Last night I had the privilege to be at a dinner with a
speaker who had come to St. Scholastica in Duluth ,
MN for a talk titled, “The Myth
of Religious Violence”. He admits early on that there have been and still are
people who abuse religion to promote violence. His thesis is a much more
complex historical analysis of how we view religion today and how we justify
violence. It has some very simple errors too.
When I had a chance to ask Mr. Cavanaugh a question after
the talk, I found that he is very interested in reducing violence in the world
and believes that one way to do that is to examine empirically (he used that
word), what it is about religions that promotes violence and what in religion
helps to build community and promote peace. Also, to be fair, and “level the
playing field” as he says, we should apply those same standards and same
questions to things like nationalism, something else that we know can be used
to promote a strong secular society or can be used to get people to kill.
I thanked him for his time and said I think we are heading
for the same goal, just along different tracks. I wanted him to have the
experience of a respectful interaction with a non-theist, and I wanted to give
others a chance to ask questions. Because, here’s the thing, I could have spent
the rest of the night ripping his childish arguments apart. He may want to
examine religion empirically, he may even believe he is doing it, I have to
take him at his word, but once he starts doing that examination he does a horse
shit job of it. He appears as a scholar who says “level the playing field”, but
right underneath that is a big baby screaming that life is not fair.
He discussed Hinduism and Native American spirituality, two
“religions” that before the modern definition of “religion” were just ways of
life. For these indigenous people, their spiritual life was their life.
Everything from how to plant their fields and build their homes to what caused
the rain was tied into beliefs about how the world works. Beliefs that were arrived
at through definitively non-empirical methods. He thinks it is funny that
modern Europeans at first recognized this, but then proceeded to define which
parts of their life were the religion and which were not. He also thinks it was
a way to exert power over them by saying the things we, the colonizers, say are
religion can only be done in your private life. We, your new government, will
say what you can do in public life.
What he never addresses is, isn’t that what governments do?
Whether they be theocracies or Kings anointed by Popes or spiritual circles or
democracies, leaders decide when they will punish you for public behavior that
is anathema to what they consider civil and right. What is different and new in
our modern world is that citizens expect to have some say about those rules. He
kept using the phrase “imposing our western liberal values” on the rest of the
world. Those values are freedom of speech, equal pay for equal work and respect
for the dignity of all. They are not strictly western, liberal or even modern.
When he talks about how the modern world defined certain
aspects of social life that used to be normal, that were used to guide ancient
people in decision making, but now we now call religion, what I hear is that people
realized, through empirical means, that they were allowing their lives to be
guided by superstition. In the past people saw no distinction between how we
decided what to eat, who we slept with, how we choose our leaders and their
superstitious beliefs in what was above the clouds because that’s all they
knew, that’s what they were taught.
It is difficult to go back into history and determine what
the Pope or King or Priest or peasant believed. It is just as difficult to know
what Mr. Cavanaugh believes, because I have yet to here him say anything
specific about his religious beliefs. In the end it is less important what
those individual beliefs are, and more important what is actually true.
When Galileo looked to the heavens and realized his
spiritual leaders were wrong, he knew he had a problem. Before that, we can
hope that people who believed the earth was the center of all things were not
lying, it was just what they knew. The concept of their being a religious
belief different from a scientific belief would not have occurred to them. After
that, if they were intelligent enough to
examine the evidence but insisted on teaching what they thought their God had
told them, then they were teaching a lie. It doesn’t matter what kind of belief
you call it, it matters that you can demonstrate the truth.
We know some people did lie. We know because we have a Pope
who outwardly said he was an atheist. In Cavanaugh’s world, people like that
can’t exist. He talks about the Roman word “religio” which covered many daily
habits, habits we would call “secular” today. He talks about the Medieval
world, where being part of a “religious order” referred to certain types of
Orders. If you weren’t in one of those you were “secular”, you could still be a
monk, you just weren’t in one of those orders. He leaves no room and no place
for non-believers. And, if you look for atheists in Medieval Europe, you’ll
find their words in the notes made by the inquisitors who were deciding if they
should be burned at the stake. They weren’t published, they didn’t have public
meetings, they didn’t have a YouTube channel.
