A Sermon On The Mount
By Delos McKown, Ph.D.
This was delivered during the Lake Hypatia Independence Day
festivities and sponsored by the Alabama Freethought Association,
a Foundation
chapter, at Mt. Cheaha State Park, the highest point in Alabama,
on July 7, 1996, in the Al Alexander Activities center formally
but illegally known
as "the Chapel." It is the first freethought function
held there since Roger Cleveland won a legal settlement against
the State for reserving its use for
religion.
In a segment of the Sermon on the Mount, appearing in Matthew 5,
Jesus is reported to have set six new teachings of his against
six old Jewish teachings. The
latter are introduced by such words as "You have heard that
it was said by them of old time" and the former by "But
I say unto you."
Since both the teachings of old time and Jesus' new teachings are
predicated on the same profoundly mistaken views of human nature
and of the world in general,
it is unimportant for us here today to compare and contrast these
teachings or to determine which is better or worse in some way or
other. The point is that
whether better or worse, in this way or that, both are lodged in
an egregiously mistaken mythology -- but in a mythology of
enormous importance for us, because it
is one of the wellsprings of Western culture. Another tributary,
equally informative of our civilization and equally mistaken,
also exists -- the Greco-Roman.
In the following, I shall refer now to the one source and then to
the other and back again and shall introduce each mistaken idea
that has plagued our culture with
the words "You have heard that it was said by them of old
time." I shall then introduce each modern, corrective idea
with the words "But I say unto you." We shall
then have a new Sermon on the Mount, but on Mount Cheaha this
time and in, of all places, deepest Dixie.
You have heard that it was said by them of old time that mind as
an active agent precedes matter as inert stuff, but I say unto
you that matter/energy precedes
mind.
In the tenth book of The Laws, Plato, while trying to prove the
existence of gods, posits the priority of mind (and all its
kindred such as soul) over matter. He
writes:
"Nearly all of them [i.e., unbelievers] . . . seem to be
ignorant of the nature and power of soul, especially in what
relates to her origin: they do not
know that she is among the first of things, and before all
bodies, and is the chief author of their changes and
transpositions. And if this is true, and if
the soul is older than the body, must not the things which are of
the soul's kindred be of necessity prior to those which appertain
to body?"
Eliciting agreement, he continues:
"Then thought and attention and mind and art and law will be
prior to that which is hard and soft and heavy and light; and the
great primitive works
and actions will be works of art; they will be the first and
after them will come nature and works of nature, which however is
a wrong term for men to
apply to them. . . ."
Feeling the need to explain why "nature" is misapplied,
he continues:
". . . [T]hose who use the term mean to say that nature is
the first creative power; but if the soul turn[s] out to be the
primeval element, and not fire or
air, then in the truest sense and beyond other things the soul
may be said to exist by nature; and this would be true if you
proved that the soul is older
than the body, and not otherwise."
If the Jews of Jesus' time and before had not based their
chauvinistic theism on intuition, animism, and tradition but had,
instead, tried to think through the issues of
theism versus atheism as Plato did, they would probably have
reasoned much as he. The fatal flaw in this line of reasoning,
whether Platonic or not, is that no
human being of whom we know anything, including ourselves, has
ever encountered a mind (or any of its kindred) apart from a
functioning brain housed in a living,
supportive body. Although one may lose one's mind while keeping
one's head, one cannot be beheaded and retain one's mind. Those
who speak of the mind of
God, unless they are willing to give themselves over totally to
magic, had better be prepared to speak of the brain of God, of
the nervous system of God, and of
his body. Where, one wonders, are these to be found that we may
inspect them and see how they work? Although Plato is to be
respected for identifying the
points at issue, he and all other theists have it backward.
Matter/energy precedes mind, the latter being, almost certainly,
derivative from the former.
You have heard that it was said by them of old time that there
are two worlds, the physical world that meets the eye (and other
senses), created and passive,
and the world of spirits, entities of non-flesh, and non-blood,
and non-material, i.e., ethereal, nature, agents active in both
worlds, producing human weal and woe.
But I say unto you that there is only one world, the natural
world, the spirit world being a world in name only, a fictitious
world created by human ignorance,
emotion, and imagination. To say that there is only one world is
not to deny cosmological speculations suggesting other universes
than the one we know
empirically, the one that constitutes our environment. It is
merely to say that our universe and any others that may exist,
though beyond our ken, are one in being
natural, i.e., in not being the artificial product(s) of any
spirit-entity or agency, however grandiose the human conception
thereof.
