When religion is
abused
By
Fr. ROY CIMAGALA,
roycimagala@gmail.com
April 13, 2015
WE are already familiar with
the problem of secularization. That’s when God is set aside not only
in society – as in business and politics – but also in one’s personal
life. This is the anomaly besetting many developed Western countries
that are entering what is known as post-Christian or post-religion
era.
That means religion is
already considered as passé and obsolete. Any mention of God is likely
met with a laugh, a derision if not an open hostility. In these
places, men are convinced there’s no other source of light, wisdom and
guidance than their own selves, their own ideas and devices.
Under this category, we can
cite isms like atheism, agnosticism, relativism, skepticism, deism,
etc.
But another anomaly can also
be found in the other end, precisely happening in places known for
religious zeal. Our country falls largely under this classification.
Here, religion tends to be abused and exploited. In the end, religion
is used to deform, emasculate and even kill religion itself.
This happens when religion
is detached from a living relationship with God, with his Church, his
doctrine and sacraments, and personal struggle. It is driven more by
one’s ideas and efforts. Faith becomes mere philosophizing and
theologizing, full of form without substance.
Spiritual life freezes into
mere external appearances, reduced to a lifeless set of pietistic
practices. Sanctity deteriorates into sanctimony and into what is
considered as politically correct. Hypocrisy, calculation, pretension,
treachery abound. There’s bigotry instead of broad-mindedness,
rigidity and intolerance instead of respect for freedom and variety.
This irregularity has many
faces. To mention a few, we can cite religious fanaticism and bitter
zeal, fundamentalism, clericalism, superstitious beliefs and
practices, simony or commercialization of sacred things, pietism and
quietism, fideism and a string of other heresies. There’s also petty
jealousy among religious groups.
I suppose we can cite our
Lord’s own experience at the hands of those who crucified him as the
extreme form of religious abuse. Imagine, they were convinced they
were doing it out of a keen sense of religious duty itself.
Our Lord himself said: “The
hour comes when whoever kills you will think that he does a service to
God.” (Jn 16,2) This is the ultimate in religious abuse.
One can readily suspect
religion is abused when all those calls for goodness and holiness are
full of sound and fury and bombast, but lacking in charity, patience,
mercy, humility, meekness, etc. It drips with self-righteousness, ever
eager to flaunt itself and have its authority felt.
There is clear bias and
prejudice in the understanding and application of the doctrine. Unfair
and discriminatory selectiveness marks the study and practice of the
faith.
A holistic approach to
religion and freedom of consciences are often compromised in the
pursuit of holiness. There’s an absence of balance and openness. Even
the elementary norms of naturalness are violated.
Of course, religion will
always involve a specific way of life, marked even by a special
charism. But it’s a uniqueness that does not annul religion’s
universal and common end, but rather enriches it in an original way.
In abuse of religion,
coercion is subtly made and can lead to brainwashing and to
manipulative isolation of people from others. People are made to do
religious practices just for the heck of it.
They do these practices more
out of fear than of love, more for some ulterior motives than out of a
sincere desire to know, love and serve God and others.
The virtues are pursued
mechanically, not organically in the sense that they are vitally
motivated by charity as they ought to be. Sincerity, for example, can
be understood as simply telling the truth, the whole truth, but
without any mention about charity, prudence and discretion. Truth is
divorced from charity.
When religion is abused,
prayer turns into a soliloquy rather than a loving dialogue with God.
Love for sacrifice does not spring from the spirit, but is merely a
put-on.
When religion is abused,
priesthood is less an office for a total holocaust of self-giving, and
more an occasion for privileges. The scandals that black-eyed the
Church these past years involving some clerics arise from this
disorder.
We need to be wary of these
tendencies and possibilities that are open to all of us. We can even
fall into them without noticing it, since the decline to religious
abuse can mimic the process of osmosis.
We have to ask our Lady to
teach us how to truly deal with God without being deluded by the wily
ways of religious abuse. Like her, we need to be always simple and
humble to be able to stick to what is authentic religion.