"Believers and Nonbelievers" by Rev. Thomas Schade
Memos from Rev. Barbara Merritt and Rev. Tom Schade
Firstumemo at firstunitarian.com
Tue Oct 24 13:49:14 CDT 2006
M I N I S T E R S M E M O
Believers and Nonbelievers
Last week, I went with a group of my colleagues to Rowe Camp and Conference
Center for a study group for UU ministers. We gathered to review some of the
findings of some of those studying the human brain, and to consider the
implications that they have for organized religion. There is a field of
study now known as Neurotheology, which inquires into how religious
feelings and spirituality is processed by the brain. So we read some of the
writings that have come from the scientists, and fell to the task of trying
to sort out what it means for understanding the religious diversity in the
world, and planning worship services, and the rest of our work.
I dont think that we pushed back the frontiers of human knowledge. After
all, most of us dont have much of a background in medical science. I myself
never advance beyond the gee whiz level of reaction to this kind of
information. Someone tells me that there are some gazillion neurons in the
brain, each making another gazillion connections to each other. Each of
these gazillion neurons is programmed by genes that make up its DNA, and
scientists think this gene causes the neurons to act in this way, and that
gene tunes that other neuron to music of the spheres. To which I respond,
Gee Whiz! Isnt that something? Wow!
Of course, I believe it. I have no reason not to.
They could show me a picture of some squiggly little things, and tell me
that if they turn clockwise, it that causes Methodism, while the counter
clockwise movement results in Sikhism, and I would believe them. I just
wouldnt take it very seriously.
There is a serious scientific consensus that there are identifiable brain
states, or patterns of brain activity, that correspond with what people
experience as a spiritual feeling. Some analysts call that feeling
self-transcendence.
There is something going on when people have that feeling of connection to a
larger, all-encompassing wholeness. Further, there is not much difference in
these brain reactions between the Buddhist, the Christian or the Natural
Mystic. There is a brain process that one might call spiritual awareness
and it is independent of any specific religious content.
In other words, there may be a scientific basis for the distinction that so
many people make between being spiritual and being religious.
Even more interesting is the evidence that some people, due to their unique
brain, are more prone to this feeling of self-transcendence than others.
Some people seem to be more hardwired for spirituality, and most likely,
religion than others. We may not get to choose these aspects of life,
anymore than we choose whether we are right-handed or left-handed.
Do they mean to tell me that all those arguments about the existence of God
are not likely to change anyones mind? If so, I am glad to find that out,
since that has been my impression all along. There are those who believe and
those who dont. No less an observer of the religious spirit than St. Paul
remarked that the degree of our faith was a gift from God, and not our own
doing.
Another bit of information from the brain scientists clarifies this more. It
appears that when we learn a piece of information, we remember not only it,
but also any emotions we may be feeling while we are storing that knowledge
away. If you were scared when you learned about religion, that fear will
always re-surface to some degree whenever you think about religion. It only
makes sense.
So what does all this mean?
I think that what it means is that whenever people gather together to have a
church service, it is inevitable that everyone in the room will have their
own unique angle of vision on what the group is doing. Some will be fully
caught up in it; others more skeptical; and still others, quite anxious and
nervous. And, most of those emotional reactions will not be under the
rational control of the people in the pews.
Given that, doesnt it take bravery to worship together? All sorts of
people, in widely varying emotional states, come together to make a human
connection with each other, in the presence of as much transcendence as they
can countenance, and to be witnesses to each others struggle to live in the
fullness of the truth.
There is great joy there, because while we each have our own brains, we
share a heart.
Tom
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