Opinion
Religion And Rationality Of Purpose (I)
Religion is the belief in a personal God or gods en
titled to obedience and worship. The national government of Nigeria allows for freedom of religion, that is, persons to follow whatever religion one chooses. Therefore, an individual or a group of people have the fundamental right to reject what is unreasonable or cannot be tested by reason in religion or custom.
The only snag is that religion in Nigeria, which is so near to rationality in its purpose, has today fallen so far short of it in its texture and in its results. The reason is attributable to the fact that religion pursues rationality through a process of imagination. The conditions and the aims of life we perceive are poetically represented in religion, but this poetry tends to arrogate to itself literal truth and moral authority, neither of which it possesses. Hence the depth and importance of religion become intelligible no-less-than its contradictions and practical disasters. Its object is the same as that of reason, but its method is to proceed by intuition and by unchecked poetic conceits.
These poetic conceits are repeated and vulgarised in proportion to their original fineness and significance, till they pass for reports of objective truth and came to constitute a world of faith, superposed upon the world of experience and regarded as acceptable religious materials, if not in space at least in time and in existence. The only truth of religion comes from its interpretation of life, from its symbolic rendering of that moral experience which it springs out of and which it seeks to elucidate.
Man’s consciousness in it, is more immersed in nature, nearer to a vegetative union with the general life; it bemoans division and celebrates harmony with a more passive and lyrical wonder. Its false hood however, comes from the insidious misunderstanding which clings to it, to the fact that these poetic conceptions are not merely representations of experiences, but are rather information about experience or reality elsewhere, which strangely, supply just the defects betrayed by reality and experience on earth. Thus religion has the same original relation to life that poetry has; although, poetry never pretends to add a pure value of liberal imaginative exercise to existence.
The poetic value of religion would initially be greater than that of poetry itself, because religion deals with higher and more practical themes, with sides of life which are in greater need of some imaginative touch and ideal interpretation than are those pleasant or pompous things which ordinary poetry dwells upon. But this initial advantage is neutralised in part by the abuse to which religion is subject, whenever its symbolic rightness is taken for scientific truth. Like poetry, religion thinks to confer a more radical benefit by persuading mankind that, in spite of appearances, the world is really such as professed by a given religion rather than the arbitrary idealisation as painted it. This spurious satisfaction is naturally the prelude to many a disappointment, and the soul of believers has infinite trouble to emerge again from the artificial problems and sentiments into which it is thus plunged.
It is obvious that religion is an imaginative achievement, a symbolic representation of moral reality which may have a most important function in vitalizing the mind and transmitting, by way of parables, the lessons of experience. But it becomes at the same time a continuous incidental deception; and this deception is strenuously denied to the proportion of causing indefinite harm in the world and in the conscience.
On the whole, however, religion should not be conceived as having taken the place of anything better, but rather as having come to relieve situations which, but for its presence, would have been infinitely worse.
In the thick of active life, or in the monotony of practical slavery, there is more need to stimulate fancy than control it. We must not blame religion for preventing the development of a moral and natural science which at any rate would seldom have appeared; rather we should appreciate religion for the sensibility, the reverence, the speculative insight which it has introduced into the world.
We may therefore, proceed to analyze the significance and the function which religion has had at different stages, and without condoning its confusion with literal truth, we may allow ourselves to enter as sympathetically as possible into its various conceptions and motions. For instance, religion in Nigeria have made up the inner life of many sages, and of all those who without great genius or learning have lived steadfastly in the spirit. Nevertheless, we must confess that religion have prevailed on thousands of persons in Nigeria who today express total satisfaction with its results and achievements, thanks to a fond partiality in reading the past and generous draughts of hope for the future; but anyone regarding the various religions at once and comparing their achievements with what reason requires, must feel how terrible is the disappointment which they have one and all prepared for mankind. It is a common knowledge, that their major anxiety has been to offer imaginary remedies for mortal ills, some of which are essentially incurable, while others might have been really cured by well directed effort. The Greek oracles, for instance pretended to heal our natural ignorance, which has its appropriate though difficult cure, while Christian vision of heaven, pretended to be an antidote to our natural death, the inevitable correlate of birth and of a changing and conditioned existence. It is obvious that with this method of the religion claims, only little can be done for the real betterment of life.
Fuayefika, a public affairs analyst writes from Port Harcourt.
Tonye Fuayefika
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