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Trevor's avatar

If you look at this phenomenon from the other end (i.e. the cause instead of the multiple forms its symptoms may take), it may appear that humans are innately programmed for a spiritual experience, and we are all just plugging different variables into the underlying universal grammar. If so, it would make sense that contemporary solutions are shallow and full of gibberish given the external circumstances, but I don't think we should throw out the baby Jesus with the holy bathwater here!

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Tarot for aspiring writers's avatar

Great series, Jamie. I can’t help but wonder—what is your religion? Who is your god?

As I go through your exploration of megachurches, I keep asking myself: what do I belong to? I grew up Catholic, and I still find something moving in Catholic mass, not for its dogma but for its ceremony. I’m a sucker for incense, for the solemnity of nuns, for art covering the walls, for ritual.

I do have a god, or gods. Life itself, the planet Earth, Time; forces to respect. But who do I venerate? Who do I love as my god? Who do I have a sublime, divine relationship with? And I realize, it is my creative inner companion, the presence that moves through me when I write. In its company I feel bigger than my everyday self, yet so deeply personal.

Could we have a religion built around our own inner companions? Could creativity, art, be our gods? As Nikolai Berdyaev said, "God awaits from us a creative act." A shift from justifying the goodness of God in the face of evil, as Berdyaev would say, to justifying ourselves, our own moral and existential standing based on creative principles that sustains life rather than undermining it.

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