A Classic Example of Spiritual Ignorance
Beloved Friends:
I invite you to compare this article, which is an expression of
unenlightened third-dimensional separation consciousness, with my article
"Parable of Enlightenment", which is an expression of enlightened
fourth-dimensional unity consciousness, bearing in mind the crucially important
fact that your experiences are determined by your beliefs.
All*is*one Heartsong
Enough With the 'One God' Stuff
by James Foley
www.alternet.org, September 23, 2006
In the world today, one ancient religious ideology,
monotheism, stands out as especially dangerous, repressive and loony.
Sam Harris's book "The End of Faith: Religion, Terror,
and the Future of Reason," which won the 2005 Pen Award for nonfiction, develops
a smart, knowledgeable polemic about the growing dangers of all religious
ideologies. Although I love Harris' rant, my personal obsession has long been
with how weird monotheism is. Monotheism insists there is but one god, a man of
course, alone in the universe for all eternity. Even as a child, I found this to
be a crazy idea.
The Greeks and Romans, the Hindus, and the Egyptians all
imagined many different gods who hang out together, the way people throughout
the world do. These cultures envisioned social gods with busy existences who
like pleasure, food, sex, art and other good things of life. As with people, the
social ties among the gods loosely constrain their destructive impulses. Mostly
these gods are so involved with each other they only sometimes notice the lesser
beings, just as people only sometimes notice their household animals. The
multiple gods of great cultural systems, and the gods and spirits of many tribal
cultures as well, are familiar, understandable. They project the human world
into the sky, the same way science fiction does (except, of course, science
fiction understands it is offering fiction).
But monotheism posits one omnipotent, lonely sucker all
by himself -- "the sky god" as Gore Vidal once called him. The first five books
of the Hebrews' Bible reveal, not surprisingly, that the sky god is often angry,
jealous, vengeful, and even murderous -- regularly toying with, manipulating and
punishing the puny beings he creates to worship and amuse him. Not surprisingly,
he's a self-absorbed ascetic who invents for his "children" bizarre,
impossible-to-comply-with rules governing a multitude of tiny details of daily
life. Sometimes he goes berserk about minor infractions; frequently he ignores
major violations of his own rules. He's the original bad father, threatening
awful punishments, with no wife, lover, siblings, friends, co-workers, neighbors
or relatives to reign him in.
Early Christians and then Muslims added to monotheism
the great creative innovation of the promise of eternal life. A person gets to
live forever if, and only if, that person closely follows the sky god's rules.
This made monotheism much easier to sell, especially when coupled with the offer
of extra credit toward salvation for converting others. It also made monotheism
fantastically effective in motivating, inspiring, controlling and ruling people.
Fueled by the monotheists' inexhaustible missionary zeal, in nearly 2,000 years
this peculiar ideology has spread throughout much of the globe.
Here in the high-tech futuristic 21st century, the
punitive, vengeful, sky god is as strong and legitimate as he's been in a long
time. Modernity, it turns out, was no cure for monotheism. If anything, it
increases extremism, especially -- but never only -- among the dispossessed. And
now in the Middle East we have the volatile blend of pissed-off Jews, Muslims,
and Christians, each convinced they possess an a iron-clad mandate from their
one and only angry god. Mixed in as well are many weapons, lots of oil, and the
dangerous, born-again idiocy of George W. Bush and other prominent Republicans.
All this is concentrated on the turf that monotheists everywhere see as their
origin, their home, their "holy land."
Present-day America's most popular form of lunatic
monotheism -- fundamentalist, evangelical Protestantism (and especially
end-of-days Christianity with tens of millions of believers convinced that Jesus
is returning soon) -- is deeply obsessed with the holy land. Crazed Christian
fundamentalists love it when crazed Jewish warriors battle it out with crazed
Islamic warriors. The Pat Robertsons regard the wars as win-win and ordinary
believers see them as signs that the saved will soon be lifted to heaven.
Unfortunately, these fundamentalist Christians now have enormous influence over
the foreign policy of the most powerful nation in the world.
Most monotheists want governments to punish people who
fail to obey some of the sky god's ascetic rules. Even moderate,
middle-of-the-road monotheists -- like the Roman Catholic Church -- pressure
governments to criminalize and punish homosexuality, drug use and abortion. The
large and growing numbers of Christian, Muslim and Jewish fundamentalists have
far grander ambitions.
Inevitably, some prominent believers turn out to have
long been hypocrites, liars and secret sinners -- adulterers, gamblers, drug
users, homosexuals. But hypocrisy poses no threat to the monotheists who say the
hidden sins demonstrate the awful power of the evils they battle. The
self-righteous condemn the sins, of course, but they actually approve of the
lies, insisting that "hypocrisy is the tribute that vice pays to virtue -- to
the one heavenly lord.
Monotheists, especially in scary and desperate times
like our own, easily hate other monotheisms and often loath variants of their
own brand. And while they have often been happy to butcher polytheists by the
wagonload, monotheists do not ordinarily hate polytheists (except when armed and
dangerous). Traditionally, monotheists have regarded pagans as primitive or
backward peoples who just don't know any better. But they, the other monotheists
and the apostates, do know better, or should.
The historic battles within monotheism are legendary:
Hebrews vs. Christians, Sunnis vs. Shiites, Catholics vs. Protestants, Lutherans
vs. Calvinists, Church of England vs. dissenters, Puritans vs. Baptists, and so
many others. Currently some Islamic extremists have a hard time deciding who
they despise more: Is it the evil Christian and Jewish heretics, or is it the
evil Muslims heretics? So much heresy, so little time.
For monotheism, it always comes down to heresy, to the
rejection of orthodoxy. Starting perhaps with Zoroastrianism, each monotheism
itself began as a heresy, instantly generating its own orthodoxy. Heresy -- free
thought and choosing to reject the rules -- is the primal offense against the
monotheists' conception, and love, of their solitary deity.
The chief authoritarian ideologies of the 20th century
were secular and even anti-religious. They are not gone, but they are exhausted.
Now, in our global warming, nuclear bomb-loaded world, especially in the United
States and the Middle East, we face an older, far more popular and durable
ideology: the angry god as mandate and role model.
Like Mark Twain, Bertrand Russell and others before him,
Sam Harris insists that the basic premises and literal texts of monotheism are
so authoritarian and repressive that people who believe them also easily and
frequently support all sorts of other repressive causes. For evidence, see the
last 2,000 years of history, or tomorrow's newspaper.
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