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The Church’s Mission and Post-Modern Humanism by M. M. Thomas Dr. M.M. Thomas was one of the formost Christian leaders of the nineteenth century. He was Moderator of the Central Committee of the World Council of Churches and Governor of Nagaland. An ecumenical theologian of repute, he wrote more than sixty books on Theology and Mission, including 24 theological commentaries on the books of the bible in Malayalam (the official language of the Indian state of Kerela). This book was jointly published by Christava Sahhya Samhhi (OSS), Tiruvalla, Kerela, and The Indian Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (ISPOK), Post Box 1585, Kashmere Gate, Delhi - 110 006, in 1996. Price Rs. 60. Used by permission of the publisher. This material was prepared for Religion Online by Ted & Winnie Brock.
Chapter 5:. Technology, Culture and Religion Graduation
address delivered at the Christian Medical College, Vellore on 11th Oct. 1993 I must first of
all thank Drs. Booshanam Moses and Molly Thomas for their kind invitation to me
to be present here with you for this year’s Medical Graduation as your Chief
Guest. I deem it a distinct honour to have been so invited. What shall I
say to you on this important occasion in your life when you have finished
securing the basic degree in medicine and considering your future course? I am
a person belonging to an older generation having graduated in chemistry from
the University of Madras in 1935, that is, 58 years ago. But through the years
chemistry has changed and I have moved away from it into researches and
writings on Religion. Culture and Politics. It has been said that old people
dream of the past and young people see visions of the future. So I have been
wondering how I could speak some words of relevance to you who are visualizing
the future both of yourselves and the world which you enter. I understand
that this is the 51st year of the starting of the MBBS programme and the 46th
Graduation Day. I was reading the College Prospectus for 1993 which was sent to
me and it speaks of a Tradition laid down by the founder Ida Scudder which has
been moulding you through the years you have spent here. I thought I would
serve the occasion best by enlarging on some aspects of the relevance of that tradition
for the contemporary post-modem world situation. It comes nearest to my own
concerns. The three
themes emphasized in the college tradition from the foundation are: modern
medical technology, the humanist culture of service and justice to the community
of the poor and the needy, and religion as the source of the humanist culture.
Building a proper relation between Technology, Culture and Religion was very
much present in the mind of Ida Scudder when she founded this academic
institution. If I interpret the prospectus of the CMC correctly, the objective
of the CMC namely to “impart to men and women an education of the highest order
in the art and science of medicine and to equip them in the spirit of Christ
for service In the relief of suffering and promotion of health”, that is, the
idea of a combination of training in professional skills, moulding the
technically trained in a culture of human values and motivation, equipping them
to utilize technology to serve “with compassion and concern for the whole
person”, the people especially the weaker sections of society, and giving
spiritual reinforcement of that culture by the “spirit of Christ” and the motto
“Not to be Ministered unto but to Minister” derived from him, goes back in
tradition to the founder herself (Prospectus MBBS Course p.5). Of
course she could not have realized at that time fifty years ago that some
specialized medical technologies could be so fully integrated with the
materialistic-mechanical reductionist view of human being and with the
profit-consumerist motives that it would be impossible to convert them to the
holistic view of human personhood or to be made an appropriate tool for
promoting health of poor communities. That awareness has come only in recent
years with the destructiveness of technological culture becoming expressly
manifest. Today of course medicos engaged in community health services are
critiquing high-tech medical technology itself as class-biased and exploitative
and call for technologies more appropriate. One should also appreciate the fact
that though an institution founded by Christian Missions, considering the
inter-religious character of the academic community of the college, the
founders emphasized the Christian “values” of self-giving service to the poor
and concern for the whole person rather than Christian salvation, thereby
somewhat separating the common “culture” and values of humanism of academic
community of the college, from the Christian “religion” and thus relatively
secularizing it to keep the academic community free from discrimination on the
basis of religion. Of course, for a Christian college it was
right to emphasize the special role of Christianity to reinforce the humanist
values. But one does not know whether the founders remembered the historical
fact that it was the movement of Secular Humanism associated with the European
Enlightenment that brought the humanist values of liberty, equality and
fraternity to the forefront in the French Revolution and helped Christianity to
discover them and their roots within the Christian tradition and the gospel of
Christ. The implication is that a dialogue between Religion and Secularism is
necessary to keep a culture of Humanism alive. The American democratic
constitution came into being and is sustained within the context of such a
dialogue between Christianity and Secular Humanism. And if the Indian
Constitution begins with affirming the humanist principles of liberty,
equality, fraternity and justice it has behind it the impact of liberal and
socialist secular ideologies as well as Renascent Hinduism from Raja Rammohan
Roy to Gandhi who absorbed these values and made them part of the Renascent
Hinduism itself. And today, the threat to the further development of common
humanist culture comes from religious fundamentalism and communalism which deny
the reality of religious pluralism and the possibility of a composite human
culture reinforced by many faiths and ideologies. It is the contemporary situation of the
relation between Modern Technology, Humanist Culture and Religious Pluralism
that I want to highlight today. Here I see two challenges which seem to loom
large in the modern world including India which is in the process of
modernization; one, of humanizing the technological revolution to serve the
poor and protect the ecological basis of life; and the other, of building a
