Keeping the faith

Religions around the world are losing followers. But people are seekers, they want to believe in something. And while there are downsides to religion, including fanaticism and blind following of misguided faith leaders, there is also a warmth of community, a comfort of shared values, and a wonderful sense of belonging.

Atheism and often the path it can lead to nihilism don’t fill the voids a loss of religion can leave behind. And I think that’s why we see blind faith emerging that doesn’t seem to make sense to many.

Why on earth would someone in 2026 join a community of flat earthers who have to literally ignore volumes of data in order to believe what they believe? Maybe because the community is so inviting to anyone who believes?

Why would someone defend unnecessary violence, or even terrorism in the name of God or country? Maybe because they feel othered, or fear being othered. Maybe they feel hurt and seek vengeance? Maybe they feel the government is too heavy-handed or not heavy handed enough?

Why would someone follow a leader who does things they would previously have been upset about? Maybe there is one pillar that leader stands on that supports their beliefs more than any other transgression that leader might be accused of? Maybe they feel community, shared values, and a sense of belonging are all missing in their lives because their waning beliefs in a broken religion can no longer fulfill these needs.

When people can’t seem to hold onto their religious faith, where else do they put their faith?

It seems today that it goes to all the wrong places.

We need a new kind of religion, one that is inherent in most faiths already, but often masked by evangelical fervour, threats of secularism, misinterpreted scripture, literal interpretations of metaphors, among other reasons justifiable by the keepers of the faith. That inherent idea common to all faiths, the somehow lost idea, is that we are all the children of God, and that we should be kind, caring, and even loving to all God’s children.

If that was the underlying premise of ‘our belief systems’ (intentionally plural) then the best thing we could do is to keep the faith. But when religions and more specifically religious people, focus on differences, and when charismatic leaders decide that hate, separation, and false prophecies are the goal, well then our belief systems rise only to crumble.

This is the path we are on, not an increase in atheism, because atheism is not a belief system to swap another religion for. A thing to ‘not believing in’ is not a replacement for a faith. And so what we are seeing is a rise in people looking in all the wrong place to feel safe and then blindly, misguidedly keeping the faith.

2 thoughts on “Keeping the faith

  1. Janice

    I encourage you to hook up with once upon a time scientists who were atheists. They set out to prove Gods Word/Bible wrong/false. They found the opposite. They found the evidence that proved God is real. That we are created by God, as is all creation. God is the same today as He has always been. He is a God of Love, Mercy, Grace, Forgiveness, Justice, Absolute Truth, Redemption, Transformation and the list goes on…He is also a God who hates evil.
    I pray your eyes, ears, mind, and heart be opened to hear Gods truth/reality. I pray you see the evidence of God all around you, right in front of you, not alone in His Word/bible.
    Wish I had more time to expand and give references…but you are awesome at research. 🙏

    Reply
    1. David Truss

      Hi Janice,
      I appreciate the comment, thanks. I actually follow quite a few scientists and while I’m aware that some scientists are also religious, I struggle with your statement, “They set out to prove Gods Word/Bible wrong/false. They found the opposite. They found the evidence that proved God is real.”

      1. The scientists I admire do not set out to prove God/the bible wrong, they are interested in science.

      2. I’ve seen no evidence that God is real. That doesn’t discredit faith, it’s just a statement to say scientific evidence isn’t there.

      That said, I’m truly happy that your faith means so much to you and that it gives you what you seek. At the end of my post I shared that I am concerned that people are looking in the wrong places for faith and I’m concerned about what they are finding. You’ve found something rich and meaningful to you, and which provides you with guidance to live a good life. I am truly happy for you.

      Reply

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