Sitemap

Member-only story

“Morality without mythology”: a humanist response

4 min readJun 13, 2025

--

Zeus image: Wikipedia

This is the second post sharing a discussion between friends, one a self-described humanist and the other a self-described Christian. Read the previous post to get the context for this one.

My confession

As a preliminary matter, you are correct, you are not the “Christian friend” I wrote to. He is actually an amalgam of the worshipers at the Evangelical Church of God where my Grandma Emma took me as a child. They actually did have a fervent faith in the fundamentalist beliefs I used to contrast with and explain humanism, as do “a minority” of about 40% of today’s Christians.

And I do write as a “confession” to them that I have stepped away from what they tried to teach me, not in an effort to convert them, but as a plea for forgiveness, or at least, understanding. I “confess” that I am different. Use of the term “confess” avoids the implication that I am “better” — we just see the world differently. I am trying to be ecumenical, trying to maintain “morality without the mythology.”

Morality is important to me, mythology is not. (Mythology is just a story to support adherence to the morality.) Though too often mythology just gets in the way.

Humanism:

--

--

Gerald R. Baron
Gerald R. Baron

Written by Gerald R. Baron

Dawdling at the intersection of faith, science, philosophy and theology. Author of It Was My Turn, a Vietnam story.

Responses (1)