Anything in Moderation?

In a recent post, Kevin Kim offers a rebuttal to Sam Harris’s argument that religious moderates are in fact an impediment to progress toward a more rational world.

Kevin, reading from an online excerpt from Harris’s The End of Faith, quotes the following passage:

The problem that religious moderation poses for all of us is that it does not permit anything very critical to be said about religious literalism. We cannot say that fundamentalists are crazy, because they are merely practicing their freedom of belief; we cannot even say that they are mistaken in religious terms, because their knowledge of scripture is generally unrivaled. All we can say, as religious moderates, is that we don’t like the personal and social costs that a full embrace of scripture imposes on us. This is not a new form of faith, or even a new species of scriptural exegesis; it is simply a capitulation to a variety of all-too-human interests that have nothing, in principle, to do with God.

Unless the core dogmas of faith are called into question– i.e., that we know there is a God, and that we know what he wants from us– religious moderation will do nothing to lead us out of the wilderness.

The benignity of most religious moderates does not suggest that religious faith is anything more sublime than a desperate marriage of hope and ignorance, nor does it guarantee that there is not a terrible price to be paid for limiting the scope of reason in our dealings with other human beings. Religious moderation, insofar as it represents an attempt to hold on to what is still serviceable in orthodox religion, closes the door to more sophisticated approaches to spirituality, ethics, and the building of strong communities.

Kevin, who has a laudable personal interest in the promotion of interreligious dialogue, and whose fascinating book Water From A Skull examines the topic in great depth, makes the following objection:

Harris seems to think that moderates and pluralists are purposely or inadvertently protecting their more rabid co-religionists, but I think the assertion in the first sentence of the above-quoted text is in error. Contrary to Harris’s claim, I would contend that religious moderation and pluralism are often critical responses to fundamentalism, scriptural literalism, and similar orientations.

I am also unsure how Harris can justify calling moderation and pluralism “an attempt to hold on to what is still serviceable in orthodox religion.” Theologians like John Hick or the far more radical John Shelby Spong would probably style their project as one of deconstruction: both Hick and Spong are willing to go so far as to throw out the resurrection — the very cornerstone of Christian faith — in their radical recasting of the Christian message. What Harris is talking about is more reminiscent of the humorous stereotypes one hears about the Catholic Church: every announced revision in Roman dogma begins, “As we have always contended…”

In speaking this way about religion, Harris mischaracterizes the phenomenon as non-evolving, which is ludicrous even from a non-religious standpoint. I would agree that religious traditions are highly, highly resistant to change; as my former pastor used to say, “If you want to find a group of people more unwilling to change than any other, go to a church.” There’s truth to this. But Harris should know better than to view religions as static phenomena. They do indeed change, the doctrines within them change, and one of the ways they evolve is by interacting with scientists, the non-religious, and yes, with other religious traditions.

Kevin’s point is well taken. Much of moderate and progressive religion is indeed a critical response to the dogmatic rigidity and palpable absurdities of literalism and fundamentalism. And as moderate religious groups evolve and interact, there can plainly be a softening, and sometimes a casting aside, of previously non-negotiable doctrine (that theologians like Hick would be willing to abandon the notion of the Resurrection is a particularly striking example). This in turn does make it possible for progressive religious communities of different faiths to find common ground, to reach out across ancient divisions.

But Harris is right as well, I think: the problem is that no amount of evolution by moderate and progressive congregations will address the problem of religious fundamentalism and extremism. To such believers, the moderates are seen, and quite defensibly so, simply as heretics on their way to apostasy, and ultimately to Hell. Particularly in the case of Islam, there is not a great deal of wiggle-room: the belief that the sacred Muslim text is the verbatim, literal word of God, dictated to a chosen prophet who then reigned on Earth for ten years as political leader as well (thereby providing a clear example of how God thinks human society ought to be arranged), is a core tenet of the religion. Anyone who does not accept this as incontestible truth is arguably no longer a Muslim at all.

I think also that while progressive religious pluralists may indeed make occasionally harsh criticism of the fundamentalists in their own traditions, their agenda of tolerance and respectful dialogue makes it far rarer for them to have anything unfavorable to say about other faiths. After all, it is one thing to bicker amongst one’s own family, but human groups are notoriously prickly when it comes to perceived insults from without — and there are few subjects about which folks are more sensitive than their religion (this is yet another of religion’s exquisitely evolved defenses). A perfect example of this is Anglican leader Rowan Williams’s recent abject prostration in the face of Muslim demands for the establishment of Shari’a in England.

