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[personal profile] da
This evening I paid a visit to see [livejournal.com profile] lovecraftienne, [livejournal.com profile] persephoneplace, and [livejournal.com profile] joymoose, and to drop off some oranges as a thank-you for watching Rover a week ago.

One reason among many I like these folks is that they ask wonderful questions. So we were talking about the Quaker gathering I was at with [livejournal.com profile] melted_snowball this weekend, and the question came up, how is being an atheist Quaker different from being a Quaker who believes in God?

To begin with, I do think there are differences. In the Quaker experience, people learn to do verbal translations all the time. A Christian Quaker might say "the Inner Christ", another Quaker will understand that to mean "that of God within," a third might translate the same as "the Inner Light". This translation process is fundamental, since Quakerism is Experiential (that is, one is not called to believe any doctrine that doesn't stand up to being tested against one's deepest soul/heart). When I'm translating, some things get left aside, the parts that don't speak to me at that time. In Quaker Meeting, we're trying to recognize and speak to the Eternal within each other; understanding the words is only part but it's an essential part.

An irreverent description I've heard for the process is "listening in tongues".

Going back to atheist Friends: there are translations I don't know how to make, going from theistic Quaker speech to atheist Quaker speech. The two I thought of in the discussion were miracles and blessings, things I can't explain in rational language without invoking the placebo effect. So, sure, it's possible that random events can seem like signs when you're paying attention to them. And a strictly rational person can say that the subconscious mind makes connections that the conscious mind cannot, so intuitive choices can feel like one was guided by something outside one's consciousness.

But by definition, faith goes further than rational explanation. As I was reminded a number of times this weekend, having faith to take a step when there's no evidence that the step should hold can be tremendously rewarding. Not necessarily at first; part of the faith is to keep going, and the claim (which, in all truth, I've not tested completely myself) is that the faith will be enough to keep you going so long as you follow what God wants you to do and continue to have faith. So there it is. A little work, plus faith, turns into the God Perpetual Motion Machine. How irrational is that? How can an atheist internalize this and use it? It is a miracle (if indeed miracles exist), and I believe it is one of the fundamental things that Friends ask for, say, when we gather to make decisions (which are meant to be coming to Unity with God's wishes for the collected body; instead of unity with each other).

So, that's my inconclusive thoughts about Atheist Quakers.



I'd welcome comments and other opinions on this; I feel like I'm oversimplifying the strong atheist position.

Date: Saturday, 25 February 2006 09:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] da-lj.livejournal.com
So, let me make sure I understand... as a theist in this position, it's not just that I believe that following God's will is more important than financial concerns, and therefore will risk bankrupcy to follow God's will. It's that I believe God will pay the bills as long as I follow his will, and therefore I'm not actually risking bankrupcy at all.

Nope- the ends are just as secondary as the means. I'm totally risking bankruptcy in that situation. My assumption is that God's plans don't include bankruptcy. But if they do, then God will provide at that point, too.

I think there's an important point here which gets down exactly to your difference in context/state between the theist and atheist. In each moment of making a decision, the faithful theist attempts to determine God's will and to follow it. So in a sense, the faithful theist loses free will. But at the same time, following God's will depends on every one of their abilities including their full reason. (So perhaps their loss of agency is only to the extent that they gain in their faith? I won't try to argue that right now though.)

My argument, I suppose, is that the faithful theist's state of mind is different from the atheist's because they have faith. I think that difference is observed in how they make choices; and I agree with you that there might be losses in translation between atheist speech and theist speech.

This makes me grumpy, because I would like to argue that the differences are bridgable by translation, particularly for atheists in Quaker contexts.

This is a challenging set of things to think about, but good, I think. Apart from the intellectual part, I realize as I write that I personally wouldn't do very well in the "have faith no matter what" test.

Date: Sunday, 26 February 2006 12:37 am (UTC)
dpolicar: (Default)
From: [personal profile] dpolicar
OK. I'm going to sidestep the "God will provide" thread, because I think it leads quickly to "why does God allow bad things to happen?", which will take over this thread if allowed to. And I will attempt to sidestep the chasm that is free will, and stay on the narrow-path thread of translation.

I think translating from faith to lack-of-faith is at best difficult and more likely impossible. I think translating from having a set of moral values that define the good to having no such values is, similarly, difficult-or-impossible.

But I'm not sure any of that has anything to do with theism, necessarily. Perhaps it is easier, or more likely, for a theist to sustain faith or act in accordance with a set of values... or perhaps not... but either way that doesn't mean a nontheist can't understand the activity. There may be differences in how _compelling_ the two formulations are, but I'm not sure there's an unbridgable gap in understanding. And certainly, I would expect the sorts of nontheists who attend Quaker meetings to be several sigmas up the able-to-talk-about-faith-and-moral-values-cogently scale within the domain of nontheists. (This is similar to the sense in which, though men are on average more muscular than women, a given weight class can contain both male and female weightlifters.)

But here again, I find the more abstract we get, the harder it is for me to get a grip on the matter. Perhaps my problem is precisely that I'm not enough of a faithful theist to understand the thing that you feel is not getting translated.

But, OK, trying to respond to this in the same abstract terms... it seems to me that a nontheist who has a set of moral values that define the good and sets out to act in accordance with the good in a given situation, is in essentially the same position you describe here for a theist who has a set of intuitions about God's will and sets out to act in accordance with God's will in a given situation.

I'm not necessarily saying here that "the good as defined by one's moral values" and "God's will as one is able to discern it" are the same thing... or even that they are similar. The Galaxy is incommensurably larger than the Earth, and not very much like it in many important dimensions... however, both are so huge and pervasive relative to an individual person that in the context of the overwhelming majority of tasks we undertake, the differences don't matter. A nonGalaxist and a Galaxist might find they can still navigate a boat to the same place in the same way, even when one (correctly) understands the stars to be suns lightyears away, and the other has no such belief.

All that said, I don't know if I'm making much sense... and I'm also not sure I'm really understanding you. It's funny to be talking about whether understanding can span a conceptual bridge over that same conceptual bridge... :-)

Date: Sunday, 26 February 2006 05:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] da-lj.livejournal.com
It's funny to be talking about whether understanding can span a conceptual bridge over that same conceptual bridge...

Yes, it sure is. But it's fun, too, so I won't complain about the irony. :)

(By the way: atheist? nontheist? Yon wikipedia article suggests they are different but overlapping. Nontheist seems to be anyone for whom the question "is there a god?" is meaningless.
In case it wasn't your intent to include them, I'd like to do so, because I expect it doesn't complicate our discussion and the addition means we can include such people as Buddhist Quakers without worrying if they're actually atheists or if they just say mu.)

I'll come back to this tomorrow, 'cause my brain isn't coming up with anything useful.

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