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9 THINGS EVERY DEIST SHOULD KNOW

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3 WAYS PANENDEISM CAN BENEFIT THE WORLD

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Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts

Monday, July 20, 2015

My Religion is Life and My Church is the Universe

The Emblem of Deism 'My Religion is Life and My Church is the Universe' Benjamin Sullivan
Deism is Based on Observable Truth and Logic Rather Than Faith in the Unknown

Modern Deism is a religion or philosophy that isn't really well understood by the general public. As a deist, I've decided to dedicate an article to explaining what it is and is not.

Deism is almost entirely void of faith.  As a deist, you observe the perfect balance and incomprehensible complexity of the universe and consider a creator to be self-evident through it. Many of the greatest minds in human history have come to the same conclusion through observation. Einstein, whose theories unlocked the key to understanding the very substance of the universe once said

"Everyone who is seriously involved in the pursuit of science becomes convinced that a spirit is manifest in the laws of the universe - a spirit vastly superior to that of man, and one in the face of which we with our modest powers must feel humble. In this way the pursuit of science leads to a religious feeling of a special sort, which is indeed quite different from the religiosity of someone more naive."

Deism is understanding God through personal observation. There is no hidden or abstract meaning to attain, no ritualistic practice to elevate one's spirituality, and no prayer to alter destiny. There are innumerable things that are self-evident and by choosing to embrace or ignore these things, we alter the quality and depth of our experiences.

Deists reject 3rd party information from people who claim to have spoken with God or spiritual entities. However, we don't claim they are impossible or don't occur. For example, it's not that we reject the concept that an angel could appear in your bathroom and demand you stop eating tacos, it's that the only person who's obligated to believe that angel and stop eating tacos, is you. If every person on earth suddenly had a an angel telling them to stop eating tacos, we'd certainly stop eating tacos and start believing in angels.

The greatest gift of life is that we exist and are able experience. Through experience we observe God's creation and using the gift of reason, we seek understanding on everything around us. Because we are conscious beings capable of experience, we are able to love, to create, to be inspired, to be moved, and to change the world around us.

God is discovered entirely through creation - the brilliance of a sunset, the powerful roar of  a waterfall, the symphony of sounds you hear in the heart of the forest, or the vastness of space and its countless stars. God is the mastermind behind all matter - every earth shattering scientific discovery and mystery that is yet to be unraveled was dreamed and enacted by God.

God is perfect and doesn't need to intervene in creation. A creator complex enough to construct the universe would clearly be aware of its outcome, eliminating the need to change it down the line. Deism observes a balance that allows for both free will and autonomous correction.

Evil is a necessary component of a multi-faceted existence, without it, good has no definition. It is only through our struggles that we can triumph, only through chaos that we can know order, and only through conquering our own infirmities that we can comprehend the joys of a life well lived. Since we are free beings and live in a world that allows choice, we are exposed to both elements and whatever joys or sorrows they may bring.

As a whole, humanity already has the resources to abolish many of the problems we conveniently attribute to God. Through reason, we have risen to technological levels our predecessors could never have dreamed would be possible, and we continue to advance. Hunger, poverty, and disease could all be eradicated if we learned to think outside of ourselves and consider each human being as an equal part of an integral whole. Yet so far, we have chosen to hoard. We've created a world view in which people in one culture are dying from obesity while people in another are dying of starvation. It's only through our own efforts that we can make the world into the kind of place we want it to be. We can blame no one for the state of civilization, it is merely a reflection of the majority of our own actions and mindsets.

Written by Benjamin F. Sullivan, Published with Permission via BlogOfBenjamin

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Why Deism is Not a Religion

Deism is not a religion, but a religious philosophy. It advances the theory that God exists, that He created the universe, but does not intervene in the affairs of humankind.

Deism emerged during the Enlightenment in the 17th and 18th centuries, initially in England, later in France and other European countries, and also in America.

Deism serves to rationalize the existence of God with newly surfacing scientific discoveries and belief in the existence of free will. Deists generally place their trust in reason and disdain revelation as well as the teachings of a specific church. Some elements of Deism survive today in Unitarianism.

Washington, Franklin, Jefferson and Paine were prominent deists in 18th century America.

Franklin summarized much of the philosophy of deism in his Articles of Belief and Acts of Religion, which he published in 1728 at the age of 22. It began:

For I believe that Man is not the most perfect being but One, rather that as there are many Degrees of Beings his Inferiors, so there are many Degrees of Beings superior to him.

Also, when I stretch my Imagination thro` and beyond our System of Planets, beyond the visible fix`d Stars themselves, into that Space that is every Way infinite, and conceive it fill`d with Suns like ours, each with a Chorus of Worlds for ever moving round him, then this little Ball on which we move, seems, even in my narrow Imagination, to be almost Nothing, and my self less than nothing, and of no sort of Consequence.

When I think thus, I imagine it great Vanity in me to suppose that the Supremely Perfect, does in the least regard such an inconsiderable Nothing as Man. More especially, since it is impossible for me to have any positive or clear Idea of that which is infinite and incomprehensible, I cannot conceive otherwise, that He, the Infinite Father, expects or requires no Worship or Praise from us, but that he is even infinitely above it.

---- Selected Quotes ----

Ethan Allen On Deism

I have generally been denominated a Deist, the reality of which I never disputed, being conscious I am no Christian, except mere infant baptism make me one; and as to being a Deist, I know not, strictly speaking, whether I am one or not, for I have never read their writings; mine will therefore determine the matter; for I have not in the least disguised my sentiments, but have written freely without any conscious knowledge of prejudice for, or against any man, sectary or party whatever; but wish that good sense, truth and virtue may be promoted and flourish in the world, to the detection of delusion, superstition, and false religion; and therefore my errors in the succeeding treatise, which may be rationally pointed out, will be readily rescinded.

Preface to "The Only Oracle of Man", 1784
By Frank Lloyd Wright

I believe in God, only I spell it "Nature".

- - - Books You May Like Include: ----

The Faiths of the Founding Fathers by David L. Holmes.
It is not uncommon to hear Christians argue that America was founded as a Christian nation. But how true is this claim? In this compact book, David L...
God of Liberty: A Religious History of the American Revolution by Thomas S. Kidd.
Before the Revolutionary War, America was a nation divided by different faiths. But when the war for independence sparked in 1776, colonists united un...

Deism Is Not A Religion.

Reviewed by Dr. Ben Johnson, Doctor of Divinity-Original author unknown.