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- Does Religion Necessarily Liberate?
Does Religion Necessarily Liberate?
- By Jibril Sado
- Published 07/25/2007
- Religion & Philosophy
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Jibril Sado
I consider myself a free spirit. The unusual interests me in practically everything. The following quotations express an important part of my worldview:
Being myself includes taking risks with myself, taking risk on new behaviour, trying new ways of “being myself” so that I can see how it is I want to be - Hugh Prather
Many societies have educated their male children on the simple device of teaching them not to be women - Margaret Mead
In societies where men are truly confident of their worth, women are not merely tolerated but valued - Aung San Suu Kyi
To handle yourself, use your head; to handle others, use your heart - George Bernard Shaw
Our humanity rests upon a series of learned behaviors, woven together into patterns that are infinitely fragile and never directly inherited - Margaret Mead
You can reach me at justjibril@yahoo.com
A university undergraduate in
In
In
I do spirituality but for a kaleidoscope of reasons I find religion confusing
I cringe and shudder for instance, to think that by certain religious account or definition, there is a chance that the saintly Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu – Mother Teresa to all of us – who so admirably epitomized kindness and altruism might end up in some conflagration somewhere in the clouds above while some of us so lacking in such moral fundamentals as love and compassion will not, just because unlike her, we have held on to certain doctrine as a part of our belief in a supreme being. I reject the notion of there being a specific path to doing good and going to that much vaunted heaven, and that religiosity or being religious is that only way. I ask anyone who confronts me with the superiority of his religion over any other, ‘what happens if you wake up one day here or there to discover that all you have ever held to be true about your religion and that of others is not actually the way it seems now?’ More often than not, I get the answer, ‘that is faith for you’.
But I believe there is an avenue, if you will, a midpoint or safety valve you can adopt with less anxiety as it affords you the opportunity to live meaningfully by demonstrating the fact that the only divine imperatives are such higher values like love, trust, compassion, etc, while being able to grow in other spheres of your life. It is my belief that if Islam came with Mohammed and Christianity came with Jesus Christ, then we can live in peace and harmony and develop all-round without all the religiosity that jumbles our reasoning today. I rationalize my stance in the belief that some of the most revered men in faith were first and foremost highly successful merchants, carpenters, shepherds and what have you, who did not allow their faith interfere with their personal development in other spheres of life. Muslims, Jews and Christians all subscribe to Moses/Musa, Abraham/Ibrahim as the rafters of their faith and I argue that these figures, by all rational accounts were neither Christians nor Muslims. And they were very likely not Jews either. Yet they managed to lead – whether it was by their consciousness of a supreme being or not – a life of great love and compassion for everyone while not being hindered in their quest for personal socio-economic development.
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10 Responses to "Does Religion Necessarily Liberate?" 
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said this on 25 Jul 2007 12:26:12 PM EDT
so very true,sometimes it is too easy to fall on instead of doing something about the situation by empowering yourself.
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said this on 25 Jul 2007 12:31:35 PM EDT
You are right with your points because the 'religious' clergies of the "Latter-Days" have gone gaga. I agree with your statement thus: ‘what happens if you wake up one day here or there to discover that all you have ever held to be true about your religion and that of others is not actually the way it seems now?’ " And because of this I have even stopped going to church but I am a christian. I like your article. More greese to your brain.........
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said this on 25 Jul 2007 8:41:35 PM EDT
Good comments.What sort of God teaches selective love or idleness?
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said this on 26 Jul 2007 11:42:20 PM EDT
Really saturated and frank article. I support the point that religion bounds progressive thought and ignores natural-based intentions.
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said this on 28 Jul 2007 10:50:24 AM EDT
Well put together! But I disagree that religion is the problem. The problem lies more with people, their world views, knowledge, intellect, understanding and interpretation of their religions. And if their religion is failing them, perhaps its time to go shopping for a new one.
The problem with most people today is they look around, see people of religion messing up and conclude the only solution is to get rid of religion altogether. Are the divine impratives of love, trust, compassion, tolerance, etc, not preached by this very religions?
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said this on 01 Aug 2007 1:12:57 PM EDT
Right on point. I enjoyed reading it.
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said this on 04 Aug 2007 6:10:44 AM EDT
I agree with thewriter (comment #5). The problem in religion has often been with people, not theology and dogma. For anyone who hasn't read much outside of the "Holy Books" (particularly the philosophical and metaphysical writings), I don't think they can truly grasp the depth to which religious thinking and rationale operates outside of their zone. Interestingly, agnostics and atheists are just as fundamentalist as the religious people they criticise. Ironic? I think not.
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said this on 06 Aug 2007 8:15:00 AM EDT
wonderful write-up, but rather too judgemental
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said this on 08 Aug 2007 11:29:05 AM EDT
I totally disagree with comment #8 and #7. The problemwith religion is as much with dogma as it is with people the holy books as the fountain and foundation of religion, they are the reference point of anything religious and if they form the evidence of a strong argument against religion, then just as well. The truth is certain formof unreasonability aside, most actions that neutrals, free thinkers and agnostics, atheist and what have you pick on in religious peopleare sanctioned by religion as reflected in holy books. Kudos to this writer.
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said this on 04 Oct 2007 12:55:12 AM EDT
You have given us an explicit view of the expliotative parlance attached to religion in Nigeria and which has not contributed to the intellectual growth of the ordinary man who believes being pious is semblance to being poor.
Thank you and keep the wheels going because you are a quintessential per excellence
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