Somewhere
along the road, curiosity moved into my head and hasn’t paid rent since. I’ve
always been open—respectfully—to how other people see the divine. I may not
agree with George Carlin or the more notorious atheists, but I’m endlessly
interested in how they arrived where they did. Passion—especially philosophical
passion—deserves attention, not hostility.
The
Great Spiritual Family Tug-of-War
To
understand my perspective, you have to know my family. On the maternal side:
hardcore Roman Catholics, the type who still have holy water that expired
during the Nixon administration. On the paternal side, Southern Baptists are so
committed that you can practically hear the hymns when you walk into the room.
And
let’s say… the two branches are not known for their warm ecumenical embraces.
Some Baptists feel the Catholic Church is “not Christian enough”, and a few
even drop the “anti-Christ pope” line like it’s casual small talk. (Nothing
like a little light spiritual combat at Thanksgiving.)
But
then there’s my father, a Baptist preacher himself. A man who’s walked the
walk, preached the Word, and still manages to sum up inter-denominational unity
better than any seminary lecture: “Boy… at least we have the Father, Son,
and Holy Ghost in common!” And he’s
right. That is a foundation strong enough to build bridges on.
From
Chopra to Carlin: Listening Without Losing Yourself
I’ve always
appreciated voices like Deepak Chopra, not because I adopt every
teaching, but because he recognizes something universal:
Most faith traditions—despite different names, faces, and languages—reach for
the same divine Source.
After
all, Jesus wasn’t a blonde-haired, blue-eyed Middle Eastern man that I had pictured
in my head growing up. And I’m pretty
sure God doesn’t check His passports to decide what ethnicity He’s going to
appear as today.
I disagree
with George Carlin’s conclusion (“no God”), but I admire the boldness behind
it. I don’t embrace atheist philosophy, but I’m genuinely intrigued by the
rigor some of them bring to their reasoning. When someone has wrestled
intellectually for years, even if I disagree, I respect the tenacity.
Because
for me, curiosity is not doubt. Curiosity is just another form of reverence.
Pascal’s
Math and the Comedy of Faith
Then
there’s Blaise Pascal, who basically turned theology into a Vegas
decision tree: Believe, and if you're right, you win heaven. Don’t believe, and
if you’re wrong—well, that’s the sort of “oops” you don’t recover from.
It’s
funny, but it also shows that even the most innovative thinkers in history have
wrestled with the question of belief. And here I am, somewhere between Carlin’s
mic drop and Pascal’s spreadsheets, just trying to keep the conversation in my
head from turning into a cage match.
So,
Where Does That Leave Me?
It leaves
me right where God placed me: Firm in my Catholic faith. I’m grateful for where I came from. Open to learning from people who don’t
believe what I believe. And hopeful that
one day Baptists and Catholics will sit together without someone reaching for a
verse like it’s a weapon. I love it when
Dad says, “Boy, you know what Paul said about…” My reply is generally, “No,
Dad, but I'm sure you’re going to tell me regardless!”
In the
end, I trust a God big enough to handle our questions, patient enough to wait
for our clarity, and loving enough to guide all of us, Catholic, Baptist,
Buddhist, Muslim, atheist—because every single one of us is trying to
understand the same mystery.
And if
I ever get lost in all the theological noise, I hear my father’s voice again: “Boy…
at least we have the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost in common!”
Amen to that.
I’m right there with you, kneeling before the monstrance and striking my breast, and then I read Viktor Frankl or someone similar and my mind begins to mull! Recently I read a book by a Jewish neurologist, Proof of Heaven, interesting, to say the least! It’s good to learn and question and not to be sedentary and take our religion for granted. I LOVE learning about the faith of others. It’s atheism that I can’t quite understand. Thanks, Greg
ReplyDeleteGlad more people than me love learning about and having religious tolerance. Enjoyed reading your feedback. Namaste!
DeleteRight on my friend! I always fall back on that everyone, EVERYONE, is made in God's image. And isn't that a grand thought. God is big enough to handle all of us. Thanksgiving blessings to you and yours.
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving to you and your family as well! Namaste, my friend!
ReplyDeleteGreat lesson as we gather around the table this week! I was a convert when I was expecting my first so our table has a lot of branches to that religion tree. Even a few that I'm praying will bloom again. Maybe that's what keeps me learning about my own faith in the hopes I can share just the right words someday. Thanks for your help🙏
ReplyDeleteGod gave us two ears and one mouth for a reason. I love listening to people talk about things important to them, religion almost always pops up in their TOP lists, listen to what makes them, them, and appreciate that they "believe" in a cosmic force, a creator, GOD, who is omnipotent and better than anything of this world... Happy Thanksgiving!
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