I hate to be in a position of defending violence, but under
the right circumstances, if my country, the one that states all men are created
equal in its founding documents and has since improved on that statement to
include women and non-white people who don’t own land and is still debating
this and hopefully will continue to openly discuss these issues of human rights
and human dignity, if that country was really threatened by a theocracy or a
charismatic dictator, I would kill to defend it. I would kill, and risk dying for
Mr. Cavanaugh’s right to worship whatever the hell he wants because we are
living in a country where he has agreed to allow me to not worship at all.
I hold that right as sacred, it defines who I am and I find
it completely reasonable to defend it. Freedom isn’t free. I have considered
the path of the complete pacifist and I admire those who would hold that ground
while a tank rolls over them, but every legal system has a provision for self
defense, even the laws of Moses. If Cavanaugh and I were to sit down and
examine every war throughout history I expect we would agree 99% of them were
unjust. If we were to discuss why they were unjust or what justice means, we’d
probably end up poking each other in the eye because we couldn’t agree at all.
Cavanaugh never says what he would like the world to look
like because I think if he tried, his entire thesis would fall apart. It is
easy to say the word “religion” has a modern meaning. Most words mean something
different from what they meant 500 years ago. It’s easy to say we have
privatized religion, because we have. I can think of many great reasons for
doing that. Cavanaugh never addresses them, he just quote mines Harris and
Hitchens and scoffs at their worst arguments, arguments that many atheists
distance themselves from. He says nationalism is just as bad or worse than
religion at promoting violence, but he never delineates when nationalism goes
wrong or acknowledges the value of the modern nation state that gives us clean
drinking water and defined borders so we can negotiate peace and so we can live
under a rule of law.
When he talks of what I guess he thinks is a better time,
when we all lived a spiritual life, I wonder how he thinks this could be
applied to the modern world. Does he imagine Barack Obama addressing the nation
on national television saying, “Ladies and gentleman, our friends and allies in
the Mideast face a grave threat, but last
night I had a dream. I dreamt that a beam of white light shown upon the White
House and a pure energy of love and forgiveness flowed through that light. Then
a dark cloud appeared over northern Iraq and I knew it was our bombers
and our aircraft carriers that must carry that light to them.” They would be
swearing in Joe Biden before he finished the next sentence.
I have no problem using myth and story to express an idea.
What I have a problem with is abusing that language to promote violence. It is
too easy to do. If our president spoke that way, we would have the additional burden
of first interpreting his vision and his symbolism to understand what he was
justifying then we could start the reasonable conversation about dealing with
innocent people being caught in the middle of a conflict partly caused by ancient
beliefs in who is destined to control the land and partly caused by recent
actions by us to control the resources just below that land. Fortunately, we
live in a world where language like “God told me we must smite the enemy” can
be questioned without the act of questioning first being considered godless,
which 500 years ago meant evil. It was something that you could only express in
private and even then, there were no laws protecting your right to express that
thought. Your friends or family might call you out and label you a heretic
which had much worse consequences than being unfriended on Facebook.
In the last question of the night in front of the audience,
a friend of mine asked about how he figured we could allow for the irrational
and superstitious beliefs of religious people to be tolerated and even
incorporated into daily life. My friend acknowledged that not all religious
beliefs are irrational, but when they are, they are the end of rational
conversations. Examples could be given about allowing foreigners to cross our
borders for work, or allowing same-sex couples equal rights, or a woman having
control over her body, or the right to make an end of life decision. Cavanaugh
responded that what stops conversation is when one person decides that the
other person is irrational. If two people come into a conversation and one
concludes the other is irrational based strictly on the knowledge that they are
religious, then the conversation is over, it never gets started. He says we can
open conversations and prevent violence by entertaining others' beliefs.
My friend recognizes the difference between rational and
irrational and happens to find a lot of irrational beliefs in religion.
Cavanaugh also apparently recognizes the difference between rational and
irrational, but gives a lot more leeway to belief systems. I don’t know what he
considers rational because he doesn’t discuss it. He also doesn’t discuss how
one can have a rational conversation with an irrational person. The only thing
left to discuss is specific beliefs and how those beliefs inform actions. The
world has been moving ahead with that for 500 years. Mr. Cavanaugh apparently
wants to reverse that.
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