When anthropologists look at religion, in particular Rene Girard, they see the sacred as a human universal.
Girard has reminded us of truths that we would rather forget—in particular the truth that religion is not primarily about God but about the sacred, and that the experience of the sacred can be suppressed, ignored and even desecrated (the routine tribute paid to it in modern societies) but never destroyed. Always the need for it will arise, for it is in the nature of rational beings like us to live at the edge of things, experiencing our alienation and longing for the sudden reversal that will once again join us to the centre.
The Sacred and the Human by Roger Scruton
Posted by Jill Fallon at August 16, 2007 8:38 AM | Permalink