4. What feeds the human compulsions to connect with the divine? How closely related are religious rapture and sexual ecstasy? And, why, through the ages, have we persistently searched and yearned for miracles?
The human compulsion to connect with the divine stems from the unknown. If man knew the answers to all questions, then he would not seek anything beyond his own reason. Divine intervention is an explanation for the unexplainable. That’s why man is so obsessed with prolonging life, cloning species, and becoming bionic- he wants to stop attributing purpose to anything divine. He is becoming his own god, answering to no one but himself. And yet, humans know that death will happen. This is not a variable; it is out of man’s reach to control.
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The desire to have faith in something is so strong because facts are sometimes difficult to live with and expectations often go unmet, even in the midst of strong reason. Life itself is unexpected and unpredictable and impervious to human will, so the attribution for existence has to rest on something higher. By looking at the chain-of-command within creation, it is tempting to categorize life forms according to their capability of higher thought. It’s obvious that humans are the kings of reason and critical thought. However, single-celled organisms have been known to wipe out entire populations of humans, i.e. the Black Plague. And that’s why humans seek the divine; because there is no reasoning through it. No one species rules the planet, although humans constantly seek the power to do so. But as that power eludes them, they always turn to something …show more content…
Other people do sacrificial things for others and receive nothing but suffering for it. Humans see this and demand justice; make laws that require punishment, make punishments that satisfy the masses. Make the masses resent the laws, amend the laws and so on. In the end, humans need a God to deal a final justice; hell for the sinners, heaven for the abiders. They know that true justice is unrealistic, and are therefore forced to leave the rest to God. If there is no God, justice can’t truly be served. And then there are those that are unconcerned with death. Yet death is the only certainty in life, and man is trying his best to fight against even