthRidge_church_Plymouth_Michigan.jpg/220px-NorthRidge_church_Plymouth_Michigan.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="66" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0f/NorthRidge_church_Plymouth_Michigan.jpg/330px-NorthRidge_church_Plymouth_Michigan.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0f/NorthRidge_church_Plymouth_Michigan.jpg/440px-NorthRidge_church_Plymouth_Michigan.jpg 2x" data-file-width="4752" data-file-height="1421" /></a><figcaption>Cultural <a href="/wiki/Elites" class="mw-redirect" title="Elites">elites</a> in countries that dominate peoples have adapted subject people’s religion for their own purposes ~ <a href="/wiki/Richard_A._Horsley" title="Richard A. Horsley">Richard A. Horsley</a></figcaption></figure> <ul><li>Now they had given their wills to Agon, and it was Agon who acted through them—they could spy upon their benefactors, they could betray their friends, they could torture the weak, prostitute themselves, beat a helpless old cripple to death in an alleyway, and remain, in their hearts, good people, kindly people, men and women worthy of regard, because it was, after all, the Veiled God who was acting, not them. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Barbara_Hambly" title="Barbara Hambly">Barbara Hambly</a>, <i>The Rainbow Abyss</i> (1991), <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-345-37101-1" title="Special:BookSources/0-345-37101-1">ISBN 0-345-37101-1</a>, p. 225</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Man without religion is the creature of circumstances. Religion is above all circumstances, and will lift him up above them. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustus_William_Hare" class="extiw" title="wikipedia:Augustus William Hare">Augustus William Hare</a>, in <a href="/wiki/Julius_Charles_Hare" class="mw-redirect" title="Julius Charles Hare">Julius Charles Hare</a> and Augustus William Hare, <i>Guesses at Truth</i> (London: Macmillan and Co., 1871), p. 1</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>We do ourselves wrong, and too meanly estimate the holiness above us, when we deem that any act or enjoyment good in itself, is not good to do religiously. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Nathaniel_Hawthorne" title="Nathaniel Hawthorne">Nathaniel Hawthorne</a>, <i>Marble Faun</i>, Book, II, Ch. VII</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The undoubted historical connection between religion and the values that have shaped and furthered our civilisation, such as the family and several property, does not of course mean that there is any intrinsic connection between religion as such and such values. Among the founders of religions over the last two thousand years, many opposed property and the family. But the only religions that have survived are those which support property and the family. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Friedrich_Hayek" title="Friedrich Hayek">Friedrich Hayek</a>, <i>The Fatal Conceit</i> (1988), Ch. 8: The Extended Order and Population Growth</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>From Greenland's icy mountains, <br /> From India's coral strand, <br /> Where Afric's sunny fountains <br /> Roll down their golden sand; <br /> From many an ancient river, <br /> From many a palmy plain, <br /> They call us to deliver <br /> Their land from error's chain. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Reginald_Heber" title="Reginald Heber">Reginald Heber</a>, <i>Missionary Hymn</i> (1819), stanza 1</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>For the men that history enshrines on her immortal pages, the men whose memories are embalmed in the hearts of their fellows for all ages, were men who placed unfaltering trust in the loftiest convictions of the soul, and consecrated life and death to their realization. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Hecker" class="extiw" title="w:Isaac Hecker">Isaac Hecker</a>, <i>Aspirations of Nature</i> (1857) ch. 2, p. 19</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion, therefore, is the answer to that cry of Reason which nothing can silence, that aspiration of the soul which no created thing can meet, that want of the heart which all creation cannot supply. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Hecker" class="extiw" title="w:Isaac Hecker">Isaac Hecker</a>, <i>Aspirations of Nature</i> (1857) ch. 3, p. 24</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There is no use disguising the fact, our religious needs are the deepest. There is no peace until they are satisfied and contented. The attempt to stifle them is in vain. If their cry be drowned by the noise of the world, they do not cease to exist. In some unexpected moment they will break through with redoubled energy. They must be answered. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Hecker" class="extiw" title="w:Isaac Hecker">Isaac Hecker</a>, <i>Aspirations of Nature</i> (1857) ch. 6, p. 38</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It is the very nature and essence of religion to raise men, peoples, and nations, above the common level of life, to break through its ordinary bounds, and express itself in a thousand ways, in poetry, painting, music, sculpture, and in every other form of ideal expression. The splendid monuments of the genius and greatness of by-gone ages are the monuments inspired by their religion. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Hecker" class="extiw" title="w:Isaac Hecker">Isaac Hecker</a>, <i>Aspirations of Nature</i> (1857) ch. 8, p. 46</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Science embraces facts and debates opinion; religion embraces opinion and debates the facts. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Tom_Heehler" title="Tom Heehler">Tom Heehler</a>, <i>The Well-Spoken Thesaurus</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The objects of philosophy, it is true, are upon the whole the same as those of religion. In both the object is Truth, in that supreme sense in which God and God only is the Truth. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Georg_Wilhelm_Friedrich_Hegel" title="Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel">Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel</a>, <i>Logic</i>, Chapter 1</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>All religions look equally silly from the outside. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFRobert_A._Heinlein1949"><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>&#32;(1949).&#32;"Chapter Six".&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sixth_Column" class="extiw" title="w:Sixth Column">The Day After Tomorrow</a></i>. New York: Signet.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=bookitem&amp;rft.btitle=Chapter+Six&amp;rft.atitle=%5B%5Bw%3ASixth+Column%7CThe+Day+After+Tomorrow%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=%5B%5BRobert+A.+Heinlein%5D%5D&amp;rft.au=%5B%5BRobert+A.+Heinlein%5D%5D&amp;rft.date=1949&amp;rft.place=New+York&amp;rft.pub=Signet&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It is a truism that almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so, and will follow it by suppressing opposition, subverting all education to seize early the minds of the young, and by killing, locking up, or driving underground all heretics. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFRobert_A._Heinlein1953"><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>&#32;(1953).&#32;"Concerning Stories Never Written: Postscript".&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolt_in_2100" class="extiw" title="w:Revolt in 2100">Revolt in 2100</a></i>. Chicago: Shasta.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=bookitem&amp;rft.btitle=Concerning+Stories+Never+Written%3A+Postscript&amp;rft.atitle=%5B%5Bw%3ARevolt+in+2100%7CRevolt+in+2100%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=%5B%5BRobert+A.+Heinlein%5D%5D&amp;rft.au=%5B%5BRobert+A.+Heinlein%5D%5D&amp;rft.date=1953&amp;rft.place=Chicago&amp;rft.pub=Shasta&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The capacity of the human mind for swallowing nonsense and spewing it forth in violent and repressive action has never yet been plumbed. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFRobert_A._Heinlein1953"><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>&#32;(1953).&#32;"Concerning Stories Never Written: Postscript".&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolt_in_2100" class="extiw" title="w:Revolt in 2100">Revolt in 2100</a></i>. Chicago: Shasta.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=bookitem&amp;rft.btitle=Concerning+Stories+Never+Written%3A+Postscript&amp;rft.atitle=%5B%5Bw%3ARevolt+in+2100%7CRevolt+in+2100%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=%5B%5BRobert+A.+Heinlein%5D%5D&amp;rft.au=%5B%5BRobert+A.+Heinlein%5D%5D&amp;rft.date=1953&amp;rft.place=Chicago&amp;rft.pub=Shasta&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is a solace to many and it is conceivable that some religion, somewhere, is Ultimate Truth. But being religious is often a form of conceit. The faith in which I was brought up assured me that I was better than other people; I was 'saved,' they were 'damned'—we were in a state of grace and the rest were 'heathens.' By 'heathen' they meant such as our brother Mahmoud. Ignorant iouts who seldom bathed and planted corn by the Moon claimed to know the final answers of the Universe. That entitled them to look down on outsiders. Our hymns were loaded with arrogance—self-congratulation on how cozy we were with the Almighty and what a high opinion he had of us, and what hell everybody else would catch come Judgment Day. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFRobert_A._Heinlein1961"><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>&#32;(1961).&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stranger_in_a_Strange_Land" class="extiw" title="w:Stranger in a Strange Land">Stranger in a Strange Land</a></i>. New York: Avon. p.&#160;229.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=book&amp;rft.btitle=%5B%5Bw%3AStranger+in+a+Strange+Land%7CStranger+in+a+Strange+Land%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.au=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.date=1961&amp;rft.pages=p.%26nbsp%3B229&amp;rft.place=New+York&amp;rft.pub=Avon&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>History has the relation to truth that theology has to religion — i.e., none to speak of. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFRobert_A._Heinlein1973"><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>&#32;(1973).&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Enough_for_Love" class="extiw" title="w:Time Enough for Love">Time Enough for Love</a></i>. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. p.&#160;13. <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/9780399111518" title="Special:BookSources/9780399111518">ISBN 9780399111518</a>.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=book&amp;rft.btitle=%5B%5Bw%3ATime+Enough+for+Love%7CTime+Enough+for+Love%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.au=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.date=1973&amp;rft.pages=p.%26nbsp%3B13&amp;rft.place=New+York&amp;rft.pub=G.+P.+Putnam%27s+Sons&amp;rft.isbn=9780399111518&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Men rarely (if ever) manage to dream up a god superior to themselves. Most gods have the manners and morals of a spoiled child. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFRobert_A._Heinlein1974"><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>&#32;(1974).&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Enough_for_Love" class="extiw" title="w:Time Enough for Love">Time Enough for Love</a></i>&#32;(Twelfth Printing ed.). New York: Berkeley Medallion. p.&#160;244. <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/9780425024935" title="Special:BookSources/9780425024935">ISBN 9780425024935</a>.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=book&amp;rft.btitle=%5B%5Bw%3ATime+Enough+for+Love%7CTime+Enough+for+Love%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.au=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.date=1974&amp;rft.pages=p.%26nbsp%3B244&amp;rft.edition=Twelfth+Printing&amp;rft.place=New+York&amp;rft.pub=Berkeley+Medallion&amp;rft.isbn=9780425024935&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Any priest or shaman must be presumed guilty until proved innocent. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFRobert_A._Heinlein1973"><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>&#32;(1973).&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Enough_for_Love" class="extiw" title="w:Time Enough for Love">Time Enough for Love</a></i>. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. p.&#160;256. <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/9780399111518" title="Special:BookSources/9780399111518">ISBN 9780399111518</a>.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=book&amp;rft.btitle=%5B%5Bw%3ATime+Enough+for+Love%7CTime+Enough+for+Love%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.au=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.date=1973&amp;rft.pages=p.%26nbsp%3B256&amp;rft.place=New+York&amp;rft.pub=G.+P.+Putnam%27s+Sons&amp;rft.isbn=9780399111518&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>History does not record anywhere at any time a religion that has any rational basis. Religion is a crutch for people not strong enough to stand up to the unknown without help. But, like dandruff, most people do have a religion and spend time and money on it and seem to derive considerable pleasure from fiddling with it. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFRobert_A._Heinlein1973"><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>&#32;(1973).&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Enough_for_Love" class="extiw" title="w:Time Enough for Love">Time Enough for Love</a></i>. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. p.&#160;258. <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/9780399111518" title="Special:BookSources/9780399111518">ISBN 9780399111518</a>.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=book&amp;rft.btitle=%5B%5Bw%3ATime+Enough+for+Love%7CTime+Enough+for+Love%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.au=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.date=1973&amp;rft.pages=p.%26nbsp%3B258&amp;rft.place=New+York&amp;rft.pub=G.+P.+Putnam%27s+Sons&amp;rft.isbn=9780399111518&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>God is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent — it says so right here on the label. If you have a mind capable of believing all three of these divine attributes simultaneously, I have a wonderful bargain for you. No checks, please. Cash and in small bills. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFRobert_A._Heinlein1973"><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>&#32;(1973).&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Enough_for_Love" class="extiw" title="w:Time Enough for Love">Time Enough for Love</a></i>. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. p.&#160;264. <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/9780399111518" title="Special:BookSources/9780399111518">ISBN 9780399111518</a>.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=book&amp;rft.btitle=%5B%5Bw%3ATime+Enough+for+Love%7CTime+Enough+for+Love%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.au=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.date=1973&amp;rft.pages=p.%26nbsp%3B264&amp;rft.place=New+York&amp;rft.pub=G.+P.+Putnam%27s+Sons&amp;rft.isbn=9780399111518&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The most preposterous notion that H. sapiens has ever dreamed up is that the Lord God of Creation, Shaper and Ruler of all the Universes, wants the saccharine adoration of His creatures, can be swayed by their prayers, and becomes petulant if He does not receive this flattery. Yet this absurd fantasy, without a shred of evidence to bolster it, pays all the expenses of the oldest, largest, and least productive industry in all history. <br /> The second most preposterous notion is that copulation is inherently sinful. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFRobert_A._Heinlein1973"><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>&#32;(1973).&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Enough_for_Love" class="extiw" title="w:Time Enough for Love">Time Enough for Love</a></i>. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. p.&#160;266. <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/9780399111518" title="Special:BookSources/9780399111518">ISBN 9780399111518</a>.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=book&amp;rft.btitle=%5B%5Bw%3ATime+Enough+for+Love%7CTime+Enough+for+Love%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.au=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.date=1973&amp;rft.pages=p.%26nbsp%3B266&amp;rft.place=New+York&amp;rft.pub=G.+P.+Putnam%27s+Sons&amp;rft.isbn=9780399111518&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The profession of shaman has many advantages. It offers high status with a safe livelihood free of work in the dreary, sweaty sense. In most societies it offers legal privileges and immunities not granted to other men. But it is hard to see how a man who has been given a mandate from on High to spread tidings of joy to all mankind can be seriously interested in taking up a collection to pay his salary; it causes one to suspect that the shaman is on the moral level of any other con man. <br /> But it's lovely work if you can stomach it. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFRobert_A._Heinlein1974"><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>&#32;(1974).&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Enough_for_Love" class="extiw" title="w:Time Enough for Love">Time Enough for Love</a></i>&#32;(Twelfth Printing ed.). New York: Berkeley Medallion. p.&#160;349. <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/9780425024935" title="Special:BookSources/9780425024935">ISBN 9780425024935</a>.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=book&amp;rft.btitle=%5B%5Bw%3ATime+Enough+for+Love%7CTime+Enough+for+Love%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.au=Robert+A.+Heinlein&amp;rft.date=1974&amp;rft.pages=p.%26nbsp%3B349&amp;rft.edition=Twelfth+Printing&amp;rft.place=New+York&amp;rft.pub=Berkeley+Medallion&amp;rft.isbn=9780425024935&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>“Religious” = “absolute belief without proof.” <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friday_(novel)" class="extiw" title="w:Friday (novel)">Friday</a></i> (1982), <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-345-30988-X" title="Special:BookSources/0-345-30988-X">ISBN 0-345-30988-X</a>, p. 181</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I think that you are immune to the temptations of religion. If you are not, I cannot help you, any more than I could keep you from acquiring a drug habit. A religion is sometimes a source of happiness and I would not deprive anyone of happiness. But it is a comfort appropriate for the weak, not for the strong—and you are strong. The great trouble with religion—any religion—is that a religionist, having accepted certain propositions by faith, cannot thereafter judge those propositions by evidence. One may bask in at the warm fire of faith or choose to live in the bleak uncertainty of reason—but one cannot have both. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friday_(novel)" class="extiw" title="w:Friday (novel)">Friday</a></i> (1982), <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-345-30988-X" title="Special:BookSources/0-345-30988-X">ISBN 0-345-30988-X</a>, p. 253</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Anyone who can worship a trinity and insist that his religion is a monotheism can believe anything — just give him time to rationalize it. Forgive me for being blunt. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_A._Heinlein" title="Robert A. Heinlein">Robert A. Heinlein</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/Job:_A_Comedy_of_Justice" title="Job: A Comedy of Justice">Job: A Comedy of Justice</a></i> (1984)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Nothing exposes religion more to the reproach of its enemies than the worldliness and half-heartedness of the professors of it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Matthew_Henry" title="Matthew Henry">Matthew Henry</a>, <i>An Exposition of All the Books of the Old and New Testaments</i>, vol. 2 (1804) p. 482</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion stands on tiptoe in our land, <br /> Ready to pass to the American strand. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/George_Herbert" title="George Herbert">George Herbert</a>, <i>The Temple</i> (1633), <i>The Church Militant</i>, line 235</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Dresse and undresse thy soul: mark the decay <br /> And growth of it: if, with thy watch, that too <br /> Be down, then winde up both: since we shall be <br /> Most surely judged, make thy accounts agree. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/George_Herbert" title="George Herbert">George Herbert</a>, <i>The Temple</i> (1633), Church Porch, Stanza 76</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Authentic religion, like authentic liberty, is a continuous inquiry, indeed continuous doubt, of a living soul. Certainty exists only among disciplined ranks, the servile and delusive certainty of dead souls. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustaw_Herling-Grudzi%C5%84ski" class="extiw" title="w:Gustaw Herling-Grudziński">Gustaw Herling-Grudziński</a>, <i>Dziennik pisany nocą 1971–1972 (Journal Written at Night 1971–1972)</i> (Paris: Instytut Literacki, 1973); journal entry dated 3 September 1972</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>My Fathers and Brethren, this is never to be forgotten that New England is originally a plantation of religion, not a plantation of trade. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Higginson" class="extiw" title="w:John Higginson">John Higginson</a>, <i>Election Sermon</i>. The Cause of God and His People in New England. May 27, 1663</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religious ideas, supposedly private matters between man and god, are in practice always political ideas. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Christopher_Hitchens" title="Christopher Hitchens">Christopher Hitchens</a>, <i>The Monarchy: A Critique of Britain's Favourite Fetish</i> (1990), <i>Chatto Counterblasts</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>One must state it plainly. Religion comes from the period of human prehistory where nobody—not even the mighty Democritus who concluded that all matter was made from atoms—had the smallest idea what was going on. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Christopher_Hitchens" title="Christopher Hitchens">Christopher Hitchens</a>, <i>God is not Great,</i> (2007) Chapter 5</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It may be that today gold has become the exclusive ruler of life, but the time will come when man will again bow down before a higher god. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Adolf_Hitler" title="Adolf Hitler">Adolf Hitler</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/Mein_Kampf" title="Mein Kampf">Mein Kampf</a></i> (1926), <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Mannheim" class="extiw" title="w:Ralph Mannheim">Ralph Mannheim</a> translation (1943), p. 436</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>We must seize the evil in Germany by the root and tear it out, to make way for true socialism, for the new faith, for the new religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Adolf_Hitler" title="Adolf Hitler">Adolf Hitler</a>, according to <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_Wagener" class="extiw" title="w:Otto Wagener">Otto Wagener</a> in "Hitler Memoirs of a Confidant", editor, Henry Ashby Turner, Jr., Yale University Press (1985) p. 59</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>And indeed, no man has found his religion until he has found that for which he must sell his goods and his life. <ul><li><cite style="font-style:normal" class="book" id="CITEREFWilliam_Ernest_Hocking1912"><a href="/wiki/William_Ernest_Hocking" title="William Ernest Hocking">William Ernest Hocking</a>&#32;(1912).&#32;<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Meaning_of_God_in_Human_Experience" class="extiw" title="w:The Meaning of God in Human Experience">The Meaning of God in Human Experience</a></i>. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. p.&#160;237.</cite><span class="Z3988" title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&amp;rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Abook&amp;rft.genre=book&amp;rft.btitle=%5B%5Bw%3AThe+Meaning+of+God+in+Human+Experience%7CThe+Meaning+of+God+in+Human+Experience%5D%5D&amp;rft.aulast=William+Ernest+Hocking&amp;rft.au=William+Ernest+Hocking&amp;rft.date=1912&amp;rft.pages=p.%26nbsp%3B237&amp;rft.place=New+Haven+and+London&amp;rft.pub=Yale+University+Press&amp;rfr_id=info:sid/en.wikipedia.org:Religion"><span style="display: none;">&#160;</span></span></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Is religion one of the fine arts, that it should consist in going to meeting in good clothes every Sunday, saying grace at table, and praying night and morning? Is there every thing to receive, and nothing to give? Are we so literally a flock that we have nothing to do but to be fed all the year, yielding only the annual fleece which forms our pastor's salary? <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Josiah_Gilbert_Holland" title="Josiah Gilbert Holland">Josiah Gilbert Holland</a>, <i>Gold-foil, Hammered from Popular Proverbs</i> (1860) p. 295</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion may enter a pothouse as a minister of good, but it may not lay aside its dignity to argue its rights and claims there. The moment that it does this it is shorn of its power. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Josiah_Gilbert_Holland" title="Josiah Gilbert Holland">Josiah Gilbert Holland</a>, <i>Gold-foil, Hammered from Popular Proverbs</i> (1860) p. 242</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There are men who stalk about the world gloomy and stiff and severe — self-righteous embodiments of the mischievous heresy that the religion of peace and good-will to all mankind — the religion of love and hope and joy, the religion that bathes the universal human soul in the light of paternal love, and opens to mankind the gates of immortality — is a religion of terror — men guilty of misrepresenting Christ to the world, and doing incalculable damage to His cause, yet who find it in them to rebuke the careless laughter that bubbles up from a maiden's heart that God has filled with life and gladness. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Josiah_Gilbert_Holland" title="Josiah Gilbert Holland">Josiah Gilbert Holland</a>, <i>Gold-foil, Hammered from Popular Proverbs</i> (1860) pp. 184-185</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>No solemn, sanctimonious face I pull, <br /> Nor think I'm pious when I'm only bilious — <br /> Nor study in my sanctum supercilious <br /> To frame a Sabbath Bill or forge a Bull. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Hood" title="Thomas Hood">Thomas Hood</a>, <i>Ode to Rae Wilson</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The greatest, the chief cause of nearly two-thirds of the evils that pursue humanity ever since that cause became a power... is religion under whatever form and in whatever nation. It is the sacerdotal caste, the priesthood and the Churches; it is in those illusions that man looks upon as sacred, that he has to search out the source of that multitude of evils which is the great curse of humanity, and that almost overwhelms mankind. <ul><li>The Master K.H. quoted in <i>The Mahatma Letters, A.P. Sinnett </i> (1923)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Remove from the history of the past all those actions which have either sprung directly from the religious nature of man, or been modified by it, and you have the history of another world and of another race. