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<text id=93TT0277>
<title>
Sep. 27, 1993: How Man Created God
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Sep. 27, 1993 Attack Of The Video Games
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
IDEAS, Page 77
How Man Created God
</hdr><body>
<p>In a provocative new book, a former nun explains how God really
is in the details
</p>
<p>By JOHN ELSON--With reporting by Helen Gibson/London
</p>
<p> Who is God? What can we know about God? And if knowing God is
possible, how do we comprehend him: by reason or only through
an ecstatic epiphany of faith? These questions have tormented
theologians and mystics in the 4,000-year history of monotheism.
Their wildly varied answers are explored in an absorbing new
book from Britain with a catchy title, a lode of learning and
a challenging thesis. Whether or not one accepts the biblical
teaching that men and women are made in God's image, argues
the author of A History of God (Knopf; $27.50), it is clear
the deity is a product of humankind's creative imagination.
</p>
<p> God may well be our most interesting idea. Down the ages, humans
have posited a deity, or deities, in order to fulfill a pragmatic
need: primarily, to find meaning and value in life. Man is the
only animal that worships; religion underlies conflicts and
economics even in the secular 20th century, the only age in
history that has not regarded some form of faith as natural
and normative.
</p>
<p> Karen Armstrong, 48, who wrote A History of God, has impressively
wide scholarship and strong ecumenical credentials. She spent
seven years as a Roman Catholic nun, part of the time studying
literature at St. Anne's College, Oxford. It was there that
she began to question the teachings of the church and decided,
after considerable agony, to leave her order. She lives alone
in north London and teaches at the Leo Baeck College for the
Study of Judaism. Armstrong has written 10 books, including
an account of her convent years, Through the Narrow Gate, and
a well-regarded biography of Muhammad that earned her an honorary
membership in the Association of Muslim Social Scientists.
</p>
<p> A request by British television's Channel 4 to write and present
a six-part documentary series on St. Paul revived her interest
in religion. "What I really am is a historian of ideas," she
says, "rather than a theologian, which sounds a bit narrow."
She considers herself an unaffiliated monotheist who appreciates
many aspects of Eastern Orthodoxy but finds it easier to pray
with Jews and Muslims. "Only Western Christianity makes a song
and dance about creeds and beliefs," she says. "The authentic
test of a religion is not what you believe. It's what you do,
and unless your religion expresses itself in compassion for
all living things, it is not authentic."
</p>
<p> Whether Jew, Christian or Muslim, believers today tend to regard
their faith as a received whole -- that is, as a belief system
with most of the major theoretical issues long since resolved,
in so far as they can be. No 20th century Christian, for example,
would bother to start an argument about the divinity of Jesus,
a subject that obsessed 4th century bishops. But as Armstrong
reminds us, the world's three great monotheistic religions --
Judaism, Christianity and Islam -- did not arrive where they
are without impassioned debates and conflicts. She contends
that Yahweh was originally a savage, partisan god of war and
one of several deities worshipped by the Israelites. It took
seven centuries or more for this unpleasant being to evolve
into the almighty Yahweh proclaimed by the prophets as the one
and only God.
</p>
<p> Armstrong sees nothing amiss or unusual in this evolutionary
process. New ideas about God have always emerged in response
to new psychological needs. Had the great faiths lacked this
capacity to change, they might well have withered away. "All
religions change and develop," the author writes. "If they do
not, they will become obsolete." Consequently, "each generation
has to create its own imaginative conception of God."
</p>
<p> Some eras have been particularly critical for God's history.
During the so-called Axial Age (800 B.C. to 200 B.C.), political
and economic changes led to new religious ideologies throughout
the known civilized world: Taoism and Confucianism in China,
Buddhism and Hinduism in India, the rational philosophy of Plato
and Aristotle in Greece, differing concepts of monotheism in
Israel and in Iran (Zoroastrianism). Common to all these ideologies
was what Armstrong calls "the duty of compassion," meaning authentic
religious experiences must be integrated into everyday life.
