The following is a quotation from Pigeon Feathers, a book by the late John Updike. The previous blog entry defended the practical utility of some forms of religion; Updike defends its artistic and experiential value, even if it turns out that there is no spiritual realm or miracles. I am not sure if I agree with Updike’s sentiments but they are valid and I pass them on to you.
There was a time when I wondered why more people did not go to church.
Taken purely as a human recreation, what could be more delightful, more unexpected than to enter a venerable and lavishly scaled building kept warm and clean for us one or two hours a week and to sit and stand in unison and sing and recite creeds and petitions that are like paths worn smooth in the raw terrain of our hearts?
To listen, or not listen, as a poorly paid but resplendently robed man strives to console us with scraps of ancient epistles and halting accounts, hopelessly compromised by words, of those intimations of divine joy that are like pain in that, their instant gone, the mind cannot remember or believe them; to witness the windows donated by departed patrons and the altar flowers arranged by withdrawn hands and the whole considered spectacle lustrous beneath its patina of inheritance; to pay, for all this, no more than we are moved to give—surely in all democracy there is nothing like it.
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