
Science answer the "how"
but science alone is insufficient
Secular education wisely does not pretend to give us answers to the great “why” questions [e.g. why are we here?]—any more than you and I would read a telephone directory in search of a plot!
- Neal A. Maxwell
Religion answers the great "why"
Re- "again" as in "repeat," "redo
Lig- "connect" as in "ligate," "ligament"
-ion "state of being"
Religion is about reconnecting with the divine, answering the great "why" questions
Why are we here? Why do I do what I do? Why does evil exist (in whatever its form)? etc.

"We live in an age that is flooded with facts and issues, big and small. But, ironically, in some respects men are, as never before, ". . . ever learning, and never able to come to a knowledge of the truth," or of the real issues... President John R. Silber of Boston University has observed:
"One can forget the meaninglessness of his own existence by occupying himself with scientific experiments of dubious import. Countless scientists and scholars spend their lives in the search of truths that are irrelevant to them."
"Something can be both true and unimportant. Therefore, just as there are, in Jesus' words, "the weightier matters of the law," there are "weightier" truths! We must not only distinguish between fact and fancy, but know which facts are worthy of fealty.
"[The reality is] that there is an aristocracy among truths; some truths are simply and everlastingly more significant than others! In this hierarchy of truths are some which illuminate both history and the future and which give to men a realistic view of themselves-- a view that makes all the difference in the world.
"In this context, one can see how being "learned" (by simply indiscriminately stockpiling a silo of truths) is not necessarily the same thing as being wise, for wisdom is the distillation of data-- not merely its collection and storage...
"In point of value, longitudinal truth, when compared to truth which reflects reality as it exists in only a portion of one of the three great time zones past, present, and future is like the Bible [or other heaven-inspired writings, I would add] when it is compared with the single issue of a newspaper. Telephone directories are useful, but inevitably obsolescent reflections of reality. Many of us still store in our memories old phone numbers, and veterans usually know their military service serial number. These are once useful but now useless facts.
Knowing how, through the process of irrigation, land can be made more productive is actually very useful 'proximately' but in terms of ultimate utility, man's need to know about soils does not compare in importance with that knowledge which concerns souls!
- Neal A. Maxwell
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