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Mark_Hopkins_(educator)" title="Mark Hopkins (educator)">Mark Hopkins</a>, <i>Lectures on the Evidences of Christianity</i> (1846) Lecture II, p. 49</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Who ever heard of a devout <a href="/wiki/Deism" title="Deism">deist</a>? Who ever heard of one who was willing to spend his life in missionary labor for the good of others? It is not according to the constitution of the mind that such a system should awaken the affections. And what is true of this system is true of every false system. All such systems leave the heart cold, and, accordingly, exert very little genuine transforming power over the life. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Mark_Hopkins_(educator)" title="Mark Hopkins (educator)">Mark Hopkins</a>, <i>Lectures on the Evidences of Christianity</i> (1846) Lecture V, p. 156</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Cultural elites in countries that dominate peoples have adapted subject people’s religion for their own purposes. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Richard_A._Horsley" title="Richard A. Horsley">Richard A. Horsley</a>, <i>Religion and Empire: People, Power, and the Life of the Spirit</i> (2003), p. 12</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Rational arguments don't usually work on religious people. Otherwise there would <i>be</i> no religious people. <ul><li>Dr. House in <i><a href="/wiki/House_(TV_series)" title="House (TV series)">House</a></i> season 4 episode 2, "<a href="/wiki/House_(Season_4)#The_Right_Stuff_(4.02)" title="House (Season 4)">The Right Stuff</a>" (<span class="mw-formatted-date" title="2007-10-02">2007-10-02</span>)</li> <li>Sometimes paraphrased as "If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people."</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A religion that never suffices to govern a man, will never suffice to save him; that that which does not distinguish him from a sinful world, will never distinguish him from a perishing world. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Howe" class="mw-disambig" title="John Howe">John Howe</a>, <i>The works of the Rev. John Howe</i> vol. 2 (1835) p. 798</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The canon of the [sharia] and the Church, closely linked with the laws of the bourgeosie, treated women as a commodity, a thing to be bought and sold by the male... Just as the bourgeosie had made the worker into its proletarian, so had the savage ancient canons of the [shariah], the Church, feudalism and the bourgeosie, reduced woman to the proletariat of the man. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Enver_Hoxha" title="Enver Hoxha">Enver Hoxha</a> (1986) <i>The Artful Albanian</i>, (Chatto &amp; Windus, London), <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0701129700" title="Special:BookSources/0701129700">ISBN 0701129700</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Should all the banks of Europe crash, <br /> The bank of England smash, <br /> Bring all your notes to Zion's bank, <br /> You're sure to get your cash. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Hoyt" class="extiw" title="w:Henry Hoyt">Henry Hoyt</a>, <i>Zion's Bank, or Bible Promises Secured to all Believers</i>, Pub. in Boston (1857); probably a reprint of English origin.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Il y a maintenant en France dans chaque village un flambeau allumé, le maître d'école, et une bouche qui souffle dessus, le curé.</i> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Victor_Hugo" title="Victor Hugo">Victor Hugo</a>, <i>Histoire d'un crime. Déposition d'un témoin</i> (1877), <a href="https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/fr:Histoire_d%E2%80%99un_crime/II#III._La_Barricade_Saint-Antoine" class="extiw" title="s:fr:Histoire d’un crime/II">Deuxième Journée. La lutte, ch. III: La barricade Saint-Antoine</a></li> <li>Translation: There is now, in France, in each village, a lighted torch—the schoolmaster—and a mouth which blows upon it—the curé. <ul><li>T. H. Joyce and Arthur Locker (tr.), <i>The History of a Crime: The Testimony of an Eye-Witness</i> (1877), The Second Day, Chapter III, <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://books.google.com/books?id=CT1BkrtaFlIC&amp;pg=PA120&amp;dq=%22There+is+now,+in+France,%22">p. 120</a></li></ul></li> <li>Translation: In every French village there is now a lighted torch, the schoolmaster; and a mouth trying to blow it out, the priest. <ul><li>Huntington Smith (tr.), <i>History of a Crime</i> (1888), The Second Day, Chapter III, <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://books.google.com/books?id=idfUAAAAMAAJ&amp;pg=PA187&amp;dq=%22In+every+French+village+there+is+now+a+lighted+torch%22">p. 187</a></li></ul></li> <li>Variants: There is in every village a torch: The schoolteacher/teacher. And an extinguisher: The priest/clergyman.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Maintaining, in this matter, the attitude of a strict operationalist, the Buddha would speak only of the spiritual experience, not of the metaphysical entity presumed by the theologians of other religions, as also of later Buddhism, to be the object ... of that experience. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Aldous_Huxley" title="Aldous Huxley">Aldous Huxley</a>, <i>The Perennial Philosophy</i> (1944), p.45</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="I">I</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=9" title="Edit section: I"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>To become a popular religion, it is only necessary for a superstition to enslave a philosophy. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Ralph_Inge" title="William Ralph Inge">William Ralph Inge</a>, <i><a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://archive.org/details/cu31924007897725">The Idea of Progress</a></i>, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanes_Lecture" class="extiw" title="w:Romanes Lecture">Romanes Lecture</a> (1920)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I am a believer in liberty. That is my religion — to give to every other human being every right that I claim for myself, and I grant to every other human being, not the right — because it is his right — but instead of granting I declare that it is his right, to attack every doctrine that I maintain, to answer every argument that I may urge — in other words, he must have absolute freedom of speech. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_G._Ingersoll" title="Robert G. Ingersoll">Robert G. Ingersoll</a>, in an <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://www.infidels.org/library/historical/robert_ingersoll/blasphemy_trial.html">appeal to the jury in the trial of C.B. Reynolds for blasphemy (May 1887)</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Who is a worshiper? What is prayer? What is real religion? Let me answer these questions. <br /> Good, honest, faithful work, is worship. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_G._Ingersoll" title="Robert G. Ingersoll">Robert G. Ingersoll</a>, at the trial of C.B. Reynolds for blasphemy (May 1887)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I belong to the Great Church which holds the world within its starlit aisles; that claims the great and good of every race and clime; that finds with joy the grain of gold in every creed, and floods with light and love the germs of good in every soul. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_G._Ingersoll" title="Robert G. Ingersoll">Robert G. Ingersoll</a>, in discussion with Rev. Henry M. Field on Faith and Agnosticism, quoted in Vol. VI of Farrell's edition of his works; also in <i>Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations</i> (1922) edited by Kate Louise Roberts, p. 663</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>My creed is this: <br /> Happiness is the only good. <br /> The place to be happy is here. <br /> The time to be happy is now. <br /> The way to be happy is to help make others so. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_G._Ingersoll" title="Robert G. Ingersoll">Robert G. Ingersoll</a>, on the title page of Vol. XII of Farrell's edition of his works</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="J">J</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=10" title="Edit section: J"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Saint_James_the_Just.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/96/Saint_James_the_Just.jpg/220px-Saint_James_the_Just.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="310" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/96/Saint_James_the_Just.jpg 1.5x" data-file-width="319" data-file-height="450" /></a><figcaption>Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world. ~ <a href="/wiki/Epistle_of_James" title="Epistle of James">James</a> 1:27</figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Thomas_Jefferson_3x4.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/de/Thomas_Jefferson_3x4.jpg/220px-Thomas_Jefferson_3x4.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="293" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/de/Thomas_Jefferson_3x4.jpg/330px-Thomas_Jefferson_3x4.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/de/Thomas_Jefferson_3x4.jpg/440px-Thomas_Jefferson_3x4.jpg 2x" data-file-width="450" data-file-height="600" /></a><figcaption>It is in our <a href="/wiki/Lives" class="mw-redirect" title="Lives">lives</a>, and not from our <a href="/wiki/Words" title="Words">words</a>, that our religion must be judged. ~ <a href="/wiki/Thomas_Jefferson" title="Thomas Jefferson">Thomas Jefferson</a> </figcaption></figure> <ul><li><a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%CE%B8%CF%81%CE%B7%CF%83%CE%BA%CE%B5%CE%AF%CE%B1" class="extiw" title="wikt:θρησκεία">θρησκεία</a> καθαρὰ καὶ ἀμίαντος παρὰ τῷ Θεῷ καὶ Πατρὶ αὕτη ἐστίν, ἐπισκέπτεσθαι ὀρφανοὺς καὶ χήρας ἐν τῇ θλίψει αὐτῶν, ἄσπιλον ἑαυτὸν τηρεῖν ἀπὸ τοῦ κόσμου. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%CE%B8%CF%81%CE%B7%CF%83%CE%BA%CE%B5%CE%AF%CE%B1" class="extiw" title="wikt:θρησκεία">Religion</a> that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Book_of_James" class="mw-redirect" title="Book of James">James</a> 1:27 <a href="/wiki/New_International_Version" title="New International Version">NIV</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I envy them, those monks of old <br /> Their books they read, and their beads they told. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Payne_Rainsford_James" class="extiw" title="w:George Payne Rainsford James">G. P. R. James</a>, <i>The Monks of Old</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Science says things are; morality says some things are better than other things; and religion says essentially two things.<br />First, she says that the best things are the more eternal things, the overlapping things, the things in the universe that throw the last stone, so to speak, say the final word. "Perfection is eternal,"—this phrase of <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Secr%C3%A9tan" class="extiw" title="w:Charles Secrétan">Charles Secrétan</a> seems a good way of putting this affirmation of religion, an affirmation which obviously cannot yet be verified scientifically at all.<br />The second affirmation of religion is that we are better off even now if we believer her first affirmation to be true. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_James" title="William James">William James</a>, <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://books.google.com/books?id=moyx63z2G0AC&amp;q=science+says+things+are#v=snippet&amp;q=science%20says%20things%20are&amp;f=false"><i>The Will to Believe</i>, Section X</a>, 1896</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There can be no doubt that as a matter of fact a religious life, exclusively pursued, does tend to make the person exceptional and eccentric. I speak not now of your ordinary religious believer, who follows the conventional observances of his country, whether it be Buddhist, Christian, or Mohammedan. His religion has been made for him by others, communicated to him by tradition, determined to fixed forms by imitation, and retained by habit. It would profit us little to study this second-hand religious life. We must make search rather for the original experiences which were the pattern-setters to all this mass of suggested feeling and imitated conduct. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_James" title="William James">William James</a>, <i>The Varieties of Religious Experience</i>, Lecture 1, 1902</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I never told <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_views_of_Thomas_Jefferson" class="extiw" title="w:Religious views of Thomas Jefferson">my own religion</a> nor scrutinized that of another. I never attempted to make a convert, nor wished to change another's creed. I am satisfied that yours must be an excellent religion to have produced a life of such exemplary virtue and correctness. For it is in our lives, and not from our words, that our religion must be judged. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Jefferson" title="Thomas Jefferson">Thomas Jefferson</a>, in a letter to Mrs. H. Harrison Smith (1816)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In every country and in every age, the priest has been hostile to liberty. He is always in alliance with the despot, abetting his abuses in return for protection to his own. It is error alone that needs the support of government. Truth can stand by itself. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Jefferson" title="Thomas Jefferson">Thomas Jefferson</a>, in a letter to Horatio Spofford (1814)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Because religious belief, or non-belief, is such an important part of every person’s life, freedom of religion affects every individual. <br /> State churches that use government power to support themselves and force their views on persons of other faiths undermine all our civil rights. Moreover, state support of the church tends to make the clergy unresponsive to the people and leads to corruption within religion. <br /> Erecting the “wall of separation between church and state,” therefore, is absolutely essential in a free society. We have solved … the great and interesting question whether freedom of religion is compatible with order in government and obedience to the laws. And we have experienced the quiet as well as the comfort which results from leaving every one to profess freely and openly those principles of religion which are the inductions of his own reason and the serious convictions of his own inquiries. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Jefferson" title="Thomas Jefferson">Thomas Jefferson</a>, in a speech to the Virginia Baptists (1808)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Christianity neither is, nor ever was a part of the common law. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Jefferson" title="Thomas Jefferson">Thomas Jefferson</a>, letter to Dr. Thomas Cooper (10 February 1814)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Sir, I think all Christians, whether Papists or Protestants, agree in the essential articles, and that their religious differences are trivial, and rather political than religious. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Samuel_Johnson" title="Samuel Johnson">Samuel Johnson</a>, <i>Boswell's Life</i>, Ch. V, (1763)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>To be of no Church is dangerous. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Samuel_Johnson" title="Samuel Johnson">Samuel Johnson</a>, <i>Life of Milton</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There are a hundred and fifty or more definitions of religion. One says it is “what we do with our solitariness”; another that it is “how we integrate ourselves socially”; another that “the root of religion is fear,” and so on. The reason it is so difficult to define is that life itself is difficult to define. When we define religion in terms of its various manifestations, we get partial, sometimes contradictory definitions. But religion, having many forms, has only one root. That root is the urge after life, fuller life. In everything, from the lowest cell clear up to the highest person, there is an urge toward completion. We are all incurably religious. Even the Communists, though repudiating religion, are deeply religious. They want a better social order. They may be right or wrong in their method of getting it, but the very desire for a better social order is religious. For religion is a cry for life.</li></ul> <ul><li><ul><li>E. Stanley Jones, <i>Victorious Living</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A little is fine, but the minute you start believing that you've picked the only right one out of the 4,200 or so on offer, you need to get a grip on yourself. Once you start thinking that it's okay to hate someone that chose one of the 4,199 others... snap out of it. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_M._Jolly" class="extiw" title="w:Arthur M. Jolly">Arthur M. Jolly</a>, in "The Questionnaire" (2010)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>We do not want churches because they will teach us to quarrel about God, as the Catholics and Protestants do. We do not want that. We may quarrel with men about things on earth, but we never quarrel about God. We do not want to learn that. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Chief_Joseph" title="Chief Joseph">Chief Joseph</a>, quoted in <i>The Wisdom of the Native Americans</i> (1999) by Kent Nerburn</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="K">K</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=11" title="Edit section: K"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Bill_of_Responsibilities.png" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/33/Bill_of_Responsibilities.png/220px-Bill_of_Responsibilities.png" decoding="async" width="220" height="280" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/33/Bill_of_Responsibilities.png/330px-Bill_of_Responsibilities.png 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/33/Bill_of_Responsibilities.png/440px-Bill_of_Responsibilities.png 2x" data-file-width="793" data-file-height="1011" /></a><figcaption>Business leaders, of course, had long been working to "<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchandising" class="extiw" title="w:Merchandising">merchandise</a>" themselves through the appropriation of religion. In organizations such as <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_W._Fifield_Jr.#Spiritual_Mobilization" class="extiw" title="w:James W. Fifield Jr.">Spiritual Mobilization</a>, the prayer breakfast groups, and the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedoms_Foundation" class="extiw" title="w:Freedoms Foundation">Freedoms Foundation</a>, they had linked <a href="/wiki/Capitalism" title="Capitalism">capitalism</a> and <a href="/wiki/Christianity" title="Christianity">Christianity</a>. ~ <a href="/wiki/Kevin_M._Kruse" title="Kevin M. Kruse">Kevin M. Kruse</a></figcaption></figure> <ul><li>[Jesus] claims that not the observance of outer civil or statutory churchly duties but the pure moral disposition of the heart alone can make man well-pleasing to God (Matthew V, 20-48); … that injury done one’s neighbor can be repaired only through satisfaction rendered to the neighbor himself, not through acts of divine worship (V, 24). Thus, he says, does he intend to do full justice to the Jewish law (V, 17); whence it is obvious that not scriptural scholarship but the pure religion of reason must be the law’s interpreter, for taken according to the letter, it allowed the very opposite of all this. Furthermore, he does not leave unnoticed, in his designations of the strait gate and the narrow way, the misconstruction of the law which men allow themselves in order to evade their true moral duty, holding themselves immune through having fulfilled their churchly duty (VII, 13). He further requires of these pure dispositions that they manifest themselves also in works (VII, 16) and, on the other hand, denies the insidious hope of those who imagine that, through invocation and praise of the Supreme Lawgiver in the person of His envoy, they will make up for their lack of good works and ingratiate themselves into favor (VII, 21). Regarding these works he declares that they ought to be performed publicly, as an example for imitation (V, 16), and in a cheerful mood, not as actions extorted from slaves (VI, 16); and that thus, from a small beginning in the sharing and spreading of such dispositions, religion, like a grain of seed in good soil, or a ferment of goodness, would gradually, through its inner power, grow into a kingdom of God (XIII, 31-33). <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Immanuel_Kant" title="Immanuel Kant">Immanuel Kant</a>, <i>Religion within the Limits of Reason Alone</i>, Book IV, Part 1, Section 1, “The Christian religion as a natural religion,” as translated by Theodore M. Greene</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>What makes the decisive difference is not whether religion is persecuted or not, but whether religion is a pious name for conformity or a fighting name for non-conformity. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Walter_Kaufmann_(philosopher)" title="Walter Kaufmann (philosopher)">Walter Kaufmann</a>, <i>The Faith of a Heretic</i> (1963), cited from the trade paperback edition published by Princeton University Press <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-691-16548-6" title="Special:BookSources/978-0-691-16548-6">ISBN 978-0-691-16548-6</a>, (p. 253)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The most obvious failure of organized religions is surely that almost all of them have made a mockery of what their founders taught. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Walter_Kaufmann_(philosopher)" title="Walter Kaufmann (philosopher)">Walter Kaufmann</a>, <i>The Faith of a Heretic</i> (1963), cited from the trade paperback edition published by Princeton University Press <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-691-16548-6" title="Special:BookSources/978-0-691-16548-6">ISBN 978-0-691-16548-6</a>, (p. 267)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Organized religion flourishes. And so do thoughtlessness, dishonesty, and hypocrisy. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Walter_Kaufmann_(philosopher)" title="Walter Kaufmann (philosopher)">Walter Kaufmann</a>, <i>The Faith of a Heretic</i> (1963), cited from the trade paperback edition published by Princeton University Press <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-691-16548-6" title="Special:BookSources/978-0-691-16548-6">ISBN 978-0-691-16548-6</a>, (p. 277)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>People have fought in vain about the names and lives of their saviors, and have named their religions after the name of their savior, instead of uniting with each other in the <a href="/wiki/Truth" title="Truth">truth</a> that is taught. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Inayat_Khan" title="Inayat Khan">Inayat Khan</a>, in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://wahiduddin.net/mv2/I/I_I_3.htm"><i>The Spiritual Message of Hazrat Inayat Khan</i> Vol. I, <i>The Way of Illumination</i> Section I - The Way of Illumination, Part III&#160;: The Sufi</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A religiously developed person makes a practice of referring everything to God, of permeating and saturating every finite relation with the thought of God, and thereby consecrating and ennobling it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/S%C3%B8ren_Kierkegaard" title="Søren Kierkegaard">Søren Kierkegaard</a> <i>Either/Or II</i>, Hong p. 43 1843</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It requires moral courage to grieve; it requires religious courage to rejoice. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/S%C3%B8ren_Kierkegaard" title="Søren Kierkegaard">Søren Kierkegaard</a>, Journal entry, 19 July 1840</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Softmindedness often invades religion. … Softminded persons have revised the Beautitudes to read "Blessed are the pure in <a href="/wiki/Ignorance" title="Ignorance">ignorance</a>: for they shall see <a href="/wiki/God" title="God">God</a>." This has led to a widespread <a href="/wiki/Belief" title="Belief">belief</a> that there is a conflict between <a href="/wiki/Science" title="Science">science</a> and religion. But this is not true. There may be a conflict between softminded religionists and toughminded scientists, but not between science and religion. … Science investigates; religion interprets. Science gives man <a href="/wiki/Knowledge" title="Knowledge">knowledge</a> which is <a href="/wiki/Power" title="Power">power</a>; religion gives man <a href="/wiki/Wisdom" title="Wisdom">wisdom</a> which is control. Science deals mainly with <a href="/wiki/Facts" class="mw-redirect" title="Facts">facts</a>; religion deals mainly with <a href="/wiki/Values" class="mw-redirect" title="Values">values</a>. The two are not rivals. They are complementary. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Martin_Luther_King,_Jr." class="mw-redirect" title="Martin Luther King, Jr.">Martin Luther King, Jr.</a>, in <i>Strength to Love</i> (1963), Ch. 1&#160;: A tough mind and a tender heart</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>So here we are moving toward the exit of the twentieth century with a religious community largely adjusted to the status quo, standing as a taillight behind other community agencies rather than a headlight leading men to higher levels of justice. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Martin_Luther_King,_Jr." class="mw-redirect" title="Martin Luther King, Jr.">Martin Luther King, Jr.</a>, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letter_from_Birmingham_Jail" class="extiw" title="w:Letter from Birmingham Jail">Letter from Birmingham Jail</a>, April 16, 1963</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is hate, religion is fear, religion is war, religion is rape, religion's obscene, religion's a whore. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerry_King" class="extiw" title="w:Kerry King">Kerry King</a> of <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slayer" class="extiw" title="w:Slayer">Slayer</a>, in "Cult" on <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christ_Illusion" class="extiw" title="w:Christ Illusion">Christ Illusion</a></i> (2006)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>And now, after making due allowance for evils that are natural and cannot be avoided... I will point out the greatest, the chief cause of nearly two-thirds of the evils that pursue humanity ever since that cause became a power. It is religion under whatever form and in whatever nation. It is the sacerdotal caste, the priesthood and the churches. It is in those illusions that man looks upon as sacred, that he has to search out the source of that multitude of evils which is the great curse of humanity and that almost overwhelms mankind. Ignorance created Gods and cunning took advantage of opportunity. Look at India and look at Christendom and Islam, at Judaism and Fetichism. It is priestly imposture that rendered these Gods so terrible to man&#160;; it is religion that makes of him the selfish bigot, the fanatic that hates all mankind out of his own sect without rendering him any better or more moral for it. It is belief in God and Gods that makes two-thirds of humanity the slaves of a handful of those who deceive them under the false pretence of saving them. Is not man ever ready to commit any kind of evil if told that his God or gods demand the crime?&#160;; voluntary victim of an illusionary God, the abject slave of his crafty ministers. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koot_Hoomi" class="extiw" title="w:Koot Hoomi">Koot Hoomi</a>, <a href="/wiki/The_Mahatma_Letters_to_A._P._Sinnett" title="The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett"><i>The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett</i></a>, Letter No. X, (1923)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>And wasn’t <i>that</i> a common pattern in human history! Greedy religious orders, wanting to keep <a href="/wiki/Power" title="Power">power</a> for themselves, using customs and myth and threats and murder to keep the people in line and then making them believe it was all for their own good so they wouldn’t challenge the supremacy of the priesthood. Some political thinker of a few centuries ago had nailed it exactly: “Religion is the opiate of the people.” <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Nancy_Kress" title="Nancy Kress">Nancy Kress</a>, <i>Probability Moon</i> (2000), <small> <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-765-34341-X" title="Special:BookSources/0-765-34341-X">ISBN 0-765-34341-X</a> </small>, Chapter 6 (p. 63)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Business leaders, of course, had long been working to "<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchandising" class="extiw" title="w:Merchandising">merchandise</a>" themselves through the appropriation of religion. In organizations such as <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_W._Fifield_Jr.