This post is inspired by this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r6w2M50_XdkI remember my first Bible, it was given to me by the Church during my first communion, and I remember, one of the first pages of that Bible had an image similar to this:
Look at this, this is the universe as portrayed in the Bible, and it was completely wrong. Sure my church taught me that it was metaphorical, but an honest examination of the text would make people realize that all the prophets, from Abraham to Jesus, all holy men, and the God of the Bible, all thought of it as reality.
And they were and are wrong, period.
This is the conflict between religions and science, religions make claims that have been disproven, repeatedly and often. And of course, to keep themselves relevant, when the evidence became overwhelming the religions adapted, and tried to expand their parochial and limited deities to fit any new discoveries about the universe. Yet it becomes similar to trying to fit a square peg in a round hole.
And this is but one cosmological claim shared by 3 religions in the world, there are others, and they are just as wrong, all of them.
What's interesting is how religions sometimes encouraged observing the world, because they thought it was a way to glorify the gods. Both Christianity and Islam did this for many centuries, up to a point. Their reactions to discoveries that did contradict their holy texts were either attempting to suppress it, or attempting to reconcile it with increasingly irrelevant holy books.
This leads us to today, and this is what we find:
Every light present here isn't just a galaxy of billions of suns, but clusters of galaxies, and we are a small part of it. A mote of dust suspended around one sun in but one galaxy among billions, with billions of trillions of suns that have their own motes of dust orbiting them.
If a god or gods exist, it or they created that, and yet what how do the religions react? By putting their gods in a box, given them attributes that are woefully inadequate to explain how they could possibly have created the universe. Indeed, in many cases, they fail to define them at all, and instead claim it is beyond human understanding, and that may be true, but they still fall victim of relying on outdated and irrelevant holy books that describe their gods as petty and small beings that require worship and fealty.
Its certainly possible that a god or gods did create this universe, but these beings aren't present in any church or temple, and they certainly aren't the same beings as described in any holy book that humans have written. I also strongly doubt that such beings would demand we are on our knees and would rather we looked up at the sky in wonder at what it or they achieved, and to study and understand it, rather than clench our teeth and close our eyes to what is plainly around us. To look at reality for what it is, at this fantastical universe and not look to magic charlatans and old books.
You want to worship a god? Look through a telescope, or a microscope. Go to a science museum rather than a church.
Read this:
Instead of this:
Worship on your feet, go to a forest, enjoy the beauty of wildlife, enjoy the company of other people, love, live, raise children, and all without the shackles of religion. Enjoy the life we have right here, because it is precious, and no matter how small reality makes you feel, know that you are an individual with a mind of your own, you are unique. We were born of the stars, of the universe, and we are special in that we can understand this.
We ask big questions, what is our place in the universe? What is our purpose? And the questions cannot be found through prophets and temples, but rather through living our lives the best way we know how.