Hey, I quite liked this essay at Aeon: How to Pray to a dead God.
There are a lot of familiar names in it, and some new-ish stuff I don't recall reading before. This section, for example:
Challenges to uncomplicated faith – or uncomplicated lack of faith –
have always been within religion. It is a dialectic at the heart of
spiritual experience. Perhaps the greatest scandal of disenchantment is
that the answer of how to pray to a dead God precedes God’s death.
Within Christianity there is a tradition known as ‘apophatic theology’,
often associated with Greek Orthodoxy. Apophatic theology emphasises
that God – the divine, the sacred, the transcendent, the noumenal –
can’t be expressed in language. God is not something – God is the very
ground of being. Those who practised apophatic theology – 2nd-century
Clement of Alexandria, 4th-century Gregory of Nyssa, and 6th-century
Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite – promulgated a method that has come to
be known as the via negativa. According to this approach,
nothing positive can be said about God that is true, not even that He
exists. ‘We do not know what God is,’ the 9th-century Irish theologian
John Scotus Eriugena wrote. ‘God Himself does not know what He is
because He is not anything. Literally God is not’ [my emphasis].
How these apophatic theologians approached the transcendent in the
centuries before Nietzsche’s infamous theocide was to understand that
God is found not in descriptions, dogmas, creeds, theologies or anything
else. Even belief in God tells us nothing about God, this abyss, this
void, this being beyond all comprehension. Far from being simple
atheists, the apophatic theologians had God at the forefront of their
thoughts, in a place closer than their hearts even if unutterable. This
is the answer of how to pray to a ‘dead God’: by understanding that
neither the word ‘dead’ nor ‘God’ means anything at all.
Well, that's one way to deal with a problem.
[Update insert: oddly, it reminds me of the opening lyrics of Birdhouse in Your Soul:
I'm your only friend
I'm not your only friend
But I'm a little glowing friend
But really I'm not actually your friend
But I am
I didn't realise they were summarising mystical/radical theology.]
I've always found the question of religion's response to the scientific changes in the understanding of the age of the planet, the size of the universe, and human nature, to be terribly interesting; and as I have written before, the older you get, the greater perspective you have on how it is not so long ago that these radical changes in understanding happened. We're still living within the lifetime of people who were young when Einstein revolutionised physics and an understanding of the scale of the universe was found at the end of telescope. It was only 50 or so years before that that evolution was being hotly debated as a new idea. Is it any wonder this is still having repercussions on religions going back a couple of thousand years before these changes in understanding?
Yet, it seems to me that quite a lot of people never think of this perspective - that the (seemingly newly invigorated) war within the Churches between conservatives and liberals are connected to this problem that is actually pretty new and still being worked through.