To introduce the topic, as spoken with words more eloquent than my own:
This, I think is a problem. It's a problem that doesn't often get direct attention or discussion because classical monotheism doesn't just grip the minds of theologians and philosophers, but your average Western citizen as well. Spend enough time on RF and you'll observe that threads and conversations almost always center around a god-concept that fall under the classical monotheism header. The criticisms and problems pointed out by the non-theists often fail to apply to other theisms, but these are scarcely given much notice. Instead, we narrow down our thinking to a subset of theism rather than consider theism in its full diversity.
I challenge us to broaden our thinking about theism. Let's get these ideas out on the table for consideration. In my time here, my theism has faced little to no significant challengers. Part of this is because I personally have a habit of avoiding arguments, but much of it, I think, is because anything that falls outside of classical monotheism is deemed irrelevant, not applicable, off-topic, or otherwise brushed aside. Let's consider all the theisms: animism, autotheism, deism, duotheism, henotheism, monolatry, pantheism, panentheism, polytheism... am I missing some? I probably am. There are so many, many understandings of god(s) in the world's religions. Let us remember this!
(Yes, I have every intention of starting some topics around RF in the spirit of this thread; I encourage others to do the same!)
Greer, J.M. 2005. A World Full of Gods: An Inquiry into Polytheism. ADF Publishing, Tuscon, AZ. Pg 1-2.J.M. Greer said:For quite a few centuries now, a particular set of ideas has dominated talk about gods in the Western world. In that branch of philosophy known as philosophy of religion, these ideas have been gathered up under the label of "classical theism," which may be defined as the belief in only one god, the unique, eternal, omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent creator of the universe.
...
This term "classical theism" misleads, since other theisms – beliefs in the existence of one or more gods – have at least as good a claim to classical status. A better term might be classical monotheism, and this latter phrase will be used here. Still, the habit of using the word "theism" as though it inevitably implies monotheism points up a very widely held and rarely questioned broader frame of mind.
A broader and more complete understanding of theism must get outside this frame, because classical monotheism is by no means the only possible or reasonable way of believing in gods, nor the only one believed in by people today, even in Western industrial societies. Nor is it the only view with something to contribute to conversations about religion and spirituality. ... Yet among theologians and philosophers, precisely those people who might have been expected to find other possibilities worth discussing, the grip of classical monotheism has been all but total.
This, I think is a problem. It's a problem that doesn't often get direct attention or discussion because classical monotheism doesn't just grip the minds of theologians and philosophers, but your average Western citizen as well. Spend enough time on RF and you'll observe that threads and conversations almost always center around a god-concept that fall under the classical monotheism header. The criticisms and problems pointed out by the non-theists often fail to apply to other theisms, but these are scarcely given much notice. Instead, we narrow down our thinking to a subset of theism rather than consider theism in its full diversity.
I challenge us to broaden our thinking about theism. Let's get these ideas out on the table for consideration. In my time here, my theism has faced little to no significant challengers. Part of this is because I personally have a habit of avoiding arguments, but much of it, I think, is because anything that falls outside of classical monotheism is deemed irrelevant, not applicable, off-topic, or otherwise brushed aside. Let's consider all the theisms: animism, autotheism, deism, duotheism, henotheism, monolatry, pantheism, panentheism, polytheism... am I missing some? I probably am. There are so many, many understandings of god(s) in the world's religions. Let us remember this!
(Yes, I have every intention of starting some topics around RF in the spirit of this thread; I encourage others to do the same!)