secular state and common civil society with openness to religious insights in a
situation of religious pluralism. These are challenges to the present
generation of youth looking towards making their contribution to the shaping of
the future of humanity. Firstly, how to make technological
developments in the modem world instruments of justice, rather than
exploitation, to the poor and the needy in society and also serve to protect
and not destroy the ecological basis of the community of life on earth? There
is no doubt that the scientific and technological revolution of the modem
period has been a tremendous expression of human creativity, It has eliminated
distances and created the global community materially. It has given us the
knowledge necessary to produce goods and services in abundance. It has given us
power for social, psychic and genetic engineering, to control disease and death
as well as birth. But as we survey the world situation today, the general
feeling is that along with many benefits, many of the promises of technology
stand betrayed and there is evidence of a lot of technology having become
instruments of exploitation of peoples, destruction of cultures and
dehumanization of persons and pose threat of destruction not only to the whole
humanity through nuclear war but also to the whole community of life on the
earth through the destruction of its ecological basis. In India’s “ten
percent economy” as economist C.T. Kurien calls it, 40 to 50 percent of people
are living below the poverty line; and the present pattern of development
through globalization with economic growth as the only criterion will lead to
large-scale cuts in welfare measures and to the capital-intensive industries
under the auspices of the multi-national corporations and consequently to more
poverty and unemployment as it happened in Latin America. The dalits, the
tribals, the fisherfolk and women who have been outside the power-structures of
traditional society and state have become more oppressed through technological
advance giving their traditional oppressors more power. Class, caste, race,
ethnic and sexist oppressions and violence have become more intense with people
getting awakened to demand their just rights. In fact, Narmada, Chilika and
other people’s struggles are against technological development which have
become inhuman and destructive of not only peoples’ livelihood but also of
their self-identities. There was a
time when people thought that technologies were morally neutral and that if
peoples’ purposes were changed all technologies could be utilized for the good
of the community. There may be some truth in that approach with respect to the
earlier stage of the technological advance and probably also with respect to
small-scale technologies. Today however many knowledgeable people are saying
that many of the high-tech developments have produced technological systems in
which the mechanical-materialist view of reality, human greed and ecological destruction
are built in; and that therefore a new paradigm of development with
technologies integrated with a more holistic understanding of human personhood
and peoplehood and recognizing the organic natural and spiritual dimensions of
human community are called for. The WCC Conference of technicians and
scientists in Boston on the Future of Humanity in a Technological Age held
sometime ago, asked for the development of an Ethics of Appropriate Technology.
This was of course Gandhi’s approach. Schumacher’s book Small is Beautiful is
a technologist’s restatement of Neo-Gandhism as an ideology of humanized
technology. Since the CMC
was started in response to the village women’s situation, it is worth
mentioning that today the feminist movement on the whole (as represented by the
recent recipient of the Right Livelihood award Vandana Shiva’s book Staying
Alive) considers modern science and technology as essentially an expression
of masculine chauvinism intent on “raping” nature and woman; and therefore they
call for a reorganization of society on the traditional “feminist” principle of
production, reproduction and sustenance of all life for saving the future.
There may be exaggerations here but there is little doubt that the relation
between technology and justice needs to be rethought. Secondly, how
to recognize the religious dimension of public life in a society of many
religions and secular ideologies without allowing society to fall into the
dangers of religious fundamentalism and communalism? Religious and linguistic
and ethnic plurality we always had. But then they lived in more or less
isolation from each other. Today what we have is pluralism where the old
isolation is gone and we are thrown together to recognize each other and even
to relate to each other on an equal footing in a democratic set-up and build
society together. Thus religious plurality has moved to religious pluralism
which has its own dynamics. We have sought to keep the unity of India as a
nation-state in such a situation through the idea of the secular state. It
guaranteed freedom of religion and freedom from religious discrimination in
civil society to all but allowed religion to enter vital areas of public life
only through the inspiration religion gives to individuals. This framework of unity
in pluralism has been developed through the movement of national struggle for
independence under the leadership of Gandhi, the leader of Renascent Hinduism
and Nehru, the advocate of Secular Socialism. In fact, Gandhi became martyr to
preserve India a secular state with equality for all religions under law. The
threat to this idea of secularism arises form religious fundamentalism which is
afraid of insecurity through change in traditional religious dogmas, ritual
practices of purity and impurity in social laws; the threat also comes from
communalism which seeks political power for one’s religious community or in the
case of Hindutva wants to establish a Hindu state. This communalist path will
lead, as Rammanohar Lohia said long ago, to the break-up of India. Minority consciousness or majority
consciousness are dangers to both religion and politics because they arise as
defensive reactions stifling creativity. The real struggle in all religious
communities is for spiritual reformation opening themselves to enter into
dialogue with other religions and with secular humanist ideologies regarding
the nature and rights of the human person and the meaning of social justice
enabling to build together a new spiritually-oriented humanism and a more
humane society. Opening up is the only path for the humanization of religion
which will also enable it to communicate its message of spiritual salvation in
relation to the humanization of society itself. |