You can be moral and not be religious

I have just a few minutes before I am tasked with taking care of things around the house so I wanted to comment on something.

Morality can be had without being religious. Yes, that is right I do not believe that you have to have faith and or believe in G-d to be a moral person who has character and integrity.

You can call me naive, but I believe that people are not born with original sin. I believe that we enter the world with a clean slate and how we inscribe that slate is of our own choosing. We are responsible for our actions and those actions can be good. They can be altruistic and giving without the influence of religion. They can also be evil.

But good and evil are not the sole province of the religious person or the atheist. Smarter people than I have composed essays on this that are much more eloquent and more logical, so I won't try and recreate the wheel.

One need not be afraid of eternal punishment to understand the benefits and rewards of acting morally. For that matter I intensely dislike the concept that man cannot be good without the threat of fire and brimstone or the incentive of eternal life or any similar concepts.

Being good and acting ethically to me are practical matters. Not only are they the correct way to do things, but they make my life much easier. So if for no othe reason then my own selfish needs, I would want to behave morally and ethically. Being a mensch is important.

4 comments:

Stacey said...

Great post. I think you're completely correct about all of this.

Jack Steiner said...

I do want to clarify something. There are many contributions made by religion. I love so many things about Judaism. It is so rich and has so many things to offer.

My big issue is that we not lose sight of the big picture here and that it is better to be a good person who is unfamilar with the derech than to be someone who is Shomer Mitzvot and not.

Ok, I am waiting for the arguments about how you cannot be Shomer Mitzvot and be bad. ;)

Anshel's Wife said...

You are so right about being a mentsh. The Rebbe actually said something like, "It doesn't matter how great an education you give your children, if they aren't mentshlach." Or something like that.

You are also right about not knowing certain laws in Judaism and not keeping them as opposed to knowing them and not keeping them. That's kind of why my husband and I became frum. Once we learned the laws, we felt we had to keep them. Seemed hypocritical to us (that's just how we felt, not judging anyone else) not to be frum.

Jack Steiner said...

Hi Selena,

Frum is a term used to describe someone who is a religious observant Jew.

There are many other classifications that we could throw out as well, Chassid, MO, Reform, Conservative and then some.

But for your purposes that should probably cover it. Let me know if you have any other questions.

-J

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