On hope and faith
It is convenient to categorize people and their relation to faith into these blocks:
- Ones with blind faith in god.
- Reasoned believers.
- Non-believers who haven't quite thought about it and hence do not have conviction.
- Reasoned non-believers.
- people who gloss over their infirmities using god:)
One may cope with difficult circumstances by not relying on faith/god. There is usually a point where one usually finds it extremely hard to continue doing so. At some point in our lives, faith usually steps in and saves when we cannot survive by ourselves anymore. People follow a statistical distribution in the types of their reactions to adversity. Such reactions are also distributed across times. for e.g. if your dad dies, you may resort to faith immediately or at a much later point (distributed). No two people are exactly alike in their reactions. Few people even risk saying there is no God. Most meekly obey and play along with rituals even; worship rather than be defiant. On a personal note, I have never been through a situation which I have not been able to cope with, myself. The longer I do this, the stronger I get, the firmer my conviction becomes that man is alone.
It has been a year since I realized the importance of hope in a man's life. I thought I had hit a dead end; no amount of thinking was letting me progress further, if there is in fact scope for any more progress. However recently, I got some much needed help from an uncle who understood where I was and asked me to think about faith to be a cause and hope as its effect. Light of day, eh? Not quite. This might be an important clue. I have to reason whether faith is the cause and hope is the effect, all by myself. I have felt that hope is inbuilt and have described this in detail elsewhere. We are naturally inclined to be hopeful. Does that apply to faith as well? Are we born with it? Am I not admitting that I am such a hopeful person only because of faith? Is this plausible? Quite a contradiction! More later.
3 Comments:
Even if religion gives us hope, that does not make it true (or false). The question is whether the basic tenets of religion can survive reasoned scrutiny.
there cannot be a reasoned faith, even though I had added that as a subcategory - that was because of a few people who think they could reason god. Guess reason and faith do not go hand in glove.
Hope,faith, belief call it whatever you may, it is all pure moral support. Our heart and mind tries to hold on to something to keep going forward... How strange it is... We need to hold on if we want to progress. Hope, faith, god, belief in non- existent of God, all thee thoughts of ours are like the branch supporting the vine. Justification gives us closures, gives us peace
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