Wednesday, 31 July 2013

Religion and its role in society

As a Baptised atheist with beliefs which go against the religion to which I was baptised I find it hard to understand why, firstly my agnostic mother and my atheist father would have their three children baptised, and secondly why religion of any belief is ever present in politics and seen as a dominant ideology in many countries’?

When prompted as to my baptism and why it occurred my mother clarified that “it was just a family thing more so than a religious thing.  I was baptized, my mother was baptized and so on and so forth”,  I feel used, my body was offered to be engulfed in water to pledge my “obedience” and “allegiance” to Jesus Christ, a fictitious character, without me having any say in it…just to please my grandma.

In Australia we have the right to religious freedom allowing Australian citizens to practice a religion of their choosing however they also have to accept that “although they are free to practice their religion, they must accept the nation’s legal or traditional preference for another faith” (Trofin, L, & Tomescu, M 2012) begging the question, why is religion present in politics’ at all if we have a right to choose against that? And this is not only an issue in Australia but multiple democratic nations around the globe; it would seem that Religion is an opposing force against social and cultural globalisation, and for that matter, peace.

It is easy to see how in the bronze ages that religion was necessary, to set needed ground rules so to speak (i.e. the Ten Commandments) however those rules have been established and now the use and necessity of religion is hard to see in any realm of living.
For as long as there are conflicting religions, cultures and beliefs around the world is social and cultural globalisation even possible?
No. Religion is becoming less about preaching equality and peace but proving that their individual religion is the best, it is driving communities, countries and the world apart and “The irony of religion is that because of its power to divert man to destructive courses, the world actually could come to an end” (Bill Maher, 2008).

Maher B 2008, Religulous, Documentary, distributed by Lions Gate Entertainment, USA

Trofin, L, & Tomescu, M 2012, 'SOLIDARITY AND SOCIETY IN THE ERA OF GLOBALIZATION', Contemporary Readings In Law & Social Justice, 3, 2, pp. 236-241