The limits of secularization
Britain’s best-known rabbi says that religion must be a voice in the public square
Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks, the former Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth was recently awarded the 2016 Templeton Prize. The prize, valued at £1.1 million (US$1.5 million), honours a living person who has made exceptional contributions to affirming life's spiritual dimension. Previous recipients have included Mother Teresa, in 1973; Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu, in 2012; and Jean Vanier, a theologian and disability activist, last year.
Rabbi Sacks, 67, first gained attention by leading what many consider the revitalization of Britain's Jewish community during his service as Chief Rabbi from 1991 to 2013, a feat he accomplished in the face of dwindling congregations and growing secularization across Europe.
Here is an excerpt from his response to the announcement.
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How does our view of the cosmos help us better understand ourselves, and how does our understanding of ourselves affect our view of the cosmos?
We recently had a stunning example of this in the form of the detection of gravitational waves, finally confirming a prediction Einstein made a century ago. It would be something of an exaggeration to say that I understand the science involved. But the poetry is a thing of stark and stunning beauty. It took instruments of enormous sensitivity to detect a cosmic ripple of almost unimaginable smallness, yet which testifies to an enormous collision between two black holes that had been circling one another ever closer until they merged in an enormous event whose ripples can still be detected more than a billion years later.
Einstein was right in his prediction of gravitational waves even if there were times later in his life when he doubted it and even sought to retract it. Gravity is not, as it were, a simple linear phenomenon, and its tremors, however slight, testify to vast explosive forces in the cosmos.
This strikes me as a powerful metaphor of the human universe the West has been constructing for the past four centuries. It seemed for a long time to be a simple linear equation. The world was becoming ever more secularized. Civilization was a one way road from the age of many gods to that of one God to that of none. The 17th century saw the secularization of knowledge in the form of Newtonian science and Cartesian philosophy. The 18th century saw the secularization of power, in the form of the American and French revolutions and the separation of church and state.
The 19th century saw the secularization of culture, as museums, art galleries and concert halls took the place of churches as houses of the human spirit. And the 20th century saw the secularization of morality as one by one the nations of the West slowly abandoned the Judeo-Christian ethic of the sanctity of life and of the marital bond. And it began not because people stopped believing in God. Newton believed in God very much indeed. It happened after almost a century of wars of religion because people lost faith in the ability of people of different faiths to live peaceably together.
However, the linear theory of secularization always was an over-simplification. First, it failed to take account of the persistence of faith. None of the four great institutions of the modern age – science, technology, the market economy or the liberal democratic state – offers a compelling answer to the three great questions every reflective human being will ask at some stage in life: Who am I? Why am I here? How then shall I live? These belong to a different universe of discourse to that charted by science. As I put it in The Great Partnership: Science takes things apart to see how they work. Religion puts things together to see what they mean. We will always inhabit a world of the spirit that searches not just for explanation but also for meaning. Or as Einstein himself said: “To know an answer to the question, ‘what is the meaning of human life?’ means to be religious.”
No less significant, though, is that there always was a danger that extremism in one direction would generate a counter-extremism in the opposite direction. Like two black holes they might begin to circle one another, generating enormous turbulence. That, it seems to me, is the danger we face at present in many parts of the world: an extreme secularism facing extreme expressions of religion seeking to undo the work of four centuries of the West, threatening to take us back to the age of wars of religion. If these two powerful forces were to collide, the explosion would send ripples through the human universe for centuries to come.
This concern has driven much of my own work for the past quarter century, in three directions.
First, I believe that religion, or more precisely, religions, should have a voice in the public conversation within the societies of the West, as to how to live, how to construct a social order, how to enhance human dignity, honour human life, and indeed protect life as a whole from environmental hazard. We are about to be challenged by huge questions. How shall we use the ever greater power of medical technology through active intervention in the human genome? How shall we structure a global economy without generating almost unbearable inequalities within and between nations? How shall we confront the challenge artificial intelligence will pose to traditional patterns of employment? And so on. Our powers are growing almost faster than we can understand, let alone control, and we need not just intelligence, artificial or otherwise, but also wisdom. If nothing else, the world’s great faiths are among our richest heritages of wisdom. Religion must have a voice in the public conversation, but it must be a reasoned and reasonable voice and one that makes space for other voices also.
Second, in a culture of global communication and interconnectedness, we need to work as hard as we can to enhance mutual respect and friendship between faiths. There is no one formula as to how to do this. I have argued, for example, that the message of monotheism is not, one God, one truth, one way, but rather the miracle that unity in heaven creates diversity on earth. I have argued that the book of Genesis, from which Judaism, Christianity and Islam all take inspiration, tells us that our shared humanity precedes and transcends our religious differences.
More recently I have argued that we may have to reread the narratives of Genesis if we are to overcome the sibling rivalry that has all too often characterized the relationship between, and sometimes within, these three great faiths. Each religion, and each strand within each religion, will have to undertake this work, because if religion is not part of the solution it will assuredly be a large part of the problem as voices become ever more strident, and religious extremists ever more violent.
Third, I have tried within my own faith to do what I can to help turn religion outward. At times of great turbulence and change cultures become hedgehogs. They roll up and focus all their energies inward, presenting only sharp, prickly spines to the world outside. That is a symptom of fear – and faith should be the great antidote to fear. The imperative of the God of Abraham, as I understand it, is to be true to your faith while being a blessing to others regardless of their faith. The God of Abraham asks us to turn our face outward to the world, recognising His image even in the people who are not in our image, whose faith is not mine, whose colour and culture are not mine, yet whose humanity is as God-given and consecrated as mine.
These then have been the avenues I have sought to explore, and the Templeton Prize will both enable and encourage me to continue and intensify that work, seeking to find kindred spirits around the world, inspire young leaders to take the work forward into the future and doing all I can to honour the challenge of the prize itself, which is to make progress in religion, understanding that faith is a not-yet completed journey to a world awed by the cosmos as the work of God, and humbled in the face of our shared humanity as the image of God.
Lord Jonathan Sacks was the Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth from 1991 to 2013.
Below you will see the faces of two very different men, both good guys, religious, with important messages for society. One of them, American actor Terry Crews, has struggled with a very common problem afflicting men in particular and seems to be winning. It's hard to believe that he, and a New Zealand Olympian who has come out about the same problem, could be living in the same world as an Australian woman who is doing her PhD on women (including herself) who are producing pornography as a career. But it's true. As Rabbi Jonathan Sacks says, secularization has its limits; it's just hard to see where they lie at the moment.
Carolyn Moynihan
Deputy Editor,
MERCATORNET
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