Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Wholeness: Faith & Reason


Modern science clearly impacts daily life.  At the same time, spirituality or religious tradition shapes experiences for many of us.  Yet the worlds of science and religion are often at odds.

There is a history to this antagonism.  By the sixteenth-century “the creativity of the West was now situated primarily in the scientific inquiry…” and not in the religious traditions, notes Thomas Berry the cultural historian (The Sacred Universe, p.6).  Berry writes that “…traditional religion, alienated from the modern world, has reached a spiritual impasse” (p.14).

The message of wisdom always seems to be one of wholeness.  Take everything that is, and work with it.  Don’t throw out discoveries of science.  Similarly don’t dismiss traditions of religion.  Let them mold each other.  See how they can inform and teach each other.

I agree with Berry that there is hope in efforts to allow modern realities to add “new vigor” to old traditions (p.17).  Science and religion need each other.  Without spirit, reason can grow egocentric and meaningless.  Lacking reason, spirituality can become removed from the realities of here and now.  They need to evolve together.

Further, the either-or debate of science or religion reflects the dualistic nature of many arguments and fields of study.  We can learn from this by seeing the need for more integration of academic fields, more acceptance of difference – the need for greater wholeness in ourselves.  Making connections and seeing the wider field, the bigger picture is the way forward for science and religion, for academic study, and for communities.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Getting There

In Wherever You Go, There You Are, author Jon Kabat-Zinn writes that in order to get there, you must be fully here.


I don't think most of us live like that.  We plan, we hurry, we follow automatic patterns of behavior that we hardly - if at all - notice to be patterns of behavior.  Once I get [fill in the blank] done, then life will be better.  Once I get [name the place or situation] then I'll be able to really relax.  I do it, too, and it's silliness.


In fact, whatever we're like now is probably how we'll be when we arrive there, wherever or whenever 'there' may be.  So in some ways the message is comforting: be present now and that prepares us for whatever is ahead.  It's a common theme, really.  It's one of openness, willingness, and allowing.  And it takes some work.