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"Is Christianity Good for the World?"

Part 3 of the ongoing debate between Christopher Hitchens and Douglas Wilson.

Theologian Douglas Wilson and atheist Christopher Hitchens, authors whose books are already part of a larger debate on whether religion is pernicious, agreed to discuss their views on whether Christianity itself has benefited the world. Below is their exchange, one in a series that will appear on our website over the course of this month.



Douglas Wilson is author of Letter from a Christian Citizen, senior fellow of theology at New Saint Andrews College, and minister at Christ Church in Moscow, Idaho. He is also the editor of Credenda/Agenda magazine and has written (among other things ) Reforming Marriage and A Serrated Edge: A Brief Defense of Biblical Satire and Trinitarian Skylarking. His Blog and Mablog site inevitably makes for provocative reading.

Christopher Hitchens wrote, God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything(Twelve Books). Hitchens is a contributing editor to Vanity Fair and a visiting professor of liberal studies at the New School. He is the author of numerous books, Thomas Jefferson: Author of America, Thomas Paine's "Rights of Man," Letters To a Young Contrarian, and Why Orwell Matters. He was named, to his own amusement, number five on a list of the "Top 100 Public Intellectuals" by Foreign Policy and Britain's Prospect.

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6

From: Christopher Hitchens
To: Douglas Wilson
Part 3

Here is a minor example of how the complacency of the religious allows them to be rude (and crude) in a manner which they might not so easily permit themselves in everyday discourse. I am quite familiar with the verse from the Psalms that describes me as a fool, and corrupt and abominable as well. (In my book, God Is Not Great, I point out that the psalmist was so delighted with this conceit that he reproduced it almost word for word at the opening of Psalm 53.) No great surprise—and no real offense taken—to find myself similarly dismissed as a dumb and vain ingrate in the epistle to the Romans. It's true that I never asked to be saved and don't want anyone to be martyred for me—or to martyr themselves against me, for that matter. All I ask of the apostle Paul is that he and his followers and emulators leave me alone.

On the much more pertinent question of the origin of ethical imperatives, which I believe to be derived from innate human solidarity and not from the supernatural, let me likewise offer an instance from each Testament. Let us assume that the tales can be taken at face value. Is it to be believed that the Jews got as far as Sinai under the impression that murder, theft, and perjury were more or less all right? And, in the story of the good man from Samaria, is it claimed that the man went out of his way to help a fellow creature because of a divine instruction? He was clearly, since he preceded Jesus, not motivated by Christian teaching. And if he was a pious Jew, as seems probable, he would have had religious warrant and authority NOT to do what he did, if the poor sufferer was a non-Jew. It is belief in the supernatural that can make otherwise decent people do things that they would otherwise shrink from—such as mutilating the genitals of children, frightening infants with talk of hellfire, forbidding normal sexual practices, blaming all Jews for "deicide," applauding suicide-murderers, and treating women as Paul or Muhammad thought they should be treated.

I have nowhere claimed nor even implied that unbelief is a guarantee of good conduct or even an indicator of it. (I have sometimes thought that atheists have a slight superiority in one respect, in that we come to our conclusions without any element of self-centered wish-thinking about death.) But an atheist can as easily be a nihilist, a sadist—even a casuist.


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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 76 comments

armadillo

May 25, 2007  4:07am

If belief in God strengthens my morals, then I should believe. That seems to be a popular argument here. Now...substitute "the invisible unicorn" for God. Suddenly, the idea seems ludicrous. Why? Because SOME of us find it difficult to take on an absurd belief just because it might make us nicer and the world safer. In fact, such an approach to life is, by many definitions, immoral...it's a lie.

Ken

May 25, 2007  12:42am

"If we are not transcendent, why should I give a fig about him, why should I care at all?" Use your imagination...there are plenty of possible answers that don't depend on some unproven, immaterial essence that occupies your body. A Buddhist might care because he has tamed his ego to the extent that he simply has a clear understanding that other folks aren't utterly separate entities that we're free to use and abuse. An existentialist will say he cares because he chooses to care. A biologist might say that a good chunk of morality is either ingrained. A game theorist might say it emerges when intelligent creatures debate how to allocate resources and mates. And on and on. The above views don't necessarily result in belief in an absolute, universal morality that wafts in the air...but maybe that's just the way it is.

DrZaius

May 24, 2007  5:50pm

From my vantage point, Wilson is too humble when he states he may be Hitchens's intellectually inferior. Hitchens continually avoided all the difficlut questions. He seems somewhat lightweight to me in terms of his thniking depth. Of course I believe in God, so I may be biased, but I've given much thought about this over the years being scientifically and mathematically trained.

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