#Spiritual_Mobilization" class="extiw" title="w:James W. Fifield Jr.">Spiritual Mobilization</a>, the prayer breakfast groups, and the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedoms_Foundation" class="extiw" title="w:Freedoms Foundation">Freedoms Foundation</a>, they had linked <a href="/wiki/Capitalism" title="Capitalism">capitalism</a> and <a href="/wiki/Christianity" title="Christianity">Christianity</a> and, at the same time, likened the welfare state to godless paganism. After decades of work, these businessmen believed their efforts had finally paid off with the election of <a href="/wiki/Dwight_Eisenhower" class="mw-redirect" title="Dwight Eisenhower">Dwight Eisenhower</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Kevin_M._Kruse" title="Kevin M. Kruse">Kevin M. Kruse</a>, <i>One Nation Under God: How Corporate America Invented Christian America</i> (2015) p. 86</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="L">L</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=12" title="Edit section: L"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Hubble_ultra_deep_field_high_rez_edit1.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0d/Hubble_ultra_deep_field_high_rez_edit1.jpg/220px-Hubble_ultra_deep_field_high_rez_edit1.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="220" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0d/Hubble_ultra_deep_field_high_rez_edit1.jpg/330px-Hubble_ultra_deep_field_high_rez_edit1.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0d/Hubble_ultra_deep_field_high_rez_edit1.jpg/440px-Hubble_ultra_deep_field_high_rez_edit1.jpg 2x" data-file-width="6200" data-file-height="6200" /></a><figcaption>We have too long supposed that the Unknown <i>mysterium tremendum et fascinosum</i> of religion was outside us, when in fact that Unknown, although ego-alien or unconscious, was all the while within us: the alleged “supernatural” is the <a href="/wiki/Human" title="Human">human</a> “subconscious.” ~ <a href="/wiki/Weston_La_Barre" title="Weston La Barre">Weston La Barre</a> </figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Halo_solaire_21112006_003.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/02/Halo_solaire_21112006_003.jpg/220px-Halo_solaire_21112006_003.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="146" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/02/Halo_solaire_21112006_003.jpg/330px-Halo_solaire_21112006_003.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/02/Halo_solaire_21112006_003.jpg/440px-Halo_solaire_21112006_003.jpg 2x" data-file-width="1504" data-file-height="1000" /></a><figcaption>The purposes of the Almighty are perfect, and must prevail, though we erring mortals may fail to accurately perceive them in advance. ~ <a href="/wiki/Abraham_Lincoln" title="Abraham Lincoln">Abraham Lincoln</a> </figcaption></figure> <ul><li>We have too long supposed that the Unknown <i>mysterium tremendum et fascinosum</i> of religion was outside us, when in fact that Unknown, although ego-alien or unconscious, was all the while within us: the alleged “supernatural” is the human “subconscious.” <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Weston_La_Barre" title="Weston La Barre">Weston La Barre</a>, “Hallucinogens and the Shamanic Origins of Religion,” <i>Flesh of the Gods</i> (1972), p. 261</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A religion is a kind of group dream. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Weston_La_Barre" title="Weston La Barre">Weston La Barre</a>, “Hallucinogens and the Shamanic Origins of Religion,” <i>Flesh of the Gods</i> (1972), p. 264</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Like the paranoid schizophrenic, the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/prophet" class="extiw" title="w:prophet">vatic</a> personality pretends to be talking about the grandiose outside cosmic world, but he is really talking grandiosely in symbolic ways only about his narcissistic self and his inner world. The mystic pretends to discard his sensory self in order to meld with the cosmic Self; but in discarding his senses he abjures his only connection with the cosmos and re-encounters only himself. The realities he expounds are inside him. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Weston_La_Barre" title="Weston La Barre">Weston La Barre</a>, “Hallucinogens and the Shamanic Origins of Religion,” <i>Flesh of the Gods</i> (1972), p. 265</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>“God” is often clinically paranoiac because the shaman’s “supernatural helper” is the projection of the shaman himself. The personality of Yahweh, so to speak, exactly fits the irascible personality of the sheikh-shaman <a href="/wiki/Moses" title="Moses">Moses</a>; the voices of Yahweh and Moses are indistinguishable. Of course, shamans do not always have an easy time of it. If the <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/dereistic" class="extiw" title="wikt:dereistic">dereistic</a> dreamer arouses too much anxiety, people call him crazy, just as people must put themselves at a psychological distance from the frightening and uncanny schizophrenic. But if the dreamer largely allays anxiety in the society, then he is the shaman-savior. Thus it is that outsiders to the society cannot tell the difference between a psychotic and a <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/prophet" class="extiw" title="w:prophet">vatic</a> personality. Only the society itself can distinguish between its psychotics and its shaman-saviors. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Weston_La_Barre" title="Weston La Barre">Weston La Barre</a>, “Hallucinogens and the Shamanic Origins of Religion,” <i>Flesh of the Gods</i> (1972), p. 266</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>All religions are the same: religion is basically guilt, with different holidays. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathy_Ladman" class="extiw" title="w:Cathy Ladman">Cathy Ladman</a>, quoted in <i>The God Delusion</i> (2006) by <a href="/wiki/Richard_Dawkins" title="Richard Dawkins">Richard Dawkins</a>, "The Roots of Religion", p. 167</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>You ask about the Great One whom we call the <a href="/wiki/Christ" title="Christ">Christ</a>, the <a href="/wiki/Maitreya_(Theosophy)" title="Maitreya (Theosophy)">Lord Maitreya</a>, and about His work in the past and in the future... there is what we may call a department of the inner government of the world which is devoted to religious instruction—the founding and inspiring of religions, and so on. It is the Christ who is in charge of that department; sometimes He Himself appears on earth to found a great religion and sometimes He entrusts such work to one of His more advanced assistants. We must regard Him as exercising a kind of steady pressure from behind all the time, so that the power employed will flow as though automatically into every channel anywhere and of any sort which is open to its passage; so that He is working simultaneously through every religion, and utilizing all that is good in the way of devotion and self-sacrifice in each. The fact that these religions may be wasting their strength in abusing one another upon the physical plane is of course lamentable, but it does not make much difference to the fact that whatever is good in each of them is being simultaneously utilized from behind by the same great Power. p. 19 <ul><li><a href="/wiki/C.W._Leadbeater" class="mw-redirect" title="C.W. Leadbeater">C.W. Leadbeater</a>, in <a href="/wiki/Charles_Webster_Leadbeater#The_Inner_Life_(1917)" title="Charles Webster Leadbeater"><i>The Inner Life</i></a> (1917)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Pursuing the religious life today without using psychedelic drugs is like studying astronomy with the naked eye. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Timothy_Leary" title="Timothy Leary">Timothy Leary</a>, “The Seven Tongues of God,” <i>The Politics of Ecstasy</i> (1968)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It takes a long time to learn to live without God, and some people never do. They would rather have a false God than none at all. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ursula_K._Le_Guin" title="Ursula K. Le Guin">Ursula K. Le Guin</a>, <i>The Birthday of the World,</i> in <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_G._Hartwell" class="extiw" title="w:David G. Hartwell">David G. Hartwell</a> (ed.) <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year%27s_Best_SF_6" class="extiw" title="w:Year&#39;s Best SF 6">Year's Best SF 6</a>,</i> p. 246 (Originally published in <i>Fantasy &amp; Science Fiction</i> magazine, June 2000)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><p>Imagine there's no countries, <br /> It isn't hard to do, <br /> Nothing to kill or die for, <br /> No religion too, <br /> Imagine all the people <br /> living life in <a href="/wiki/Peace" title="Peace">peace</a>...</p><p>You may say I'm a dreamer, <br /> but I'm not the only one, <br /> I hope some day you'll join us, <br /> And the world will be as one.</p> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Lennon" title="John Lennon">John Lennon</a>, in "Imagine"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The word <i>religion</i> is extremely rare in the New Testament or the writings of mystics. The reason is simple. Those attitudes and practises to which we give the collective name of <i>religion</i> are themselves concerned with religion hardly at all. To be religious is to have one's attention fixed on God and on one's neighbor in relation to God. Therefore, almost by definition, a religious man, or a man when he is being religious, is not thinking about <i>religion</i>; he hasn't the time. <i>Religion</i> is what we (or he himself at a later moment) call his activity from the outside. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/C._S._Lewis" title="C. S. Lewis">C. S. Lewis</a> in "Lilies that Fester" in <i>The Twentieth Century</i> (April 1955)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Individuals must be persuaded to believe in an apparent <a href="/wiki/Paradox" title="Paradox">paradox</a>, that something is <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/gain#Verb" class="extiw" title="wikt:gain">gained</a> through <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/selfless#English" class="extiw" title="wikt:selfless">selflessness</a> and something is <a href="/wiki/Loss" title="Loss">lost</a> through <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/self-fulfillment#Noun" class="extiw" title="wikt:self-fulfillment">self-fulfillment</a>. ...The four <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinal_virtues#Hellenistic_philosophy" class="extiw" title="w:Cardinal virtues">cardinal virtues</a> from <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_philosophy" class="extiw" title="w:Ancient Greek philosophy">Greek philosophy</a> are prudence, temperance, fortitude, and justice. <a href="/wiki/Islam" title="Islam">Islam</a> recognizes those, as well as, righteousness, respect, sincerity, and honesty. <a href="/wiki/Christianity" title="Christianity">Christianity</a> adds faith, hope, charity, and love. <a href="/wiki/Buddhism" title="Buddhism">Buddhism</a>'s <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divine_grace#Buddhism" class="extiw" title="w:Divine grace">Divine States</a> are loving kindness, compassion, altruistic joy, and equanimity. Practicing these virtues requires <a href="/wiki/Self-control" title="Self-control">self-restraint</a> and <a href="/wiki/Generosity" title="Generosity">generosity</a> towards others. <a href="/wiki/Vices" title="Vices">Vices</a>, for example, pride, avarice, and gluttony are typically described as manifestations of <a href="/wiki/Selfishness" title="Selfishness">selfishness</a>. Although the following is a very simplified formula, excellence of character or proper living is said to be achieved through practicing virtue (which is <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/self-effacement#Noun" class="extiw" title="wikt:self-effacement">self-effacing</a>) and avoiding vice (selfishness).<br />Is personal transcendence consistent with this formula? “No,” assert the critics of <a href="/wiki/Transhumanism" title="Transhumanism">transhumanity</a>. It is egotistical, too grasping, and may result in new forms of <a href="/wiki/Injustice" title="Injustice">injustice</a>. Living a good life accepting of human <a href="/wiki/Mortality" title="Mortality">mortality</a>... has intrinsic value and it helps promote the greater good. <ul><li>Stephen Lilley, <i>Transhumanism and society: the social debate over human enhancement</i> (2013) p. 21-22.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In my opinion the religion that makes men rebel and fight against their government is not the genuine article, nor is the religion the right sort which reconciles them to the idea of <a href="/wiki/Slavery" title="Slavery">eating their bread in the sweat of other men's faces</a>. It is not the kind to get to <a href="/wiki/Heaven" title="Heaven">heaven</a> on. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Abraham_Lincoln" title="Abraham Lincoln">Abraham Lincoln</a>, as quoted in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://archive.org/details/recollectionsab00lamogoog"><i>Recollections of Abraham Lincoln, 1847-1865</i></a> (1895), by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ward_Hill_Lamon" class="extiw" title="w:Ward Hill Lamon">Ward Hill Lamon</a>, p. 90</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I am much indebted to the good christian people of the country for their constant prayers and consolations; and to no one of them, more than to yourself. The purposes of the Almighty are perfect, and must prevail, though we erring mortals may fail to accurately perceive them in advance. We hoped for a happy termination of this terrible <a href="/wiki/American_Civil_War" title="American Civil War">war</a> long before this; but God knows best, and has ruled otherwise. We shall yet acknowledge His wisdom and our own error therein. Meanwhile we must work earnestly in the best light He gives us, trusting that so working still conduces to the great ends He ordains. Surely He intends some great good to follow this mighty convulsion, which no mortal could make, and no mortal could stay. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Abraham_Lincoln" title="Abraham Lincoln">Abraham Lincoln</a>'s Letter to Eliza Gurney (4 September 1864); quoted in Roy P. Basler, ed., <i>The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, vol. 7</i> (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1953), p. 535</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>What fascinated us about Carrie was that her religious mother could believe that Christ performed miracles, yet when her daughter demonstrates miraculous abilities, she deems that satanic. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Damon_Lindelof" class="extiw" title="wikipedia:Damon Lindelof">Damon Lindelof</a>, <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.ew.com/article/2006/11/24/stephen-king-meets-creators-lost">Stephen King meets creators of Lost</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Mr. Doctor, pray remember that text, He that seemeth to be religious, and bridleth not his tongue, his religion is vain. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lisle" class="extiw" title="wikipedia:John Lisle">John Lisle</a>, <i>Hewet's Case</i> (1658), 5. How. St. Tr. 894</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Other hope had she none, nor wish in life, but to follow <br /> Meekly, with reverent steps, the sacred feet of her Saviour. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Henry_Wadsworth_Longfellow" title="Henry Wadsworth Longfellow">Henry Wadsworth Longfellow</a>, <i>Evangeline</i> (1847), Part II. V, line 35</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Bunch together a group of people deliberately chosen for strong religious feelings, and you have a practical guarantee of dark morbidities expressed in crime, perversion, and insanity. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/H.P._Lovecraft" class="mw-redirect" title="H.P. Lovecraft">H.P. Lovecraft</a>, letter to <a href="/wiki/Robert_E._Howard" title="Robert E. Howard">Robert E. Howard</a> <a rel="nofollow" class="external autonumber" href="https://books.google.com/books?isbn=0809515679">[4]</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Puritanism, believing itself quick with the seed of religious liberty, laid, without knowing it, the egg of democracy. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/James_Russell_Lowell" title="James Russell Lowell">James Russell Lowell</a>, <i>Among My Books</i>. New England Two Centuries Ago</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>God is not dumb, that he should speak no more; <br /> If thou hast wanderings in the wilderness <br /> And find'st not Sinai, 'tis thy soul is poor. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/James_Russell_Lowell" title="James Russell Lowell">James Russell Lowell</a>, <i>Bibliolatres</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>But he turned up his nose at their murmuring and shamming, <br /> And cared (shall I say?) not a d—n for their damning; <br /> So they first read him out of their church and next minute <br /> Turned round and declared he had never been in it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/James_Russell_Lowell" title="James Russell Lowell">James Russell Lowell</a>, <i>A Fable for Critics</i> (1848), line 876</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Tantum religio potuit suadere malorum</i>! <ul><li><i>Translated</i>: How many evils has religion caused!</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Lucretius" title="Lucretius">Lucretius</a>, <i>De Rerum Natura</i>. I. 102</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Blessed is the man that hath not walked in the way of the Sacramentarians, nor sat in the seat of the Zwinglians, nor followed the Council of the Zurichers. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Martin_Luther" title="Martin Luther">Martin Luther</a>, <i>Parody of First Psalm</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is not 'doctrinal knowledge,' but wisdom born of personal experience. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Martin_Luther" title="Martin Luther">Martin Luther</a>, Holborn, Hajo; <i>A HISTORY OF MODERN GERMANY</i>: <i>The Reformation</i>; 1959/1982 Princeton university Press</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="M">M</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=13" title="Edit section: M"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>The Puritan hated bear-baiting, not because it gave pain to the bear, but because it gave pleasure to the spectators. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Babington_Macaulay" title="Thomas Babington Macaulay">Thomas Babington Macaulay</a>, <i>History of England</i> (1849-1861), Vol. I. Ch. II</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>To judge religion we must have it—not stare at it from the bottom of a seeming interminable ladder <ul><li><a href="/wiki/George_Macdonald" class="mw-redirect" title="George Macdonald">George Macdonald</a>, <i>Warlock o' Glenwarlock</i> ch 18</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is no dry morality; no slavish, punctilious conforming of actions to a hard law. Religion is not right thinking alone, nor right emotion alone, nor right action alone. Religion is still less the semblance of these in formal profession, or simulated feeling, or apparent rectitude. Religion is not nominal connection with the Christian community, nor participation in its ordinances and its worship. But to be godly is to be godlike. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Alexander_Maclaren" title="Alexander Maclaren">Alexander Maclaren</a>, <i>Expositions of Holy Scripture</i> "Galatians"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion to be permanently influential must be intelligent. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Elias_Lyman_Magoon" title="Elias Lyman Magoon">Elias Lyman Magoon</a>, <i>Proverbs for the People</i> (1849) ch. 1, p. 16</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Faith means making a virtue out of not thinking. It’s nothing to brag about. And those who preach faith, and enable and elevate it are intellectual slaveholders, keeping mankind in a bondage to fantasy and nonsense that has spawned and justified so much lunacy and destruction. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Bill_Maher" title="Bill Maher">Bill Maher</a>, <i>Religulous</i> (closing words)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><b>Either every imaginable institution is founded on a religious concept or it is only a passing phenomenon.</b> Institutions are strong and durable to the degree that they are, so to speak, <i>deified.</i> Not only is human <a href="/wiki/Reason" title="Reason">reason</a>, or what is ignorantly called <i><a href="/wiki/Philosophy" title="Philosophy">philosophy</a>,</i> incapable of supplying these foundations, which with equal ignorance are called <i>superstitious,</i> but philosophy is, on the contrary, an essentially disruptive force. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Joseph_de_Maistre" title="Joseph de Maistre">Joseph de Maistre</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/Considerations_on_France" title="Considerations on France">Considerations on France</a></i> (1796), ch. V</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There is no civilized religion without it saints and devils, without its illuminations and tokens, without the spirit of God descending upon the community of the faithful. There is no new-fangled creed, no new religion, whether it be a form of <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiritism" class="extiw" title="w:Spiritism">Spiritism</a>, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theosophy" class="extiw" title="w:Theosophy">Theosophy</a>, or <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Science" class="extiw" title="w:Christian Science">Christian Science</a>, which cannot prove its legitimacy by the solid fact of supernatural manifestation. The savage also has his <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/thaumatology" class="extiw" title="wiktionary:thaumatology">thaumatology</a>, and in the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trobriand_Islands" class="extiw" title="w:Trobriand Islands">Trobriands</a>, where magic dominates all <a href="/wiki/Supernaturalism" class="mw-redirect" title="Supernaturalism">supernaturalism</a>, it is a thaumatology of magic. Round each form of magic there is a continuous trickle of small miracles, at times swelling into bigger, more conspicuously supernatural proofs, then again, running in a smaller stream, but never absent. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronis%C5%82aw_Malinowski" class="extiw" title="w:Bronisław Malinowski">Bronislaw Malinowski</a>, <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.archive.org/stream/sexrepressionins00mali/sexrepressionins00mali_djvu.txt"><i>Sex and Repression in Savage Society</i></a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I never really hated a one true God, but the God of the people I hated. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Marilyn_Manson" title="Marilyn Manson">Marilyn Manson</a>, <i>Disposable Teens</i> (2000)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In religion three things do not exist but these things preserve it: national <a href="/wiki/Language" title="Language">language</a>, national dress and national customs. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/%C5%9Eihabetdin_M%C3%A4rcani" title="Şihabetdin Märcani">Şihabetdin Märcani</a>, Tatar encyclopedist, as quoted in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/06/their-language-under-attack-tatars-turn.html">"Their Language Under Attack, Tatars Turn to Islam to Defend Their Nation’s Future"</a>, <i>Window on Eurasia</i> (June 17, 2019)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>If I could pray with my cock I'd be a lot more religious. <ul><li>George R.R. Martin, <i><a href="/wiki/A_Song_of_Ice_and_Fire#A_Clash_of_Kings" title="A Song of Ice and Fire">A Clash of Kings</a></i> Tyrion (III)–Tyrion</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>To rely on intellectual methods for the direct advance of devout thought is to mistake philosophy for religion… Who does not know, out of his own heart, that he never was <i>reasoned</i> into holy wonder, love, or reverence? and who can fail to observe that there is no fixed proportion between force of understanding and clearness or depth of religion? <ul><li><a href="/wiki/James_Martineau" title="James Martineau">James Martineau</a>, <i>Hours of Thoughts on Sacred Things</i> Vol. 2 (1879) "The Way of Rememberance" p. 96</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Law, morality, religion, are ... so many bourgeois prejudices, behind which lurk in ambush just as many bourgeois interests <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Karl_Marx" title="Karl Marx">Karl Marx</a>, <i>The Communist Manifesto</i></li></ul></li></ul> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Karl_Marx_Holzschnitt.JPG" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/12/Karl_Marx_Holzschnitt.JPG/220px-Karl_Marx_Holzschnitt.JPG" decoding="async" width="220" height="329" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/12/Karl_Marx_Holzschnitt.JPG/330px-Karl_Marx_Holzschnitt.JPG 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/12/Karl_Marx_Holzschnitt.JPG/440px-Karl_Marx_Holzschnitt.JPG 2x" data-file-width="2817" data-file-height="4209" /></a><figcaption>Religious <a href="/wiki/Suffering" title="Suffering">suffering</a> is, at one and the same time, the expression of real suffering and a protest against real suffering. Religion is the sigh of the <a href="/wiki/Oppression" title="Oppression">oppressed</a> creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people. ~ <a href="/wiki/Karl_Marx" title="Karl Marx">Karl Marx</a> </figcaption></figure> <ul><li><b>Religious suffering is, at one and the same time, the expression of real suffering and a protest against real suffering. Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opium_of_the_people" class="extiw" title="w:Opium of the people">opium of the people</a>.</b> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Karl_Marx" title="Karl Marx">Karl Marx</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contribution_to_the_Critique_of_Hegel%27s_Philosophy_of_Right" class="extiw" title="w:Contribution to the Critique of Hegel&#39;s Philosophy of Right">Contribution to the Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right</a></i>, Introduction..., p. 1 (1843)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In any discussion of religion and personality integration the question is not whether religion itself makes for health or neurosis, but what kind of religion and how is it used? <a href="/wiki/Sigmund_Freud" title="Sigmund Freud">Freud</a> was in error when he held that religion is per se a compulsion neurosis. Some religion is and some is not. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Rollo_May" title="Rollo May">Rollo May</a>, <i>Man's Search for Himself</i> (1953), p. 166</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>We define religion as the assumption that life has meaning. Religion, or lack of it, is shown not in some intellectual or verbal formulations but in one's total orientation to life. Religion is whatever the individual takes to be his ultimate concern. One's religious attitude is to be found at that point where he has a conviction that there are values in human existence worth living and dying for. