Thursday, January 07, 2016

What Does the Religion of Peace Teach about Violence?



Okay, once again on social media I encountered a provocative political video posted by a longtime friend. The video was to essentially show how Muslims and Islam are the reasons for all of our problems here on US soil. In other words, a precursor to a head-desk moment.

To encapsulate, in the video, a young Muslim woman who identifies as a student asks a female journalist the following question:

"How can we fight an ideological war with weapons?" 

Now, the station producing the video is of course of the Right Wing flavor. In other words, it should now make perfect sense when I tell you that the female journalist goes on 5 minute rant but doesn't scratch the surface in answering the young woman's question. Zero; zip; nadda in the way of a direct answer to the question. But, okay, whatever.....par for the course. 

I don't want to focus on the video so much as I want to focus on what was posted in response to the video. To set up the encounter, an acquaintance of the guy who posted the video chimed in and posted a link to a website called, "The Religion of Peace"(addy: TheRelgionofPeace.com).

The title of the referenced article is, What Does the Religion of Peace Teach about Violence? 

'Ironic that both Christianity and Islam think of themselves as a "Religion of Peace", both taking the self-righteous attitude that.... Oh, it's the 'other guy who's the problem. But again, par for the course.

In any case, I thought that if someone was going to selectively extract the most violent and gruesome verses from the Qu'ran - in other words, if someone was going to cherry-pick verses to suit their agenda - then to give a fair and balanced perspective, we need to also point out that the same can be done with the Bible. And, well, that's precisely what I did, remarking......


"So, you cherry picked some verses that show violence, did you? The same can be done with the Bible."

Concluding with.....

 "So, no, the problem isn't just with 'The Quran's Verses of Violence.' The problem is the belief that certain books contain information "from Above" regarding the way we are to live our lives and treat others, etc., and unfortunately, a few of those books instruct to kill the infidel. One such book even talks about dashing the heads of your enemy's children against rocks. It doesn't get much more violent than that."

The person who posted the link and the guy who was now attempting to defend the Bible(I'll call him "Blake") responded with the following.....

"Nothing in the New Testament instructs believers to convert or kill non believers. Your example is from the Old Testament and is in a closed ended historical context. Evidently you failed to read the entire link and the additional links within"

RE: point # 1, um, yes, in fact there are passages in the NT that talk about killing non-Christians. One such passage is in Luke, where Jesus advocates, if not requires, that any person who does not want to be his "disciple" be brought before him and slain. I give you that unequivocal passage now....

But those mine enemies, which would not that I should reign over them, bring hither, and slay them before me. ~ Luke 19:27(KJV)

"Blake" then gave a defense that this was a "bad example", arguing that it was in third person and was  "parable". Okay? So? It's "parable". But it's evidently a parable that uses VIOLENCE to make a finer point or to illustrate a poetic truth. In other words, "Blake" offered a red herring. He offered a tangential point of no practical value, a point that doesn't negate the fact that passages in the Bible contain violence.

And now is a good time to delineate what my argument is, and what it is not:

What I am arguing: I am contending that, in the same way that people can go into the Qu'ran and extract passages that depict violence, to include, but not limit to, the condoned killing of all non-Muslims, people can likewise go into the Bible and find passages that are equally violent. The Bible contains passages that are every bit as violent as any of those found in the Qu'ran. That is my argument.

What I am not arguing: I am not contending, asserting, suggesting, nor arguing that passages in the Bible depicting violence are inciting today's Christians to commit acts of violence, albeit, I contend that elements of the Christian philosophy influence certain individuals to commit violence..e.g...a Christian gunman believing that he is doing "God's Will" by shooting up an abortion clinic.

RE: point # 2,  the point of contention or apologetic that the OT no longer applies because the NT(i.e.."Jesus") made it obsolete is a debatable topic in itself. To avoid going down that path, I simply concede that point, and move on to the NT. After all, the NT is replete with barbarism, threats of bodily harm for noncompliance, and just downright stupid advice. Note, I'm not saying there aren't some gems in there. But it's not gems, exclusively.

