The Spanish Inquisition led to the torture and
execution of countless individuals. This dark spot in human history
occurred around 1492, the year Christopher Columbus joined the list
of people who had "discovered" what came to be called the New World.
This final "discovery" of the Americas led to the decimation of the
native population due to diseases unknown to their immune systems
and, later, to the "loving" efforts of some of the new inhabitants to
convert these "savages" to Christianity. In many cases the natives
were, literally, "loved" to death, sometimes even killed after
converting and being baptized into the "kind and loving" religion.
In Bosnia, tensions persist between Serbs and Croats, part of a
conflict that goes back to before the first World War. Their most
recent hostilities have led to mass graves reminiscent of the Nazis'
treatment of Jews, homosexuals, and Catholics during the second World
War. Gays and lesbians beaten, abortion doctors shot, the corpses of
children in the smoking remains of the Branch Davidian compound, all
symptoms of the plague that has ravaged the human race since before
recorded history: religion. Or, should I say, the wrong sort of
religion -- intolerant fundamentalism.
Throughout the course of history, men and women who have dared
raise a voice of reason, speak of peace, have been given no tolerance
and even less respect. To admit one's disbelief is to risk death (or,
in more "civilized" nations such as ours, rejection by "decent
folks"). An honest atheist or agnostic is eyed with contempt, while
hypocrites such as Jimmy Swaggart and Jim Bakker are forgiven their
many transgressions and maintain a loyal following. Unitarian
Universalists are considered a joke by many fundamentalists.
Take Dr. Madalyn Murray O' Hair, for example. This atheism
activist has vanished after years of death threats from "Good
Christians" who wanted her dead because of her involvement in the
fight against religious indoctrination in public schools. All of this
despite her living in a country whose Constitution guarantees free
speech and (in theory, although you wouldn't think so from
Mississippi's judges or Tennessee's state legislature) guarantees
that the government will not take one side or the other in the matter
of religion.
On the other hand, Pat Buchanan can be considered a viable
contender for the Presidency. Part of his appeal is his perceived
commitment to his religious faith (you can't get much more
traditional and conservative than the orthodox Roman Catholic
doctrine, though most Catholics I know are embarrassed by the man and
take some of the church's official stances with a grain of salt).
Never mind the opinion columns Buchanan has written denying the
Holocaust ever took place -- what matters is that he's a Man of God,
note the capital letters.
What's as twisted or worse is the fact that the zealots wage war
not only on "heretics" and "infidels" but also on each other. Viewed
from an objective standpoint, with no stakes in the outcome, these
"holy wars" resemble nothing more than a playground full of children
arguing over whose imaginary friend is the most powerful.
This sort of religion brings out the worst, not the best, in
human nature. Instead of putting us "closer to God," this sort of
religion reduces us to something less than admirable. Here are a few
examples of what I mean:
- Appealing to base instincts. Homophobia, racism, and sexism
have all been given the divine seal of approval by fundamentalist
Christianity. Prejudice is approved; discrimination is promised a
heavenly reward. Hate is, bluntly, a sacrament in many Christian
sects. Revenge fantasies are fueled by the teaching that the redeemed
will one day listen gleefully to the screams of souls damned to
eternal torment -- the souls not only of murderers and rapists but
also homosexuals or members of other religions (even other
denominations of Christianity).
- Discouraging achievement and fostering dependency. "He who
hesitates is lost," goes the proverb. I wonder how many opportunities
have slipped past people who were too busy waiting for divine
intervention? Many are the problems allowed to spread because the
faithful have opted to pass the buck to God. With religion offering
the prayer exit, why do anything? You really don't even have to be
moral -- you can do as you please during the week, then confess on
the Sabbath and have a clean slate.
- Suppression of knowledge. The Big Bang happened. Several million
years later, evolution started to happen (and still is). Period. But
fundamentalists are still trying to substitute the Genesis creation
myth for real science. In the past, religion just as firmly insisted
that the earth (which was flat) was the center of the universe, with
the sun, planets, and stars all orbiting it (this coming from the
same self-centered yahoos who declared us the pinnacle of all
creation).
- Needless suffering of the ill. I list this separately from the
Creation Science idiocy because while those people's ideas are
alternately amusing and frustrating, this is a matter of the (pardon
the quite unintentional pun) gravest import. Jehovah's Witnesses are
prohibited by their religion from receiving blood transfusions;
Christian Scientists can't receive any medical care at all (believing
that since we don't really exist, our ailments are all an illusion).
When you add in the people who've died after handling snakes or
falling on coals or trusting faith healers instead of doctors, you'd
have enough dead bodies to declare religion a plague. It would be
easy to laugh at these people and say "They asked for it -- at least
it's culling the weak from the gene pool," except these damned fools
invariably end up murdering their children through their
negligence.
I'm not so naive as to say none of these problems would be here
if we were, as a race, cured overnight of the mental illness known as
fundamentalism. The facts, however, suggest that their religion has
heaped many more problems on us than it has solved.
Critics of Political Correctness cite ethnocentric revisions of
history as absurdity running amok. Claims that, for example, Columbus
was actually an African prince whose name and identity were changed
by white historians who wanted to steal his glory for their own race,
are called bullshit -- and rightly so!
I would challenge us to also look at who we Americans really are
-- not the result of a divinely ordained Manifest Destiny, but rather
that of greed hidden behind the words "God's Will" and the continued
subjugation of the people who were here first. Christians are not the
practitioners of the One True Religion that has by the Grace of God
slowly overcome all the false ones, but rather the legacy of
centuries of wars fought over the silliest bone of contention
imaginable. Think about in terms of fruit.
Fruit carries seeds. It also, when eaten, has various vitamins
and minerals that are good for you. You can't really say that an
apple is more a real fruit than an orange is, can you? No. But people
make the claim that their religion, which teaches love and humility
and so on, is more valid than someone else's religion which teaches
all the same things. It's silly. It's Liliputian.
There's hope. We each hold the cure in our hearts, if we're brave
enough to use it. And the more people who do cure themselves of this
oppressive sort of religion, the less the sick will have the power to
reinfect the healthy ones through peer pressure. We can also choose
not to infect our children with this illness -- religious fanatics
are made, not born. We're all atheists until someone else teaches us
religion, good or bad.
Do I feel all religion is an illness? No, I don't. But I believe
that an Atheist can be as well-adjusted as a Christian, can live as
happy and meaningful a life. And if there's a God up there, I believe
that He or She or It will judge us based on our actions and the
content of our character, not on whether we could see behind the
curtain. If there were a Heaven, I believe we'd see Ghandi and Jesus
sitting side-by-side, along with some Atheists saying "I was as
surprised as you were."
Some religions help people. And the community that develops in a
church can be of great aid to people. That's why I'm a Unitarian
Universalist; they'll accept anyone with an open heart and mind,
theistic or not.
On average, we each get about 70 years of life; that's one area
in which the Bible is more or less accurate. It's time to quit
feeding the megachurches and start feeding the hungry; it's time to
stop praying without ceasing and start acting; and it's time to stop
seeing people as enemies if the only problem lies in their religion,
or sexual orientation, or race.
Most of all, it's time to realize that many of the most seemingly
unbreachable walls between us are made of air. So walk through, shake
hands with someone on the other side, and start learning what it
really means to love your neighbor.
Jason R. Tippitt
Camden, TN
May 30, 1997
God is Dead -- Now What?