Fear and Religion
July 4, 2016
Today, once again, Islamic Jihadists killed people in the
name of their religion … out of fear.
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam – the three “Religions of the Book” ---
teach us to fear death. Each of them
teaches the same basic truth: that after
we die we will either feel untold joy or we will endure untold pain -- forever.
The simplest, most extreme motivation for deciding which of these outcomes we
ourselves will experience is fear, our fear of others who will threaten us with
their unbelief, or our fear of ourselves because we may not be able to live up
to the demands of goodness.
There are, however, two ways to look at our future. Give in to the joy that is promised by each
of these religions, or fight the war against evil that all of them abhors. Most Jews, Christians and Muslims live in
between these two extremes. We’re in
between joy and fear. Few of us actually
follow the letter of the law. Only when our fear of each other makes us take up
arms do we fight. Social concerns rather
than ideological ones determine what we will do every day. This is true for young ISIS fighters, too, I
think, just as it was for cavemen.
If you were raised in a household that is only nominally
Jewish, Catholic, Protestant, Muslim, or if you were raised (or have become)
not religious at all, then your social concerns of freedom, tolerance, justice
and non-discrimination far outweigh any abstract notions of goodness and evil,
right and wrong. If that is you, then you may be susceptible to religion. Your
appetite for an answer to the unknown may be too strong. If you already have the answer you want in
religion, then you already are on the warpath.
Most Americans seem to be that way.
Something in the human brain seems to demand simple answers
to the mystery of life and death, and if you find them in the radical side of religious
doctrine, you become (in my opinion) a danger to society. The question becomes, “What does society do about
protecting itself from you?” The same question pops up for
dharma-caste-conscious Hindus, as well. They have been at war off and on with
Muslims for centuries, but at least they produced a rebel some 2600 years ago,
the historical Buddha, the world’s first pacifist, who slammed the door shut on
retaliation against anyone for any reason. In theory, at least, Jesus of
Nazareth was a pacifist, too. (Sometimes
I disagree with both of them on this issue, but that’s another story.)
At issue this very moment is, “What do we do about people on
the most radical side of Islam?” ISIS and other terrorist groups are angry that
the Christian-dominated Western world defeated the vast military might of the
Islamic world in 1922, after 1400 years of fighting, and helped Jews establish
Israel after WWII. More recently, we
invaded Iraq and other parts of the Islamic world. The Kor’an says that if your
enemy attacks, you can retaliate, even by killing.
Well, according to radical Islam, we in the West (and any
people who do not follow the letter of Sharia law the radicals follow) are the
enemy. We are the infidels, the
unbelievers. That’s the simple answer to
the “Why?” that so many Americans are asking. The question remains, “What do we
do?” Do we bomb them, more than we have,
and kill civilians in the process? Shall
we assassinate their leaders? Can we
convert the young men and women who believe in the radical Islamist cause to
some other form of religion or more humane system of living? If so, where do we begin? Should we pull back our military entirely? Build
a wall around our country?
Right now we seem to be doing almost all of those things,
but with little success. In addition,
our leaders are telling us to pray for our dead and their loved ones. We are
also blaming all Muslims for not speaking out and doing more to stop the
carnage going on in the name of their religion. In November our nation will
elect a new president. Right now we have
two candidates, a woman with perhaps more experience in democracy than almost
anyone on earth, and another with no experience in anything except making money
for himself and lashing out at his critics.
At the moment most Americans seem to hate her and prefer turning over
the country to him, hoping he will make them wealthy, too. I dread what comes next. I’m not sure God is even looking at us.