The Problem With Monotheism
When an author argues that there is no God, that’s his personal business—something between him and the Creator. But when an author, in addition to denying God, asserts that monotheism is a net negative for the human race, a rebuttal is in order.
In recent years, atheistic authors have claimed that monotheism is a blight, because such faith engenders war. While it is true that the histories of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam include many episodes of intrafaith and interfaith violence, only someone with an unbalanced knowledge of history could fall prey to the error that monotheism has made the world a meaner, more violent place.
War has been part of human history, both before and after the emergence of monotheism, and both where monotheism prevails and where it does not. Wars are generally fought over territory and wealth, even where differing religious beliefs are involved.
Is religion a major cause of war? Not for the United States. Not one American war—Revolutionary, 1812, Mexican, Civil, Spanish, World Wars I and II, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq—was fought over religion. Furthermore, blaming monotheism for the world’s violence at this juncture in history is willful blindness. In the 20th century, brutal, tyrannical regimes inflicted more than six times as many fatalities as did wars. (Google “R.J. Rummel democide†and click on the “20 th century democide†link.) 20 th century aggressors and tyrants—the three most murderous being Mao, Stalin, and Hitler—were predominantly atheistic.
Authors who condemn monotheism seem oblivious to how much their own comfortable, free lives owe to the historical impact of monotheism. The pre-monotheistic worldview was pagan. Paganism exalted nature above all, and taught human subjection to nature. Paganism was fatalistic; it inculcated resignation to a static social order. To the pagans, individual lives were unimportant, cheap. The welfare of the collective, which in practice was the welfare of the ruling elite, was supreme. There was no theory of individual rights opposed to this arrangement. If you were born a drone, you lived the life of a drone, and if the rulers decided that your life should be forfeited to the sun god or in some military campaign to obtain booty for the rulers, then your fate was sealed.
The Judeo-Christian tradition’s greatest contribution to the human race has been to liberate the human race from the stifling and deadly paganism that preceded it—and that is trying to defeat it today. Monotheism impelled the search for scientific knowledge to tame the natural world. Judeo-Christian teachings gradually imbued human thought with ethical values that spawned the doctrines that all men are created equal, that they have inalienable rights, and that rulers are not above the law. The free market—based on that premise of God-given rights—has lifted masses of people out of poverty for the first time in human history. All three monotheistic faiths teach their followers to be charitable to those in need. In fact, the widespread calls we hear today about helping the less fortunate, even when made by unbelievers, are cultural echoes of our monotheistic traditions. It is hard to imagine how much poorer and less free we would be today if not for the leavening influence of monotheistic teachings.
That having been said, there is a problem with monotheism: monotheists. We who profess monotheism and know that we shouldn’t sin, sometimes give in to sin and do things to our fellow man that our faith teaches us are wrong. In the case of a minority of fanatics, the sin of self-righteousness drives them to aggression against those who don’t share their religious sense. This is because the limited human mind is incapable of fully comprehending the Deity. We each grasp small portions of this one infinite, Supreme Being, and then make the mistake of concluding that we are qualified to impose that imperfect view on others.
It is worth noting, however, that the antidote for such self-righteous aggression is found in the very Bible that atheists find so unbelievable. The Lord Jesus directs us to get the beam out of our own eyes. The apostle Paul tells us to work out our own (not the other guy’s) salvation.
Those who bash monotheism are justified in exhorting monotheists to do a better job of practicing what we preach. In turn, I urge them, too, to practice what we preach (again, not in terms of how to relate to the Deity—because that is each person’s private business—but in terms of how we relate to each other, since that is public business). After all, wouldn’t everybody prefer to live under rules like, “Thou shalt not kill,†“Thou shalt not steal,†etc ., that help to protect individual lives? Can atheists think of a better formula for peace that the Lord’s Golden Rule given in the Bible: “do to others what you would have them do to you†( Matthew 7:12 )?
If these guidelines for social interaction hadn’t been given to us by divine commandment, human beings would need to invent them. But which approach would be more likely to instill obedience—obey these rules because you are accountable to God, Who will judge you, or do these things because Andy Atheist says that is what nice people do? Personally, I’d rather trust the peace and prosperity of future generations to monotheists, who recognize a higher authority than human will, than to atheists, who do not.
