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  1. Sep 13, 2021 · “Imagine” was not the first time Lennon sang his secular humanism. A year before, in 1970, he released “I Found Out,” declaring his lack of belief in either Jesus or Krishna.

  2. Sep 20, 2021 · Beginning with a classic psychological explanation of theism — that humans construct the concept of God as a way to cope with and measure their pain — “God” goes on to list all the things that Lennon most decidedly does not believe in: the Bible, Jesus, Gita, Buddha, I-Ching, magic and so on.

  3. Mar 9, 2023 · Secular critics often note that what Lennon depicts is end-stage communism: the pursuit of which has been the cause of millions of deaths throughout history. From a biblical standpoint, some of what the song “imagines” is worthwhile, and some is flatly false.

  4. It is here that Lennons humanism the belief that humans, without reliance upon anything supernatural, have the capacity to create a better, more humane world comes to the fore. Nihilism is not the path, nor is despondency, debauchery or destruction.

  5. Sep 24, 2012 · Lennon’s attitudes toward religion are examined here in light of trends toward secularization in the 1960s; studies of religious experimentalism; and the non-conventional religious typology of humanism as a quasi-religion.

    • Eyal Regev
    • 2012
  6. While most pop songs are secular by default – in that they are about the things of this world, making no mention of the divine or spiritual – “Imagine” is explicitly secularist. In Lennon’s telling, religion is an impediment to human flourishing – something to be overcome, transcended.

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  8. Sep 13, 2021 · Beginning with a classic psychological explanation of theism – that humans construct the concept of God as a way to cope with and measure their pain – “God” goes on to list all the things that Lennon most decidedly does not believe in: the Bible, Jesus, Gita, Buddha, I-Ching, magic and so on.

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