Thales, presumably the first philosopher, is supposed to have
said, "There are gods everywhere," i.e., personalized
spirit-entities explaining the powers and
functions of nature. Surely, most of his contemporaries agreed as
did the bulk of their descendants. Meanwhile, in Israel, cherubs
hovered about the Ark of the
Covenant, (Exodus 25:18-22), Seraphim levitated above the throne
of the "sovereign spirit" (Isaiah 6:3-4), humans,
unaware, entertained angels (Hebrews 13:2),
and the prince of demons prowled about like a lion seeking whom
he might devour (I Peter 5:8). Since the king of spirits is
supposed to be from everlasting, and
since he would have had no kingdom without spirit-subjects, we
may assume that lesser spirits were present from the beginning.
But what were they doing?
Indeed, what have they ever done? Astrophysicists know nothing of
angelic or demonic activity during the billions of years prior to
our solar system's formation.
Geologists of the primitive earth detect nothing of them.
Paleontologists find no evidence of their activities among
prehistoric animals, and modern chemists and
biologists cannot distinguish physical processes with spirits
from physical processes without them.
The only science that has even a tangential relationship to
"spirits" is human psychology, and here it is not a
matter of inquiry into the nature of "spirits" but of
inquiry into the mentalities of those believing in
"spirits." What are we to think of alleged entities
that make their appearance only with the coming of the human
animal, that do nothing objective, as it were, except in human
lives, emotionally, and that appear to have no existence apart
from human belief? The conclusion is
inescapable: The spirit world is a world in name only, its
denizens the creatures of human imagination.
You have heard that it was said by them of old time that we
humans, unique in the world of animate beings, are living souls,
but I say unto you that we are
living meat, marvelous meat, no doubt, but meat nonetheless. What
power has human meat to create within itself an alleged entity
(called the soul) having
non-physical properties, being, thus, akin to alleged entities in
the "spirit world," and being able either by its
immortal nature or by divine miracle to live endlessly
after the death of the body that houses it while on earth? This
question does not deny the reality of consciousness or mind, does
not hold in doubt the presence of
reason and intentionality, and in no way questions the spirited
aspects of our bodies, i.e., the emotional aspects underlying our
personalities. As strange as it may
seem, living human meat can, in varying degrees and mixtures, be
optimistic or pessimistic, extroverted or introverted, bold or
shy, ebullient or melancholy, elated
or depressed. The philosophy of materialistic monism, when
applied to humans, causes nothing in our lives to change. It
merely denies that we are dualistic
creatures compounded of flesh and non-flesh, of living meat and
immortal soul.
You have heard that it was said by them of old time that there is
a spiritual world, that there are spiritual people, spiritual
knowledge, spiritual beliefs, and
spiritual acts, but I say unto you that there is no spiritual
world as such nor does the world of matter/energy in space/time
have any objective spiritual dimension.
What is called the spiritual is an illusion, but an illusion that
feigns reality expertly.
Whatever "spiritual" may mean metaphorically, at base
it refers to ethereal entities having minds and dispositions
that, among other tasks, aid or afflict human
beings. These presumed entities, it must be remembered, inhabit a
kingdom ruled over by a supreme, and supremely good spirit, who
dwells on high. Nor should it
be forgotten that in Christian mythology, the king of good
spirits is, for a time at least, resisted by the prince of evil
spirits, of demons and imps that inhabit what
might be called the infernosphere (sic) but that infest our world
as well, causing evil, sickness, disease, and death. But, if all
such "spirit-entities," good and bad
alike, are fictitious, what distinguishes the spiritual person
from the non-spiritual person, spiritual knowledge from
non-spiritual knowledge, spiritual belief from
non-spiritual belief, and spiritual action from non-spiritual
action? The answers are deceptively simple.
The spiritual person, unlike the unspiritual person, is a dualist
who not only interacts with the physical world, as we all do, but
also interacts through vivid
imagination with a particular "spirit world." When such
imaginings are idiosyncratic, they are transparently eccentric or
even mad, but when the imaginings and
make-believe at issue are collective, are handed down by
tradition authoritatively, are accepted by many (if not most)
people, and are reinforced by hope and
fear, such imaginings are opaque to the imaginer(s) and appear to
be as real as anything in the physical world.
"Spiritual knowledge" is a misnomer. Nobody knows
anything about "spirit-entities" as defined above,
because so far we have discerned nothing to know.
Moreover, when one claims to know something about sacred objects
or theology all one knows is what somebody else believes or
thinks. Believing in or thinking
about sacred objects or theology cannot guarantee objective
knowledge about the topic(s) at issue. Spiritual belief, though
not a misnomer, is, nonetheless, not
what most people take it to be. It is simply belief in this,
that, or the other insofar as what is believed in is inextricably
linked, in the believer's mind, to the so-called
spirit world. By this token, unspiritual belief is belief in any
this, that, or the other, devoid of all reference to spirits and
divorced from their alleged activities.