RE: point # 3,  True, I did not read the entire link. Why? Well, for starers, I know all about how and why Christians believe that the OT no longer applies. How do I know? Simple, I was a Christian for 2/3rds of my life and I believed and spouted the same dishonest Christian apologetic..i.e..that the "Old Law" no longer applies, because Jesus!!! Yep, even as a believer I knew something was amiss, because then that meant that the "Commandments" were "Old Law", too.....you know, for the Jews? Excuse my French, but what utter guano..i.e..shit. This is especially true when factoring in Jesus' (supposed) own words in Matthew 5:18. But alas, there's an apologetic for that, too. It's utter insanity. The mental gymnastics required to reconcile it all are insanity.

Moving on, the second reason that I didn't read the whole link was because of some remarks I saw from the get-go. That is, the website in question, the one that amusingly claims not to represent any particular religion(true story), starts out by extracting two of the most vile, barbaric, violent passages they can find from the Qu'ran, passages that are presumably from "Allah" himself. Then what do they do next?? Lo and behold, they juxtapose those two passages with a passage that is (presumably) Jesus' own words, and that passage is the whole "love your neighbor" rigmarole.

Now, did you catch that? Well, of course you caught it! Yes, the website that claims to be "neutral" and to not represent any one particular religion, disingenuously compares the worst passages that they can find from the Qu'ran, and then they contrast them with the best, "Jesus meek'n mild" passage they can find from their Bible. Un-flippin'-believable. And yes, any "source" that attempts such downright dishonesty does not deserve me as their readership. I make no bones about it: To hell with that "source" and others like it. I am being completely reasonable to be skeptical of such tactics, and frankly, when apologists attempt this crap, I am being reasonable to dismiss them out of hand.

Throughout the discussion, "Blake" employs the disingenuous(and fallacious) tactic of moving the goal posts. In other words, his criteria changes slightly with every single post. First, it's "Show me the violent verses".

Check, criteria met.

Next, *"Okay, then show me the violent verses in the New Testament".

Check, criteria met.

Next, it's.. *"Show me where Christians are following the commands".

*Quotations denote a paraphrasing.

Well, while it would admittedly be difficult to show how Christians are bringing non-believers to Jesus to slay them before him, mainly because Jesus is a perpetual no-show(or doesn't exist), I can provide mounds of evidence that there does exist cases of Christian terrorism, and in fact, many of the most extreme instances of terrorism committed on US soil have been done by Christian extremists. This is factual data that anyone can research, mind you.

So, in closing, the underlying problem, and in fact what I contend is the the bigger picture, is that there are Muslims and Christians who follow their respective "holy" books a little too closely. We have Christians using their bibles as a license to blow up federal buildings, to bomb and shoot up clinics that perform abortion, and to overtake government dwellings, threatening violence if anyone confronts them.

We don't have a "Muslim" problem, "Blake"(and people like "Blake"); we have a religious certainty problem.

6 comments:

Robert said...

we have a religious certainty problem

And it gets worse than that since I don't think any two humans who "buy in" to whatever flavor of religion they choose, views it EXACTLY the same. We're now forced to deal with roughly (and this is a guess pulled out of my ass) 6 BILLION different version of religion and every single one of these versions, the person believing it is CERTAIN their interpretation is the "right" one.

Every single religion claims it is the right one with blind faithful certainty, yet, no two baptists, catholics, sunni muslims, shia muslims, jews etc. ad nauseum hold 100% identical views. I'm certain that if you polled those in any given church and stepped through each minute detail of their belief you'd vind several variances and conflicts that, if exposed, could very likely cause some serious infighting within the denomination - it IS, after all, the reason why there are so many denomination currently. But I contend, it goes MUCH deeper than that and that no two believers hold the exact same beliefs.

This, in and of itself, is enough evidence to suggest that man made god in his image considering how many images of man there are, there is an equal number of "images" of god(s).

