Marx And Religion

Words: 458
Pages: 2

In this essay, I will argue that the idea behind the famous phrase “religion is the opiate of the people” declared by Karl Max, is more accurate than the sentence itself. I think this sentence is exaggerated, and some people might find it disrespectful. However, I also think that the Marxist interpretation is much more complex than just that phrase, and therefore we should look at its explanation. According to the professor and religion expert Austin Cline most of the people who quote that sentence do not really understand what Marx meant (2017). Marx criticizes the use of religion by the elites rather than the religion itself. I would like to mention that Marxism is an explanatory theoretical model of reality mainly developed by Karl Max (Dictionary.com, 2017). Due to the considerable transcendence that Marxism has had for years, the Marxist critique is an important point of view to take into account when considering different opinions towards religion. According to Karl Max religion is a tool used by the ruling classes; the masses can alleviate their suffering through the act of experiencing religious emotions. It is in the …show more content…
Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people” (Carmondy, 2009).
Marx affirms that man alienates himself in an ideal plane because he is alienated in his real existence. The society divided into oppressors and oppressed, the class society, in which some possess the means of production and the others are forced to sell their labor force, this structurally unjust and exploitative society that prevents the full development of man, is the one that leads man to seek his fulfillment in an ideal, unreal, imaginary