New Consciousness Review Spring 2015 | Page 8

INSPIRATION REVIEW The Future of God: A Practical Approach to Spirituality for Our Times By Deepak Chopra Finding God and Faith in Modern Times Deepak Chopra writes in “The Future of God”, “Faith must be saved for everyone’s sake. From faith springs a passion for the eternal, which is even stronger than love. Many of us have lost that passion or have never known it.” Chopra’s “The Future of God” is a soulful, brilliantly researched, eloquently written response to proponents of material realism and militant atheism. I love the way Deepak explains in pure, simple terms, “You are whatever your faith is.” Chopra explains that skepticism is a good first step to exploring and finding our faith, as he points out the important differences between bad faith--which we can identify by the way it opposes spiritual growth. Faith can be either a guide to spiritual growth, or an obstacle. It is possible to consider oneself an atheist and have faith, and it can be possible to have good faith--that improves one’s experience of life, or bad faith--which can be recognized by the effect it has in the world. Faith exists in us as the core ideas and beliefs we live by, and these inner beliefs direct and inspire our every thought, word, and action. When we come to know that we ARE our faith, as Deepak points out, “It then becomes vitally important to know good faith from bad.” Every generation faces questions of “Who are we?” and “Where did we come from?” In modern times, we find ‘postmodern’ themes questioning our identity in popular culture and movies, which invite us to more deeply question the connection be- 8 | NEW CONSCIOUSNESS REVIEW tween who we think we are and what we think we know of reality. Many are struggling with what they consider to be an absence of faith, without noticing that atheism can be viewed as a particular kind of faith. Non-spiritual scientists can be as faith-based as religious believers, to the point that they can suppress thinking and research in directions that don’t conform to conventional guidelines. When scientists become close-minded in their beliefs, they can often unknowingly become believers in a faith of scientism--the belief that one day the scientific method will solve all problems. Proponents of scientism can be every bit as arrogant, self-righteous, dogmatic and intolerant as religious fundamentalists, which are indicators alerting us to the presence of bad faith. Chopra points out that while proponents of material realism and militant atheism such as Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Christoph Hitchens and Sam Harris profess to be voices of logic and reason, their prejudice in discrediting religions and spirituality is evident in their use of such derogatory terms as: ‘superstition,’ ‘false consolation,’ ‘mind-