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God is good, but just be sure not to take Him too literally

One reason why Christian faith has declined in the West is because of the reliance placed on a literal reading of the testaments. Such an approach has tangled the Christian faith in a confusion of contradictions.

By encouraging literalist analysis of the Bible, many churches have inadvertently invited people to question the validity of a faith that seems to be based on questionable facts or outdated prescriptions.

I recently read the transcript of the cross-examination of William Jennings Bryan in the famous Scopes trial of 1925.

The state of Tennessee had sought to outlaw the teaching of evolution in its schools. When a teacher, John Scopes, deliberately flouted this law, he faced trial in a high-profile battle between evolutionists and the supporters of Biblical creation.

The prosecution was assisted by the serial presidential candidate and one of the giants of Democratic politics, William Jennings Bryan, who was called to give evidence.

What followed was the humiliation of Bryan and his literal interpretation of the Bible as he sought to argue the historical truth of Genesis. That Adam and Eve were really the first humans to walk the Earth just 6000 years ago; that 2300 years before Christ, all living things - apart from those saved by Noah - were wiped from the planet, and that Jonah was swallowed by a big fish.

From my perspective, Bryan's most damning words were: ''I believe in creation as there told, and if I am not able to explain it, I will accept it."

There are some who will with great conviction, even to this day, argue that all of these things were so. In fact a number of fast-growing evangelical Christian churches in Australia take a literalist approach to the scriptures.

While most leaders of the older churches have moved away from such a position, there is still an alienating literalism that pervades many faiths, and Christianity is not alone in this regard.

Those of you who are political junkies will be avid watchers of The West Wing. You may recall an episode in which President Jed Bartlet confronts a right-wing radio host who has led a crusade against homosexuality based on biblical doctrine. Bartlet wonders that if he were to form his views on homosexuality based on the prescriptions of Leviticus whether he should also be following the guidance of the Old Testament in relation to the sale of his daughter into slavery; whether he should be putting to death his chief of staff for working on the Sabbath, or what he should be doing about footballers playing with a ball made of pigskin, or his wife for wearing cloth made from different threads.

Those who seek to proclaim the prescriptions of the Bible selectively or literally provide an armoury of ammunition to those like Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins. Laymen like myself struggle with the logic of such an approach. While debate rages about such matters, the true message of the scriptures - of compassion, justice, equality, dignity, forgiveness, charity and respect for other people - inevitably takes a back seat.

Hitchens and Dawkins go further than simply trying to pick holes in a literal or historical interpretation of the Bible and the texts and teachings of the other great religions.

They argue that not only are all religions based on falsehoods but also that religion is a malevolent force. Again, in this they are supported by those across the globe who have used their faith to justify and explain suffering, war, cruelty and calamity.

It is a debating technique as old as discourse itself - to seek to define your opponents on terms that suit your hypothesis, usually by selecting the extremes, and then send in the wrecking ball. It's an approach that anyone in the Australian Parliament would find familiar.

I don't accept that any of the great religions envisage a God or a divine force that sanctions the worst failings of humanity. Religion asks of us to become better people - to choose a life of giving and compassion. This "Golden Rule" is a thread that runs from Confucius to Christianity, from Buddhism to Islam.

For me this is the essential message of all faiths - that we should love our neighbour as we love ourselves. As Muhammad spoke in his final sermon, "Hurt no one so that no one may hurt you." Or as the great Jewish Rabbi Hillel put it: "That which is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow."

The God of my faith is not full of revenge, as the Old Testament would suggest with a literal interpretation. The God of my faith does not cause earthquakes or tsunamis as acts of retribution.

As the Pope identified in his recent encyclical Caritas in Veritate (Love in Truth): "Love is God's greatest gift to humanity, it is his promise and our hope."

It is not a loving God who wilfully inflicts pain and suffering. No God of any mainstream religion would do that if God's love is real.

The Koran does not encourage Muslims to bomb buildings. God does not march off to war supporting one nation over another or the persecution of those of different creeds and colour. My God does not discriminate against women, or favour first born children over others. Nor does God support one political party.

All of these things have been claimed as acts of God at various times in our history. They provide easy targets for those who argue that religion causes harm rather than good. However, they are not propositions that I believe have any foundation in the mainstream religions.

Many today look at the world and see one that is divided by religion. This is inflamed by fear of the unknown and views formed by the actions of fundamentalists.

There are some who wonder, for example, whether Islam and Christianity can peacefully coexist.

My father migrated to Australia from the Middle East - the son of an Armenian father and a Palestinian mother. While Dad was a Christian growing up in Jerusalem, his closest childhood friend was a Jewish girl. Dad speaks fluent Hebrew and Arabic. He taught me tolerance. He is very ecumenical for someone who lost his home to a war that was based on faith. In Australia he found a country that tolerated diversity.

Australia has embraced religious diversity. It must always remain so, and as a Member of Parliament I am a custodian of that principle of tolerance. That is why it is disturbing to hear people rail against Muslims and Jews, or Pentecostals and Catholics. Australia must continue, without fear, to embrace diversity of faith provided that those gods are loving, compassionate and just.

An extract from In Defence of God, a speech by the shadow treasurer, Joe Hockey, to the Sydney Institute last night.

