Non-religious communities: A Thread
Once I left religion, I missed the society. We are largely defined by our societies. They give us a context. They give us belonging. Any cause that the leaders of said society rally behind, we are overwhelmingly likely to adopt as our own.
Non-religious communities: A Thread
There have been several attempts at atheist churches, universalist churches, etc. But they all tend to fall into the same disintegration patterns of tribal concerns. This is a problem!
We have to be enough! No one is coming to save us from ourselves. If we can't form a community, we will continue to be overwhelmed by the whims of the people who have the simple banners and the bully pulpit.
I am not and never have been a member, but I know that the Ethical Culture movement still exists, as far as I know unsplintered, after nearly 150 years.
@jasod One of the places where you tend to find that kind of solidarity is in the LGBTQ+ community. Sometimes we joke that it's a "community" (due to the cattiness of some), but as a general rule, if you're queer, you can usually trust and be around other queer folks and be comfortable in queer spaces.
It's the family I never knew I needed before I became part of it. 🏳️🌈
@jasod
The trick, and it's not easy, is to create an inclusive community of believers *and* non-believers, from all walks of life, working together for the common good.
Otherwise, you're not creating a community, you're merely exascerbating tribalism.
@stueytheround It is the "Believer" part that is the magic. Believe in what? What is the rallying cry for humans? To each their own? We need a firewall. The line that it is unacceptable to cross no matter the reason. We need a point of intolerance. My belief? All humans have the inalienable right to worthiness and dignity. Anything that denies a human of their worthiness or dignity should not be tolerated.
@jasod I agree with you.
Any community with merit will naturally shun hateful people.
There need be no greater rallying cry than "All you need is love".
By "believers" I mean folk with a spiritual faith of *any* kind. There will always be bad apples, of course, and those people need to be re-educated or avoided.
It *can* be done, but as I said, it's hard work because we need to deal with everyone with great love, including the hateful people.
The MLK "hate can not drive out hate" quote is true.
Non-religious communities: A Thread
What you see in societies that don't have as strong of a banner as a deity is fracturing of concerns. Smaller banners, smaller circles, further divides. It is easy to move past most of those divisions with a "live and let live" mentality, but there is no unity in that.
#Community