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Rollo_May" title="Rollo May">Rollo May</a>, <i>Man's Search for Himself</i> (1953), p. 180</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religious history also offers another striking parallel between Rome and China. The Buddhist faith began to penetrate the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Han_Dynasty" class="extiw" title="w:Han Dynasty">Han empire</a> in the first century A.D., and soon won converts in high places. Its period of official dominance in court circles extended from the third to the ninth centuries A.D. This obviously parallels the successes that came to <a href="/wiki/Christianity" title="Christianity">Christianity</a> in the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_empire" class="extiw" title="w:Roman empire">Roman empire</a> during the same period. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Hardy_McNeill" class="extiw" title="w:William Hardy McNeill">William Hardy McNeill</a>, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plagues_and_Peoples" class="extiw" title="w:Plagues and Peoples"><i>Plagues and Peoples</i></a> (1976)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Like Christianity, <a href="/wiki/Buddhism" title="Buddhism">Buddhism</a> explained suffering. In forms that established themselves in China, Buddhism offered the same sort of comfort to bereaved survivors and victims of violence or of disease as Christian faith did in the Roman world. Buddhism of course originated in India, where disease incidence was probably always very high as compared with civilizations based in cooler climates; Christianity, too, took shape in the urban environments of Jerusalem, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antioch" class="extiw" title="w:Antioch">Antioch</a>, and Alexandria where the incidence of infectious disease was certainly very high as compared to conditions in cooler and less crowded places. From their inception, therefore, both faiths had to deal with sudden death by disease as one of the conspicuous facts of human life. Consequently, it is not altogether surprising that both religions taught that death was a release from pain, and a blessed avenue of entry upon a delightful afterlife where loved ones would be reunited, and earthly injustices and pains amply compensated for. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Hardy_McNeill" class="extiw" title="w:William Hardy McNeill">William Hardy McNeill</a>, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plagues_and_Peoples" class="extiw" title="w:Plagues and Peoples"><i>Plagues and Peoples</i></a> (1976)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><b>When something is done by Jews, that does not make it Jewish.</b> Jewish [religion] is defined by what Torah commands. Making our own state, or oppressing other people, is forbidden by Judaism and cannot be considered “Jewish”[...]Judaism is defined by Torah, and Torah teaches Jews to be subservient to the Almighty, follow His commandments, and live peacefully alongside the other nations of the world. Torah commands Jews not to kill or steal. <ul><li>Meir Hirsch, <i>Chief Rabbi: Nakba, Al-Quds Days Opportunities to Express Anti-Zionist Position by Orthodox Judaism</i> (May 2020) Fars News Agency</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>While religion, contrary to the common notion, implies, in certain cases, a spirit of slow reserve as to assent, infidelity, which claims to despise credulity, is sometimes swift to it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Herman_Melville" title="Herman Melville">Herman Melville</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/The_Confidence-Man" title="The Confidence-Man">The Confidence-Man</a></i> (1857)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Certainly religion must be granted to be one of the greatest inventions ever made on earth. It not only probably antedated all the rest... it was also more valuable to the Dawn Man than any or all of them. For it had the peculiar virtue of making his existence more endurable. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/H._L._Mencken" title="H. L. Mencken">H. L. Mencken</a>, in <a href="/wiki/Treatise_on_the_Gods" title="Treatise on the Gods">Treatise on the Gods</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The cosmos is a gigantic fly-wheel making 10,000 revolutions a minute. Man is a sick fly taking a dizzy ride on it. Religion is the theory that the wheel was designed and set spinning to give him a ride. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/H._L._Mencken" title="H. L. Mencken">H. L. Mencken</a>, <i>Prejudices: Third Series</i> (1917)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Shave a gorilla and it would be almost impossible, at twenty paces, to distinguish him from a heavyweight champion of the world. Skin a chimpanzee, and it would take an autopsy to prove he was not a theologian. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/H._L._Mencken" title="H. L. Mencken">H. L. Mencken</a>, Baltimore Evening Sun (4 April 1927)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Socrates" title="Socrates">Socrates</a> reminds us that it is not the same thing, but almost the opposite, to understand religion and to accept it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Maurice_Merleau-Ponty" title="Maurice Merleau-Ponty">Maurice Merleau-Ponty</a>, <i>In Praise of Philosophy</i> (Chicago: 1963), p. 45</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Compassion in the highest degree is the divinest form of religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Alice_Meynell" title="Alice Meynell">Alice Meynell</a>, "Introductory Note" to <i>The Poetry of Pathos &amp; Delight: From the Works of Coventry Patmore; Passages Selected by Alice Meynell</i> (London: William Heinemann, 1906), p. xi</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Our religion is made to eradicate vices, instead it encourages them, covers them, and nurtures them. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Montaigne" class="mw-redirect" title="Montaigne">Montaigne</a>, <i>Essays</i>, Book II, Chapter 12, “Apology for Raymond Sebond”</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I acknowledge that history is full of religious wars: but we must distinguish; it is not the multiplicity of religions which has produced wars; it is the intolerant spirit animating that which believed itself in the ascendant. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Charles_de_Montesquieu" class="mw-redirect" title="Charles de Montesquieu">Charles de Montesquieu</a>, <a class="external text" href="https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Persian_Letters/Letter_86">Letter No. 86</a> of the <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persian_Letters" class="extiw" title="w:Persian Letters">Persian Letters</a></i> (<i>Lettres persanes</i>, 1721, translation and introduction by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Davidson_(poet)" class="extiw" title="w:John Davidson (poet)">John Davidson</a>, 1899)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>We look at gorgeous churches and synagogues, but now they are only 10% to 15% filled. Those who are there are old; pretty soon they will go to the grave. Then there will be no one. This is true for all religions. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Sun_Myung_Moon" title="Sun Myung Moon">Sun Myung Moon</a> <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.unification.net/pr-mes/pr-mes-2.html">The Reappearance of the Second Coming and the Completed Testament Era (10 January 1993) Belvedere International Training Center</a>.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>While the U.S. was founded on basic freedoms, including the freedom of religion, there is a distinction between belief and conduct. One can believe whatever one wishes; however, one cannot practice a belief if such practice violates a valid law. <ul><li>Andrea Moore-Emmett, <i>God’s Brothel,</i> <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-1-930074-13-2" title="Special:BookSources/978-1-930074-13-2">ISBN 978-1-930074-13-2</a>, Part 1, “Contemporary Fundamentalist Polygamy in America” (p. 37)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>If the women in these stories seem very removed from the religions that once consumed their lives, it is because they are. Once they began to exercise critical thinking skills, they were able to sort through the dogma, releasing the hold their religion once had on them to allow them to leave. During interviews, more than one woman stopped in the middle of a theological narrative to say, “I can’t believe I ever fell for that shit.” <ul><li>Andrea Moore-Emmett, <i>God’s Brothel,</i> <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-1-930074-13-2" title="Special:BookSources/978-1-930074-13-2">ISBN 978-1-930074-13-2</a>, Part 1, “Contemporary Fundamentalist Polygamy in America” (p. 48)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Having brought up the question of religion, it is perhaps worthwhile taking a closer look at this strange pattern of animal behaviour, before going on to deal with other aspects of the aggressive activities of our species. It is not an easy subject to deal with, but as a zoologist we must do our best to observe what actually happens rather than listen to what is supposed to be happening. If we do this, we are forced to the conclusion that, in a behavioural sense, religious activities consist of the coming together of large groups of people to perform repeated and prolonged submissive displays to appease a dominant individual. The dominant individual concerned takes many forms in different cultures, but always has the common factor of immense power. Sometimes it takes the shape of an animal from another species, or an idealized version of it. Sometimes it is pictured more as a wise and elderly member of our own species. Sometimes it becomes more abstract and is referred to as simply as ‘the State’, or in other such terms. The submissive responses to it may consist of closing the eyes, lowering the head, clasping the hands together in a begging gesture, kneeling, kissing the ground, or even extreme prostration, with the frequent accompaniment of wailing or chanting vocalizations. If the submissive actions are successful, the dominant individual is appeased. Because its powers are so great, the appeasement ceremonies have to be performed at regular and frequent intervals, to prevent its anger from rising again. The dominant individual is usually, but not always, referred to as a god. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Desmond_Morris" title="Desmond Morris">Desmond Morris</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Naked_Ape" class="extiw" title="w:The Naked Ape">The Naked Ape</a></i> (1967), Chapter 5</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Since none of these gods exist in a tangible form, why have they been invented? To find the answer to this we have to go right back to our ancestral origins. Before we evolved into co-operative hunters, we must have lived in social groups of the type seen today in other species of apes and monkeys. There, in typical cases, each group is dominated by a single male. He is the boss, the overlord, and every member of the group has to appease him or suffer the consequences. He is also most active in protecting the group from outside hazards and in settling squabbles between lesser members. The whole life of a member of such a group revolves around the dominant animal. His all-powerful role gives him a god-like status. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Desmond_Morris" title="Desmond Morris">Desmond Morris</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Naked_Ape" class="extiw" title="w:The Naked Ape">The Naked Ape</a></i> (1967), Chapter 5</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>At first sight, it is surprising that religion has been so successful, but its extreme potency is simply a measure of the strength of our fundamental biological tendency, inherited directly from our monkey and ape ancestors, to submit ourselves to an all-powerful, dominant member of the group. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Desmond_Morris" title="Desmond Morris">Desmond Morris</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Naked_Ape" class="extiw" title="w:The Naked Ape">The Naked Ape</a></i> (1967), Chapter 5</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Pascal says that when men become separated from God, two courses present themselves; to imagine that they are gods themselves, and try to behave as such, or, alternatively, to seek for enduring satisfaction in the transitory pleasures of the senses. The one sends them, like Icarus, flying into the bright furnace of the sun, there to perish; the other reduces them to far below the level of the farmyard, where the cows with their soft eyes, and the hens with their shrill cries, and the strutting peacocks and the grunting pigs, down to the tiny darting flies and wasps and insects, all live out whatever span of animal existence is vouchsafed them, under God’s kindly gaze. Men are denied this satisfaction. If they set up as a farmyard, it is a place of dark fantasies and weird imaginings –Prometheus, unbound, chaining himself to the rock, and there, day by day, gorging his own entrails. <ul><li>Malcolm Muggeridge, The Great Liberal Death Wish</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is a species of <a href="/w/index.php?title=Mental_disease&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1" class="new" title="Mental disease (page does not exist)">mental disease</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Benito_Mussolini" title="Benito Mussolini">Benito Mussolini</a>, as qtd. in <i>2000 Years of Disbelief: Famous People with the Courage to Doubt</i>, James A. Haught, Amherst: NY, Prometheus Books (1996) p. 256</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Science" title="Science">Science</a> is now in the process of <a href="/wiki/Destroying" class="mw-redirect" title="Destroying">destroying</a> religious dogma. The dogma of the divine creation is recognized as <a href="/wiki/Absurd" class="mw-redirect" title="Absurd">absurd</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Benito_Mussolini" title="Benito Mussolini">Benito Mussolini</a>, as qtd. in <i>2000 Years of Disbelief: Famous People with the Courage to Doubt</i> by James A. Haught (1966) p. 256. Originally came from Mussolini’s essay <i>l'Homme et la Divinité,</i> 1904.</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="N">N</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=14" title="Edit section: N"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:JUL_Soul_Iris.png" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/74/JUL_Soul_Iris.png/220px-JUL_Soul_Iris.png" decoding="async" width="220" height="220" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/74/JUL_Soul_Iris.png 1.5x" data-file-width="292" data-file-height="292" /></a><figcaption>A <a href="/wiki/Circle" class="mw-redirect" title="Circle">circle</a> can have only one centre but it can have numerous radii. The centre can be compared to <a href="/wiki/God" title="God">God</a> and the radii to religions. So, no one sect, no one religion or book can make an <a href="/wiki/Absolute" class="mw-redirect" title="Absolute">absolute</a> claim of It. He who works for It gets It. ~ <a href="/wiki/Swami_Narayanananda" title="Swami Narayanananda">Swami Narayanananda</a> </figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Crist_Figure_Deesis_Mosaic_Chora_Church.JPG" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1d/Crist_Figure_Deesis_Mosaic_Chora_Church.JPG/220px-Crist_Figure_Deesis_Mosaic_Chora_Church.JPG" decoding="async" width="220" height="293" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1d/Crist_Figure_Deesis_Mosaic_Chora_Church.JPG/330px-Crist_Figure_Deesis_Mosaic_Chora_Church.JPG 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1d/Crist_Figure_Deesis_Mosaic_Chora_Church.JPG/440px-Crist_Figure_Deesis_Mosaic_Chora_Church.JPG 2x" data-file-width="2304" data-file-height="3072" /></a><figcaption>One of the fundamental points about religious <a href="/wiki/Humility" title="Humility">humility</a> is you say you don't <a href="/wiki/Know" class="mw-redirect" title="Know">know</a> about the ultimate <a href="/wiki/Judgment" title="Judgment">judgment</a>. It's beyond your judgment. And if you equate <a href="/wiki/God" title="God">God</a>'s judgment with your judgment, you have a wrong religion. ~ <a href="/wiki/Reinhold_Niebuhr" title="Reinhold Niebuhr">Reinhold Niebuhr</a> </figcaption></figure> <ul><li><i>Quant à moi, je ne vois pas dans la religion le mystère de l'incarnation, mais le mystère de l'ordre social; elle rattache au ciel une idée d'égalité qui empêche que le riche ne soit massacré par le pauvre.</i> <ul><li>I do not see in religion the mystery of the incarnation, but the mystery of the social order; religion attaches to heaven an idea of equality that stops the rich from being massacred by the poor. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Napol%C3%A9on_Bonaparte" class="mw-redirect" title="Napoléon Bonaparte">Napoléon Bonaparte</a>, March 4, 1806, as reported in <i>Opinions de Napoléon sur divers sujets de politique et d'administration, recueillies par un membre de son conseil d'état</i> (1833), p. 223</li></ul></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A circle can have only one centre but it can have numerous radii. The centre can be compared to <a href="/wiki/God" title="God">God</a> and the radii to religions. So, no one sect, no one religion or book can make an absolute claim of It. He who works for It gets It. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Swami_Narayanananda" title="Swami Narayanananda">Swami Narayanananda</a>, <i>Selected Articles 1933-86</i> (2002), p. 301</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The religion of some people is constrained; they are like people who use the cold bath — not for pleasure, but necessity, and for their health, they go in with reluctance, and is glad when they get out; but religion to a true believer is like water to a fish; it is his element, he lives in it, and could not live out of it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Newton" title="John Newton">John Newton</a>, letter, 24 January 1800, <i>The Aged Pilgrim's Triumph Over Sin and the Grave</i> (1825), p. 158</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>One of the fundamental points about religious <a href="/wiki/Humility" title="Humility">humility</a> is you say you don't know about the ultimate judgment. It's beyond your judgment. And if you equate God's judgment with your judgment, you have a wrong religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Reinhold_Niebuhr" title="Reinhold Niebuhr">Reinhold Niebuhr</a>, in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/multimedia/video/2008/wallace/niebuhr_reinhold_t.html"><i>The Mike Wallace Interview</i> ABC TV (27 April 1958)</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I will make an attempt to attain freedom, the youthful soul says to itself; and is it to be hindered in this by the fact that two nations happen to hate and fight one another, or that two continents are separated by an ocean, or that all around it a religion is taught which did not yet exist a couple of thousand years ago. All that is not you, it says to itself. No one can construct for you the bridge upon which precisely you must cross the stream of life, no one but you yourself alone. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Friedrich_Nietzsche" title="Friedrich Nietzsche">Friedrich Nietzsche</a>, <i>Untimely Meditations</i>, “<a href="/wiki/Schopenhauer" class="mw-redirect" title="Schopenhauer">Schopenhauer</a> as educator,” § 3.1, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._J._Hollingdale" class="extiw" title="w:R. J. Hollingdale">R. Hollingdale</a>, trans. (1983), pp. 128-129</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Even that Dionysus is a philosopher, and that gods, too, thus philosophy, seems to me a novelty that is far from innocuous and might arouse suspicion precisely among philosophers. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Friedrich_Nietzsche" title="Friedrich Nietzsche">Friedrich Nietzsche</a>, <i>Beyond Good and Evil</i> (1886)</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="O">O</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=15" title="Edit section: O"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Osho_1972_59.png" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8f/Osho_1972_59.png/220px-Osho_1972_59.png" decoding="async" width="220" height="186" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8f/Osho_1972_59.png/330px-Osho_1972_59.png 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8f/Osho_1972_59.png/440px-Osho_1972_59.png 2x" data-file-width="550" data-file-height="464" /></a><figcaption>The so-called <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mah%C4%81tm%C4%81" class="extiw" title="w:Mahātmā">mahatmas</a> and saints are all cowards. I have never come across a single mahatma&#8212;Hindu, Mohammedan, Christian, Buddhist&#8212;who can be said to be really a rebellious spirit. Unless one is rebellious, one is not religious. Rebellion is the very foundation of religion. ~ <a href="/wiki/Osho" class="mw-redirect" title="Osho">Osho</a></figcaption></figure> <ul><li>Ancient [Graeco-Roman] religion was tolerant and non-sectarian. In this it was unlike ancient philosophy. The adherents of Epicurean and Stoic philosophy fought long and acrimonious feuds, as one can see by reading <a href="/wiki/Lucretius" title="Lucretius">Lucretius</a>. The reason for this difference between religion and philosophy is that philosophers maintained various factual propositions about the world—that it was made of 'breath' or atoms, that it was finite or infinite, and so on—whereas ancient religions only presupposed the existence of forces capable of being persuaded by prayer and sacrifice. Since Roman religion offered no dogmas about the universe, there was nothing for people to contradict or to argue about. Philosophers, on the other hand, had elaborate systems which they defended to the last detail with grotesque ingenuity. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Maxwell_Ogilvie" class="extiw" title="w:Robert Maxwell Ogilvie">R. M. Ogilvie</a>, <i>The Romans and Their Gods</i> (1969), p. 3</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Reverend Lovejoy: This so-called new religion is nothing but a pack of weird rituals and chants, designed to take away the money of fools. Now let's say the Lord's Prayer 40 times, but first, let's pass the collection plate. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/The_Simpsons/Season_9" title="The Simpsons/Season 9">The Simpsons/Season 9</a> <i>The Joy of Sect</i>, written by Steve O'Donnell</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The so-called <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mah%C4%81tm%C4%81" class="extiw" title="w:Mahātmā">mahatmas</a> and saints are all cowards. I have never come across a single mahatma&#8212;Hindu, Mohammedan, Christian, Buddhist&#8212;who can be said to be really a rebellious spirit. Unless one is rebellious, one is not religious. Rebellion is the very foundation of religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Osho" class="mw-redirect" title="Osho">Osho</a>, <i>Autobiography of a Spiritually Incorrect Mystic</i> (2000), p. 19</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Expedit esse deos et, ut expedit, esse putemus.</i> <ul><li>The existence of the gods is expedient and, as it is expedient, let us assume it.</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Ovid" title="Ovid">Ovid</a>, <i>The Art of Love</i> (c. AD 2) I, 645</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="P">P</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=16" title="Edit section: P"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>Do they profess to have delighted us by telling us that they hold our <a href="/wiki/Soul" title="Soul">soul</a> to be only a little wind and smoke, especially by telling us this in a haughty and self-satisfied tone of <a href="/wiki/Voice" title="Voice">voice</a>? Is this a thing to say gaily? Is it not, on the contrary, a thing to say sadly, as the saddest thing in the world? <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Blaise_Pascal" title="Blaise Pascal">Blaise Pascal</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/Pens%C3%A9es" title="Pensées">Pensées</a></i> (1669), <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/18269/18269-h/18269-h.htm#p_194">194</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I cannot really endorse <a href="/wiki/Planck" class="mw-redirect" title="Planck">Planck</a>'s philosophy, even if it is <a href="/wiki/Logically" class="mw-redirect" title="Logically">logically</a> valid and even though I respect the <a href="/wiki/Human" title="Human">human</a> <a href="/wiki/Attitudes" class="mw-redirect" title="Attitudes">attitudes</a> to which it gives rise. <br /> <a href="/wiki/Einstein" class="mw-redirect" title="Einstein">Einstein</a>'s conception is closer to mine. His <a href="/wiki/God" title="God">God</a> is somehow involved in the immutable <a href="/wiki/Laws" class="mw-redirect" title="Laws">laws</a> of <a href="/wiki/Nature" title="Nature">nature</a>. Einstein has a feeling for the central order of things. He can detect it in the <a href="/wiki/Simplicity" title="Simplicity">simplicity</a> of natural laws. We may take it that he felt this simplicity very strongly and directly during his discovery of the theory of relativity. Admittedly, this is a far cry from the contents of religion. I don't believe Einstein is tied to any religious tradition, and I rather think the idea of a personal God is entirely foreign to him. But as far as he is concerned there is no split between science and religion: the central order is part of the subjective as well as the objective realm, and this strikes me as being a far better starting point. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Wolfgang_Pauli" title="Wolfgang Pauli">Wolfgang Pauli</a>, in statements after the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solvay_Conference" class="extiw" title="w:Solvay Conference"> Solvay Conference</a> of 1927, as quoted in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.edge.org/conversation/science-and-religion"><i>Physics and Beyond</i> (1971)</a> by <a href="/wiki/Werner_Heisenberg" title="Werner Heisenberg">Werner Heisenberg</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>È religione anche non credere in niente.</i> <ul><li>Not believing in anything is also religion.</li> <li><a href="/wiki/Cesare_Pavese" title="Cesare Pavese">Cesare Pavese</a>, <i>The house on the hill</i> (<i>La casa in collina</i>, 1949), Chapter 15</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>No pain, no palm; no thorns, no throne; no gall, no glory; no cross, no crown. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Penn" title="William Penn">William Penn</a>, <i>No Cross, No Crown</i> (1682)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Psychiatry" title="Psychiatry">Psychiatry</a>: it's the latest <a class="mw-selflink selflink">religion</a>. We decide what's <a href="/wiki/Right" class="mw-redirect" title="Right">right</a> and <a href="/wiki/Wrong" class="mw-redirect" title="Wrong">wrong</a>. We decide who's <a href="/wiki/Crazy" class="mw-redirect" title="Crazy">crazy</a> or not. I'm in trouble here. I'm losing my <a href="/wiki/Faith" title="Faith">faith</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/12_Monkeys" title="12 Monkeys">12 Monkeys</a> screenplay by David Peoples and Janet Peoples</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It was a friar of orders grey <br /> Walked forth to tell his beads. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Percy" class="mw-redirect" title="Thomas Percy">Thomas Percy</a>, <i>The Friar of Orders Grey</i> (based on an older ballad)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The psychology of the religious experience has been well-researched and taped. There are many paths up the mountain—sensory deprivation or sensory overload—emotional response to stimuli or the lack thereof is common. Drugs, of course, from psychoactives to the more mundane depressants. Electropophy can bring it about, as can organic brain damage, lack or excess of oxygen, even sex can trigger it. And what it is, according to the science of man and mue, is a subjective mental state, somewhere to the left of <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnosis" class="extiw" title="w:Hypnosis">hypnosis</a>. A trick the mind plays on itself. A <a href="/wiki/Delusion" title="Delusion">delusion</a>, void of <a href="/wiki/Reality" title="Reality">reality</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Steve_Perry" class="mw-redirect" title="Steve Perry">Steve Perry</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Man_Who_Never_Missed" class="extiw" title="w:The Man Who Never Missed">The Man Who Never Missed</a></i> (1985), <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-441-51916-4" title="Special:BookSources/0-441-51916-4">ISBN 0-441-51916-4</a>, pp. 56-57</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion, which true policy befriends, <br /> Design'd by <a href="/wiki/God" title="God">God</a> to serve man's noblest ends, <br /> Is by that old deceiver's subtle play <br /> Made the chief party in its own decay, <br /> And meets the eagle's <a href="/wiki/Destiny" title="Destiny">destiny</a>, whose breast <br /> Felt the same shaft which his own feathers drest. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katherine_Philips" class="extiw" title="w:Katherine Philips">Katherine Philips</a>, <i>On Controversies in Religion</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The Puritan did not stop to think; he recognized God in his soul, and acted. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Wendell_Phillips" title="Wendell Phillips">Wendell Phillips</a>, speech (18 December, 1859)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>All</i> religious expression is <a href="/wiki/Symbolism" class="mw-disambig" title="Symbolism">symbolism</a>; since we can describe only what we see, and the true objects of religion are <span style="font-variant:small-caps;text-transform:lowercase">The Seen</span>. The earliest instruments of <a href="/wiki/Education" title="Education">education</a> were symbols; and they and all other religious forms differed and still differ according to external circumstances and imagery, and according to differences of knowledge and mental cultivation. All <a href="/wiki/Language" title="Language">language</a> is symbolic, so far as it is applied to mental and spiritual phenomena and action. All <i><a href="/wiki/Words" title="Words">words</a></i> have, primarily, a <i>material</i> sense, howsoever they may afterward get, for the ignorant, a spiritual <i>non</i>-sense. To "retract," for example, is to <i>draw back</i>, and when applied to a statement, is symbolic, as much so as a picture of an arm drawn back, to express the same thing, would he. The very word "<a href="/wiki/Spirit" title="Spirit">spirit</a>" means " breath," from the Latin verb <i>spiro</i>, <i>breathe</i>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Pike" title="Albert Pike">Albert Pike</a>, <i>Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry</i> (1871), Ch. III&#160;: The Master, p. 62</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It is not in the <a href="/wiki/Books" title="Books">books</a> of the <a href="/wiki/Philosophers" class="mw-redirect" title="Philosophers">Philosophers</a>, but in the religious <a href="/wiki/Symbolism" class="mw-disambig" title="Symbolism">symbolism</a> of the Ancients, that we must look for the footprints of <a href="/wiki/Science" title="Science">Science</a>, and re-discover the <a href="/wiki/Mysteries" class="mw-redirect" title="Mysteries">Mysteries</a> of <a href="/wiki/Knowledge" title="Knowledge">Knowledge</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Albert_Pike" title="Albert Pike">Albert Pike</a>, <i>Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry</i> (1871), Ch. XXXII&#160;: Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret</li></ul></li></ul> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Plejanov1917.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f9/Plejanov1917.jpg/220px-Plejanov1917.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="272" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f9/Plejanov1917.jpg/330px-Plejanov1917.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f9/Plejanov1917.jpg/440px-Plejanov1917.jpg 2x" data-file-width="944" data-file-height="1168" /></a><figcaption>People look for a path in the <a href="/wiki/Heaven" title="Heaven">heavens</a> for the simple reason that they have lost their way on earth.<br /> ~ <a href="/wiki/Georgi_Plekhanov" title="Georgi Plekhanov">Georgi Plekhanov</a></figcaption></figure> <ul><li>People [who belong in this environment] look for a path in the heavens for the simple reason that they have lost their way on earth. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Georgi_Plekhanov" title="Georgi Plekhanov">Georgi Plekhanov</a>, <i><a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://libelli.ru/works/pi3-1/iii8.htm">On the so-called religious searches in Russia</a></i>, 1909, article 3 (Gospel from decadence), chapter 8, first paragraph. <ul><li>Original: <i>Люди, принадлежащие к этой среде, ищут пути на небо по той простой причине, что они сбились с дороги на земле.</i></li></ul></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>We have a Calvinistic creed, a Popish liturgy, and an Arminian clergy. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Pitt,_1st_Earl_of_Chatham" title="William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham">William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham</a>, speech in the House of Lords (19 May 1772) The exact text was unrecorded, <a href="/wiki/Edmund_Burke" title="Edmund Burke">Edmund Burke</a> reported this version in a speech (2 March, 1790) see <i>Prior's Life of Burke</i>. Ch. X. (1824)</li></ul></li></ul> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Laying_on_of_hands.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7a/Laying_on_of_hands.jpg/220px-Laying_on_of_hands.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="160" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7a/Laying_on_of_hands.jpg/330px-Laying_on_of_hands.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7a/Laying_on_of_hands.jpg/440px-Laying_on_of_hands.jpg 2x" data-file-width="593" data-file-height="431" /></a><figcaption><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transference" class="extiw" title="w:Transference">Transference</a> of <a href="/wiki/Fear" title="Fear">fear</a> and <a href="/w/index.php?title=Self-loathing&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1" class="new" title="Self-loathing (page does not exist)">self-loathing</a> to an <a href="/wiki/Authoritarian" class="mw-redirect" title="Authoritarian">authoritarian</a> vessel. It's <a href="/wiki/Catharsis" title="Catharsis">catharsis</a>. He absorbs their <a href="/wiki/Dread" class="mw-redirect" title="Dread">dread</a> with his <a href="/wiki/Narrative" class="mw-redirect" title="Narrative">narrative</a>. Because of this, he's effective in proportion to the amount of <a href="/wiki/Certainty" title="Certainty">certainty</a> he can <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychological_projection" class="extiw" title="w:Psychological projection">project</a>. Certain <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_anthropology" class="extiw" title="w:Linguistic anthropology">linguistic anthropologists</a> think that religion is a language virus that rewrites pathways in the brain. Dulls <a href="/wiki/Critical_thinking" title="Critical thinking">critical thinking</a>. ~ <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nic_Pizzolatto" class="extiw" title="w:Nic Pizzolatto">Nic Pizzolatto</a></figcaption></figure> <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transference" class="extiw" title="w:Transference">Transference</a> of <a href="/wiki/Fear" title="Fear">fear</a> and <a href="/w/index.php?title=Self-loathing&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1" class="new" title="Self-loathing (page does not exist)">self-loathing</a> to an <a href="/wiki/Authoritarian" class="mw-redirect" title="Authoritarian">authoritarian</a> vessel. It's <a href="/wiki/Catharsis" title="Catharsis">catharsis</a>. He absorbs their <a href="/wiki/Dread" class="mw-redirect" title="Dread">dread</a> with his <a href="/wiki/Narrative" class="mw-redirect" title="Narrative">narrative</a>. Because of this, he's effective in proportion to the amount of <a href="/wiki/Certainty" title="Certainty">certainty</a> he can <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychological_projection" class="extiw" title="w:Psychological projection">project</a>. Certain <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_anthropology" class="extiw" title="w:Linguistic anthropology">linguistic anthropologists</a> think that religion is a language virus that rewrites pathways in the brain. Dulls <a href="/wiki/Critical_thinking" title="Critical thinking">critical thinking</a>. <ul><li><a href="/w/index.php?title=Detective&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1" class="new" title="Detective (page does not exist)">Detective</a> <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rustin_Cohle" class="extiw" title="w:Rustin Cohle">Rustin "Rust" Cohle</a> as interpreted by <a href="/wiki/Matthew_McConaughey" title="Matthew McConaughey">Matthew McConaughey</a> in <i><a href="/wiki/True_Detective" title="True Detective">True Detective</a></i>, "<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Locked_Room_(True_Detective)" class="extiw" title="w:The Locked Room (True Detective)">The Locked Room</a>", written by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nic_Pizzolatto" class="extiw" title="w:Nic Pizzolatto">Nic Pizzolatto</a>, (January 26, 2014)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>So upright Quakers please both man and God. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Alexander_Pope" title="Alexander Pope">Alexander Pope</a>, <i>The Dunciad</i> (1728; 1735; 1743), Book IV, line 208</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>To happy convents, bosom'd deep in vines, <br /> Where slumber abbots purple as their wines. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Alexander_Pope" title="Alexander Pope">Alexander Pope</a>, <i>The Dunciad</i> (1728; 1735; 1743), Book IV, line 301</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion, blushing, veils her sacred fires, <br /> And unawares <a href="/wiki/Morality" title="Morality">Morality</a> expires. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Alexander_Pope" title="Alexander Pope">Alexander Pope</a>, <i>The Dunciad</i> (1728; 1735; 1743), Book IV, line 649</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>For <a href="/wiki/Virtue" title="Virtue">virtue</a>'s self may too much zeal be had; <br /> The worst of madmen is a <a href="/wiki/Saint" class="mw-redirect" title="Saint">saint</a> run mad. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Alexander_Pope" title="Alexander Pope">Alexander Pope</a>, <i>To Murray</i>, Epistle VI. of Horace, line 26</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I think while zealots fast and frown, <br /> And fight for two or seven, <br /> That there are fifty roads to town, <br /> And rather more to <a href="/wiki/Heaven" title="Heaven">Heaven</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Winthrop_Mackworth_Praed" title="Winthrop Mackworth Praed">Winthrop Mackworth Praed</a>, <i>Chant of Brazen Head</i>, Stanza 8</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Suddenly he was angry.<br />“And that’s what you think religion is, is it?” he said, trying to keep his temper.<br />“I gen’rally don’t think about it at all,” said the voice behind him. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Discworld" title="Discworld">Terry Pratchett</a>, <i>Carpe Jugulum</i> (1998)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>“Now if <i>I’d</i> seen him, really there, really alive, it’d be in me like a fever. If I thought there was some god who really did care two hoots about people, who watched ‘em like a father and cared for ‘em like a mother...well, you wouldn’t catch me sayin’ things like ‘there are two sides to every question’ and ‘we must respect other people’s beliefs.’ You wouldn’t find <i>me</i> just being gen’rally nice in the hope that it’d all turn out right in the end, not if that flame was burning in me like an unforgivin’ sword. And I did say burnin’, Mister Oats, ‘cos that’s what it’d be. You say that you people don’t burn folk and sacrifice people anymore, but that’s what true faith would mean, y’see? Sacrificin’ your own life, one day at a time, to the flame, declarin’ the truth of it, workin’ for it, breathin’ the soul of it. <i>That’s</i> religion. Anything else is just...is just bein’ <i>nice.</i> And a way of keepin’ in touch with the neighbors.” <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Discworld" title="Discworld">Terry Pratchett</a>, <i>Carpe Jugulum</i> (1998)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The Auditors had tried to understand religion, because so much that made no sense whatsoever was done in its name. But it could also excuse practically any kind of eccentricity. Genocide, for example. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Discworld" title="Discworld">Terry Pratchett</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thief_of_Time" class="extiw" title="w:Thief of Time">Thief of Time</a></i> (2001), <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/_0-06-103132-1" title="Special:BookSources/ 0-06-103132-1">ISBN 0-06-103132-1</a>, pp. 221-222</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The fool hath said in his heart, There is no <a href="/wiki/God" title="God">God</a>. <ul><li><i><a href="/wiki/Psalms" title="Psalms">Psalms</a></i> 14:1</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Let a man be firmly principled in his religion, he may travel from the tropics to the poles, it will never catch cold on the journey. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Morley_Punshon" title="William Morley Punshon">William Morley Punshon</a>, <i>Lectures and Sermons</i> (1877) "Daniel in Babylon" p. 8</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Q">Q</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=17" title="Edit section: Q"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>He that hath no cross deserves no crown. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Quarles" class="extiw" title="w:Frances Quarles">Frances Quarles</a>, <i>Hadassa</i> (1621)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>They say: "If it had been the will of The Most Gracious, we should not have worshiped such (deities)!" Of that they have no knowledge! they do nothing but lie! Indeed, have We given them a Scripture before this, to which they are holding fast? Nay! they say: "We found our fathers following a certain religion, and we do guide ourselves by their footsteps." Just in the same way, whenever We sent a Warner before thee to any people, the wealthy ones among them said: "We found our fathers following a certain religion, and we will certainly follow in their footsteps." He said: "Even if I brought you better guidance than that which ye found your fathers following?" They said: "For us, we deny that ye are sent!" So We exacted retribution from them: now see what was the end of those who rejected! <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Quran" title="Quran">Quran</a> 43:20-25</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Western psychologists accuse religion of repressing the vital energy of man and rendering his life quite miserable as a result of the sense of guilt which especially obsesses the religious people and makes them imagine that all their actions are sinful and can only be expiated through abstention from enjoying the pleasures of life. Those psychologists add that Europe lived in the darkness of ignorance as long as it adhered to its religion but once it freed itself from the fetters of religion, its emotions were liberated and accordingly it achieved wonders in the field of production. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Muhammad_Qutb" title="Muhammad Qutb">Muhammad Qutb</a> Chapter 4, <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.islam4all.com/newpage17.htm">Islam and Sexual Repression</a></li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="R">R</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=18" title="Edit section: R"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Ramakrishna_at_studio.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5e/Ramakrishna_at_studio.jpg/220px-Ramakrishna_at_studio.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="281" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5e/Ramakrishna_at_studio.jpg/330px-Ramakrishna_at_studio.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5e/Ramakrishna_at_studio.jpg/440px-Ramakrishna_at_studio.jpg 2x" data-file-width="800" data-file-height="1020" /></a><figcaption>Common <a href="/wiki/Men" class="mw-redirect" title="Men">men</a> <a href="/wiki/Talk" title="Talk">talk</a> <i>bagfuls</i> of religion but do not practise even a <i>grain</i> of it. The <a href="/wiki/Wise" class="mw-redirect" title="Wise">wise</a> <a href="/wiki/Man" title="Man">man</a> <a href="/wiki/Speaks" class="mw-redirect" title="Speaks">speaks</a> little, even though his whole <a href="/wiki/Life" title="Life">life</a> is religion expressed in <a href="/wiki/Action" title="Action">action</a>. ~ <a href="/wiki/Ramakrishna" title="Ramakrishna">Ramakrishna</a></figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:William_Winwood_Reade_(1910)_headshot.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a6/William_Winwood_Reade_%281910%29_headshot.jpg/220px-William_Winwood_Reade_%281910%29_headshot.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="343" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a6/William_Winwood_Reade_%281910%29_headshot.jpg/330px-William_Winwood_Reade_%281910%29_headshot.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a6/William_Winwood_Reade_%281910%29_headshot.jpg/440px-William_Winwood_Reade_%281910%29_headshot.jpg 2x" data-file-width="666" data-file-height="1039" /></a><figcaption>As the <a href="/wiki/Saints" title="Saints">saints</a> and <a href="/wiki/Prophets" class="mw-redirect" title="Prophets">prophets</a> were often forced to practise long vigils and fastings and prayers before their ecstasies would fall upon them and their visions would appear, so <a href="/wiki/Virtue" title="Virtue">Virtue</a> in its purest and most exalted form can only be acquired by means of severe and long continued culture of the mind. Persons with feeble and untrained intellects may live according to their conscience; but the conscience itself will be defective. … To cultivate the intellect is therefore a religious duty; and when this truth is fairly only recognized by men, the religion which teaches that the intellect should be distrusted and that it should be subservient to faith, will inevitably fall. ~ <a href="/wiki/William_Winwood_Reade" title="William Winwood Reade">William Winwood Reade</a></figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:AnttlersNewM45.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7e/AnttlersNewM45.jpg/220px-AnttlersNewM45.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="147" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7e/AnttlersNewM45.jpg/330px-AnttlersNewM45.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7e/AnttlersNewM45.jpg/440px-AnttlersNewM45.jpg 2x" data-file-width="1737" data-file-height="1160" /></a><figcaption>In the presence of infinite might and infinite wisdom, the strength of the strongest man is but weakness, and the keenest of mortal eyes see but dimly. ~ <a href="/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt" title="Theodore Roosevelt">Theodore Roosevelt</a> </figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Religions_4x5.png" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4d/Religions_4x5.png/220px-Religions_4x5.png" decoding="async" width="220" height="273" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4d/Religions_4x5.png/330px-Religions_4x5.png 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4d/Religions_4x5.png/440px-Religions_4x5.png 2x" data-file-width="737" data-file-height="915" /></a><figcaption>Discrimination against the holder of one faith means retaliatory discrimination against men of other faiths. The inevitable result of entering upon such a practice would be an abandonment of our real freedom of conscience and a reversion to the dreadful conditions of religious dissension which in so many lands have proved fatal to true liberty, to true religion, and to all advance in civilization. ~ <a href="/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt" title="Theodore Roosevelt">Theodore Roosevelt</a> </figcaption></figure> <ul><li>Common men talk <i>bagfuls</i> of religion but do not practise even a <i>grain</i> of it. The wise man speaks little, even though his whole life is religion expressed in action. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ramakrishna" title="Ramakrishna">Ramakrishna</a>, <i>Sayings of Ramakrishna</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>As the saints and prophets were often forced to practise long vigils and fastings and prayers before their ecstasies would fall upon them and their visions would appear, so <a href="/wiki/Virtue" title="Virtue">Virtue</a> in its purest and most exalted form can only be acquired by means of severe and long continued culture of the mind. Persons with feeble and untrained intellects may live according to their conscience; but the conscience itself will be defective. … To cultivate the intellect is therefore a religious duty; and when this truth is fairly recognized by men, the religion which teaches that the intellect should be distrusted and that it should be subservient to faith, will inevitably fall. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Winwood_Reade" title="William Winwood Reade">William Winwood Reade</a>, <i>The Martyrdom of Man</i> (1872), p. 540</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>I’m not a practitioner of any religion, and I like it that way.</i> <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Resnick" class="extiw" title="w:Mike Resnick">Mike Resnick</a>, <i>The Godstone of Venus,</i> in <a href="/wiki/George_R._R._Martin" title="George R. R. Martin">George R. R. Martin</a> &amp; <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gardner_Dozois" class="extiw" title="w:Gardner Dozois">Gardner Dozois</a> (eds.) <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Venus" class="extiw" title="w:Old Venus">Old Venus</a></i> (2015), p. 542</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>If a person who indulges in gluttony is a glutton, and a person who commits a felony is a felon, then God is an iron. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Spider_Robinson" title="Spider Robinson">Spider Robinson</a>, in "God Is An Iron" (1977)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I listened to the sermon, and I remember complete astonishment because what they were talking about were things that were just crazy. It was communion time, where you eat this wafer and are supposed to be eating the body of Christ and drinking his blood. My first impression was, "This is a bunch of cannibals they've put me down among!" For some time, I puzzled over this and puzzled over why they were saying these things, because the connection between what they were saying and reality was very tenuous. How the hell did Jesus become something to be eaten?</li></ul> <dl><dd>I guess from that time it was clear to me that religion was largely nonsense--largely <a href="/wiki/Magical" class="mw-redirect" title="Magical">magical</a>, <a href="/wiki/Superstitious" class="mw-redirect" title="Superstitious">superstitious</a> things. In my own teen life, I just couldn't see any point in adopting something based on magic, which was obviously phony and superstitious. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Gene_Roddenberry" title="Gene Roddenberry">Gene Roddenberry</a>, <i>The Humanist</i>, Mar/Apr 1991</li></ul></dd></dl> <ul><li>I condemn false prophets, I condemn the effort to take away the power of rational decision, to drain people of their free will — and a hell of a lot of money in the bargain. Religions vary in their degree of idiocy, but I reject them all. For most people, religion is nothing more than a substitute for a malfunctioning brain. <ul><li>Gene Roddenberry, as quoted in <i>In His Name</i> (2010) by E. Christopher Reyes, p. 39</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Let us also bear in mind that all the ancient religions, without exception, were divided into esoteric and exoteric. Indeed, much has become complicated in our Christian religion due to the fact that the clergy lost, or rather rejected, the key to the understanding of Christ's Teaching. This Teaching is full of esotericism, as is continuously confirmed by the words of Christ Himself. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Helena_Roerich" title="Helena Roerich">Helena Roerich</a> <i>Letters of Helena Roerich I,</i> (1 February 1935)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>One may be quite sure that the conventional religious instruction, without the knowledge of the One Source, without the comparative history of the religions of all nations, gives only a false concept of the spiritual evolution of humanity and develops a sense of religious intolerance. Intolerance is a terrible scourge of the human race, and it contradicts all the Covenants of the Founders of the existing religions. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Helena_Roerich" title="Helena Roerich">Helena Roerich</a> <i>Letters of Helena Roerich I,</i> (22 March 1935)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Wrong are the assertions found in books that all religions and teachings discuss the low level of woman. Such discussions as do appear are the distortions and additions made in later times by those holding power through avarice and ignorance. Verily, the Great Founders of religions and teachings are not to be blamed for this crying ignorance. Let us consider how many dishonest and avaricious hands have handled these teachings during thousands of years! <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Helena_Roerich" title="Helena Roerich">Helena Roerich</a> <i>Letters of Helena Roerich I,</i> (31 May 1935)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In the presence of infinite might and infinite wisdom, the strength of the strongest man is but weakness, and the keenest of mortal eyes see but dimly. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt" title="Theodore Roosevelt">Theodore Roosevelt</a>'s Christian Citizenship Address before the Young Men's Christian Association, Carnegie Hall, New York, 30 December 1900</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The demand for a statement of a candidate’s religious belief can have no meaning except that there may be discrimination for or against him because of that belief. Discrimination against the holder of one faith means retaliatory discrimination against men of other faiths. The inevitable result of entering upon such a practice would be an abandonment of our real freedom of conscience and a reversion to the dreadful conditions of religious dissension which in so many lands have proved fatal to true liberty, to true religion, and to all advance in civilization. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt" title="Theodore Roosevelt">Theodore Roosevelt</a>'s <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.theodore-roosevelt.com/images/research/txtspeeches/307.txt">Letter to Mr. J.C. Martin concerning religion and politics (November 6, 1908)</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Locke" title="John Locke">Locke</a> would have us begin with the study of spirits and go on to that of bodies. This is the method of superstition, prejudice, and error; it is not the method of nature, nor even that of well-ordered reason; it is to learn to see by shutting our eyes. We must have studied bodies long enough before we can form any true idea of spirits, or even suspect that there are such beings. The contrary practice merely puts materialism on a firmer footing. I am aware that many of my readers will be surprised to find me tracing the course of my scholar through his early years without speaking to him of religion. At fifteen he will not even know that he has a soul, at eighteen even he may not be ready to learn about it. For if he learns about it too soon, there is the risk of his never really knowing anything about it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Jean_Jacques_Rousseau" class="mw-redirect" title="Jean Jacques Rousseau">Jean Jacques Rousseau</a> Emile Book IV</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Ils ont les textes pour eux; disait-il, j'en suis faché pour les textes. <ul><li><i>Translated</i>: They have the texts in their favor; said he, so much the worse for the texts.