China Cat Sunflower
Nimrod
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I've been thinking for quite some time about what a natural religion would be like. Not a religion of nature (necessarily), but a religion that encorporates the positive aspects of a religion in a way that makes sense for my modern life.
It seems to me that religion is not so much about believing in something as it is about being and belonging to something. In that sense religion works well as the transmission agent of nationalism. For sure there is doctrine, dogma, and theology, but that's just the nuts and bolts. At heart religion is a social mechanism that tells us who we are, where we came from, and ties us ethnically to a group.
This last Saturday was my oldest daughter's sixth birthday party. We had probably twenty adults and ten or twelve kids here at our house. I was mingling, enjoying, and playing my role as host. I was watching the adults group, disperse, then group again, and the kids playing. I started thinking about the social mechanisms of religion and wondering if having a good old fashioned get together didn't fill all of those roles.
I was raised a Seventh-day Adventist. Sabbath was a big deal. I've come to the opinion that the concept of "weekend" is really just an expansion on what the Sabbath is supposed to be...exept that there aren't any don'ts. I want a sacred weekend every week if I can help it.
I find the ritual of what I do on the weekend starting to gell into an almost religious experience. There's the ritual of cleaning the house on Saturday, followed by ritual sex with the wife on Saturday night. I take my ritual shave Sat. morning in preperation. Sunday is my ritual game of golf followed by playing with the kids so momma can rest, and then an awesome meal in the evening, usually with good friends, and then good conversation over drinks until it's night, night time.
So maybe all I need is a sacred scripture. I thought of using the Farmers Almanac. What do you think?
Chris
It seems to me that religion is not so much about believing in something as it is about being and belonging to something. In that sense religion works well as the transmission agent of nationalism. For sure there is doctrine, dogma, and theology, but that's just the nuts and bolts. At heart religion is a social mechanism that tells us who we are, where we came from, and ties us ethnically to a group.
This last Saturday was my oldest daughter's sixth birthday party. We had probably twenty adults and ten or twelve kids here at our house. I was mingling, enjoying, and playing my role as host. I was watching the adults group, disperse, then group again, and the kids playing. I started thinking about the social mechanisms of religion and wondering if having a good old fashioned get together didn't fill all of those roles.
I was raised a Seventh-day Adventist. Sabbath was a big deal. I've come to the opinion that the concept of "weekend" is really just an expansion on what the Sabbath is supposed to be...exept that there aren't any don'ts. I want a sacred weekend every week if I can help it.
I find the ritual of what I do on the weekend starting to gell into an almost religious experience. There's the ritual of cleaning the house on Saturday, followed by ritual sex with the wife on Saturday night. I take my ritual shave Sat. morning in preperation. Sunday is my ritual game of golf followed by playing with the kids so momma can rest, and then an awesome meal in the evening, usually with good friends, and then good conversation over drinks until it's night, night time.
So maybe all I need is a sacred scripture. I thought of using the Farmers Almanac. What do you think?
Chris