Sunday, July 27, 2008

One Night I Redeemed My Conscientiousness Back

Above all, I appreciate consciousness of action. I appreciate actions that are taken for the goodness of humanity and not of sheer selfishness. Each of every single one of your actions should come hand in hand with the crucial element of consciousness and conscientiousness.

I believe that it is the work of beliefs to do that. A work of something in the greater order than the human unreserved naivety and animal instincts.

We are no longer the animals we were. We have the strong history of civilisation which will improve our actions far better than the shallow, instinctive and immoderate behaviours.

Some of us even have the extra favour by owning a religion for moderation of behaviours.

But I believe that religions have became too ritualistic for that purpose. There is no more strong understanding of religion anymore. What is left around here are just the rituals which nobody even care what they ought to mean.

Nobody takes the tedious task of understanding the consciousness of action, albeit them being the centre of development of many religions.

The rituals of religion somehow overshadow the importance of having conscientiousness. Followers have immediately feel satisfied and fulfilled just by these rituals without them delving much further than that. They will have sheer satisfaction, feeling the godfulness and holier-than-thou-ness without them even trying hard enough to go beyond ritualistic understanding.

If this persists, morality will take over religion in no time. Morality has no God in its name. Morality has no power from above to oversee the adherence to religious conscientiousness. In fact, morality has no specified rituals to follow leaving people in fragile state and possibly in continuous improvement.

I really want to call the way some of us treating religion as secularisation of religion. A very harsh way of describing these people who want religions to be more ritualistic than what they already are.

1 comment: