this post was submitted on 24 May 2026
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Day by day I begin to wonder more and more if I can even call myself a communist anymore. Its becoming hard to really reconcile my faith with communism if the ideology itself is theorically opposed to it. Bukharin's book, "ABCs of Communism," has an entire section on Chapter 11 that directly talks about why religion and communism are incompatible. Communists believe history is driven by class struggle and material conditions. Religious people believe in stuff like divine intervention or divine will. A communist would probably look at islam (my faith) and be like "No prophet was sent a message by God and acted upon it, it was their material conditions that made them act." I don't see how one could believe both, it feels like its either or.

Sure, it is perfectly possible for religious people to largely agree with Marxists on such things as historical materialism and present-day class struggles, not to mention struggles for national liberation, against racism, etc. It is possible be anti-capitalist and fight for a classless, moneyless, and stateless society where MOP is colletively owned but at the end of the day, there is philosophical tension.

I feel at best, I can be an ally, but the way I see it, I will never be one of them. I do not belong. My voice does not count equally and my beliefs make me suspect. I have faced hostility from leftists that are atheist and hostile towards religion and been called a revisionist. If this is how me and others are gonna be treated just because of our faith, I'd rather die than simply be used as cannon fodder in a revolution.

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[–] catonion@lemmygrad.ml 12 points 3 days ago

holy fuck i'm so sorry. who tf told you this btw? please don't listen to those atheist nerds if you are religious. tell them to go choke on barbed wire /lovingly (5serious: hard boundaries are important here, your religion is a personal matter).

you're not just an ally and you know it. you are one of us. you belong here. your voice is equal and your beliefs make you beautiful. you have value regardless of any of this, ok?

i don't have to reconcile anything, not with myself or with others. i am an atheist pagan witch nerd and i don't want nor need to explain what that means to anyone but myself(s). does it bleed through my words and actions? yeah, at times. again, it is strictly a personal matter. lenin wrote about this if i remember correctly.

[–] darkernations@lemmygrad.ml 12 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

Dialectical materialism: our ideas are our social material conditions reflected imperfectly in our brain

Religious folks implementing the above: god set the above matter in motion

A sensible communist would understand that religions themselves reflect the political economy (eg UAE salafist islam with their concentrations of captial and imperialist comprador class is significantly different to the Islam of Hamas and their revolutionary anti-imperialism despite both being Sunni. One could make a similar argument for say the Catholicism of cuba vs catholicism found in USA), and athiesm does not make you an anti-imperialist let alone having a scientific understanding of capital.

And to hit it really on its head: consider all these Western Marxists refusing to support those on the ground fighting imperialists; they are essentially liberals cosplaying with a sickle and a hammer.

Marxism is a science, and this includes the science of how capital works and how to build socialism from it ("from" in a dialectical materialist sense). If a person practising a religion can also be a scientist then the same coul be said for a social scientist.

Develop the vanguard that will help the peoples you want to emancipate scientifically, everyone else is just wasting your time.

(My background: I am an athiest but my ancestor's homeland would not have ended formal western colonisation without revolutionary socialist muslims. Period.)

[–] Maeve@lemmygrad.ml 6 points 4 days ago
[–] AnarchoBolshevik@lemmygrad.ml 9 points 4 days ago (1 children)
[–] Maeve@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 4 days ago

Nineteenth‑century thinkers such as Aaron Shmuel Liberman (1845–1880) and Elia Benamozegh (1823–1900) had already tied Kabbalah to Marxist and universalistic aspirations, and twentieth‑century Jewish thought expanded on this trend when thinkers such as Avraham Yitzhak Kook (1865–1935), Yehuda Ashlag (1885–1954), Leon Askenazi (1922–1996), and many others claimed Kabbalah as the centerpiece of their Jewish politics.

Exploring these to get a better understanding of the faith in which I was reared, along with Judaism in general, the Ethiopian Bible, and numerous other faiths, Omnism, and a healthy dose of skepticism is how I reconcile it.

Someone long ago claimed to me that to embrace communism meant to destroy all religious art, literary, visual, all religious texts and services. I'm skeptical of that, too. My faith and understanding is important to me, but not so important it's worth sacrificing a strong community that cares for each other, and preserves and shares resources for the good of all. Ironically, it's this faith journey that brought me here.

[–] pyromaiden@lemmygrad.ml 29 points 5 days ago (2 children)

You have to remember that the extremely militant atheism of the Russian and Spanish revolutions were in response to the clergy aligning themselves with the ruling class and reactionary forces. This is because the class interests of the clergy, as property owners, was aligned with that of the aristocrats and bourgeoisie and was inherently at odds with socialism. I do think certain parts of the revolutionary movements overcorrected in reaction but it's understandable why they zero'd in on religion so strongly with this context.

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[–] frisbird@lemmy.ml 27 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (5 children)

You're reacting to the anti-religious antics of people who don't have enough of an identity that they need performative atheism to feel superior to others. That's not communism, and it's certainly not limited to communism. Lots of capitalists behave the same way.

Yes, Marxism is a materialist philosophy. It does not allow for things like morality and the supernatural to be used for explanatory purposes. That doesn't mean you can't believe in those things and it doesn't mean you can't practice organized religion. What it means is that you can't use the contents of your religious beliefs as the basis for supporting an argument.

This should be pretty obvious for any plural society though. You can't say that the reason we should have Law 4815-D is because it's God's will. You can't say that the reason we should execute this prisoner is because of crimes against God. That will only work in a society where everyone believes mostly the exact same things. As soon as two or three religions coexist in a society, they're going to disagree on what God's Will is or what constitutes a crime against God. How do you build a pluralistic society in this case?

So go ahead and be religious and also be a communist. But understand that communism is a scientific analysis of the way society actually functions. It doesn't care why a specific prophet said a specific thing at a specific time (though it may have an opinion). It cares about what we need to do to build a sustainable society of liberated people. It's like any science. How can you be a rocket scientist and be religious? How can you be a cancer researcher and be religious? How can you study chemical catalysts and be religious? You simply don't use your religion as the analytical tool for that domain. You don't say the rocket launch failed because it was God's Will - you study the data and run experiments. The same is true of communism.

Once you come to terns with that, let the performative atheists know that they're harming the revolution.

[–] RedZodan@lemmygrad.ml 10 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Thank you, you give me some hope and relief. I once though brought up your point about scientists and other professionals still believing in religion to an atheist and they responded with "There is a cognitive dissonance. Relativity of simultaneity automatically rules out most religious metaphysical interpretations."

[–] frisbird@lemmy.ml 12 points 5 days ago

Again, because these performative atheists are acting like scientists who are religious are constantly battling with interpretations like "the rocket moved because God pushed it with his hand".

And listen, if you're belief system is that God personally intervenes in everything and nothing can be understood except by interpreting everything as God personally does each thing, then yeah you're going to have a hard time in communism, but also in capitalism, and in any science, and honestly anything you ever do. Why did he break up with me after I betrayed his trust, is it because God made him do it?

Try not make everything about whether people accept your beliefs. Believe what you believe. Keep your beliefs within your community of belief. Share with people outside that community after you trust them. For people who just voluntarily say things like "religion should be eradicated" go ahead and push back, but for the most part, treat your religious life as mostly separate from the practical workings of society while simultaneously integrating it into everything you do. It's a difficult process but it's not cognitive dissonance. It's the real life experience of humanity to exist in multiple interpretative layers of reality simultaneously.

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[–] Ember_NE@lemmygrad.ml 15 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

I am a Christian and a Marxist-Leninist. I don't think this is a big problem. My practical politics is based on diamat analysis and the study of theory, not idealism. My personal drive is a wish to help create a better world through altering the material conditions here and now, with more space for love to flourish - why does it matter if I am personally motivated by faith in God in addition to just secular love for my fellow humans?

The critique of religion, while it can wary between ML-theorists, usually either rest on a practical opposition to the clergy class (and personally I am just as eager to oppose and stop MAGA megachurch supply-side Jesus christians as I'm sure the bolsheviks were to stop the tsarist orthodox clergy) or a philosophical position (I am sure there is a lot of nuance and things one could get into here, just writing from what I've seen when reading. I do not intend to argue against a strawman, just to be brief). Philosophically, it either rests on pure materialism and non-dualism; which is a fair position to take, but which is inherently also an unprovable metaphysical position, and one which I personally disagree with - or on an idea that religion is used to resolve alienation from our limitations in the psyche. I rather think that faith is an innate part of what we are as humans, and even if Marxs critique of religion as a way to counteract alienation of the self, societal progress is still not going to solve the core human issues which faith deals with: interpersonal relations and issues, the meaning of life and existence, growing as human beings, and our meeting with death.

The primary thing to avoid is to let politics be influenced by idealism. Comrade, atheists and agnostics do not automatically avoid this! Racism and other xenophobia, bro science, unexamined belief, imperialism and social chauvinism, liberalism - in many countries today strands of non-religious ideology and thought are problematic just the same as the most problematic expressions of faith. The tendency to idealism is innate in humanity, the matter is to discipline the mind, to be aware of ones biases, to spend the time and effort needed for clear and examined thought, and to think collectively to transcend our individual limits. Comrade, you can do this just as well as anyone else!

[–] zedcell@lemmygrad.ml 6 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (6 children)

The non-dualism comes more into the problem of religion and scientific analysis. If your philosophical world-view posits that there is a power outside of nature that can influence it independently of nature itself, then how can you square the circle with the science of observation and testing of hypothesis. Surely every time you prove that things are only influenced by their material surroundings and conditions, then you are narrowing, constantly, the scope in which a dualistic power can act upon the world. If you have a divine power that ultimately has no outside observable influence on the world, then you end up falling back to spinoza's monist view of the divine and nature, the basis for most materialist atheist philosophies.

For a short piece pulling at this thread from Engels: https://redsails.org/shamefaced-materialism/

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[–] Jabril@hexbear.net 18 points 5 days ago

There are millions of communist Muslims, surely. With almost two billion Muslims in the world, and 26 million in China alone, the statistics are in your favor. I am a communist Muslim and I know many where I live in a non-Muslim region. Beyond that, communists of other religions would be in the millions as well, especially Christians in LatAm. As others have pointed out, you just need to be able to 1) ignore anti-social people like the types of atheists you are describing. They are never going to be able to organize anything because of their anti-social behavior. Even if one is an atheist, most people are not and if you are mocking them they will be against you.

  1. separate your personal relationship with Allah from your material analysis. If undertaking a material analysis, you can only rely on material data that is empirical.

  2. understand that communism is what we were put here to achieve. An equitable world of peace and prosperity is the vision, and communism is the vehicle to get there. Our faith is what allows us to be dedicated to that mission instead of being constantly pulled off track by self gratification

[–] salim@lemmygrad.ml 13 points 5 days ago (1 children)

i'm going through the same process as you do, i'm supposed to be a muslim and i live in a muslim majority country, but i don't think i'll be keeping my faith any longer. there's a lot to say against islam that is valid. what helps me is to try understand the context in which islam came to be, and the context of why laws are the way they are, basically try to look at it through a materialist lens

[–] cfgaussian@lemmygrad.ml 7 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (12 children)

Isn't it possible to be culturally part of a religion without necessarily believing in the supernatural parts of it? In the sense of looking at the religion as a historically constituted shared social and moral framework rather than a metaphysical statement about the nature of reality?

I'm pretty sure some of the famous Islamic philosophers and writers of the Islamic golden age were probably somewhere on the spectrum between materialist atheism and metaphysical theism. It didn't make them any less important to Islamic history and culture.

People, especially intellectuals, tend to privately hold very heterogenous beliefs, even when outwardly they perform the appropriate rituals of their respective culture. I suspect a lot of Christian monks in the Middle Ages were skeptics too.

[–] Maeve@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 4 days ago

A lot of Christian priests, pastors and nuns. As well as Hindu, Muslim, Catholic, Buddhist, Jainist, Zoroastrian...

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[–] GuyIncognito@lemmy.ml 5 points 4 days ago

Easy peasy! Scientific socialism posits that capitalism creates the conditions for its own overthrow. Thus, every evil that the capitalists commit ultimately undermines them and leads toward liberation. No matter how hard he tries, man cannot subvert God's will, and even in attempting to do so he cannot but fulfill it. If liberation is incipient within the logic of the machinery of oppression, does this not imply the existence of a just God?

The imperialists, in their drive for greater profits, ended up undermining the military power that allowed them to keep control over the world - once again, the internal logic of capitalism drove itself toward its own destruction. The defence contractors consolidated, and every new procurement program became a multi-billion dollar boondoggle. But it didn't matter, they had won! The USSR was gone, and the world was theirs. The US military would only ever need to bully small countries, and the production rates of advanced weaponry would never be a hindrance to that. In their hubris, they didn't understand the extent to which they had undermined themselves, and they tried to pull on Iran what they pulled in Venezuela.

Iran was not a soft target. It was the hardest target they could have picked outside of China or Russia, and it was on the forefront of the military technologies that are the great equalizer in the 21st century - drones and missiles, fired out of hardened underground bases. The Amero-Israeli shock and awe campaign achieved little besides creating martyrs, and the empire was exposed as a paper tiger. They expended precision standoff munitions at an unsustainable rate, cutting deeply into the stocks earmarked for a big showdown with China, and they lost irreplaceable radars and high-value aircraft.

This is the first anti-imperial war in the modern era. Previous wars were anti-colonial in character, aiming to kick the imperialists out of Vietnam, or Angola, or Algeria. Iran has checked US power across the entire middle east, and the possibility still exists that they will be driven out of the region entirely. Where was the spark that ignited this conflagration blazing across the world? None other than the birthplace of Jesus Christ, Palestine.

[–] Thordros@hexbear.net 15 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I'm not a big intellectual guy, so I don't really have a ton to add to the discussion. BUT! I do know that a lot of South American Catholic Socialists have ton a ton of work on trying to square that circle between Socialism and religion through Liberation Theology.

I don't know of any great resources to read about it. Maybe Cowbee has something in his back pocket on the topic? He's the smartest guy I know about Communism stuff.

[–] Cowbee@lemmygrad.ml 11 points 5 days ago

I'm flattered! I will say, I have not studied much on Liberation Theology (as of yet), as I am not religious myself and have prioritized other areas of study. You are correct, though, that this is an area being actively developed, especially in South America. I have also seen Statesian orgs advancing this line, at least from local observation, not to replace dialectical materialism but as an avenue for religious socialists.

[–] Munrock@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I have faced hostility from leftists that are atheist and hostile towards religion and been called a revisionist.

Fuck'em. What authority do those people have to tell you what your personal beliefs can be?

When you look at how the People's Republic of China (or any other AES state) approaches matters of faith, they don't dictate what people can and can't believe as long as they're not proselytizing or campaigning for temporal authority for their organised religion.

And the reason I give China as an example is because they're the grown ups in the room when it comes to the leftist cause, while I'm willng to bet that the people castigating you for your faith are part of a left that's constantly infighting and being ineffective.

[–] chinawatcherwatcher@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 4 days ago (1 children)

it's interesting that you bring up china as an example, when my understanding is that the CPC enforces strict ideological unity among the party, including atheism. what you're referring to is its policy towards the masses, and internal/external policy should be understood as being entirely different, particularly in this case.

therefore, if we are to learn from "the grown ups in the room," yes, religion is a philosophical and ideological error that should not be tolerated in any vanguard party. religion is perfectly rational and i can't blame or fault anyone for believing in it or needing what it provides: sense of community, a way of internally regulating emotions and essentially meditating, and so on and so forth. marxism should not seek to enforce atheism among the masses, but slowly guide the masses towards atheism by showing that marxism, socialism, and dialectical materialism can fulfill these functions more completely and correctly than religion ever could. furthermore, the incorrectness of religion should not be used as an excuse to interpret religious national liberation movements as reactionary or incorrect themselves.

in lieu of actually organizing a vanguard party the stakes are not very high and it probably doesn't matter very much. and, the incorrect nature of religion should not be used as a pedestal to declare one's self more rational than others, or to ridicule others. but, because religion is fundamentally anti-scientific it should have no place in a vanguard party in that it leaves one and one's organization open to a whole host of errors in thought, strategy, tactics, and what have you. yes, china and the soviet union got it right.

[–] Munrock@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 2 days ago (1 children)

That is not what the CPC does, though.

There are and continue to be CPC members who are Uyghur Muslims. They are consistently vetted to ensure their decision making and conduct is Marxist, but they're not forced to renounce Islam and they're not even encouraged to renounce it because doing so would alienate them from the communities they are supposed to serve.

[–] chinawatcherwatcher@lemmygrad.ml 0 points 2 days ago (1 children)

what you've described is clearly understood as an exception to the rule rather than an expression of it if you read through china's basic policy on religion and religious practices, otherwise known as document 19 (eng, baidou page).

regarding religious policy towards the masses, it states (quoting from the english translation, but you can check the original if you'd like):

The basic policy the Party has adopted toward the religious question is that of respect for and protection of the freedom of religious belief. This is a long-term policy, one which must be continually carried out until that future time when religion will itself disappear. What do we mean by freedom of religious belief? We mean that every citizen has the freedom to believe in religion and also the freedom not to believe in religion. S/he has also the freedom to believe in this religion or that religion. Within a particular religion, s/he has the freedom to believe in this sect or that sect. A person who was previously a nonbeliever has the freedom to become a religious believer, and one who has been a religious believer has the freedom to become a nonbeliever. We Communists are atheists and must unremittingly propagate atheism. Yet at the same time we must understand that it will be fruitless and extremely harmful to use simple coercion in dealing with the people's ideological and spiritual questions--and this includes religious questions. We must further understand that at the present historical stage the difference that exists between the mass of believers and nonbelievers in matters of ideology and belief is relatively secondary. If we then one-sidedly emphasize this difference, even to the point of giving it primary importance--for example, by discriminating against and attacking the mass of religious believers, while neglecting and denying that the basic political and economic welfare of the mass of both religious believers and nonbelievers is the same--then we forget that the Party's basic task is to unite all the people (and this includes the broad mass of believers and nonbelievers alike) in order that all may strive to construct a modern, powerful Socialist state. To behave otherwise would only exacerbate the estrangement between the mass of believers and nonbelievers as well as incite and aggravate religious fanaticism, resulting in serious consequences for our Socialist enterprise. Our Party, therefore, bases its policy of freedom of religious belief on the theory formulated by Marxism-Leninism, and it is the only correct policy genuinely consonant with the people's welfare.

i.e. the masses are allowed to believe whatever they want so long as they are not forced to as children, there are no material consequences for believing in this or that, etc. notably, it states that "we communists are atheists and must unremittingly propagate atheism."

regarding ideological unity regarding atheism in the party, it states in no uncertain terms:

The fact that our Party proclaims and implements a policy of freedom of religious belief does not, of course, mean that Communist Party members can freely believe in religion. The policy of freedom of religious belief is directed toward the citizens of our country; it is not applicable to Party members. Unlike the average citizen, the Party member belongs to a Marxist political party, and there can be no doubt at all that s/he must be an atheist and not a theist. Our Party has clearly stated on many previous occasions: A Communist Party member cannot be a religious believer; s/he cannot take part in religious activities. Any member who persists in going against this proscription should be told to leave the Party.

i.e. dialectical materialism is explicitly atheist and anyone who continues to be a theist should be removed from the party. however, there is an exception made for ethnic minorities for whom all members are religious:

