>The April issue of Writers Digest magazine arrived in my mailbox this week, containing an article called “Religious Wars.” The author, Kara Uhl, talks about the role of September 11 as the catalyst for many of what she calls “anti-religion” books. She highlights Sam Harris’ book, The End of Faith, which was a New York Times bestseller and winner of the 2005 PEN Award for Nonfiction in 2004, as the leader in a nonfiction, bestselling subcategory, which Uhl says, “indicates a culture shift.”
My earlier reviews are (Chapter 1) here, (Chapter 2) here, and (Chapters 3 and 4) here.
Harris deals with what he calls “the influence of religion in the West” in this chapter, and starts with a warning:
The degree to which religious ideas still determine government policies—especially those of the United States—presents a grave danger to everyone…. For many years U.S. policy in the Middle East has been shaped, at least in part, by the interests that fundamentalists Christians have in the future of a Jewish state…. Fundamentalist Christians support Israel because they believe that the final consolidation of Jewish power in the Holy Land—specifically, the rebuilding of Solomon’s temple—will usher in both the Second Coming of Christ and the final destruction of the Jews.
Right off the bat, Harris is taking an extremist fundamentalist view and applying it to all Christians. When Pilate asked Jesus if He was the King of the Jews, Jesus said, “My kingdom is not of this world. If My kingdom were of this world, My servants would fight, so that I should not be delivered to the Jews; but now My kingdom is not from here.” (John 18:36)
The Orthodox Christian Church (some good links to read about Orthodoxy are here, at the Antiochian Archdiocese’s web site) does not take a political stance on these issues, because we believe what Christ said to Pilate. Our faith does not, or should not, lead us to extreme actions based on what Harris calls “intrusions of eschatology into modern politics.” His statement that “Millions of Christians and Muslims now organize their lives around prophetic traditions that will only find fulfillment once rivers of blood begin flowing from Jerusalem” is again, not an indictment against Christianity, any more than extreme behavior on the part of an individual American, or even a group of Americans, is an indictment against America.
The War on Sin
In his section on “The War on Sin,” Harris talks about what he calls “the tension between private freedom and public risk.”
Behaviors like drug use, prostitution, sodomy, and the viewing of obscene materials have been categorized as “victimless crimes.”…. Indeed, what is startling about the notion of a victimless crime is that even when the behavior in question is genuinely victimless, its criminality is still affirmed by those who are eager to punish it…. The idea of a victimless crime is nothing more than a judicial reprise of the Christian notion of sin…. It is no accident that people of faith often want to curtail the private freedoms of others. This impulse has less to do with the history of religion and more to do with its logic, because the very idea of privacy is incompatible with the existence of God…. Because we are a people of faith, taught to concern ourselves with the sinfulness of our neighbors, we have grown tolerant of irrational uses of state power.
As I read these words this morning, having just finished my Morning Prayers, I thought about the Prayer of St. Ephraim, which Orthodox Christians pray every day during Great Lent. His words speak directly to Harris’ accusations that Christian faith leads to the desire to curtail the private freedom of others:
O Lord and Master of My Life, take from me the spirit of sloth, meddling, lust of power and idle talk.
But give rather the spirit of chastity, humility, patience and love to your servant.
O Lord and King, grant me to see my own sins and not to judge my brother, for blessed are You unto ages of ages. Amen.
When I judge my brother (and I do this, unfortunately, quite a bit) it’s not in obedience to my faith. Quite the contrary—it’s a sin against my brother, and against God, the judge of all. I’m not sure who Harris is referring to when we says that we, as a people of faith, are “taught to concern ourselves with the sinfulness of our neighbors,” but it’s certainly not the historic Christian Church.
I don’t know the scientific and medical facts necessary to argue with Harris about his assessment of the danger of alcohol and cigarettes (which are legal) vs. the harmless and possibly even helpful effects (according to Harris) of marijuana and other illegal drugs. But I do disagree with his assumptions about how prohibition causes crime:
The crimes of the addict, to finance the stratospheric cost of his lifestyle, and the crimes of the dealer, to protect both his territory and his goods, are likewise the results of prohibition.
This is just illogical. Would Harris have a state with no laws, so that there would be no crimes against the law? I guess I’ll find out what his plan is in the final chapters of his book, if I can make myself read them.
In his final section of this chapter, “The God of Medicine,” Harris deals with embryonic stem-cell research. He states his beliefs about stem cells dogmatically:
Here is what we know.
Immediatly, I’m asking, who is “we”?
We know that research on embryonic stem cells requires the destruction of human embryos at the 150-cell stage. There is not the slightest reason to believe, however, that such embryos have the capacity to sense pain, to suffer, or to experience the loss of life in any way at all.
Again, who is “we”?
He sets people of faith over and against the “we” in terms that try to render them as idiots:
Enter faith: we now find ourselves living in a world in which college-educated politicians will hurl impediments in the way of such research because they are concerned about the fate of single cells…They believe that even a human zygote (a fertilized egg) should be accorded all the protections of a fully developed human being…. Those opposed to therapeutic stem-cell research on religious grounds constitute the biological and ethical equivalent of a flat-earth society.
Well, I guess we’re pretty clear about how Harris feels about Christians. I’m finding it more and more difficult to continue reading this book of his “with an open mind” as he continues to assault my intelligence, and even my humanity, with such statements. Harris’ transition into his next chapter says:
It is time we found a more reasonable approach to answering questions of right and wrong.
I guess we’ll learn about his approach in the final chapters of his book. But don’t look for my comments any time soon. Reading Harris leaves me hungry for something substantive, especially as I approach these final seventeen days of Great Lent. And so I refer again to Metropolitan Anthony Bloom’s short book, Meditations on a Theme, for some balance here:
It is not circumstances that make shadows darken our souls, nor is it God’s fault, although we accuse him all the time. How often have I heard people say, ‘Here are my sins,’ then stop a moment to take a breath and begin a long discourse to the effect that had not God afflicted them with such a hard life, they would not sin so much.’…. I suggested, before reading a prayer of absolution, that peace between God and man was a two-way traffic, and I asked whether the penitent was prepared to forgive God all his misdeeds, all the wrong he had done, all the circumstances which prevented this good Christian from being a saint. People do not like this, and yet, unless we take full responsibility for the way we face our heredity, our situation, our God and ourselves, we shall never be able to face more than a small section of our life and self. If want to pass a true and balanced judgment on ourselves we must consider ourselves as a whole, in our entirety.
Anna Sewell didn’t sell the classic novel “Black Beauty” to her publisher until she was 57. [Note: I’m 57!] Laura Ingalls Wilder, the beloved author of the Little House on the Prairie series didn’t have her first book published until she was well into her 60s. And Richard Adams, author of the children’s classic “Watership Down,” remained unpublished until he was in his 50s.
Looks like I’m in good company! Or… I will be when I get my first book published. Which reminds me, blogging is fun, but it isn’t getting the next chapter written….
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