Food for thought :)

boomSLANG said...

"And it gets worse than that since I don't think any two humans who 'buy in' to whatever flavor of religion they choose, views it EXACTLY the same." ~ R. Hall

Correct, so then you'd probably agree with me that this only exacerbates the problem. Yes, if it's not bad enough that most religions are mutually exclusive of each other, there's also the fact that those within each religion cannot even agree on what their own book says. Fact: Christians fall on opposite sides of the fence when it comes to things like the important social issues of the day..e.g...war, abortion, right to die, capital punishment, as well as other things like what's "essential" to being a "True Christian". Pretty revealing, that.

"Every single religion claims it is the right one with blind faithful certainty[...]"

"...blind faithful certainty..."

"..faithful certainty.."

Faithful certainty? Is that like a square circle? A married bachelor? Airline food? lmao! But seriously, if one is CERTAIN of something, one does not need "faith". And I don't mean "faith" as in trust(since believers like to conflate the two things). No, I mean "faith" in a religious context, which at the end of the day is claiming to be certain of things of which one cannot be certain. Can "Blake", and others like him, be certain that they are promoting the One True religion?? Can they be certain that their own "Holy book" did not come about by the same exact means that they will undoubtedly claim that the other guy's "Holy book" came about?? Hmmmm....

"This, in and of itself, is enough evidence to suggest that man made god in his image[...]"

True, that. And it would explain, perfectly, why one book is just as violent and barbaric as the other. Neither were inspired by any "Omnibenevolent" being.

Robert said...


"...blind faithful certainty..."

"..faithful certainty.."

Faithful
certainty? Is that like a square circle? A married bachelor? Airline food? lmao! But seriously, if one is CERTAIN of something, one does not need "faith".


I wish I could take credit for consciously phrasing that ... but alas it was subconscious machinations :P which often occur within my bean where words and phrases pop in and out of existence seemingly at random and at various opportune/inopportune times. In short - that phase just felt right and the word "certainty" on it's own felt inadequate ... so there is that - it was "accidentally" purposeful phasing - do with that what you will but I'm glad you enjoyed it :)

As for conscious thought on the phrase itself and in context of an assertion of one having the one true religion - they ARE "certain" ... but seeing how their faith/religion is fundamentally based on faith - that certainty MUST, in fact, be FAITHFUL certainty ... and since it completely ignores most often, willfully) reality around them - it is also, in fact, blind ... you go on to ask ...

Can "Blake", and others like him, be certain that they are promoting the One True religion??

... and I think my phrase is apt ... Blake IS "certain" ... as he is "faithfully" inspired to "know" this as fact despite "blindly" rejecting the glaring point that it rejects all evidence to the contrary.

As an aside, you bring up the point of where the "Holy book" came from - this investigation to me was the fatal death blow to any remaining "belief" I had remaining when you consider the dates for the original writings, the number of times it had to be "copied" (and likely modified/embellished) by factions with a multitude of motives and goals. Then the number of translations of those copies while again undergoing embellishments ... and this is ALL documented FACT. It becomes simply preposterous and untenable of any marginally rational individual to give it anything other than the label of "Fiction" ... and I haven't researched the other textual histories of the other religions - but I feel safe in saying they had similar fates and belong on the "Fantasy/Fiction" shelves as well.

why one book is just as violent and barbaric as the other.

Interesting timing of you bringing up this point - and I certainly agree. But in a thread in a social media group a question was posed to me which I'll copy here (leaving out the ad hominems leveled at me):

the problem is that the k'uran has "commands" for their adherents to actively (now) kill infidels. That is entirely different than having Biblical text that describes war, a narrative VS a command.

Find me a command of Jesus to murder any entire class, race or culture.


For context - the person making this statement already dismissed the OT for the usual reasons - JC/New Covenant rigmarole - and considering his tone, fallacies, rejection of fact and frequency to move the goal posts, I haven't been in a hurry to respond - but I'm pretty sure there are a few places in the NT where dispatching non-believers is urged, I just haven't had the time to search for it - so, without putting yourself out, If you know of any of these types of point off the top of your head, could you point me in the right direction?