The present question concerns the implementation of this proscription among those ethnic minorities whose people are basically all religious believers. Here, implementation must follow the actual circumstances, and so make use of proper measures, not oversimplifying matters. We must realize that although a considerable number of Communist Party members among these ethnic minorities loyally implement the Party line, do positive work for the Party, and obey its discipline, they cannot completely shake off all religious influence.

what is the party's policy regarding these members? to allow them to be religious for the time being so as not to alienate the party from the masses, but to continue to do ideological work on these party members with the eventual goal of having them become atheists (either individually, or as an entire subgroup gradually over time):

Party organizations should in no way simply cast these Party members aside, but should patiently and meticulously carry out ideological work while taking measures to develop more fully their positive political activism, helping them gradually to acquire a dialectical and historical materialist worldview and to gradually shake off the fetters of a religious ideology.

furthermore, those with relatively lower levels of belief in religion should be prioritized over those with relatively higher beliefs:

Obviously, as we go about expanding our membership, we must take great care not to be rushed into recruiting devout religious believers or those with strong religious sentiments.

so, yes, exceptions are made for ethnic minorities that are entirely religious, but these exceptions are still relatively less religious and are guided towards atheism. the fact remains that the CPC remains a staunchly atheist organization, sees atheism as a fundamental part of dialectical materialism, and, with these exceptions in mind, enforces strict ideological unity within the party. we should follow the CPC's guidance in the west by doing the same. saying this or that ethnic minority is entirely religious and should therefore be an exception to this rule is entirely different than interpreting the exception to the rule as the rule itself. it certainly does not apply to the majority of people in the west.

[–] Munrock@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 2 days ago

we should follow the CPC’s guidance in the west by doing the same.

Which requires establishing an actual vanguard party and winning a revolution, and none of that is going to happen if participants are required to resolve their cognitive dissonance before there is even a body worth being a member of.

Even at the stage they're at, China is still doing it extremely patiently. What OP describes they're experiencing from others is nothing like that, and I stand by "fuck 'em".

Anyone who thinks that a Marxist movement could take hold in the US while not only ignoring the faith of all the self-identifying Christians in the US but also actively declaring they'll all be fixed is delusional. It's armchair revolutionary chucklefuck thought.

[–] vema@lemmygrad.ml 11 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

You may be interested in this discussion between Adnan Husain (professor of Medieval, Mediterranean, and Islamic World History) and Breht O'Shea (host of Rev Left Radio): Spiritual Materialism? Left Politics and Marxian Mysticism w/Rev Left Radio’s Breht O’Shea

What does spirituality on the left look like? In a Ramadan special, Adnan discusses Buddhism and Sufi Islam, the distinctions between mysticism and mystification, spiritual practices and ethics as well as the liberation of the soul w/Revolutionary Left Radio and former co-host of Guerrilla History, Breht O’Shea. In a wide ranging and deep conversation about the inner life and the outer world, what it means to be truly human, and transformation socially and personally, Adnan and Breht explore the intersections of left politics and spirituality from the alienation of consumer corporate capitalism and the degradations of imperialism to the defiant dignity and faithful resilience of Gazan resistance.

If this interests you, I believe these two have been on each other's podcasts a few times discussing related topics and you may find other episodes of theirs talking about it.

[–] Maeve@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 4 days ago

Rumi 😍🥰

[–] amemorablename@lemmygrad.ml 9 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Religious people believe in stuff like divine intervention or divine will. A communist would probably look at islam (my faith) and be like “No prophet was sent a message by God and acted upon it, it was their material conditions that made them act.” I don’t see how one could believe both, it feels like its either or.

You might be dealing with people who are mixing up mechanical materialism (see: https://en.prolewiki.org/wiki/Mechanical_materialism) with dialectical materialism.

I'm pretty sure a dialectical materialist view would say that somebody receiving a message from a god is part of their material conditions (if they did indeed receive such a message). From the other end of the belief, that they imagined the message somehow / that it was made up in some way, it might be more accurate to say the superstructure (beliefs level of things) is more of a driving factor in that, but either way, it's still a real thing impacting them.