Dr. Mark W. Hendrickson is a faculty member, economist, and contributing scholar with The Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College.
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December 17th, 2008 at 8:19 am
Exactly. Thank you, Dr. Hendrickson.
The argument that monotheism leads to violence is nonsense, and fits with feminism’s assertion that monotheism is essentially paternalistic.
Violence has been part of the fabric of human history since we emerged from the apes. Monotheism is precisely the solution to rapacious human violence, because it is the very thing that separates humanity from its animal origins.
In my view the whole of Marxist/Nihilist theory has either a conscious or unconscious appeal to infantile Bacchanalism.
The ongoing battle between monotheism and paganism pits the collective human psyche against itself like a cosmic battle between the forces of Apollo and Dionysus.
December 17th, 2008 at 11:57 am
“I’d rather trust the peace and prosperity of future generations to monotheists, who recognize a higher authority than human will, than to atheists, who do not.â€
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That’s pretty much what many of the Founding Fathers were saying when they said our *inalienable rights* were the gift of God, not the mercy of man.
“And can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are the gift of God? That they are not to be violated but with his wrath? Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just: that his justice cannot sleep for ever.â€
-Thomas Jefferson
December 18th, 2008 at 12:41 am
Amen.
December 18th, 2008 at 7:10 pm
A good start. I am quite happy to see people stand up and defend Christianity against the atheist hordes but I do wish people would stick to the tried and tested forms of arguement, rather than passing off the failed ones over and over. The latter spoil a good essay.
“If these guidelines for social interaction hadn’t been given to us by divine commandment, human beings would need to invent them.”
Cough, splutter, guffaw. ROTFLOL. Brilliant. That would have them in the aisles on the logicians version of ‘Last Comic Standing’.
Render unto Caesar, that which is Caesar’s. As fine a list as it may be, only Moses claimed God gave the Commandments. We only know that Moses carried the Tablets down from the Mountain (Phenomenally valuable Tablets one might imagine, which seem to have been ‘lost’ !!). Did anyone check his pockets for a chilsel? Not likely as he was in a foul mood from the moment he arrived back at camp.
“In the case of a minority of fanatics, the sin of self-righteousness drives them to aggression against those who don’t share their religious sense. This is because the limited human mind is incapable of fully comprehending the Deity.”
Uhhh ? Really?
I fail to see the causal connection indicated by the ‘because’. Maybe ‘because’ there isn’t one. My own very limited human mind is incapable of fully comprehending the Deity, I am pretty sure, yet I don’t seem to have the supposedly consequent self-righteousness driving me to aggression against those who don’t share my religious sense. But just in case I am sublimating an denied urge, step outside and say that again.
Moses, too, had just spent (according to him) a few hours chatting to God and getting a better and first hand comprehension of the Deity, and yet demanded many of his own troops ’step outside’.
In the short essay above, it is almost by the by that the Christian message overturned Mosaic Law. Moses certainly didn’t practice what he preached and showed a slight tendancy toward the very self-righteous aggression you declaim. He was an eye for an eye sort of fellow (except when it came to Jerico and its inhabitants and various other sundry tribes which he set his Hebrews on with sword and flame).
Jesus on the other hand said ‘Be nice to one another. Turn the cheek. Love your enemy’. Now that was a step forward and although one likes to consider Christ as the Son of God, he was quite definitely a chap. It would seem that his human part was quite at odds with God’s (according to Moses) more vigorous approach.
Defending Christian ethic, morality and value is not helped by appeal to a non-Christian, pre-Christian heritage, nor by ‘cherry picking’ one lot of archaic philosophies as opposed to another, nor by appeals to dodgy authority.
C- Dr Mark.
(PS. I hope you are a better Economist)
December 19th, 2008 at 5:02 am
One cannot insert a razor’s edge between monotheism and pantheism except, as to how effective each has become at demonstrating the poor quality of the human character.
Monotheism has proven more to be idiots.