In other news - we're going to Thunder By the Bay this afternoon :)

Have a good weekend

boomSLANG said...

"that phase just felt right and the word 'certainty' on it's own felt inadequate ... so there is that"

There might be a misunderstanding, as I believe the terms you combined describe theists to a tee. I stuck it under the microscope because it shows with great clarity that a theist's "certainty", namely that of Christians, is built on a foundation of sand.

"they ARE 'certain'"

We agree that they're certain in a subjective context. Demonstrating that their certainty is founded in an objective context is another ball of wax.

"[...] in a thread in a social media group a question was posed to me which I'll copy here (leaving out the ad hominems leveled at me)"

Ad hominem? Nah, that never happens. No!

the problem is that the k'uran has "commands" for their adherents to actively (now) kill infidels. That is entirely different than having Biblical text that describes war, a narrative VS a command.

'Funny, that sounds exactly like this "Blake" fellow I was chatting with. He spelled "k'ran" differently, though. Are his initials "D.B.", by any chance?

But in any case, this person has got it wrong, too. The Bible doesn't just "describe war"; it details how the deity of the OT mandates, sanctions, and condones the killing of entire groups of people. Not "parable"; not "metaphor"; not "poetic truth", actual flippin' events, or so we are to believe. Describes? I mean, the Bible also "describes a flood", doesn't it? Yes, and in that description we see that the deity of the OT drowned every living thing, including women, women carrying children, and even animals, sparing a 500 year old man and his family. But that's not violent, right? Or better, we can just sweep that shit under the rug because an innocent man was executed, yes? Um, can you say lunacy?


"In other news - we're going to Thunder By the Bay this afternoon :)"

Really? What time does that stuff start? I have to spearhead a wine dinner on Bird Key @ 6. I can't be stuck in traffic on Ringling! Ain't no one got no time for dat!

Robert said...

There might be a misunderstanding ...

Nope no misunderstandings - I got, understood and appreciated your tongue in cheekiness - we're COMPLETELY on the same page and all subtleties registered correctly - no worries there :) I was just parsing the "thought" process (in this case the lack of clear conscious thought) that produced that gem and trying to convey my appreciation for your appreciation

Are his initials "D.B.", by any chance?

Nope, this one is - BCM ... no surprise there's more than one :/ You mention a lot of OT stuff which my guy conveniently dismissed with a flippant wave of the hand citing the supposed "new covenant (tm)" created by Jeebus in an earlier comment... the guy's goal posts, conditions and qualifiers never stop moving ...

What time does that stuff start?

It started at 11am ... but I'm sure by the time you read this you will have noticed no delays since the weather put a great damper on attendance ... but it runs through tomorrow afternoon as well FYI

Hope the dinner went off without a hitch - knowing your eye for detail and perfection I have little doubt it was a flawless affair - I'm looking forward to catching up with you in person one of these days.

boomSLANG said...

"You mention a lot of OT stuff which my guy conveniently dismissed with a flippant wave of the hand citing the supposed 'new covenant (tm)'[...]"

Yes, well, this is the commonplace apologetic(i.e..excuse) that you'll hear 9 times out of 10 when any skeptic or non-believer points out the behavior of "Yahweh" in the Bible...e.g.."Oh, that? That was the Old Covenant!"(or "Old Testament", "Old Law") It might be worth devoting an entire post to the subject. At the very best, it's an attempt to sweep Biblegod's behavior under the rug, implicitly saying, "Yeah, that might've happened, but he doesn't do that anymore!".

"Hope the dinner went off without a hitch - knowing your eye for detail and perfection I have little doubt it was a flawless affair - I'm looking forward to catching up with you in person one of these days"

It went off no problems, but the weather caused guests to be late. 'Gave me time to gawk at the client's Bentley and Tesla, parked side by side on what appeared to be porcelain tile.

= /