January 10, 2025

Believing after Sigmund Freud

Religion and religious sentiment permeate all spheres of human thought and life. Karl Marx saw the effects of religion or a certain religion on the economy and the relationship between the rich and the poor. Freud saw this same religion from another perspective, from that of trauma, especially those of a sexual origin.

If, for Marx, religion alienates human beings from a sociological and economic perspective; for Freud, this alienation operates at an unconscious and psychic level. Religion, in this sense, is an ideology that prevents human beings from being free, from being themselves, from accepting reality and accepting themselves as they are.

Biography of Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
Sigmund Schlomo Freud was born in Freiberg, Moravia, then part of the Austrian Empire, on May 6, 1856. The son of Jacob Freud, a small-time merchant, and Amalie Nathanson, of Jewish origin, he was the eldest of seven children.

Like Marx's father, Freud's father was also a Christian convert from Judaism. In this regard, he went so far as to say that he had always considered himself a German, until the day the Jews began to be persecuted. Later, as a refugee in London, he considered himself a Jew.

At the age of four, his family moved to Vienna, where Jews had better social acceptance and economic prospects. Freud graduated in medicine from the University of Vienna, later earning a master's degree in neuropathology. From neurology, he moved to psychiatry, and from there to psychology, studying the unconscious until he dedicated himself exclusively to psychoanalysis.

Freud worked alone for ten years on the development of psychoanalysis. In 1906, he was joined by Adler, Jung, Jones, and Stekel, and in 1908, they all gathered at the First International Congress of Psychoanalysis in Salzburg.

Religion as an Obsessive Neurosis
Freud sees religion as a repression of man's basic instincts, especially sexual ones. This is because religion perverts the natural instincts of human beings, declaring them evil, impure, ugly, dirty, and animalistic, and as such, they must be repressed.

Religion is also a moral code that makes individuals feel guilty for experiencing and expressing their instincts. This topic would later be revisited by Nietzsche in his "slave morality" concept, contrasting Judaeo-Christian morality with the morality of the Lords, or, in other words, natural ethics.

According to Freud, this repression inevitably leads to an obsessive neurosis: the body begs something, the mind does not grant it, the latter ends up short-circuiting and the fuses blow. Just as Marx saw socialism and communism as solutions to the alienation of religion, Freud believed psychoanalysis would resolve this issue—by removing the past traumas, the person reconciles with himself and his true nature.

Like Marx, Freud also knew very little about religion, focusing more on its role in a repressive and puritanical society. His theory was more than anything a reaction to puritanism, just as Marx's was a reaction to the inhumane capitalism of the time, stemming from England's first industrial revolution, where even children worked in factories from dawn to dusk.

So far, the only one to address the subject of religion from a theoretical perspective was Feuerbach in his work, The Essence of Religion. To paraphrase the title of this work, Marx and Freud dealt with the subject of religion from an existential perspective, in other words, how religion served as a weapon of the rich against the poor (Marx) or as a repression of human nature by Puritan ideology to control basic instincts.

Religion as an Infantile Illusion
For Freud, religious sentiment is an infantile illusion, something like believing in Santa Claus. Human maturity occurs when the child abandons the Pleasure Principle and embraces the Reality Principle. Religion keeps human beings in an eternal state of childishness because it is an illusion and thus not real.

In his work, The Future of an Illusion, Freud is convinced that religion is nothing more than a chimera that had its function in ancient times, but which we must now get rid of in order to find truth. As science advances, the future of this illusion becomes increasingly uncertain.

His Protestant pastor friend Pfister, probably with Pascal in mind, responds to this work by saying: “If reality boils down to a materialistic and random view of life, what future can we hope for? On the other hand, if a God of wisdom and love has come into this cold and materialistic world, we can wish for happiness here and now, and hope for a brighter future.

The donkey hopes that it will be able to nibble on the carrot; hope is what motivates it, hope is what gives it a reason to live. It is the hope that it will be able to eat the carrot that motivates its present and makes it trot towards the future. The present act of trotting forward to reach the carrot is motivated by the hope of reaching it. Without this hope, the present would be stagnant and meaningless.

