As ever, unfailingly brilliant. James Wood on atheists. (Very much worth the free registration - thanks to Dave Lull.)
Yet for all the magnificence of its reasoning, this Aristotelian coolness, which Aquinas to some extent shared, leaves me cold. Suspended between Maimonides and Melville--a fine place to be suspended in any other context--we forlornly watch a describable God vanishing into a horizon of negatives. This God is silent, and does not speak to us; and we are silent too, enjoined not to speak to him. He is just the God of the new physics. Above all, though we might come to respect and certainly fear and obey this God, why would we ever worship him? If we know him only by his non-ness, then perhaps non-worship, along with non-love and non-recognition, is the appropriate response? Wittgenstein's little phrase, from a different context, comes to mind: "a nothing will serve just as well as a something about which nothing can be said." And what do we do with our traditions, which insist on telling stories about, insist on describing, this God about which nothing can be said? Of one thing we can be absolutely certain: if God exists, then he--it, she--really is nothing like the various representations of him--it, her--that our sacred books contain. If God really exists, he is beyond love, beyond worship, beyond reach. A silence beckons to a silence. But if that is the case, our attachment to our religious traditions and descriptions, however noble their approximations, traditions over which we have spilled and continue to spill so much blood, is sentimental tribalism and one of the greatest tragedies in history.
Lovely. Anyway, why would a sane being of any sort want people to sit in pews singing his/her praise? I know I wouldn't. Could he/she be a bigger jerk than me?
Posted by: John Shannon | December 17, 2006 at 11:27 PM
sentimental tribalism and one of the greatest tragedies in history
---I love that---
But I do like the idea of sitting in pews and singing!
Posted by: Janet | December 18, 2006 at 02:31 PM
Okay weird...I'm working on my rewriting my novel and I took a break and went to look at your blog and scrolled down to this article because I'd missed it when you first posted it and read the whole thing and loved it --very insightful -- I go back to the novel and the first sentence of the next paragraph I'm working on mentions atheists and those of faith. I don't remember even writing that sentence the first time -- thought the coincidence was very ironic --
Posted by: Jerry Sticker | December 19, 2006 at 12:32 PM