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Date: Newest first | Oldest first
You can't have it both ways.You can't "cherry pick" the parts of the bible which have become irrelevant or even absurd with the progression of time and humanity and just forget them,but still believe the other parts which have not yet been disproved.Also as far as compassion, justice, equality, dignity, forgiveness, charity and respect for other people,none of these traits are or should be reliant on the believe of a deity,tooth fairy or santa claus.They are the basic tenants of everyday life and should be taught to and possesed by all.
Posted by Peeledseal, 10/11/2009 1:23:21 PM
Although an interesting read, and in some ways, Joe is right; the fundamentalists have really provided the ammunition to those who do not believe in a God, or to those whose belief in God extends outside the scope of the modern monotheistic religions, to fire right back at those who's beliefs aren't so stringent; I would like to ask Joe this. Do you believe that if one doesn't accept Christ as their saviour, and denies the existence of such a person, they will go to Hell? Because THAT is the real qualm of most atheist and spiritualist agnostic alike.
Posted by Nick, 10/11/2009 1:54:09 PM
Great speach Joe - what a wonderful advocate for tolerance you are! tolerance for all except the christian who chooses to believe that the scriptures are the literal word of God. Seems that your tolerance does not extend that far? your diatribe was predictable and raised more question its seems for yourself, than making a statement. I think you are the one that needs to sort your theology out - not the fundamentalists - we have resolved these issues and stand firm in what we believe.
Posted by believer, 10/11/2009 6:36:35 PM
Apart from the insanity of these stories, it's the condoning of things like stoning and rape that are really scary. When arguing with the faithful they are very careful with the quotes they choose from this 'holy' book.
Posted by Thomas, 10/11/2009 8:20:10 PM
I have to say that this article is far from complete in terms of understanding pre-modernity modernity and the emergence of our current postmodern or rather post-Christian context and how these implicated upon people in those times. We need to remember that from the time of Aristotle (325 BCE approx) to the time of Copernicus and Galileo (14th century) everyone though the world was flat including the Church who taught Aristotle's metaphysics as truth. Upon discovering this mistake humanity rejected the Scholastic tradition with its unhealthy marriage to Aristotle's flat world view. With this rejection, a new way of generating knowledge about everything had to be found. Rene Descarte provided the answer which involved human reason alone as the sole integration point for knowing. Of course this failed after 400 years, around the time of Rousseau because finite human minds were insufficient to answer the very big questions. So postmodern philosophy was born which meant after a short while humanity was going to find the meaning of life outside of human reason. So from Old Testament times the Christian mesage was in trouble. The problem today relates to the integration point we apply.
Posted by Hona Wikeepa, 10/11/2009 11:32:06 PM
well said, Joe. I just wonder which era will decide which parts of faith it is unfashionable to take literally - for instance this era generally accepts homosexuality as a normal strand of human sexuality, equality of women, etc. But in the future could social conditions change the opinion of the thinkers of that era so that different part of faith is ignored - say if WW III does happen, will women again become slaves to their gender in the effort to repopulate the world, will homosexuality then not be accepted, etc. Anthropologists theorise that every society creates the religion that suits it, i.e. every society worships "God" in its own image, not the other way round as the Bible says. It follows that as we become more civilised, we should then become more aware of human rights - we are now a global people so perhaps this global view of the commonality of all religions is easier to envisage now that even half a century ago. Perhaps our increasing knowledge about ourselves and the universe will lead to the decline of religious belief, replaced by belief in our common interests as human beings on one tiny planet. But I'm still not voting liberal Joe!
Posted by ml, 11/11/2009 12:49:58 AM
I thought Kevin Rudd was God - as he 'parted the red sea' of neo-liberalism, handles the G20 as Zeus and walks through walls ovecoming every earthly detail that us, mere humans face. "I will be with you always- 24/7" and "Ask, and ye shall receive" as billions are nothing to he who holds the cheque book. Maybe God is visiting revenge to the 3rd & 4th generation 'of those who hate me' when his God is Gough "And well may we say God save the Governer General" as the captain sank with the ship in '72. The bible has 'God's answers' for everything and Kevin has answers for everything (or pays enough for consultants "to get it right").
Posted by adaptapensioner.com, 11/11/2009 8:06:33 AM
What a bunch of drivel Mr Hockey. A very disappointing read. Know your Jewish history will help you understand the Old Testament and get your head around "literals". By trying to pick and choose your way through the bible is hypocritical. God is the same today, yesterday and tomorrow. Truth never changes. The Word of God is remains the same. The Word of God is Jesus. Learn about him, and see how he transformed our world by speaking TRUTH, not hiding from it.
Posted by david, 11/11/2009 12:33:07 PM
Here we go again! The bible is not literal. The bible says what I say it does. No, the bible says what I say it does. On and on it goes. The way in which those who choose to have an imaginary friend tie themselves up in knots trying to justify their psychotic beliefs never ceases to amaze. Believe this bit, but not that bit. The book is god's word, but he said this also which isn't in the book, but suits my purposes for the moment. Hey guys, it's not working. It's just words, once again slowly; you have no evidence! Our friend Joe, however, has lots of evidence for religion being a malevolent force. He has argued well for the atheists. His speech is foolish in the extreme. My god does this, doesn't do that! How would he know? Is he hearing voices in his head? This man is one of our elected leaders?!? He needs to be suspended immediately from parliament until he has had effective treatment for his mental health issues.
Posted by Cricket Tragic, 11/11/2009 1:00:18 PM
Mr Hockey doesn't seem to have read the Old Testament in the light of the New Testament. Jesus fulfilled the requirements of the law (ie those rules he mentioned in Leviticus) precisely because we could not owing to sin. Believing in something even though you can't prove it through empirical science doesn't rule out belief in the infallibility of the Bible. Where is the empirical scientific proof of evolution? The God of the Bible so loved the world that He gave us His only Son that whoever believes in Him would not perish bu have eternal life - that's John 3 verse 16, well worth a read. God's vengeance is against sin, not political enemies and achieving social justice; in fact, according to the Bible, He poured out His wrath on His own Son at the cross so that we would not be held accountable for our own sins. We trust in Christ alone, He looks not at our sin, but Christ's righteousness - it's a fantastic message ... literally!
Posted by Rob, 11/11/2009 7:01:23 PM
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