Interpersonal Religions
Every Sunday, millions of people come together to stare at an empty green
field. The field has white lines painted on it. These millions of people have all
agreed to believe (on faith) that these lines mean something important. Then,
dozens of strong men (or women) plod onto the field, line up in seemingly
arbitrary formations, and throw (or kick) around a piece of leather. Depending
on where this piece of leather goes and when, one group of people cheers, and
the other group of people gets really upset.
Sports are a form of religion. They are arbitrary value systems designed to
give people hope. Hit the ball here, and you’re a hero! Kick the ball there, and
you’re a loser! Sports deify some individuals and demonize others. Ted
Williams is the best baseball hitter ever, and therefore, according to some, an
American hero, an icon, a role model. Other athletes are demonized for
coming up short, for wasting their talent, for betraying their followers.
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Yet, there is an even grander example of interpersonal religion than sports:
politics. Across the world, we come together under a similar set of values and
decide to bestow authority, leadership, and virtue onto a small number of
people. Like the lines on a football field, political systems are entirely made
up, the positions of power exist due only to the faith of the population. And
whether it’s a democracy or a dictatorship, the result is the same: a small
group of leaders is idolized and exalted (or demonized) in the social
consciousness.
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Interpersonal religions give us hope that another human being will bring
us salvation and happiness, that one individual (or group of individuals) is
superior to all others. Interpersonal religions are sometimes combined with
supernatural beliefs and ideological beliefs, resulting in pariahs, martyrs,
heroes, and saints. Many of our interpersonal religions develop around our
leaders. A charismatic president or celebrity who seems to understand
everything we go through can approach the level of a God Value in our eyes,
and much of what we deem right or wrong is filtered through what is good or
bad for our Dear Leader.
Fandom, in general, is a low-level kind of religion. Fans of Will Smith or
Katy Perry or Elon Musk follow everything that person does, hang on every
word he or she says, and come to see him or her as blessed or righteous in
some way. The worship of that figure gives the fan hope of a better future,
even if it’s in the form of something as simple as future films, songs, or
inventions.
But the most important interpersonal religions are our familial and
romantic relationships. The beliefs and emotions involved in these
relationships are evolutionary in nature, but they are faith-based all the
same.
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Each family is its own mini-church, a group of people who, on faith,
believe that being part of the group will give their lives meaning, hope, and
salvation. Romantic love, of course, can be a quasi-spiritual experience.
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We
seem to lose ourselves in someone we have fallen for, spinning all sorts of
narratives about the cosmic significance of the relationship.
For better or worse, modern civilization has largely alienated us from
these small, interpersonal religions and tribes and replaced them with large
nationalist and internationalist ideological religions.
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This is good news for
you and me, fellow religion-builder, as we don’t have as many intimate bonds
to cut through to get our followers emotionally attached to us.
Because, as we’ll see, religion is all about emotional attachment. And the
best way to build those attachments is to get people to stop thinking critically.
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