So while I agree with Kevin that Harris underestimates the extent to which, at its growing tip, religious thought may evolve, I do think it is fair to say that moderate, progressive, tolerant religious pluralism can indeed provide cover behind which noxious fundamentalisms may fester.

6 Comments

  1. JK says

    I’m not certain that a third path is recognized. For my individuality I accept faith, distinguishable from belief of course. This is difficult from the perspective of those who, “of the Faith” find it hard to accept that one of their own accepts a belief in science. For the life of me, or the germ, I see no dissonance.

    Whether any other sentient being accepts, as I do, matters not a whit. That another might wish to convince me that I am incorrect insofar as faith regards-matters not a whit. Insofar as belief and faith, I seek not to prosyletize in either regard. And I see no compunction that I must in either faith or belief seek to transform another.

    I am presented empirical evidence that bacteria are presently evolving immunities to antibiotics. I have no problem with the evidence. Very difficult to argue with the scientific method-hypothesis, theory, test, perhaps conclusion. Maybe a Law. To me however an immutable Law lends credence to faith.

    I see faith and belief as two separate entries in a dictionary. Belief is somewhere after aardvark. Faith is somewhere after faarthing. Old English I know. However I admit and I purposefully render what I believe, what I have faith in, creationism, uncapitalized and lacking either. Faith in the hands of a George W. Bush is a dangerous thing. Belief in the same hands-equally dangerous.

    But I do not seek to proselytize as I have stated. Whether another has the faith I contain does me no good, no harm. Neither does the lack of faith do me either. I lay on my back in an unlit night and gaze upon what I consider Creation and wish others to believe that there are mysteries to resolve.

    And insofar as we are able to resolve the Mysteries, from whichever Cardinal Point (loaded as that reference is) I care not a whit.

    Don’t do no “Noble Savage” American Indian thing on me. I’ll do no Crusader: no Christianity to the natives thing on you. Sorry about the capitalization thing, it’s habit.

    JK

    Posted March 25, 2008 at 3:16 am | Permalink
  2. Malcolm says

    Hi JK, and thanks for commenting.

    In order that we may understand your remarks more clearly, could you explain what you see as the distinction between faith and belief?

    Posted March 25, 2008 at 10:09 am | Permalink
  3. JK says

    Faith in a religious tradition is too often equated as belief. For me as an individual, I try to differentiate between faith and belief as follows. Faith is without the scientific method and thus unprovable, in either direction. I do not have “faith”in evolution but I believe it to be the most accurate means of describing and understanding life on Earth. And so on as far as science/religion is concerned. I have neither faith nor belief in creationism, at least insofar as it is most often presented to me.

    Now Malcolm, I find myself at odds not infrequently with (as I consider) zealous adherents/associates from either camp: but most frequently with the adherents of a particular “faith.” For the believers in science alone, their efforts to persuade me are usually less contentious, usually more oh, “good-natured” I suppose.

    I try very hard to remember when I write not to put down that I have “faith that a particular theory will play out in such and such a manner.” I make every effort to distinguish the difference between my religious faith and my belief in science. The strictly science folk generally tolerate me. However I find myself being visited by Jehovah’s Witnesses when I disagree with the faith-based arguments.

    I suppose that when I comment on your site I should check back in more frequently so that I might answer in a timely fashion. I’ve tried to keep this short and simple. Am I sufficiently clear?

    JK

    Posted March 26, 2008 at 5:50 pm | Permalink
  4. JK says

    Hey Malcolm,

    Had to do a bit of searching but I think I’ve found my position paper er, blog. Read the entry for March 23rd by “Sean.” I copied the link but only tried to remember the title, I think it’s Politicians and Critics or somesuch.

    http://cosmicvariance.com/

    I realize my Presbyterianism doesn’t really fit in with the more radical (and well-nasty) forms, but that was my original point. I think it was Sam Rayburn who gave LBJ this advice, “To get along, go along.” Our Constitutional mantra is and should remain: Separation of Church and State. Yours’ and Gypsy’s recent entries on Raidical Multiculturalism should be, well must be, guiding principle.

    JK

    Posted March 26, 2008 at 10:57 pm | Permalink
  5. Malcolm says

    Thanks, JK; that was quite clear indeed. I’ll take a look at the link you’ve given us.

    Posted March 27, 2008 at 12:10 am | Permalink
  6. Malcolm says

    …which I have now done, and I was impressed enough to add that website to our sidebar.

    Thank you!

    Posted March 27, 2008 at 12:21 am | Permalink

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