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God tells A that he must kill B , and B knows
that A will follow God's commands, then there are two things
that B can do. He can try to stop A by, for instance, killing
him first. Or B can try to persuade A that he has
misinterpreted God, or at least that there is a real possibility
that he has misinterpreted God, and that the consequences of killing
someone by mistake will be severe, in this world and the next.
It won't do to tell A that he ought to disobey God. It may
well be the case that a world in which religious zealots aren't
killing people is a more pleasant world than one in which they are.
And some religious zealots may be crazy and all may "overvalue"
religious imperatives, as psychiatrist Paul R. McHugh has written
in The Weekly Standard. But if you believe in God, and eternal
life, and God has told you that you will suffer eternally if you
don't do something and will be rewarded eternally if you do, then
why should A put the interests of this world above God's
and, besides that, his own? Abraham, after all, was prepared to
kill his own son because God told him to.
Incidentally, some argue that events like those of September 11's
show that the world would be better off without religion, because
religions always produce people who kill in the name of God. But
religions also produce people who do great good in the name of God,
and religions also dissuade others from much wrongdoing. Moreover,
the atheists of the last century murdered a lot more people than
believers did.
So we are in
Afghanistan, rightly trying to kill all the A's before they
kill us first. If we do so ruthlessly enough, perhaps it will make
terrorism so counterproductive to the terrorists' own aims that
they will reconsider whether this really is a course that God intends
them to pursue.
But we B's also have to give some thought to other means
of persuading the A's that they are wrong in thinking that
God wants us to be killed.
Western governments have a nuanced relationship to revealed religious
truth. On the one hand, they have deep Judeo-Christian roots. Their
principal duties involve protecting citizens from those who would
commit sins like murder, rape, and theft. It is unlikely that our
governments would look the same way if they had not been created
by believers.
On the other
hand, our governments allow people to seek religious truth and worship
independently. While individually there is nothing wrong with seeking
the one religious truth and following it once you think you've found
it, collectively we acknowledge that different people take different
paths. I may be quite certain that Jesus is the Son of God, but
at the same time I can also be quite certain that God has no objection
to my supporting a government that allows people to conclude that
Jesus is not the Son of God.
There are two
non-mutually-exclusive ways one might come to this counterintuitive
conclusion. One is by acknowledging that the nature of God cannot
be definitively and objectively known, at least not now, and so
people ought to be allowed to pursue different paths to Him. We
allow individual inquiry as the best method for ascertaining truth
in other intellectual endeavors, and so we should for theology.
The other way is itself theological: a belief that God wants the
path toward him to be sought and chosen, not dictated and forced,
for that is the only way goodness can be gained.
So how can we persuade non-Westerners of various stripes
including, in particular, many Muslims that they individually,
and their governments, too, ought to tolerate non-belief? It can
best be done by other Muslims, who can show that God does not want
non-believers murdered or persecuted. They must speak out.
But there is
a role for non-Muslims, too, by pointing out that reasonable people
can conclude that, in fact, Mohammed was not God's prophet. Of course,
such scholarship and argument will infuriate some Muslims, and it
is nowadays politically incorrect and thus offensive to many
non-Muslims to challenge the factual underpinnings of any
faith. But we can respect other faiths and still critique them.
Christianity and Islam hinge on the veracity of Jesus and Mohammed,
respectively, and believers ought to be willing to demonstrate and
defend as historical fact what they did and who they said they were
if Christianity and Islam are to be taken seriously.
And for many
A's or potential A's, we have no choice. If they cannot
be dissuaded from their interpretation of Mohammed's words to mean
that God wants all the B's to be killed, then if there
is strong evidence that Mohammed does not speak for God and so his
words can be safely ignored it is foolish for the B's
not to point this out.
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