Hello Moot,
Originally posted by moot
For Seagoon.
Hi Seagoon,
Of what practical use is religion?
I.e. in a strictly rational perspective, why bother with something akin to chaos (considering it can neither be predicted nor understood) to live a life that works just as well, if not better, all by itself?
Why would I need anything else than myself? Or anyone, themselves?
Thanks in advance.
Good question, first I'd like to discriminate between the
practical usefulness of religion, and the
real usefulness of religion.
Many religions can be considered
practically useful for a time in improving one's overall quality of life both individually and socially. For instance, many non-religious people who visit our church or who interact with the members of our congregation are initially intrigued or impressed by the practical outworking of the faith of our members. Many of them have been raised in environments where everyone essentially did what was right in their own eyes and have ordered their own families that way, and so sometimes they'll actually come right out and ask questions like
"How do you get your children to sit still for an hour? How is it that your marriages stay together? Why do the members of your church love one another and look out for one another? How do you stop drinking, doing drugs, swearing, having terrible relationships?" and so on. I've actually gotten all of those questions, and as society continues to come apart at the seams, the differences between people who "have it together" and are visibly at peace and even happy and those who don't becomes more noticeable. And as a result, many may be led to look into religion or embrace it because their own worldview is failing and making them and their families thoroughly miserable.
Now I'm not about to claim for a moment that Christianity is the only religion that can produce a
practical change or even improvement in the way people live their lives. For instance, one of the many reasons that Islam is so popular in prisons today is that it does offer stability, order, masculinity, and a rule of life to men who have grown up in circumstances that are uniformly dysfunctional, matriarchical, and chaotic. Therefore for them there is a
practical benefit to becoming Muslims in that their lives are better than before.
But to embrace a religion only considering its potential
practical benefits for a time is to put the cart before the horse, because the real question that needs to be answered is not what might it do for me but,
"is it true?" After all, I might find peace in trusting in the Easter Bunny to provide me with life after death, but since there is no truth to my faith, it will ultimately have proved only to be a panacea. A false religion, founded on falsehoods, is like a placebo men swallow to make them feel better while they are dying of a terminal disease, but which does them no real good in the long run and which kept them from seeking a real cure when they had the chance.
So the Bible, for instance, doesn't call upon men to believe in Jesus Christ that they might enjoy practical benefits for a time, it calls upon them to believe in Jesus Christ that they might have the
real benefit of being saved from their sin and enjoying eternal life. I for instance, did not become a Christian because I wanted a better regulated life, I became a Christian because I came to the conclusion that the Biblical message was true, that I was a sinner, and that only through faith in the person and work of Jesus Christ could I be saved from a justly deserved damnation. I assessed that the real usefulness of religion was in whether it had the power to Save, and I assessed that only faith in Christ had the power to do that.
I based that decision not on my personal inclinations or opinions or desires (in fact they were directly opposed to those conclusions prior to my believing), I came to that conclusion based on what I was told in scripture, which I judged to be the revelation of God to men and not merely more words of men. That once-for-all revelation,
the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints as Jude put it is of course the safeguard against chaos. Christianity is not about your opinions or my opinions or doing what is right in my eyes or yours, its about listening to and accepting the revealed will of God.
Of course there have been a practical usefulness to becoming a Christian as my heart and behavior has dramatical changed as a result, but that is the fruit that is supposed to result from salvation, not the reason for believing.
Speaking to Christians about that relationship between salvation and good works and the real usefulness of Christianity, Paul wrote this:
"Remind them to be subject to rulers and authorities, to obey, to be ready for every good work, to speak evil of no one, to be peaceable, gentle, showing all humility to all men. For we ourselves were also once foolish, disobedient, deceived, serving various lusts and pleasures, living in malice and envy, hateful and hating one another. But when the kindness and the love of God our Savior toward man appeared, not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us, through the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Spirit, whom He poured out on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Savior, that having been justified by His grace we should become heirs according to the hope of eternal life." (Titus 3:1-4)
Hope this helps,
SEAGOON