</li> <li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Paul_Royer-Collard" class="extiw" title="w:Pierre Paul Royer-Collard">Pierre Paul Royer-Collard</a>, <i>Dictionnaire de Sciences Philosophiques</i> (Paris 1851, vol. V) "Life of M. Royer Collard" p. 442</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The ultimate source of our civilization's disease is the spiritual and religious crisis which has overtaken all of us and which each must master for himself. Above all, man is <i>Homo religiosus</i>, and yet we have, for the past century, made the desperate attempt to get along without God, and in the place of God we have set up the cult of man, his profane or even ungodly science and art, his technical achievements, and his State. We may be certain that some day the whole world will come to see, in a blinding flash, what is now clear to only a few, namely, that this desperate attempt has created a situation in which man can have no spiritual and moral life, and this means that he cannot live at all for any length of time, in spite of television and speedways and holiday trips and comfortable apartments. We seem to have proved the existence of God in yet another way: by the practical consequences of His assumed non-existence. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Wilhelm_R%C3%B6pke" title="Wilhelm Röpke">Wilhelm Röpke</a>, <i>A Humane Economy: The Social Framework of the Free Market</i> (1958)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Humanity and Immortality consist neither in reason, nor in love; not in the body, nor in the animation of the heart of it, nor in the thoughts and stirrings of the brain of it;]], <i>but in the dedication of them all to Him who will raise them up at the last day.</i> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Ruskin" title="John Ruskin">John Ruskin</a>, <i>Stones of Venice</i>. Vol. I. Ch. II</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I do not think that the real reason why people accept religion is anything to do with argumentation. They accept religion on emotional grounds. One is often told that it is a very wrong thing to attack religion, because religion makes men virtuous. So I am told; I have not noticed it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Bertrand_Russell" title="Bertrand Russell">Bertrand Russell</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Why_I_Am_Not_a_Christian" class="extiw" title="w:Why I Am Not a Christian">Why I Am Not a Christian</a></i> (1927)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>My own view on religion is that of Lucretius. I regard it as a disease born of fear and as a source of untold misery to the human race. I cannot, however, deny that it has made some contributions to civilization. It helped in early days to fix the calendar, and it caused Egyptian priests to chronicle eclipses with such care that in time they became able to predict them. These two services I am prepared to acknowledge, but I do not know of any others. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Bertrand_Russell" title="Bertrand Russell">Bertrand Russell</a>, <i>Has Religion Made Useful Contributions to Civilization?</i> (1930)</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="S">S</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=19" title="Edit section: S"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Double-alaskan-rainbow.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5c/Double-alaskan-rainbow.jpg/220px-Double-alaskan-rainbow.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="116" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5c/Double-alaskan-rainbow.jpg/330px-Double-alaskan-rainbow.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5c/Double-alaskan-rainbow.jpg/440px-Double-alaskan-rainbow.jpg 2x" data-file-width="1919" data-file-height="1008" /></a><figcaption>Faith: The opposite of dogmatism. ~ <a href="/wiki/John_Ralston_Saul" title="John Ralston Saul">John Ralston Saul</a> </figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:F_Schlegel.JPG" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/90/F_Schlegel.JPG/220px-F_Schlegel.JPG" decoding="async" width="220" height="329" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/90/F_Schlegel.JPG/330px-F_Schlegel.JPG 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/90/F_Schlegel.JPG/440px-F_Schlegel.JPG 2x" data-file-width="441" data-file-height="659" /></a><figcaption>The relation of the true artist and the true human being to his ideals is absolutely religious. The man for whom this inner divine service is the end and occupation of all his life is a priest, and this is how everyone can and should become a priest. ~&#160;<a href="/wiki/Friedrich_Schlegel" title="Friedrich Schlegel">Friedrich&#160;Schlegel</a></figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Ary_Scheffer_-_The_Temptation_of_Christ_(1854).jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/fa/Ary_Scheffer_-_The_Temptation_of_Christ_%281854%29.jpg/220px-Ary_Scheffer_-_The_Temptation_of_Christ_%281854%29.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="316" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/fa/Ary_Scheffer_-_The_Temptation_of_Christ_%281854%29.jpg/330px-Ary_Scheffer_-_The_Temptation_of_Christ_%281854%29.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/fa/Ary_Scheffer_-_The_Temptation_of_Christ_%281854%29.jpg/440px-Ary_Scheffer_-_The_Temptation_of_Christ_%281854%29.jpg 2x" data-file-width="1500" data-file-height="2152" /></a><figcaption>In the most deeply significant of the legends concerning <a href="/wiki/Jesus" title="Jesus">Jesus</a>, we are told how the devil took him up into a high mountain and showed him all the kingdoms of the world in a moment of time… <a href="/wiki/Upton_Sinclair" title="Upton Sinclair">Upton Sinclair</a> </figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Moreau_Pieta.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7a/Moreau_Pieta.jpg/220px-Moreau_Pieta.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="286" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7a/Moreau_Pieta.jpg/330px-Moreau_Pieta.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7a/Moreau_Pieta.jpg/440px-Moreau_Pieta.jpg 2x" data-file-width="461" data-file-height="600" /></a><figcaption>Jesus, as we know, answered and said "Get thee behind me, Satan!" And he really meant it; he would have nothing to do with worldly glory, with "temporal power;" he chose the career of a revolutionary agitator, and died the death of a disturber of the peace. ~ <a href="/wiki/Upton_Sinclair" title="Upton Sinclair">Upton Sinclair</a> </figcaption></figure> <ul><li>In science it often happens that scientists say, "You know that's a really good argument; my position is mistaken," and then they would actually change their minds and you never hear that old view from them again. They really do it. It doesn't happen as often as it should, because scientists are human and change is sometimes painful. But it happens every day. I cannot recall the last time something like that happened in politics or religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Carl_Sagan" title="Carl Sagan">Carl Sagan</a> (1987) Keynote address at CSICOP conference, as quoted in <i>Do Science and the Bible Conflict?</i> (2003) by Judson Poling, p. 30</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I’m naturally suspicious of people who wear religion heavily on their sleeves.</li> <li>The whole point in having a religion and faith is that you campaign for what you believe, not just for what you think is achievable. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Alex_Salmond" title="Alex Salmond">Alex Salmond</a>, in an interview with <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tablet" class="extiw" title="wikipedia:The Tablet">The Tablet</a></i>. <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://archive.thetablet.co.uk/page/25th-july-2009/6">Bridge Builder, Page 6.</a> (25 July 2009)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I won't take my religion from any man who never works except with his mouth and never cherishes any memory except the face of the woman on the American silver dollar. <br /> I ask you to come through and show me where you're pouring out the blood of your life. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Carl_Sandburg" title="Carl Sandburg">Carl Sandburg</a>, in "To a Contemporary Bunkshooter" in <i>Chicago Poems</i> (1916), p. 63</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Matters of religion should never be matters of controversy. We neither argue with a lover about his taste, nor condemn him, if we are just, for knowing so human a passion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/George_Santayana" title="George Santayana">George Santayana</a>,<i>The Life of Reason</i> (1905-1906) Vol. III, Ch. VI</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Faith: The opposite of dogmatism. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Ralston_Saul" title="John Ralston Saul">John Ralston Saul</a>, <i>The Doubter's Companion: A Dictionary of Aggressive Common Sense</i> (1994): "Faith"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There are as many gods as there are ideals. And further, the relation of the true artist and the true human being to his ideals is absolutely religious. The man for whom this inner divine service is the end and occupation of all his life is a priest, and this is how everyone can and should become a priest. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Friedrich_Schlegel" title="Friedrich Schlegel">Friedrich Schlegel</a>, <i>Philosophical Fragments</i>, P. Firchow, trans. (1991) § 406</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is the masterpiece of the art of animal training, for it trains people as to how they shall think. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Arthur_Schopenhauer" title="Arthur Schopenhauer">Arthur Schopenhauer</a>, <i>Studies in Pessimism</i> (1890)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>If, while hurrying ostensibly to the temple of truth, we hand the reins over to our personal interests which look aside at very different guiding stars, for instance at the tastes and foibles of our contemporaries, at the established religion, but in particular at the hints and suggestions of those at the head of affairs, then how shall we ever reach the high, precipitous, bare rock whereon stands the temple of truth? <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Arthur_Schopenhauer" title="Arthur Schopenhauer">Arthur Schopenhauer</a>, "Sketch of a History of the Doctrine of the Ideal and the Real," <i>Parerga and Paralipomena</i> (1851), as translated by E. Payne (1974), Vol. 1, p. 3</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>So, what did we do for nearly 250,000 years? We huddled in caves and around small fires, fearful of the things that we didn't understand. It was more than explaining why the sun came up, it was the mystery of enormous birds with heads of men and rocks that came to life. <b>So we called them 'gods' and 'demons', begged them to spare us, and prayed for salvation.</b> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/SCP_Foundation" title="SCP Foundation">SCP Foundation</a>, <i><a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/about-the-scp-foundation">About The SCP Foundation</a></i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><b>The core of common culture is religion.</b> Tribes survive and flourish because they have gods, who fuse many wills into a single will, and demand and reward the sacrifices on which social life depends. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Roger_Scruton" title="Roger Scruton">Roger Scruton</a>, <i>Modern Culture</i> (2000), p. 5</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is like the fashion, one man wears his doublet slashed, another laced, another plain; but every man has a doublet; so every man has a religion. We differ about the trimming. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Selden" title="John Selden">John Selden</a>, <i>Table Talk</i> (Ed. 1696), p. 157.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>[Lord Shaftesbury said] "All wise men are of the same religion." Whereupon a lady in the room … demanded what that religion was. To whom Lord Shaftesbury straight replied, "Madam, wise men never tell." <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Anthony_Ashley-Cooper,_3rd_Earl_of_Shaftesbury" title="Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury">Lord Shaftesbury</a>, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Toland" class="extiw" title="w:John Toland">John Toland</a>, <i>Clidophorus</i>. Ch. XIII. <ul><li>Attributed to <a href="/wiki/Samuel_Rogers" title="Samuel Rogers">Samuel Rogers</a> by <a href="/wiki/James_Anthony_Froude" title="James Anthony Froude">Froude</a>, <i>Short Studies on Great Subjects. Plea for the Free Discussion of Theological Difficulties</i>; attributed also to Franklin.</li></ul></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I always thought <br /> It was both impious and unnatural <br /> That such immanity and bloody strife <br /> Should reign among professors of one faith. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Shakespeare" title="William Shakespeare">William Shakespeare</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/Henry_VI,_Part_1" title="Henry VI, Part 1">Henry VI</a></i>, Part I, Act V, scene 1, line 11</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In religion, <br /> What damned error, but some sober brow <br /> Will bless it and approve it with a text. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Shakespeare" title="William Shakespeare">William Shakespeare</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/The_Merchant_of_Venice" title="The Merchant of Venice">The Merchant of Venice</a></i>, Act III, scene 2, line 77</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The ground of all religion, that which makes it possible, is the relation in which the human soul stands to God. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Campbell_Shairp" title="John Campbell Shairp">John Campbell Shairp</a>, <i>Culture and Religion</i> (1870) p. 14</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>They who seek religion for culture's sake are aesthetic, not religious, and will never gain that grace which religion adds to culture, because they never can have the religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Campbell_Shairp" title="John Campbell Shairp">John Campbell Shairp</a>, <i>Culture and Religion</i> (1870) pp. 62-63</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>But now I think the belief in a Divine education, open to each man and to all men, takes up into itself all that is true in the end proposed by culture, supplements, and perfects it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Campbell_Shairp" title="John Campbell Shairp">John Campbell Shairp</a>, <i>Culture and Religion</i> (1870) p. 131</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There is only one religion, though there are a hundred versions of it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/George_Bernard_Shaw" title="George Bernard Shaw">George Bernard Shaw</a>, <i>Plays Pleasant and Unpleasant</i>, Vol. II, preface (1898)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I can't talk religion to a man with bodily hunger in his eyes. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/George_Bernard_Shaw" title="George Bernard Shaw">George Bernard Shaw</a>, <i>Major Barbara</i> Act II (1905)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is a great force — the only real motive force in the world; but what you fellows don't understand is that you must get at a man through his own religion and not through yours. Instead of facing that fact, you persist in trying to convert all men to your own little sect, so that you can use it against them afterwards. You are all missionaries and proselytizers trying to uproot the native religion from your neighbor's flowerbeds and plant your own in its place. You would rather let a child perish in ignorance than have it taught by a rival sectary. You can talk to me of the quintessential equality of coal merchants and British officers; and yet you can't see the quintessential equality of all the religions. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/George_Bernard_Shaw" title="George Bernard Shaw">George Bernard Shaw</a> in <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Getting_Married" class="extiw" title="w:Getting Married">Getting Married</a></i> (1908)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The moon of Mahomet <br /> Arose, and it shall set: <br /> While, blazoned as on heaven's immortal noon, <br /> The cross leads generations on. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Percy_Bysshe_Shelley" title="Percy Bysshe Shelley">Percy Bysshe Shelley</a>, <i>Hellas</i> (1821), line 237</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Human pride / Is skilful to invent most serious names / To hide its ignorance. <br /> The name of God / Has fenced about all crime with holiness. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Percy_Bysshe_Shelley" title="Percy Bysshe Shelley">Percy Bysshe Shelley</a>, <i>Queen Mab</i>, Part VII</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Indeed, I am a free rider, but only in the freedom from one set of cultural traditions usually gathered under the umbrella of religion. But, like everyone else, I face judges that are in their own ways transcendent and powerful: family and friends, colleagues and peers, mentors and teachers, and society at large. My judges may be lowercased and occasionally deceivable, but they are transcendent of me as an individual, even if they are not transcendent of nature; as such, together, we all stand in a long pilgrim community struggling down the evolutionary and historical ages trying to live and love and learn to temper our temptations and do the right thing. I may be free from God, but the god of nature holds me to her temple of judgment no less than her other creations. I stand before my maker and judge not in some distant and future ethereal world, but in the reality of this world, a world inhabited not by spiritual and supernatural ephemera, but by real people whose lives are directly affected by my actions, and whose actions directly affect my life. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Michael_Shermer" title="Michael Shermer">Michael Shermer</a> in <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Science_of_Good_and_Evil" class="extiw" title="w:The Science of Good and Evil">The Science of Good and Evil</a></i> (2004).</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>the world cannot stay narrow anymore. We are<br />building bridges among religions <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Naomi_Shihab_Nye" title="Naomi Shihab Nye">Naomi Shihab Nye</a> Voices in the Air: Poems for Listeners (2018)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Sol found their tracts the usual combination of double talk and navel lint-gathering common to most religions. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Dan_Simmons" title="Dan Simmons">Dan Simmons</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperion_(Simmons_novel)" class="extiw" title="w:Hyperion (Simmons novel)">Hyperion</a></i> (1989), Chapter 4</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In the absence of choice and knowledge, cultures often turn to religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Dan_Simmons" title="Dan Simmons">Dan Simmons</a>, <i>Orphans of the Helix</i> (1999), reprinted in <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_G._Hartwell" class="extiw" title="w:David G. Hartwell">David G. Hartwell</a> (ed.), <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Space_Opera_Renaissance" class="extiw" title="w:The Space Opera Renaissance">The Space Opera Renaissance</a>,</i> <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-765-30618-2" title="Special:BookSources/0-765-30618-2">ISBN 0-765-30618-2</a>, p. 331</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Government oppressed the body of the wage-slave, but Religion oppressed his mind, and poisoned the stream of progress at its source. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Upton_Sinclair" title="Upton Sinclair">Upton Sinclair</a>, <i>The Jungle</i> (1906), Ch. 31</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In the most deeply significant of the legends concerning <a href="/wiki/Jesus" title="Jesus">Jesus</a>, we are told how the <a href="/wiki/Devil" title="Devil">devil</a> took him up into a high mountain and showed him all the kingdoms of the <a href="/wiki/World" title="World">world</a> in a moment of <a href="/wiki/Time" title="Time">time</a>; and the devil said unto him: "All this <a href="/wiki/Power" title="Power">power</a> will I give unto thee, and the <a href="/wiki/Glory" title="Glory">glory</a> of them, for that is delivered unto me, and to whomsoever I will, I give it. If thou, therefore, wilt worship me, all shall be thine." Jesus, as we know, answered and said "Get thee behind me, <a href="/wiki/Satan" title="Satan">Satan</a>!" And he really meant it; he would have nothing to do with worldly glory, with "temporal power;" he chose the career of a revolutionary agitator, and died the <a href="/wiki/Death" title="Death">death</a> of a disturber of the <a href="/wiki/Peace" title="Peace">peace</a>. And for two or three centuries his church followed in his footsteps, cherishing his proletarian gospel. The early Christians had "all things in common, except women;" they lived as social outcasts, hiding in deserted catacombs, and being thrown to lions and boiled in oil. <br /> But the devil is a subtle worm; he does not give up at one defeat, for he knows human nature, and the strength of the forces which battle for him. He failed to get Jesus, but he came again, to get Jesus' church. He came when, through the power of the new revolutionary idea, the Church had won a position of tremendous power in the decaying Roman Empire; and the subtle worm assumed the guise of no less a person than <a href="/wiki/Constantine_the_Great" title="Constantine the Great">the Emperor himself</a>, suggesting that he should become a convert to the new faith, so that the Church and he might work together for the greater glory of God. The bishops and fathers of the Church, ambitious for their organization, fell for this scheme, and Satan went off laughing to himself. He had got everything he had asked from Jesus three hundred years before; he had got the world's greatest religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Upton_Sinclair" title="Upton Sinclair">Upton Sinclair</a>, <i>The Profits of Religion&#160;: An Essay in Economic Interpretation</i> (1918), Book Seven&#160;: The Church of the Social Revolution, "Christ and Caesar"</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Logic or so called intellectual reasoning have no real meaning in religious debates. <ul><li>Judge Jussi Sippola, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helsinki" class="extiw" title="w:Helsinki">Helsinki</a> district court, in the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jussi_Halla-aho#2009_trial" class="extiw" title="w:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jussi Halla-aho">Halla-Aho</a> trial on charges of incitement of an ethnic group and disturbing religious worship, 2009. <a rel="nofollow" class="external autonumber" href="http://www.effi.org/system/files?file=halla-aho-tuomio-20090908.txt">[5]</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>She’s found that religion here is worn here like a raincoat, on and off at at convenience. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angela_Slatter" class="extiw" title="w:Angela Slatter">Angela Slatter</a>, <i>Smoke ’em if You Got ’em</i> in Marie O’Regan &amp; Paul Kane (eds.), <i>Wonderland</i> (2019), <small> <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-1-78909-148-9" title="Special:BookSources/978-1-78909-148-9">ISBN 978-1-78909-148-9</a> </small>, p. 163</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>With many people, religion is merely a matter of words. So far as words go we do what we think right. But the words rarely lead to action, thought, and conduct, or to purity, goodness, and honesty. There is too much playing at religion, and too little of enthusiastic, hard work. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Samuel_Smiles" title="Samuel Smiles">Samuel Smiles</a>, <i>Duty, With Illustrations of Courage, Patience &amp; Endurance</i> (1880)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>[E]xtreme happiness invites religion almost as much as extreme misery. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Dodie_Smith" title="Dodie Smith">Dodie Smith</a>, <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Capture_the_Castle" class="extiw" title="w:I Capture the Castle">I Capture the Castle</a></i> (1948), Ch. 13</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A Gay and flowery and heated imagination beware of; because the things of God are of deep import; and time, and experience, and careful and ponderous and solemn thoughts can only find them out. Thy mind, O man! if thou wilt lead a soul unto salvation, must stretch as high as the utmost heavens, and search into and contemplate the darkest abyss, and the broad expanse of eternity — thou must commune with God. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Joseph_Smith" class="mw-redirect" title="Joseph Smith">Joseph Smith</a>, <i>Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith</i>, p. 137</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Men of the present time testify of heaven and hell, and have never seen either. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Joseph_Smith" class="mw-redirect" title="Joseph Smith">Joseph Smith</a> <i>Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith</i>, p. 160</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The best way to obtain truth and wisdom is not to ask from books, but to go to God in prayer, and obtain divine teaching. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Joseph_Smith" class="mw-redirect" title="Joseph Smith">Joseph Smith</a>, <i>History of the Church</i>, 4:425</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>But meddle not with any man for his religion: all governments ought to permit every man to enjoy his religion unmolested. No man is authorized to take away life in consequence of difference of religion, which all laws and governments ought to tolerate and protect, right or wrong. Every man has a natural, and, in our country, a constitutional right to be a false prophet, as well as a true prophet. If I show, verily, that I have the truth of God, and show that ninety-nine out of every hundred professing religious ministers are false teachers, having no authority, while they pretend to hold the keys of God's kingdom on earth, and was to kill them because they are false teachers, it would deluge the whole world with blood. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Joseph_Smith" class="mw-redirect" title="Joseph Smith">Joseph Smith</a>, <i>History of the Church</i> 6:304</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Nothing remains, under God, but those passions which have often proved the best ministers of His vengeance, and the surest protectors of the world. <ul><li><a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.archive.org/stream/elementarysketc03smitgoog#page/n440/mode/2up">Lecture XXVIL: On Habit - Part II, in “Elementary Sketches of Moral Philosophy”, delivered at The Royal Institution in the years 1804, 1805, and 1806 by the late Rev. Sydney Smith, M.A. (Spottiswoodes and Shaw (London: 1849))</a>, p. 424. <ul><li>Another Variant: When the usual hopes and the common aids of man are all gone, nothing remains under God but those passions which have often proved the best ministers of His purpose and the surest protectors of the world.</li> <li>Quoted by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt" class="extiw" title="w:Theodore Roosevelt">Theodore Roosevelt</a> in his "<a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.theodore-roosevelt.com/images/research/txtspeeches/668.pdf">Brotherhood and the Heroic Virtues</a>" Address at the Veterans' Reunion, Burlington, Vermont, September 5, 1901 and published in Theodore Roosevelt's "The Strenuous Life: Essays and Addresses" by Dover Publications (April 23, 2009) in its Dover Thrift Editions (ISBN: 978-0486472294), p. 127</li></ul></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>No man's religion ever survives his morals. