Posted on Sat 20 Dec 2008 under Religion
A large portion of the population of established religions today are nominal members (i.e. members only by name). Most of them still attend worship/church services but some never go to church at all. Most of these nominal members believe in the essential doctrines of their religion specially those that seem to be right in their judgment. But, when the teachings of their religion go against their common sense and rational thinking, they reject them.
In my observation, many Catholics in the Philippines (I can only speak of my fatherland), especially those who are highly educated, are of this type. They choose which doctrines to believe and which doctrines to reject; a reason why they are referred to by Catholic authorities as “cafeteria-style” Catholics. I presume that nominal members of other religious groups do the same. And also those nominal members of many religions around the world.
Without knowing it, these people are actually placing much value on personal reasoning and judgment over and even against the teachings of their religion. So, without being conscious about it, they are actually rationalists in matters pertaining to religion. Some may question many teachings of their religion and others may just dismiss them as baseless. Generally though, they find the existence of God to be a very reasonable idea by merely observing the beauty and complex designs of nature.
If this is so, they actually subscribe to a set of beliefs that is basically deist. The Webster’s Encyclopedic Dictionary defines a deist as “one who believes in the existence of a God or Supreme Being but denies revealed religion, basing his belief on the light of nature and reason.” The deist is the person and the religious philosophy is called deism.
I was in a much the same situation before. I didn’t know that such a religious philosophy had a name and history. It was a very popular philosophy back in the 17th and 18th centuries and there were attempts to institutionalize it (like in France and in the US) but the efforts failed partly due to the individualist nature of deism. But it was revitalized with the advent of the internet and now, according to a survey done by the National Survey of Religious Identification (NSRI ), deism or a simple belief in a Deity is the fastest growing religion in the United States with an astounding estimated growth of +717% from 1990 to 2004.
To my fellow deists, I think its about time to go out of our shells and to be seen as what we are and to show the rest of the world that we are not just nominal Christians, or nominal Jews, nominal Muslims or nominal whatever. We have a religious philosophy of our own. We are deists!
Disclaimer: It didn't take long before I seriously doubted again my belief in God. Upon further reflection on the subject, I came to the conclusion that the most honest answer is that we really don't know. The rational grounds for God's existence are not very rational anymore and not enough. You may read the whole story of my spiritual odyssey at this post: How I broke free from various belief systems and found myself agnostic.