Whoever has no future, whoever has no hope, walks in circles. They revolve around themselves, and in this way fall easily into monotony and, the nausea that the philosophers of nothingness, Nietzsche and Sartre, talk about. Without a future, the present is nauseating no matter how pleasant it may seem. Sartre experienced this, as did Nietzsche before him and Camus after him: "If you come from nothing, there is no Faith; if you go towards nothing, there is no Hope, and most likely there is no Charity, making life meaningless and nauseating."

The life of an atheist who says that he comes from nothing and goes to nothing is meaningless. Those who live immersed in pure worldliness live in a present without a past or future, as the philosophies and spiritualities of the Far East like Buddhism recommend. Only animals have no past, no historical memory and no future purpose in life. Humans are only human if they live all three times -- past, present, and future -- in harmony.

Faith in God the Father opens us up to the Hope we find in the Son through his resurrection, and this motivates a present of Charity, leading us to see Christ in every person. And whoever sees the Son sees the Father, as Jesus said to Philip. Hope is the only begotten child of mother Faith, just as Christ is the Son of God the Father, and just as the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son, so Charity proceeds from Faith and Hope.

The three virtues work in our lives like a GPS: Faith connects us with God, our guiding star or satellite, telling us where we are and what we are, that is, sinners. Hope tells us where we want to go and what we want to be, that is, saints. Charity is the only way and roadmap to holiness.

Freud Does Not Seem to Know that Dreams Command Life
They do not know that dreaming
is a constant in life
as concrete and outlined
as any other thing,
like this grayish stone
where I sit to rest,
like this calm creek
in its easy startles,
like these high pine trees
that in green and gold sway,
like these birds that crow
in drunkenness of blue.
They do not know that dreaming
is wine, is foam, is yeast,
a joyous thirsty little animal
whose sharp snout
pokes through everywhere
in endless restlessness.
(…) They do not know, nor dream of,
that dreaming commands life.
That whenever a man dreams
the world leaps forth
like a colourful ball
into a child’s little hands.—António Gedeão

As António Gedeão says in the excerpt of his poetry quoted above, dreams command life. Illusion is in fact dream; in Spanish, illusion does not have the same sense as a chimera, of imagining something false, but rather the sense of dreaming of a better future by already doing something in the present to make that dream come true.

Human beings do not pose problems that do not have a solution; if a problem exists, it is because there is a solution to it, because as the people say, what does not have a solution is already solved. Likewise, humans do not dream of the impossible; they would not dream of water if water did not exist.

Einstein's theory of relativity was a dream, an intuition. In this sense, dreams are the antechamber of reality. A dream is a utopia in the Greek sense of the word, something that is not reality now but can be, and often becomes so, in the future.

The Best is Yet to Come
The Lord likely created hope on the same day he created spring. —Bern Williams

We are not walking towards the sunset of our lives but towards the dawn of eternal life. Therefore, no matter how happy we are, the best is yet to come; no matter how much suffering we have to endure, decrepit, limited, sick, and old, the best is always yet to come. It is not in the circumstances and vicissitudes of the here and now that we place our trust, because we know that we have no permanent city here, but we seek the one that is to come (Hebrews 13:14).

It is said that a parishioner, a woman of great faith and hope in eternal life, was suffering from an incurable disease, leaving her with very little time to live. She prepared her own funeral so that it would be a lesson to everyone on the faith and hope that animated her. When she died, in the coffin, between the fingers of her hands, instead of a Rosary, were a knife and a fork.

The priest explained to the congregation, shocked by her boldness, saying that during her life, she had never missed a parish gala dinner and that whenever she returned her plate with the cutlery, she was told to keep the fork and knife because the best was yet to come.


Death is, therefore, not the end, but the passage to the best that is to come. This motivates the Christian's life, no matter how painful or limited his or her present may be.

Conclusion - Freud says religion is an infantile illusion, like believing in Santa Claus... But the Santa Claus that children believe in really does exist... He is the image of God the Father who loved the world so much that He sent His Son and it was Christmas.

Fr. Jorge Amaro, IMC


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