Hindu and Jewish leaders suggest making religion vibrant and challenging
By ANIWednesday, September 29, 2010
NEVADA - Atheists and agnostics outperformed the religious people on a new USA wide survey of religious knowledge conducted by Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life.
“Make religion more vibrant, attractive and engaging if you wanted to keep people in God’s fold”; eminent Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, and Rabbi Jonathan B. Freirich, prominent Jewish leader in Nevada and California in USA, in a joint statement in Nevada today, suggested to organizations and leaders of various religions and denominations in the country.
Zed, who is president of Universal Society of Hinduism, and Rabbi Freirich, further said that people with “no religion” were increasing and we (religious leaders and organizations) were responsible for their alienation. Our efforts at social control, judgmentalism, stagnant approach, etc., might be turning them away resulting in many of them questioning belief in God, equating religion with fear, etc. Some of them, who still believed in God, were bypassing religion to reach God questioning the linkage between “man made religions” and God. “If I ‘just do good’, I should be fine”, many of them argued.
Rajan Zed and Jonathan Freirich pointed out that life was getting complex and distractions were increasing, so religion was slipping away from the priority list of many. Conventional style of dealing with spirituality and religion did not appear to be effectively working, especially with today’s youth. Make it more exciting and challenging, they suggested.
We as religious leaders should live exemplary lives to add credibility to our preaching. Give them fresh answers without any religious stigma attached. Listen to what the people have to say before giving your opinion to them. Accept the people who and as they are. Make religion lively and not stagnant, Zed and Rabbi Freirich argue.
A spiritual world will be a better place to live than a non-spiritual world, Rajan Zed and Jonathan Freirich add.
Previous surveys by the Pew Research Center have shown that America is among the most religious of the world’s developed nations. But this new U.S. Religious Knowledge Survey shows that large numbers of Americans are uninformed about the tenets, practices, history and leading figures of major faith traditions - including their own. (ANI)