Spiritual actions must be divided into two, the ethical and the
cultic. Respecting the former, an instance of promise keeping or
of truth telling will appear to the
ethical, but unspiritual, person to be morally right, but to the
spiritual person, both morally and spiritually right, because the
act at issue will be seen in light of what
the "sovereign spirit" wants done. To continue,
conspicuous service to one's country or bravery in its defense
will be viewed by the unspiritual person as simply
patriotic, to the spiritual person as both patriotic and
spiritual, because it is what the "king of spirits"
expects. Further, whereas enjoyment of aesthetic experiences
will be simply that and no more to the unspiritual person, these
will be both aesthetic and spiritual to the spiritual person,
because the "king of spirits" will be seen
as having given us beauty to enjoy in nature, art, and music.
Finally, moments of deep feeling, of, for example, inspiration,
joy, or exaltation will be just that and no
more to the unspiritual person, but to the spiritual person these
will be both profoundly emotional and spiritual, because they
will be seen as infusions of divine
grace from the "sovereign spirit."
Respecting cultic actions, the difference between the unspiritual
and the spiritual could not be greater. The former do not bend
the knee, bowing and scraping,
before any unseen presence, ask no favors, in Jesus' name, of the
alleged king of spirits, do not suffer themselves to be submerged
in water or have it sprinkled or
poured upon their heads to effect a metaphysical change,
participate in no acts of ritual cannibalism, and engage in no
other magical practices. The former do any
or all of these routinely -- and even more.
You have heard that it was said by them of old time that miracles
occur, but I say unto you that no past event can be known to have
been miraculous, if by that
is meant an event that was not or could not have been effected by
natural causes or that occurred in defiance of natural law.
Believers in miracles would not know
one if they witnessed it, because criteria have never been
developed to enable us to distinguish between a miraculous
happening, properly understood, and an
exceedingly rare, totally unexpected, and unpredictable, yet
natural, happening. No event can be said to have had a
non-natural, i.e., a miraculous, cause until all
natural causes and conditions or combinations thereof have been
ruled out. Believers, having no appetite for such work, never
carry through with it.
Professor John Patterson, of Iowa State, once proposed not only
how a miracle might be brought to pass but also recognized as
such. He envisioned a large
empty space where at a given time in answer to prayer a
full-grown evergreen tree might appear out of nothing and hover
in the air. Moreover, upon close
inspection, this tree would be found to have right-handed DNA.
The beauty of his proposal is that one would not have to rely on
the vagaries of human testimony
as to what is and what is not a miracle; there could be no chance
of human trickery to dazzle and deceive onlookers into believing
that a miracle had occurred
when it had not; and in nature the double helix of DNA is always
left-handed. Believers refuse to put their deity to such a
reasonable test on the trumped up
ground that he will not suffer himself to be tempted by mere
mortals.
You have heard that it was said by them of old time that we
humans have free will, but I say unto you that we have no such
thing, if by free will is meant an
inner power to motivate us to act apart from or to nullify all
causal factors bearing upon us at the instant a choice is made or
a decision taken. Put differently,
metaphysical free will is an illusion. To deny metaphysical free
will is not to deny the thousands upon thousands of uncoerced
selections among alternatives that we
have all made. It is to affirm, rather, that we bring our whole
selves to the selections we make, and these selves are not just
organic but social products as well.
What we are includes our genetics, our developmental history in
utero, our behavioral patterns and life experiences, our
predilections, tastes, and aversions, our
temptations and inhibitions, our desires and hopes, our
aspirations and self-image -- to say nothing of how we are and
feel at the moment of choice. Even trivial
external conditions prevailing at the moment of decision may play
a part. Nine months after a power failure, lasting a night or
two, the birth rate goes up in the
affected area, and when frigid conditions occur and blizzards
howl, the rate of outdoor crime drops.
You have heard that it was said by them of old time that we are
all justifiably punishable in eternal hell for free will misused
by the "primal pair" of our kind and
that they subsequently bequeathed their fallen nature to us all,
but I say unto you that responsibility thus conceived is morally
monstrous, that there was no primal
pair that misused free will in such a way as to become guilty
thereafter merely for being human, that we inherited no fallen
nature, and that hell is the contrivance of
disappointed religionists.
Genesis alleges that the "sovereign spirit" dictated
what the "primal pair" might and might not eat and
threatened them with death should they sink rebellious teeth
into the forbidden item. Here is a perfect example of an absolute
monarch's holding his subjects responsible, i.e., justifiably
punishable, for bad behavior.
