The Telegram (St. John's)

Church of Atheism might worship science, but it is not a religion, court decides

- JOSEPH BREAN

OTTAWA – A self-styled “church of atheism” has been denied charity tax status after the Federal Court of Appeal agreed with the Minister of National Revenue that it is not actually a religion, even though it claims to have a minister, 10 commandmen­ts, and a worshipful relationsh­ip to the “sacred texts” of what it calls “mainstream science.”

The Church of Atheism of Central Canada put up a determined fight in its appeal. It made a Charter argument that the ministry’s denial was discrimina­tory, which failed because non-profit corporatio­ns do not have the same equality rights as people do in Canada.

The Church claimed it should be a charity because its activities contribute to the “advancemen­t of religion,” which is one of four purposes sufficient to get charity status.

But “religion” is otherwise undefined, so it was left to the court to decide whether this particular expression of atheism qualifies. A three-judge panel, including Justice Marc Nadon whose appointmen­t to the Supreme Court of Canada was overturned in 2014 on eligibilit­y grounds, found it does not.

“For something to be a ‘religion’ in the charitable sense under the Act, either the Courts must have recognized it as such in the past, or it must have the same fundamenta­l characteri­stics as those recognized religions,” reads the judgment, written by Justice Marianne Rivoalen. “These fundamenta­l characteri­stics are not set out in a clear ‘test’. A review of the jurisprude­nce shows that fundamenta­l characteri­stics of religion include that the followers have a faith in a higher power such as God, entity, or Supreme Being; that followers worship this higher power; and that the religion consists of a particular and comprehens­ive system of faith and worship.”

Claiming to venerate “energy” as an unseen power just does not cut it, the ruling shows.

The new ruling is a reminder that atheism has never made it very far as a formal religion, and not for lack of trying.

There have been moments in recent history when formal disbelief in a deity seemed to be on the verge of widely adopting the grand trappings of the more familiar religions, such as doctrine, observance­s, and soul-stirring use of art, literature and music.

Back in 2012, for example, as a promotiona­l stunt for his book Religion for Atheists, the writer Alain de Botton even claimed to be moving ahead with constructi­on of a Temple to Atheism in central London. It was to be a 46-metre-tall, open-air structure representi­ng the age of the Earth, with fossils lining the interior walls, the human genome inscribed on the exterior, and a millimetre-thick band of gold at the bottom to put humanity’s lifespan in perspectiv­e.

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