The Axial Age was a time of prosperity, when power was passing
from kings and priests to the merchant class. "Strange as it
may seem," Armstrong writes, "the idea of `God' developed in
a market economy in a spirit of aggressive capitalism."
</p>
<p> In different ways, all three monotheisms generated the idea
of a personal God who sees and hears, rewards and punishes.
The concept, among other virtues, helped establish the dignity
of the individual and led ultimately to liberal humanism. There
was, however, a liability: a personal God could easily become
no more than a projection of humankind's limited hopes and fears;
in short, an idol. Seeking to escape this dilemma, mystical
traditions, which emerged in all three religions, taught that
God was to be experienced -- albeit by a dedicated elite --
rather than defined. In the 12th and 13th centuries, the mystical
Sufi movement was the dominant force within Islam. In the 15th
century, facing persecution and exile, European Jews found solace
in the mystical writings known as the Cabala. Even Western Christianity,
which has been strongly suspicious of ineffability, had its
mystical tradition, exemplified by such figures as the German
Dominican Meister Eckehart and the Spanish saint, Teresa of
Avila.
</p>
<p> Armstrong considers herself a feminist. But she argues that
while it might not be right to call God exclusively "he," it
is equally mistaken to regard God as "she." This makes God into
a being. She notes, however, that much of the gender politics
of God may come from the inflexibility of English. Other languages
allow God to transcend sex. In Arabic, for example, the supreme
name for God, al-Lah, is masculine, but his other names, "the
Compassionate" (al-Rahmat) and "the Merciful" (al-Rahim), are
feminine.
</p>
<p> One of the delights of Armstrong's book is her exploration of
some relatively unfamiliar pathways to God. She is much taken
with a Muslim movement devoted to Falsafah (roughly, philosophy)
that emerged in the 9th and 10th centuries. Its advocates, known
as Faylasufs, believed that the God of Greek philosophy was
identical to Islam's. "Instead of seeing God as a mystery,"
Armstrong writes, "the Faylasufs believed he was reason itself."
But they also acknowledged the chaos and disorder of the universe
and recognized that their quest for ultimate meaning was a difficult
one. Indirectly, the Faylasufs influenced such medieval thinkers
as the Jewish sage Maimonides and the greatest Catholic theologian,
St. Thomas Aquinas.
</p>
<p> Modern monotheism, as Armstrong sees it, has had two main flaws.
One is a tendency toward "belligerent righteousness," which
has led to pogroms, inquisitions and other shameful manifestations
of intolerance that defile the image of God as a benevolent
creator. The other -- most apparent in Western Christianity
-- is a tendency to define God in terms compatible with secular
thinking. Thus the Jesuit theologian Leonard Lessius (1554-1623)
argued that the existence of God could be demonstrated scientifically,
like any other fact. Similarly, the 19th century German exponents
of the Science of Judaism argued that their religion was a wholly
rational faith. Alas, the end result of treating the deity as
just another provable fact was to marginalize God, thereby making
it easier for unbelievers to proclaim that he did not exist.
</p>
<p> What of the present and the future? Armstrong notes the ever-growing
strength of secularism, which makes it possible for more and
more people to think of God as an idea that belongs to the past.
She also notes in all three faiths a surging counterrevolutionary
fundamentalism that to her represents a problem rather than
a solution: its proponents "use `God' to prop up their own loves
and hates." In short, this kind of religiosity is simply a new
idolatry and thus represents a retreat from God.
</p>
<p> Armstrong acknowledges that the anthropomorphic personal God
of monotheism is obsolete (hence dead), as is the remote Supreme
Being posited by religious philosophers. A more plausible alternative
is the God of mysticism, experienced as a reality that lies
beyond human concepts, much the way that great art is felt.
Not that this will be easy in an age of anomie, symbolized by
handgun violence, hip-hop quality and an MTV attention span.
Human kind cannot bear very much reality, T.S. Eliot wrote,
but it also cannot endure too much emptiness and desolation.
In her book's dying fall, Armstrong suggests that the ancient
quest for life's meaning will go on.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>