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_South" title="Robert South">Robert South</a>, a sermon preached at Christ-Church, Oxon. (17 October 1675)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The human mind has an adequate knowledge of the eternal and infinite essence of God. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Baruch_Spinoza" title="Baruch Spinoza">Baruch Spinoza</a>, <i>Ethics</i> (1677) Part II: On the Nature and Origin of the Mind</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In despotic statecraft, the supreme and essential mystery is to hoodwink the subjects, and to mask the fear, which keeps them down, with the specious garb of religion, so that men may fight as bravely for slavery as for safety, and count it not shame but highest honor to risk their blood and lives for the vainglory of a tyrant. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Baruch_Spinoza" title="Baruch Spinoza">Baruch Spinoza</a>, <i>Theological-Political Treatise</i>, Preface, in <a href="/wiki/Gilles_Deleuze" title="Gilles Deleuze">Gilles Deleuze</a>, <i>Spinoza</i>, R. Hurley, trans. (San Francisco: 1988), p. 25</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A religious life is a struggle and not a hymn. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Anne_Louise_Germaine_de_Sta%C3%ABl" title="Anne Louise Germaine de Staël">Anne Louise Germaine de Staël</a>, <i>Corinne</i> (1807), Book X, Ch. V</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is nothing, if it is not everything; if existence is not filled with it. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Anne_Louise_Germaine_de_Sta%C3%ABl" title="Anne Louise Germaine de Staël">Anne Louise Germaine de Staël</a>, <i>Germany</i> (1813), Part IV, Ch. I</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion has nothing more to fear than not being sufficiently understood. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Stanis%C5%82aw_Leszczy%C5%84ski" title="Stanisław Leszczyński">Stanisław Leszczyński</a> (King of Poland), <i>Maxims</i>. No. 36</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There is, I believe, something, which may be named by the misleading and debased word 'religion', and is the most distinctively human or awakened activity of man. But clearly there is something else, which is also called 'religion', and is his greatest folly and shame. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Olaf_Stapledon" title="Olaf Stapledon">Olaf Stapledon</a>, <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://olafstapledonarchive.webs.com/wakingworld_ch11.html">Waking World, Chapter 11: Religion</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>One must build to the praise of a Being above, to build the noblest memorial of himself. Then, Angelo may verily " hang the Pantheon in the air." Then the unknown builder, whose personality disappears in his work, may stand an almost inspired mediator between the upward-looking thought and the spheres overhead. Each line then leaps with a swift aspiration, as the vast structure rises, in nave and transept into pointed arch and vanishing spire. The groined roof grows dusky with majestic glooms; while, beneath, the windows flame, as with apocalyptic light of jewels. Angelic presences, sculptured upon the portal, invite the wayfarer, and wave before him their wings of promise. Within is a worship which incense only clouds, which spoken sermons only mar. The building itself becomes a worship, a Gloria in Excelsis, articulate in stone; the noblest tribute offered on earth, by any art, to Him from whom its impulse came, and with the ineffable majesty of whose spirit all skies are filled! <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Richard_Salter_Storrs" title="Richard Salter Storrs">Richard Salter Storrs</a>, <i>The Recognition of the Supernatural in Letters and in life</i> (1881)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Never trust a man who thinks his religion gives him all the answers.</i> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Charles_Stross" title="Charles Stross">Charles Stross</a>, <i>Halting State</i> <a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/978-0-441-01607-5" title="Special:BookSources/978-0-441-01607-5">ISBN 978-0-441-01607-5</a> (2007), p. 275</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>What religion is he of? <br /> Why, he is an Anythingarian. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Jonathan_Swift" title="Jonathan Swift">Jonathan Swift</a>, <i>Polite Conversation</i> (c. 1738), Dialogue I</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>He made it a part of his religion, never to say grace to his meat. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Jonathan_Swift" title="Jonathan Swift">Jonathan Swift</a>, <i>Tale of a Tub</i>, Section XI</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>We have enough religion to make us hate, but not enough to make us love one another. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Jonathan_Swift" title="Jonathan Swift">Jonathan Swift</a>, <i>Thoughts on Various Subjects</i>. Collected by Pope and Swift; found in Spectator No. 459</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="T">T</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=20" title="Edit section: T"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Tertullian.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e9/Tertullian.jpg/220px-Tertullian.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="265" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e9/Tertullian.jpg/330px-Tertullian.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e9/Tertullian.jpg/440px-Tertullian.jpg 2x" data-file-width="1181" data-file-height="1424" /></a><figcaption>It is certainly no part of religion to compel religion. ~ <a href="/wiki/Tertullian" title="Tertullian">Tertullian</a></figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size mw-halign-right" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Arco_iris_circular.JPG" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5e/Arco_iris_circular.JPG/220px-Arco_iris_circular.JPG" decoding="async" width="220" height="165" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5e/Arco_iris_circular.JPG/330px-Arco_iris_circular.JPG 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5e/Arco_iris_circular.JPG/440px-Arco_iris_circular.JPG 2x" data-file-width="2592" data-file-height="1944" /></a><figcaption>Though free to think and act, we are held together, like the stars in the firmament, with ties inseparable. These ties cannot be seen, but we can feel them. … The Buddhist expresses it in one way, the Christian in another, but both say the same: We are all one. ~ <a href="/wiki/Nikola_Tesla" title="Nikola Tesla">Nikola Tesla</a> </figcaption></figure> <figure class="mw-default-size" typeof="mw:File/Thumb"><a href="/wiki/File:Ge_Tolstoy.jpg" class="mw-file-description"><img src="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/eb/Ge_Tolstoy.jpg/220px-Ge_Tolstoy.jpg" decoding="async" width="220" height="295" class="mw-file-element" srcset="//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/eb/Ge_Tolstoy.jpg/330px-Ge_Tolstoy.jpg 1.5x, //upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/eb/Ge_Tolstoy.jpg/440px-Ge_Tolstoy.jpg 2x" data-file-width="1529" data-file-height="2048" /></a><figcaption>Besides the instinctive life ... there was a spiritual life. This life was disclosed in religion, but a religion having nothing in common with that one ... from childhood. ... This was a lofty, mysterious religion connected with a whole series of noble thoughts and feelings, which one could do more than merely believe because one was told to, which one could love. ~ <a href="/wiki/Leo_Tolstoy" title="Leo Tolstoy">Leo Tolstoy</a></figcaption></figure> <ul><li>Christianity neither is, nor ever was, a part of the common law. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Thomas_Jefferson" title="Thomas Jefferson">Thomas Jefferson</a>, letter to Dr. Thomas Cooper, February 10, 1814</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>If you can't spontaneously detect (without analyzing) the difference between the sacred and profane, you'll never know what religion means. You will also never figure out what we commonly call art. You will never understand anything. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Nassim_Nicholas_Taleb" title="Nassim Nicholas Taleb">Nassim Nicholas Taleb</a>, <i>The Bed of Procrustes: Philosophical and Practical Aphorisms</i> (2010) The Sacred and the Profane, p.19.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The way to judge of religion is by doing our duty; and theology is rather a Divine life than a Divine knowledge. In heaven, indeed, we must first see, and then love; but here, on earth, we must first love, and love will open our eyes as well as our hearts; and we shall then, see and perceive, and understand. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Jeremy_Taylor" title="Jeremy Taylor">Jeremy Taylor</a>, "A sermon preached to the University of Dublin", <i>The whole works of the Right Rev. Jeremy Taylor. Vol 6</i>, (1839) Sermon VI, p. 379</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It is a mistake to suppose that God is only, or even chiefly, concerned with religion. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Temple_(bishop)" class="extiw" title="w:William Temple (bishop)">William Temple</a>, quoted in <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._V._C._Bodley" class="extiw" title="w:R. V. C. Bodley">R. V. C. Bodley</a>, <i>In Search of Serenity</i> (1955), ch. 12</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><i>Nec religionis est cogere religionem.</i> <ul><li>It is certainly no part of religion to compel religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Tertullian" title="Tertullian">Tertullian</a>, <i>Ad Scapulam</i>, 2.2</li></ul></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Though free to think and act, we are held together, like the stars in the firmament, with ties inseparable. These ties cannot be seen, but we can feel them. I cut myself in the finger, and it pains me: this finger is a part of me. I see a friend hurt, and it hurts me, too: my friend and I are one. And now I see stricken down an enemy, a lump of matter which, of all the lumps of matter in the universe, I care least for, and it still grieves me. Does this not prove that each of us is only part of a whole? <br /> For ages this idea has been proclaimed in the consummately wise teachings of religion, probably not alone as a means of insuring peace and harmony among men, but as a deeply founded truth. The Buddhist expresses it in one way, the Christian in another, but both say the same: We are all one. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Nikola_Tesla" title="Nikola Tesla">Nikola Tesla</a>, in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.tfcbooks.com/tesla/1900-06-00.htm">"The Problem of Increasing Human Energy with Special References to the Harnessing of the Sun's Energy"</a> in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://books.google.com/books?id=_XYAAAAAYAAJ&amp;pg=PA175&amp;dq=%22humanity+as+a+whole,+and+before+applying+scientific+methods+to%22&amp;num=100&amp;ei=GpAFR4npDY6K7QLdhpCGDQ&amp;ie=ISO-8859-1"><i>Century Illustrated Magazine</i> (June 1900)</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><p>The lives and writings of the mystics of all great religions bear witness to religious experiences of great intensity, in which considerable changes are effected in the quality of consciousness. Profound absorption in prayer or meditation can bring about a deepening and widening, a brightening and intensifying, of consciousness, accompanied by a transporting feeling of rapture and bliss. The contrast between these states and normal conscious awareness is so great that the mystic believes his experiences to be manifestations of the divine; and given the contrast, this assumption is quite understandable. Mystical experiences are also characterized by a marked reduction or temporary exclusion of the multiplicity of sense-perceptions and restless thoughts. This relative unification of mind is then interpreted as a union or communion with the One God. ...</p><p>The psychological facts underlying those religious experiences are accepted by the Buddhist and are well-known to him; but he carefully distinguishes the experiences themselves from the theological interpretations imposed upon them. After rising from deep meditative absorption (<i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dhy%C4%81na_in_Buddhism" class="extiw" title="w:Dhyāna in Buddhism">jhāna</a></i>), the Buddhist meditator is advised to view the physical and mental factors constituting his experience in the light of the three characteristics of all conditioned existence: impermanence, liability to suffering, and absence of an abiding ego or eternal substance. This is done primarily in order to utilize the meditative purity and strength of consciousness for the highest purpose: liberating insight. But this procedure also has a very important side effect which concerns us here: the meditator will not be overwhelmed by any uncontrolled emotions and thoughts evoked by his singular experience, and will thus be able to avoid interpretations of that experience not warranted by the facts. <br /> Hence a Buddhist meditator, while benefiting from the refinement of consciousness he has achieved, will be able to see these meditative experiences for what they are; and he will further know that they are without any abiding substance that could be attributed to a deity manifesting itself to his mind. Therefore, the Buddhist’s conclusion must be that the highest mystical states do not provide evidence for the existence of a personal God or an impersonal godhead.</p> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Nyanaponika_Thera" title="Nyanaponika Thera">Nyanaponika Thera</a>, “Buddhism and the God-Idea” (1962)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>If organized religion is the opium of the masses, then disorganized religion is the <a href="/wiki/Cannabis" title="Cannabis">marijuana</a> of the lunatic fringe. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerry_Wendell_Thornley" class="extiw" title="w:Kerry Wendell Thornley">Kerry Wendell Thornley</a>, in the Introduction to the 5th Edition of <i><a href="/wiki/Principia_Discordia" title="Principia Discordia">Principia Discordia</a></i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>If we look more deeply into humanity’s ancient religions and spiritual traditions, we will find that underneath the many surface differences there are two core insights that most of them agree on. The words they use to describe those insights differ, yet they all point to a twofold fundamental truth. The first part of this truth is the realization that the “normal” state of mind of most human beings contains a strong element of what we might call <a href="/wiki/Dysfunctional_Systems" title="Dysfunctional Systems">dysfunction</a> or even <a href="/wiki/Madness" class="mw-redirect" title="Madness">madness</a>. Certain teachings at the heart of <a href="/wiki/Hinduism" title="Hinduism">Hinduism</a> perhaps come closest to seeing this dysfunction as a form of <a href="/wiki/Collective" class="mw-redirect" title="Collective">collective</a> <a href="/wiki/Mental_illness" class="mw-redirect" title="Mental illness">mental illness</a>. They call it <a href="/wiki/Maya" title="Maya">maya</a>, the veil of delusion.<a href="/wiki/Ramana_Maharshi" title="Ramana Maharshi">Ramana Maharshi</a>, one of the greatest Indian sages, bluntly states: <i>The mind is maya.</i> <a href="/wiki/Buddhism" title="Buddhism">Buddhism</a> uses different terms. According to <a href="/wiki/The_Buddha" class="mw-redirect" title="The Buddha">the Buddha</a>, the human <a href="/wiki/Mind" title="Mind">mind</a> in its normal state generates dukkha, which can be translated as <a href="/wiki/Suffering" title="Suffering">suffering</a>, unsatisfactoriness, or just plain <a href="/wiki/Misery" title="Misery">misery</a>. He sees it as a characteristic of the human condition. Wherever you go, whatever you do, says the Buddha, you will encounter dukkha, and it will manifest in every situation sooner or later.<br /> According to Christian teachings, the normal collective state of humanity is one of “original sin.” Sin is a word that has been greatly misunderstood and misinterpreted... It means to live unskillfully, blindly, and thus to suffer and cause suffering. Again, the term, stripped of its cultural baggage and misinterpretations, points to the dysfunction inherent in the human condition. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Eckhart_Tolle" title="Eckhart Tolle">Eckhart Tolle</a>, <a href="/wiki/A_New_Earth:_Awakening_to_Your_Life%E2%80%99s_Purpose" class="mw-redirect" title="A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose"><i>A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose</i></a> (2005)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The Arising New Consciousness. Most ancient religions and spiritual traditions share the common insight – that our “normal” state of mind is marred by a fundamental defect. However, out of this insight into the nature of the human condition – we may call it the bad news – arises a second insight: the good news of the possibility of a radical transformation of human consciousness. In Hindu teachings (and sometimes in Buddhism also), this transformation is called enlightenment. In the teachings of Jesus, it is salvation, and in Buddhism, it is the end of suffering. Liberation and awakening are other terms used to describe this transformation. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Eckhart_Tolle" title="Eckhart Tolle">Eckhart Tolle</a>, <a href="/wiki/A_New_Earth:_Awakening_to_Your_Life%E2%80%99s_Purpose" class="mw-redirect" title="A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose"><i>A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life’s Purpose</i></a> (2005)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>For the majority of mankind, religion is a habit, or, more precisely, <a href="/wiki/Tradition" title="Tradition">tradition</a> is their religion. Though it seems strange, I think that the first step to <a href="/wiki/Moral_perfection" class="mw-redirect" title="Moral perfection">moral perfection</a> is your liberation from the religion in which you were raised. Not a single person has come to perfection except by following this way. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Leo_Tolstoy" title="Leo Tolstoy">Leo Tolstoy</a> paraphrasing <a href="/wiki/Thoreau" class="mw-redirect" title="Thoreau">Thoreau</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/A_Calendar_of_Wisdom" title="A Calendar of Wisdom">A Calendar of Wisdom</a></i>, P. Sekirin, trans. (1997)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Kitty made the acquaintance of Madame Stahl too, and this acquaintance, together with her friendship with Varenka, did not merely exercise a great influence on her, it also comforted her in her mental distress. She found this comfort through a completely new world being opened to her by means of this acquaintance, a world having nothing in common with her past, an exalted, noble world, from the height of which she could contemplate her past calmly. It was revealed to her that besides the instinctive life to which Kitty had given herself up hitherto there was a spiritual life. This life was disclosed in religion, but a religion having nothing in common with that one which Kitty had known from childhood, and which found expression in litanies and all-night services at the Widow's Home, where one might meet one's friends, and in learning by heart Slavonic texts with the priest. This was a lofty, mysterious religion connected with a whole series of noble thoughts and feelings, which one could do more than merely believe because one was told to, which one could love. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Leo_Tolstoy" title="Leo Tolstoy">Leo Tolstoy</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/Anna_Karenina" title="Anna Karenina">Anna Karenina</a></i>, C. Garnett, trans. (New York: 2003), Part 2, Chapter 33, p. 207</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Honour your parents; worship the gods; hurt not animals. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triptolemus" class="extiw" title="w:Triptolemus">Triptolemus</a>, according to <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porphyry" class="extiw" title="w:Porphyry">Porphyry</a> (On Abstinence IV.22) From his traditional laws or precepts.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>In religion all other countries are paupers; India is the only millionaire. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Mark_Twain" title="Mark Twain">Mark Twain</a>, <i>Following the Equator</i> (1897), <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/2895/2895-h/p5.htm">Ch. XLIII</a></li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="U">U</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=21" title="Edit section: U"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>None are so likely to believe too little as those who have begun by believing too much. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Miguel_de_Unamuno" title="Miguel de Unamuno">Miguel de Unamuno</a>, <i>The Tragic Sense of Life</i> (1913)</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="V">V</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=22" title="Edit section: V"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>“It occurs to me that the man and his religion are one and the same thing. The unknown exists. Each man projects on the blankness the shape of his own particular world-view. He endows his creation with his personal volitions and attitudes. The religious man stating his case is in essence explaining himself. When a fanatic is contradicted he feels a threat to his own existence; he reacts violently.”<br />“Interesting!” declared the fat merchant. “And the atheist?”<br />“He projects no image upon the blank whatever. The cosmic mysteries he accepts as things in themselves; he feels no need to hang a more or less human mask upon them. Otherwise, the correlation between a man and the shape into which he molds the unknown for greater ease of manipulation is exact.” <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Jack_Vance" title="Jack Vance">Jack Vance</a>, <i>Servants of the Wankh</i> (1969), Chapter 3</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Reverend Lovejoy: Ned, have you considered any of the other major religions? They're all pretty much the same. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/The_Simpsons/Season_7" title="The Simpsons/Season 7">The Simpsons/Season 7</a> <i>Home Sweet Homediddly-Dum-Doodily</i> written by Jon Vitti</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>To devote your life to the good of all and to the happiness of all is religion. Whatever you do for your own sake is not religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Swami_Vivekananda" title="Swami Vivekananda">Swami Vivekananda</a>, <i>Pearls of Wisdom</i> (2008) edited by the Ramakrishna Mission</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="W">W</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=23" title="Edit section: W"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>Once I journeyd far from home <br /> To the gate of holy Rome; <br /> There the Pope, for my offence, <br /> Bade me straight, in penance, thence <br /> Wandering onward, to attain <br /> The wondrous land that height Cokaigne. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Wace" class="extiw" title="w:Robert Wace">Robert Wace</a>, <i>The Land of Cokaigne</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Reinhold_Niebuhr" title="Reinhold Niebuhr">Reinhold Niebuhr</a> is a man of <a href="/wiki/God" title="God">God</a>, but a man of the <a href="/wiki/World" title="World">world</a> as well. Dr. Niebuhr would seem to be saying that if a nation would survive and remain free, its citizens must use religion as a source of self-criticism, not as a source of self-righteousness. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Wallace_(journalist)" class="extiw" title="w:Mike Wallace (journalist)">Mike Wallace</a>, in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/multimedia/video/2008/wallace/niebuhr_reinhold_t.html"><i>The Mike Wallace Interview</i> ABC TV (27 April 1958)</a></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There’s a <i>religious</i> fervour spreading like clap in a cathouse. It’s screwing the world’s brains. <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Watson_(author)" class="extiw" title="w:Ian Watson (author)">Ian Watson</a>, <i>The Coming of Vertumnus,</i> in <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gardner_Dozois" class="extiw" title="w:Gardner Dozois">Gardner Dozois</a> (ed.) <i><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Year%27s_Best_Science_Fiction:_Tenth_Annual_Collection" class="extiw" title="w:The Year&#39;s Best Science Fiction: Tenth Annual Collection">The Year's Best Science Fiction: Tenth Annual Collection</a>,</i> pp. 143-144 (Originally published at <a class="external text" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interzone_(magazine)">Interzone #56</a> February 1992)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>When I can read my title clear <br /> To mansions in the skies, <br /> I'll bid farewell to every fear, <br /> And wipe my weeping eyes. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Isaac_Watts" title="Isaac Watts">Isaac Watts</a>, <i>Songs and Hymns</i>, Book II. No. 65</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>It is above all the impersonal and economically rationalized (but for this very reason ethically irrational) character of purely commercial relationships that evokes the suspicion, never clearly expressed but all the more strongly felt, of ethical religions. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Max_Weber" title="Max Weber">Max Weber</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/Sociology_of_Religion_(book)" title="Sociology of Religion (book)">Sociology of Religion</a></i> (1922), p. 216</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The more a religion is aware of its opposition in principle to economic rationalization as such, the more apt are the religion’s <a href="https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/virtuoso" class="extiw" title="wikt:virtuoso">virtuosi</a> to reject the world, especially its economic activities. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Max_Weber" title="Max Weber">Max Weber</a>, <i><a href="/wiki/Sociology_of_Religion_(book)" title="Sociology of Religion (book)">Sociology of Religion</a></i> (1922), p. 217</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Legitimation by a recognized religion has always been decisive for an alliance between politically and socially dominant classes and the priesthood. Integration into the Hindu community provided such religious legitimation for the ruling stratum. It not only endowed the ruling stratum of the barbarians with recognized rank in the cultural world of Hinduism, but, through their transformation into castes, secured their superiority over the subject classes with an efficiency unsurpassed by any other religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Max_Weber" title="Max Weber">Max Weber</a>, <i>Religion of India</i> (1916), p. 16</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is the tie that connects man with his Creator, and holds him to His throne. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Daniel_Webster" title="Daniel Webster">Daniel Webster</a>, speech at the Supreme Court of Massachusetts on the death of Jeremiah Mason (14 November 1848)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion in so far as it is a source of consolation is a hindrance to true faith; and in this sense atheism is a purification. I have to be an atheist with that part of myself which is not made for God. Among those in whom the supernatural part of themselves has not been awakened, the atheists are right and the believers wrong. ... With those who have received a Christian education, the lower parts of the soul become attached to these mysteries when they have no right at all to do so. That is why such people need a purification of which St. John of the Cross describes the stages. Atheism and incredulity constitute an equivalent of such a purification. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Simone_Weil" title="Simone Weil">Simone Weil</a>, “Faiths of Meditation; Contemplation of the Divine” in <i>The Simone Weil Reader</i> (1957) edited by G. Panichas, pp. 417-418</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is an insult to human dignity. With or without it you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion. <ul><li>Steven Weinberg, address at the Conference on Cosmic Design, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Washington, D.C., April 1999, quoted in <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://web.archive.org/web/20101218085911/http://ffrf.org/day/view/05/03/#steven-weinberg">"Freethought of the Day: May 3rd"</a>, <i>Freedom from Religion Foundation</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Take care what you are about, for unless you base all this on religion, you are only making so many clever devils. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Arthur_Wellesley,_1st_Duke_of_Wellington" title="Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington">Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington</a>, Philip Henry, Fifth Earl Stanhope, <i>Notes of Conversation with the Duke of Wellington, 1831-1851</i> (1886). Talking about non-denominational education, often paraphrased as "Educate men without religion, and you make them but clever devils".</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The religion of the heathen mythology not only was not true, but was not even supported as true; it not only deserved no belief, but it demanded none. The very pretension to truth—the very demand of faith—were characteristic distinctions of Christianity. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Richard_Whately" title="Richard Whately">Richard Whately</a>, <i>Bacon's Essays with Annotations by Richard Whately</i> (1857)</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>A legal religion is insufficient to bring the soul into harmony with God. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ellen_G._White" title="Ellen G. White">Ellen G. White</a>, <i>Thoughts from the Mount of Blessing</i> (1896), p. 53</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The world has a thousand creeds, and never a one have I; <br /> Nor church of my own, though a million spires are pointing the way on high. <br /> But I float on the bosom of faith, that bears me along like a river; <br /> And the lamp of my soul is alight with love, for life, and the world, and the Giver. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ella_Wheeler_Wilcox" title="Ella Wheeler Wilcox">Ella Wheeler Wilcox</a>, <i>Heresy</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>So many gods, so many creeds— <br /> So many paths that wind and wind <br /> While just the art of being kind <br /> Is all the sad world needs. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Ella_Wheeler_Wilcox" title="Ella Wheeler Wilcox">Ella Wheeler Wilcox</a>, <i>The World's Need</i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>All your Western theologies, the whole mythologies of them, are based on the concept of God as a senile delinquent… <ul><li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tennessee_Williams" class="extiw" title="w:Tennessee Williams">Tennessee Williams</a>, <i>The Night of the Iguana</i> Act II</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Human law must rest its authority ultimately upon the authority of that law which is divine. Far from being rivals or enemies religion and law are twin sisters, friends, and mutual assistance. Indeed, these two sciences run into each other. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/James_Wilson" title="James Wilson">James Wilson</a>, <i>The Works of the Honourable James Wilson</i> (Philadelphia: Bronson and Chauncey, 1804), Vol. I, pp. 106 &amp; 103-105.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>The Discordian Society, we repeat again, is not a complicated joke disguised as a new religion but really a new religion disguised as a complicated joke. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Robert_Anton_Wilson" title="Robert Anton Wilson">Robert Anton Wilson</a>, <i>Cosmic Trigger: Final Secret of the Illuminati</i> (1977), p. 103; paraphrases of this are sometimes attributed to Greg Hill (<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaclypse_the_Younger" class="extiw" title="w:Malaclypse the Younger">Malaclypse the Younger</a>), one of the authors of <i><a href="/wiki/Principia_Discordia" title="Principia Discordia">Principia Discordia</a></i></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>And then there’s religion—God, angels, sin—but none of that has ever appealed to me. Fiction masquerading as cosmology is what it feels like to me, and all too self-important, too self-serious. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Tim_Wirkus" title="Tim Wirkus">Tim Wirkus</a>, <i>The Infinite Future</i> (2018), Part 1, Chapter 14</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Who God doth late and early pray <br /> More of his Grace than Gifts to lend; <br /> And entertains the harmless day <br /> With a Religious Book or Friend. <ul><li>Sir <a href="/wiki/Henry_Wotton" title="Henry Wotton">Henry Wotton</a>, <i>The Character of a Happy Life</i> (1614), Stanza 5</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="X">X</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=24" title="Edit section: X"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Y">Y</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=25" title="Edit section: Y"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>The gods of all pagan faiths have been allied with the rich rulers. The priests of most religions are the employees of the landowners. But the God of Israel has always claimed to be with the poor—whether in the legislation of <a href="/wiki/Deuteronomy" class="mw-redirect" title="Deuteronomy">Deuteronomy</a>, the words of the <a href="/wiki/Prophets" class="mw-redirect" title="Prophets">prophets</a>, or the experiences of the <a href="/wiki/New_Testament" title="New Testament">New Testament</a>. Our God is on the side of the poor. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/John_Howard_Yoder" title="John Howard Yoder">John Howard Yoder</a>, <i>Radical Christian Discipleship</i>, p. 41</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion's all. Descending from the skies <br /> To wretched man, the goddess in her left <br /> Holds out this world, and, in her right, the next. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Edward_Young" title="Edward Young">Edward Young</a>, <i>Night Thoughts</i> (1742-45), Night IV, line 550</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>But if man loses all, when life is lost, <br /> He lives a coward, or a fool expires. <br /> A daring infidel (and such there are, <br /> From pride, example, lucre, rage, revenge, <br /> Or pure heroical defect of thought), <br /> Of all earth's madmen, most deserves a chain. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Edward_Young" title="Edward Young">Edward Young</a>, <i>Night Thoughts</i> (1742-45), Night VII, line 199</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Instead of holding on to the Biblical view that we are made in the image of God, we come to realize that we are made in the image of the monkey... <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Lin_Yutang" title="Lin Yutang">Lin Yutang</a> <i>The Importance of Living</i> (1937) p. 36</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Such religion as there can be in modern life, every <a href="/wiki/Individual" class="mw-redirect" title="Individual">individual</a> will have to salvage from the churches for himself. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Lin_Yutang" title="Lin Yutang">Lin Yutang</a> <i>The Importance of Living</i> (1937) p. 397</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I feel, like all modern Americans, no consciousness of <a href="/wiki/Sin" title="Sin">sin</a> and simply do not believe in it. All I know is that if <a href="/wiki/God" title="God">God</a> <a href="/wiki/Loves" class="mw-redirect" title="Loves">loves</a> me only half as much as my <a href="/wiki/Mother" class="mw-redirect" title="Mother">mother</a> does, he will not send me to <a href="/wiki/Hell" title="Hell">Hell</a>. That is a final <a href="/wiki/Fact" title="Fact">fact</a> of my inner <a href="/wiki/Consciousness" title="Consciousness">consciousness</a>, and for no <a class="mw-selflink selflink">religion</a> could I deny its <a href="/wiki/Truth" title="Truth">truth</a>. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Lin_Yutang" title="Lin Yutang">Lin Yutang</a> <i>The Importance of Living</i> (1937) p. 407</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Z">Z</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=26" title="Edit section: Z"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>Music is the only religion that delivers the goods. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Frank_Zappa" title="Frank Zappa">Frank Zappa</a>, <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://www.newspapers.com/article/daily-news-frank-zappa-self-styled-mock/156952925">"Upbeat: Frank Zappa, self-styled mocker of mankind"</a> by Clint Roswell, <i>New York Daily News</i> (September 30, 1979), p. B6</li></ul></li> <li>Religion is poison. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Mao_Zedong" title="Mao Zedong">Mao Zedong</a>, as quoted by <a href="/wiki/John_N._Gray" class="mw-redirect" title="John N. Gray">John N. Gray</a> (2008) in "The atheist delusion," <i>The Guardian</i>, (15 March 2008)</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Anon">Anon</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=27" title="Edit section: Anon"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li>Well you may throw your rock and hide your hand <br /> Workin' in the dark against your fellow man <br /> But as sure as God made black and white <br /> What's down in the dark will be brought to the light. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Anonymous" title="Anonymous">Anonymous</a>, "<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God%27s_Gonna_Cut_You_Down" class="extiw" title="w:God&#39;s Gonna Cut You Down">God's Gonna Cut You Down</a>", traditional folk song</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Go tell that long tongue liar<br />Go and tell that midnight rider<br />Tell the rambler, the gambler, the back biter<br />Tell 'em that God's gonna cut 'em down <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Anonymous" title="Anonymous">Anonymous</a> "God's Gonna Cut You Down", traditional folk song</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Philosophy is questions that may never be answered. Religion is answers that may never be questioned. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Anonymous" title="Anonymous">Anonymous</a>; quoted in <i>Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon</i> (2006) by Daniel C. Dennett, p. 17, <small><a href="/wiki/Special:BookSources/0-670-03472-X" title="Special:BookSources/0-670-03472-X">ISBN 0-670-03472-X</a></small></li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Some people complain because God put thorns on roses, while others praise Him for putting roses among thorns. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Anonymous" title="Anonymous">Anonymous</a>, <i>The Baptist Observer</i> No. 7 - (1966).</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="Dictionary_of_Burning_Words_of_Brilliant_Writers_(1895)"><span id="Dictionary_of_Burning_Words_of_Brilliant_Writers_.281895.29"></span><i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895)</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=28" title="Edit section: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895)"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <p><small>Quotes reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895).</small> </p> <ul><li>You have no security for a man who has no religious principle. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Richard_Cobden" title="Richard Cobden">Richard Cobden</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 503</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Too much is said in these days about the aesthetics of religion and its sensibilities. Religion's home is in the conscience. Its watchword is the word "ought." Its highest joy is in doing God's will. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Theodore_L._Cuyler" title="Theodore L. Cuyler">Theodore L. Cuyler</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 503</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion, in its purity, is not so much a pursuit as a temper; or rather it is a temper, leading to the pursuit of all that is high and holy. Its foundation is faith; its action, works; its temper, holiness; its aim, obedience to God in improvement of self, and benevolence to men. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Jonathan_Edwards_(theologian)" title="Jonathan Edwards (theologian)">Jonathan Edwards</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 494</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>True religion is not what men see and admire; it is what God sees and loves; the faith which clings to Jesus in the darkest hour; the sanctity which shrinks from the approach of evil; the humility which lies low at the feet of the Redeemer, and washes them with tears; the love which welcomes every sacrifice; the cheerful consecration of all the powers of the soul; the worship which, rising above all outward forms, ascends to God in the sweetest, dearest communion — a worship often too deep for utterance, and than which the highest heaven knows nothing more sublime. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Richard_Fuller" class="mw-redirect" title="Richard Fuller">Richard Fuller</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 496</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>I have now disposed of all my property to my family. There is one thing more I wish I could give them, and that is the Christian religion. If they had that, and I had not given them one shilling, they would have been rich; and if they had not that, and I had given them all the world, they would be poor. <ul><li>Attributed to <a href="/wiki/Patrick_Henry" title="Patrick Henry">Patrick Henry</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 496. The earliest attribution does not appear until 1823, nearly a quarter century after Henry's death in 1799, suggesting that this quote was falsely credited to Henry.</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion is the only metaphysics that the multitude can understand and adopt. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Joseph_Joubert" title="Joseph Joubert">Joseph Joubert</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 504</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>How admirable is that religion which, while it seems to have in view only the felicity of another world, is at the same time the highest happiness of this. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Charles_de_Montesquieu" class="mw-redirect" title="Charles de Montesquieu">Charles de Montesquieu</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 498</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religion gives to virtue the sweetest hopes, to unrepenting vice just alarms, to true repentance the most powerful consolations; but she endeavors above all things to inspire in men love, meekness, and piety. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Charles_de_Montesquieu" class="mw-redirect" title="Charles de Montesquieu">Charles de Montesquieu</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 502</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>All noblest things are religious,— not temples and martyrdoms only, but the best books, pictures, poetry, statues, and music. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Mountford" title="William Mountford">William Mountford</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 500</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>You have respect for religion! How vastly condescending! How deeply humble! The creature has a respect for the service of the Creator! A grasshopper deigns to acknowledge that it has a respect for the King of kings and Lord of lords! Verily a subject of congratulation for the universe! A worm crawling in the dust confesses to its fellow worm that it has some respect for the government of the high and mighty One that inhabiteth eternity. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Augustus_Muhlenberg" title="William Augustus Muhlenberg">William Augustus Muhlenberg</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 505</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Human things must be known to be loved; but Divine things must be loved to be known. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Blaise_Pascal" title="Blaise Pascal">Blaise Pascal</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 496</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Religious faith and purpose are the only certain safeguards against the growing perils of life. So far as there has been among educated men a decline of loyalty to Christ and His gospel, there has been a decline in those qualities which claim confidence and honor, which insure unblemished reputation, which minister to social well-being, and to the integrity and purity of public life. <ul><li>A. P. Peabody, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 498</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>Other religions have risen and decayed; Christ's comes down the ages in the strength of youth, through the seas of popular commotion, like the Spirit of God on the face of the waters, through the storms of philosophy, like an apocalyptic angel, and through all the wilderness of human thought and action, like the pillar of fire before the camp of the Israelites. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Edward_Thompson" class="mw-redirect" title="Edward Thompson">Edward Thompson</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 500</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>There is a great deal too much in the world, of the "heavenly-mindedness" which expends itself in the contemplation of the joys of paradise, which performs no duty which it can shirk, and whose constant prayer is to be lifted in some overwhelming flood of Divine grace, and be carried, amidst the admiration of men and the jubilance of angels, to the very throne of God. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Henry_Clay_Trumbull" title="Henry Clay Trumbull">Henry Clay Trumbull</a>, reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, <i>Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers</i> (1895), p. 502</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="The_Dictionary_of_Legal_Quotations_(1904)"><span id="The_Dictionary_of_Legal_Quotations_.281904.29"></span><i>The Dictionary of Legal Quotations</i> (1904)</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=29" title="Edit section: The Dictionary of Legal Quotations (1904)"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <dl><dd><small>Quotes reported in James William Norton-Kyshe, <i>The Dictionary of Legal Quotations</i> (1904), p. 219-220.</small></dd></dl> <ul><li>It is the office of Judges to advance laws made for religion, according to their end, though the words be short and imperfect. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Sir_Henry_Hobart,_1st_Baronet" title="Sir Henry Hobart, 1st Baronet">Sir Henry Hobart, 1st Baronet</a>, C.J., <i>Colt v. Glover</i> (1614), Ld. Hob. Rep. 157</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>He that seemeth to be religious, and bridleth not his tongue, his religion is vain. <ul><li>Quoted by Lisle (Lord President), in <i>Hewet's Case</i> (1658), 5 How. St. Tr. 894</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>All persecution and oppression of weak consciences on the score of religious persuasions, are highly unjustifiable upon every principle of natural reason, civil liberty, or sound religion. <ul><li><a href="/wiki/William_Blackstone" title="William Blackstone">William Blackstone</a> (1765), <i>Commentaries</i> Bk. IV., Ch. 4., p. 40</li></ul></li></ul> <ul><li>No laws can be of avail except in so far as they are founded on religion. <ul><li>Park, J., <i>Williams v. Paul</i> (1830), 6 Bing. 653</li></ul></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading2"><h2 id="See_also">See also</h2><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=30" title="Edit section: See also"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/List_of_religion-related_themes" class="mw-redirect" title="List of religion-related themes">List of religion-related themes</a></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Philosophy_of_religion">Philosophy of religion</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=31" title="Edit section: Philosophy of religion"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Demythologization" title="Demythologization">Demythologization</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Hermeneutics" title="Hermeneutics">Hermeneutics</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Relationship_between_religion_and_science" title="Relationship between religion and science">Relationship between religion and science</a></li></ul> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Organized_and_major_religions">Organized and major religions</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=32" title="Edit section: Organized and major religions"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <style data-mw-deduplicate="TemplateStyles:r3507533">@media all and (max-width:720px){.mw-parser-output table.multicol>tr>td,.mw-parser-output table.multicol>tbody>tr>td{display:block!important;width:100%!important;padding:0!important}}.mw-parser-output table.multicol{border:0;border-collapse:collapse;background-color:transparent;padding:0}.mw-parser-output table.multicol>tr>td,.mw-parser-output table.multicol>tbody>tr>td{vertical-align:top}</style> <table class="multicol" style="width: 100%"> <tbody><tr> <td width="50%" align="left" valign="top"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Buddhism" title="Buddhism">Buddhism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Bah%C3%A1%27%C3%AD_Faith" title="Bahá&#39;í Faith">Bahá'í </a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Christianity" title="Christianity">Christianity</a></li></ul> <dl><dd><ul><li><a href="/wiki/Catholic_Church" title="Catholic Church">Catholic Church</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Mormonism" title="Mormonism">Mormonism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Puritanism" title="Puritanism">Puritanism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Quakers" title="Quakers">Quakers</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Unitarian_Universalist" class="mw-redirect" title="Unitarian Universalist">Unitarian Universalist</a></li></ul></dd></dl> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Hinduism" title="Hinduism">Hinduism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Islam" title="Islam">Islam</a></li></ul> </td> <td width="50%" align="left" valign="top"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Jainism" title="Jainism">Jainism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Judaism" title="Judaism">Judaism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Rastafari" title="Rastafari">Rastafari</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Scientology" title="Scientology">Scientology</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Sikhism" title="Sikhism">Sikhism</a></li></ul> <p>&#32; </p> </td></tr></tbody></table> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Other_spiritual_traditions">Other spiritual traditions</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=33" title="Edit section: Other spiritual traditions"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <link rel="mw-deduplicated-inline-style" href="mw-data:TemplateStyles:r3507533"> <table class="multicol" style="width: 100%"> <tbody><tr> <td width="50%" align="left" valign="top"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Agnosticism" title="Agnosticism">Agnosticism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Atheism" title="Atheism">Atheism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Deism" title="Deism">Deism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Freethought" title="Freethought">Freethought</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Gnosticism" title="Gnosticism">Gnosticism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Nature_religion" title="Nature religion">Nature religion</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Occultism" title="Occultism">Occultism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Paganism" title="Paganism">Paganism</a></li></ul> </td> <td width="50%" align="left" valign="top"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Pandeism" title="Pandeism">Pandeism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Panentheism" title="Panentheism">Panentheism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Pantheism" title="Pantheism">Pantheism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Polytheism" title="Polytheism">Polytheism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Religious_naturalism" title="Religious naturalism">Religious naturalism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Serer_religion" title="Serer religion">Serer religion</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Taoism" title="Taoism">Taoism</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Theosophy" title="Theosophy">Theosophy</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/UFO_religion" title="UFO religion">UFO religion</a></li></ul> <p>&#32; </p> </td></tr></tbody></table> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Religious_texts">Religious texts</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=34" title="Edit section: Religious texts"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <link rel="mw-deduplicated-inline-style" href="mw-data:TemplateStyles:r3507533"> <table class="multicol" style="width: 100%"> <tbody><tr> <td width="50%" align="left" valign="top"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/List_of_religious_texts" class="mw-redirect" title="List of religious texts">List of religious texts</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Bhagavad_Gita" title="Bhagavad Gita">Bhagavad Gita</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/The_Bible" title="The Bible">The Bible</a></li></ul> <dl><dd><ul><li><a href="/wiki/Tanakh" title="Tanakh">Old Testament</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Apocrypha" title="Apocrypha">Apocrypha</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/New_Testament" title="New Testament">New Testament</a></li></ul></dd></dl> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Book_of_Mormon" title="Book of Mormon">Book of Mormon</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Catechism_of_the_Catholic_Church" title="Catechism of the Catholic Church">Catechism of the Catholic Church</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Dhammapada" title="Dhammapada">Dhammapada</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Gospel_of_Judas" title="Gospel of Judas">Gospel of Judas</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Gospel_of_Thomas" title="Gospel of Thomas">Gospel of Thomas</a></li></ul> </td> <td width="50%" align="left" valign="top"> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Guru_Granth_Sahib" title="Guru Granth Sahib">Guru Granth Sahib</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Mah%C4%81bh%C4%81rata" class="mw-redirect" title="Mahābhārata">Mahābhārata</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Panchatantra" title="Panchatantra">Panchatantra</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Qur%27an" class="mw-redirect" title="Qur&#39;an">Qur'an</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Rigveda" title="Rigveda">Rigveda</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Tanakh" title="Tanakh">Tanakh</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Upanishad" class="mw-redirect" title="Upanishad">Upanishad</a></li></ul> <p>&#32; </p> </td></tr></tbody></table> <div class="mw-heading mw-heading3"><h3 id="Religious_figures">Religious figures</h3><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/w/index.php?title=Religion&amp;action=edit&amp;section=35" title="Edit section: Religious figures"><span>edit</span></a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></div> <ul><li><a href="/wiki/Buddha" class="mw-redirect" title="Buddha">Buddha</a></li> <li><a href="/wiki/Kalki" title="Kalki">Kalki</a></li> 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