Posted on 06/09/2005 10:37:53 AM PDT by quidnunc
Are all religions equal in their capacity to inspire fanaticism and violence? In the wake of the Koran flushing scandal, Tom Regan of the Christian Science Monitor blog wrote a piece to that effect. Even though that scandal has faded from the headlines, the attitudes Regan expressed remain and interfere with our ability to resist the global jihad. Taking issue with the assertion by Jeff Jacoby of the Boston Globe that Christians, Jews, and Buddhists dont lash out in homicidal rage when their religion is insulted and dont call for holy war and riot in the streets, Regan wrote that Jacoby had made an interesting point. Theres only one problem with it its wrong.
-snip-
The question here is not whether or not Jews or Christians commit violence. Of course they do. Human nature is everywhere the same. The question Regan is obfuscating is whether or not Islam as an ideology exhorts people to violence. Manifestly it does, and violence committed by members of other religious traditions does nothing to mitigate that fact: Islam is unique among world religions in having a developed doctrine mandating violence against unbelievers. This has spawned in our day a global network of Muslims dedicated to jihad. Are Jews targeting non-Jews, or Christians non-Christians, on a global basis? Of course not. Until the Muslim and non-Muslim world are ready to acknowledge the role of Islam in inspiring people to violence, that violence will continue.
-snip-
Our need to answer this question is not just Judeo-Christian boosterism, a chant of Yea, team! The West is Best! The nature of jihad violence has serious consequences for the Bush policy of attempting to destabilize terrorism by establishing democracies across the Middle East. It shows how difficult it will be to export the live-and-let-live attitude necessary to make for a society that enacts the will of the majority while protecting the rights of the minority. Thomas Jefferson said: If my neighbor believes in one god, or twenty, is of no concern to me, it neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg. But is that exportable as a political credo to societies in which the legal tradition includes death for blasphemy and apostasy?
-snip-
The question people are afraid to ask . . .
Genesis 16:11-13
And the Angel of the LORD said to her:
"Behold, you are with child,
And you shall bear a son.
You shall call his name Ishmael,
Because the LORD has heard your affliction.
He shall be a wild man;
His hand shall be against every man,
And every man's hand against him.
The Lord also advocated violence to conquer the Promised Land, which was possessed by a group of unbelievers. The Crusades were
a violent solution to the Muslim
control of the Holy Land.
But Western religion has developed beyond this and Islam hasn't---but it is false to claim that Islam is the only religion that advocates violence toward unbelievers.
What if your neighbor's god REQUIRES him to break your leg??????
T.J. didn't see that one coming, cause he was a sane rational HUMAN BEING.
Obviously the ones who's god requires them to maim and kill are NOT!
He's Got A Plan
Oh so?
What other major religion has a doctrine of which advocates violence against unbelievers for no other reason than that they are unbelievers?
***The Crusades were
a violent solution to the Muslim
control of the Holy Land. ***
The Crusades, in their agressive form, have no support in the New Testament and represent an aberration of Christianity.
I know this does not exactly address your point, but there in no basis for violence in any form in the New Testament.
Strictly speaking, Christianity has not "developed beyond" violence. Whenever Christians have enganged in violence they have fallen from the ideals of the New Testament and are in disobedience to the Lord they claim to follow.
*** Do you really intend the meaning of this sentence to be as expansive as it sounds?***
Can you think of a single example of sanctioned violence in the NT?
I'm looking at it from the other side. Did the Christians who fought in WWII and committed acts of violence fall "from the ideals of the New Testament and [were they] in disobedience to the Lord they claim[ed] to follow"?
What part of this statement do you take exception with?
The concept of a "just war" has been accepted in most of Catholic and Protestant branches of Christianity. Also while the OT Jews wanted to live in peace with their non-believing neighbors, there were times when God told them to completely destroy their neighbors because their sins had become so gross that they would bring down the spiritual sensitivities of Jews.
***there were times when God told them to completely destroy their neighbors because their sins had become so gross that they would bring down the spiritual sensitivities of Jews.***
John 18:36
Jesus answered, My kingdom is not of this world: if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight, that I should not be delivered to the Jews: but now is my kingdom not from hence.
"...He shall be a wild man;
His hand shall be against every man,
And every man's hand against him...."
AMEN.
Yes. But only one, and it is not meant to be used as an excuse for others to commit violence.
Yeah, you don't get a lot of bombings by Zen extremists.
To be sure, St Thomas also states that the intentional killing of the innocent or undue violence is a grave sin but violence in protection of ones self or another to the point of killing is does not prevent salvation.
I agree with St Thomas.
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