Four Views of Religious Humanism
"Like most persons of this persuasion, I regard
myself as a Religious Humanist not because of having been converted to
a creed; a faith; not because of my having signed a membership card in
a crusading fraternity of believers. The term Religious Humanism is
more descriptive of a state of mind, of an attitude with respect to
philosophy, religion, ethics, than it is a label for another 'ism.'"
• Lester Mondale (from Religious Humanism: A Testimonial)
"I
have been enthusiastic about our Religious-Humanist Fellowship because
it presages an enlargement of humanism, a creatively different emphasis
in humanism...life's dimensions and puzzles, for their happy
resolution, demand rationality, but not bellicosity, required is an
imaginative psychology as well as an analytical logic, an inward look
as well as an extraversion...to hold eternity in an hour and to see the
world in a grain of sand are valid human endeavors...it is an honest
and valid emotional appeal to still undefined values of tomorrow as
they stand in tension with the values which have egregiously failed our
today. For motivational insight maybe we need a Prometheus. Or in
remembering another mythmaker, maybe we need to see things as a little
child."
• Robert Hoagland (from A New Dimension of Humanism)
"Humanism
is a celebration and a promise; it celebrates the integrity of human
reason, responsibility and compassion, and it promises a satisfying
lifestyle that can be counted on. No more deprecation of the human
condition; rather, an opportunity to remain true to ourselves by having
both feet in this world and responding to the challenges of existence
with excitement and pragmatic service to others. Humanism is religion
come of age; at long last we humans can live dignified lives, finite
creatures though we may be. At long last, men, women and children can
find ultimate fulfillment through bringing out the best in humanity for
the sake of humanity."
• Beverley Earles
"...YES:
Humanism can be religious; indeed, the most meaningful and liveable
kind of humanism is itself a religious way of understanding and living
life. It offers a view of [people] and [their] place in the universe
that is a religious philosophy...overarching and undergirding it all,
there can be a haunting sense of wonder which never leaves one for whom
life itself is a mystery and miracle. Where did we come from, why are
we here, where are we going with all the effort, frustration, the
grief, the joy? To be caught up in this sense of wider relatedness, to
sense our being connected in live ways with all the world and everyone
in it, is the heart dimension of religion, whatever its name."
• Peter Samson (from Can Humanism Be Religious?)