We could put it in a context that's less charged with theological debate and belief for comparison: Suppose the president of the US were to text me directly and tell me that if I don't do X, they are going to do Y threatening thing to me. Is it likely the actual president texted me? No. But that doesn't make it totally impossible. Either way, if I believe that he did and if I believe that if I don't do X in response to his message, then Y is going to happen (that I perceive as bad), then I'm going to be pretty motivated to do X if Y is bad enough. Now maybe I ignore the text and Y never happens, and I assume I was scammed. Or maybe I ignore it and Y does happen, and now I'm terrified. With the first outcome, I probably don't change my behavior as a result. With the second, I probably do.

I don't know if I'm making the point clear, but basically what I'm trying get at is that dialectical and historical materialism is a process of understanding the world as we know it, but I don't think it is equipped to weigh in on whether deities exist (I'm open to correction if people believe otherwise). It can weigh in on religious systems, however, and what kind of impact it has when people believe in them and act upon that belief.

As to something like divine intervention, I don't think it's very practical (from a tactical point of view) for a communist to believe in it because you don't want to be in a situation where you are literally at war, struggling to survive, and instead of working out what weapons and tactics will win, you sit aside and pray to be saved. However, you could probably believe in divine intervention insofar as pray helping you win, as long as you aren't losing sight of tactics. And you might even be right in a sense, regardless of whether there is a deity who is willing to intervene on your behalf, in the sense that people believing in something beyond themselves and being collectively empowered as a result can be motivating and keep them strong in times of struggle.

Note that the point about prayer vs. action is even found in a well-known religious parable: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parable_of_the_drowning_man

The parable of the drowning man, also known as Two Boats and a Helicopter, is a short story, often told as a joke, most often about a devoutly Christian man, frequently a minister, who refuses several rescue attempts in the face of approaching floodwaters, each time telling the rescuers that God will save him. He finally drowns in the flood and, standing before God, asks why he was not saved. God replies that He sent the rescuers that the man turned down.

I would say, at the end of the day, it's less about religion itself and more about the form it takes. If the exploiting classes use X religion as part of their ruling power, you may have to forcibly change things about a particular religious institution in order to take power. If you are a believer in that particular religious institution, you might view it more as a theological fight over what is correct doctrine and practice. If you're secular, you might view it more as deposing manipulative religious power. Either way, the nature and form of political power has to be taken seriously. No matter what you believe, if you want to take power seriously, you have to take seriously what institutions are tangled up in it.

I hope that makes sense.

[–] amemorablename@lemmygrad.ml 12 points 5 days ago

Also, to the point about hostility from atheists, keep in mind that some of us come from pretty awful experiences with religion and the hostility is probably not personal, but is a side effect of that.

Personally, I try to be accommodating about it, but I had to go through a lot of introspection and reasoning in order to reject my religious upbringing and find my way to atheism, so there is a certain amount of staunchness behind it that can be hard to sugarcoat and I mostly just refrain from getting into that subject with people. Some religious claims are absurd to me to a strong degree, which is part of the reflex I developed for rejecting the beliefs in the first place, and I'm aware it might upset a religious person if I voiced my thoughts about their claims in blunt terms. But it's also not really fair if I'm supposed to be nice about it, but when they are fervent to me about what they believe, that's fine; this is more an issue with proselytizing though, than anything else.

[–] Commiejones@lemmygrad.ml 10 points 5 days ago

The anti-religion militant-atheist vein of Marxists are conflating faith and religious institutions. Its bad analysis because the only religion they had experience with was a "state religion." The Russian Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church were state institutions. Priests were essentially cops. They were eventually replaced by social workers and psychologists in secular society.

Most religious institutions are reactionary and exist to uphold classism more than to uphold the spiritual teachings they espouse. Its very similar to how factories under capitalism are built to make money for their owners not to produce goods, but that does not mean the factory must be destroyed and no factory should survive the revolution.

The bourgeois perverted religions institutions must be seized by the faithful.

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