However, when St. Paul seized upon this piece of naive fiction,
he turned it into a horror story. He presumed that the primal
pair's original sin led to the total
depravity of all humankind. Henceforth, the "king of
spirits" not only holds us all responsible for our bad acts
but also holds us justifiably punishable for being born
depraved. Being held justifiably punishable merely for being born
human is a moral monstrosity.
Whether or not there was ever a primal pair from whom homo
sapiens issued, one thing is certain: This pair never selected a
course of action in defiance of any
verbal dictate announced to them in person by the "king of
spirits." Spirits, as previously characterized, lack the
mechanism to announce anything.
The biological evidence that we are animals is now so
overwhelming that no refutation thereof can be envisioned. Being
animals, we are primarily what our genes
make of us anatomically and physiologically. As such we are born,
like other animals, possessing neither the property of goodness
nor of badness -- of fallenness
or depravity. We are no more than morally neutral organisms
belonging to the genus homo, the species sapiens. That we can
acquire morality in a social context,
much as we acquire language, in no way denies the moral
neutrality we share, as organic entities, with other animals.
As for the origin of hell, well, its fabrication is transparent.
Whenever religious zealots fail to find the facts or to muster
the logic necessary to persuade unbelievers
to believe what the zealots believe and intend that others shall
believe, the eternal, fiery pit -- the ultimate threat -- is
summoned. The farcical nature of this ploy can
be seen when, for example, Christians threaten Muslims with the
biblical hell and Muslims return the favor, threatening
Christians with the Koranic hell.
You have heard that it was said by them of old time that a
"king of spirits" has handed down absolute and
universal moral laws for us to obey, but I say unto you
that the existence of no being is in greater doubt than that of
such a king, that even if this putative being has handed down
absolute and universal moral laws, we
lack the criteria for deciding which have issued therefrom and
which from ourselves, and that what we often take to be absolute
and universal moral laws are
nothing but the relativistic, situation ethics of yesteryear.
Until and unless the universe is shown to be unnatural, i.e.,
artifactual, we need spend no time trying to determine which
moral laws are of human origin and which
are not. This is not to deny that some moral principles may
approach universality. The philosopher, David Hume, believed that
if there were any kind of action that
would dependably elicit strong disapproval from human beings,
regardless of time and place, then one would be on the track of
what amounts to a universal moral
principle. He thought, for example, that treacherously stabbing
one's benefactor in the back would be viewed as reprehensible by
most people everywhere. From
this issues the moral law, Do not betray a benefactor. Here is a
law, if law it be, clearly based on shared human emotions and
experience. In any case, it is to the
consequences of moral principles, not to their point of origin,
that we should look to substantiate their validity.
You have heard that it was said by them of old time that there is
a savior who by his death redeems all who believe in him,
enabling them to live forever in the
"sovereign spirit's" heavenly home, but I say unto you
that apart from psychological phenomena, such as feeling saved,
there is no reason to believe in such a savior
nor in such redemption and that we shall be after death what we
were before conception -- nothing at all.
Except for the decrepit and those racked with pain, the desire to
live on indefinitely is strong. Except for the hardhearted, the
yearning is intense that loved ones
lost may fare well in death and that there may, one day, be a
grand and endless reunion. Except for the deeply depressed and
those who have lost all hope that
justice may prevail in this world, the need is great to live on
in a better world that old scores may be settled and justice
done. Except for the insensitive and the
sociopathic, the need is immense to shed the guilt engendered by
socialization and to be delivered from the angry demands of those
who have been wronged and
remain unforgiving. Given the obsessive nature of these deep
emotional needs, it is not surprising that we humans should have
devised for ourselves variations on a
salvation myth, an epic of make-believe, that, for all practical
purposes, ends with the words, "And they lived happily ever
after." But, alas, an old adage advises
us that if something seems too good to be true, it probably is
too good to be true.
Them of old time have given us Westerners a dominant religious
paradigm as false as it is seductive, as stultifying as it is
unscientific, as enduring as it is
unsupportable. In the belief that truth is more functional than
falsehood, even if not as satisfying emotionally, I bid you all
to go forth to subvert the dominant
paradigm. Perhaps as a first step you might consider aiding me in
gaining the widest publicity and readership for my little sermon,
as it were, on Mt. Cheaha.
Delos McKown is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Auburn
University, where he was head of the Philosophy Department. A
former Campbellite minister and
a longtime Foundation member, his most recent book is The
Mythmakers' Magic: Behind The Illusion of "Creation
Science."