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Criticism of Christianity

Criticism of Christianity has a long history which stretches back to the initial formation of the religion in the Roman Empire. Critics have challenged Christian beliefs and teachings as well as Christian actions, from the Crusades to modern terrorism. The arguments against Christianity include the suppositions that it is a faith of violence, corruption, superstition, polytheism, homophobia, bigotry, pontification, abuses of women's rights and sectarianism.

In the early years of Christianity, the Neoplatonic philosopher Porphyry emerged as one of the major critics with his book Against the Christians, along with other writers like Celsus and Julian. Porphyry argued that Christianity was based on false prophecies that had not yet materialized.[1] Following the adoption of Christianity under the Roman Empire, dissenting religious voices were gradually suppressed by both governments and ecclesiastical authorities [2]—however Christianity did face theological criticisms from other Abrahamic religions like Judaism and Islam in the meantime, such as Maimonides who argued that it was idolatry.[3] A millennium later, the Protestant Reformation led to a fundamental split in European Christianity and rekindled critical voices about the Christian faith, both internally and externally. In the 18th century, Deist philosophers such as Voltaire and Jean-Jacques Rousseau were critical of Christianity as a revealed religion.[4] With the Age of Enlightenment, Christianity was criticized by major thinkers and philosophers, such as Voltaire, David Hume, Thomas Paine, and the Baron d'Holbach.[5] The central theme of these critiques sought to negate the historical accuracy of the Christian Bible and focused on the perceived corruption of Christian religious authorities.[5] Other thinkers, like Immanuel Kant, offered critiques of traditional arguments for the existence of God, while professing to defend Christian theology on novel grounds.[6]

In modern times, Christianity has faced substantial criticism from a wide array of political movements and ideologies. In the late eighteenth century, the French Revolution saw a number of politicians and philosophers criticizing traditional Christian doctrines, precipitating a wave of secularism in which hundreds of churches were closed down and thousands of priests were deported or killed.[7] Following the French Revolution, prominent philosophers of liberalism and communism, such as John Stuart Mill and Karl Marx, criticized Christian doctrine on the grounds that it was conservative and anti-democratic. Friedrich Nietzsche wrote that Christianity fosters a kind of slave morality which suppresses the desires which are contained in the human will.[8] The Russian Revolution, the Chinese Revolution, and several other modern revolutionary movements have also led to the criticism of Christian ideas. The contemporary LGBT movements have criticized Christianity for homophobia and transphobia.

The formal response of Christians to such criticisms is described as Christian apologetics. Philosophers like Augustine of Hippo and Thomas Aquinas have been some of the most prominent defenders of the Christian religion since its foundation.

Scripture edit

Biblical criticism edit

Biblical criticism, in particular higher criticism, covers a variety of methods which have been used since the Enlightenment in the early 18th century as scholars began to apply the same methods and perspectives which had already been applied to other literary and philosophical texts to biblical documents.[9] It is an umbrella term which covers various techniques which are mainly used by mainline and liberal Christian theologians to study the meaning of biblical passages. It uses general historical principles, and it is primarily based on reason rather than revelation or faith. There are four primary types of biblical criticism:[10]

  • Form criticism: an analysis of literary documents, particularly the Bible, to discover earlier oral traditions (stories, legends, myths, etc.) upon which they were based.
  • Tradition criticism: an analysis of the Bible, concentrating on how religious traditions grew and changed over the time span during which the text was written.
  • Higher criticism: the study of the sources and literary methods employed by the biblical authors.[10][11]
  • Lower criticism: the discipline and study of the actual wording of the Bible; a quest for textual purity and understanding.[11]

Textual criticism edit

Within the abundance of biblical manuscripts exist a number of textual variants. The vast majority of these textual variants are the inconsequential misspelling of words, word order variations[12] and the mistranscription of abbreviations.[13] Text critics such as Bart D. Ehrman have proposed that some of these textual variants and interpolations were theologically motivated.[14] Ehrman's conclusions and textual variant choices have been challenged by some conservative evangelical reviewers, including Daniel B. Wallace, Craig Blomberg, and Thomas Howe.[15]

In attempting to determine the original text of the New Testament books, some modern textual critics have identified sections as probably not original. In modern translations of the Bible, the results of textual criticism have led to certain verses being left out or marked as not original. These possible later additions include the following:[16][17]

In The Text of the New Testament, Kurt and Barbara Aland compare the total number of variant-free verses, and the number of variants per page (excluding orthographic errors), among the seven major editions of the Greek NT (Tischendorf, Westcott-Hort, von Soden, Vogels, Merk, Bover and Nestle-Aland) concluding 62.9%, or 4999/7947, agreement.[19] They concluded,[19]

Thus in nearly two-thirds of the New Testament text, the seven editions of the Greek New Testament which we have reviewed are in complete accord, with no differences other than in orthographical details (e.g., the spelling of names, etc.). Verses in which any one of the seven editions differs by a single word are not counted. This result is quite amazing, demonstrating a far greater agreement among the Greek texts of the New Testament during the past century than textual scholars would have suspected... In the Gospels, Acts, and Revelation the agreement is less, while in the letters it is much greater.

With the discovery of the Hebrew Bible texts among the Dead Sea Scrolls, questions have been raised about the textual accuracy of the Masoretic text.[citation needed]

Internal consistency edit

Inconsistencies have been pointed out by critics and skeptics,[20] presenting as difficulties the different numbers and names for the same feature and different sequences for what is supposed to be the same event. Responses to these criticisms include the modern documentary hypothesis, two-source hypothesis (in various guises), and assertions that the Pastoral Epistles are pseudonymous. Contrasting with these critical stances are positions supported by traditionalists, considering the texts to be consistent, with the Torah written by a single source,[21][22] but the Gospels by four independent witnesses,[23] and all of the Pauline Epistles, except possibly the Hebrews, as having been written by Paul the Apostle.

While consideration of the context is necessary when studying the Bible, some find the accounts of the Resurrection of Jesus within the four Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, difficult to reconcile. E. P. Sanders concludes that the inconsistencies make the possibility of a deliberate fraud unlikely: "A plot to foster belief in the Resurrection would probably have resulted in a more consistent story. Instead, there seems to have been a competition: 'I saw him,' 'So did I,' 'The women saw him first,' 'No, I did; they didn't see him at all,' and so on."[24]

Harold Lindsell points out that it is a "gross distortion" to state that people who believe in biblical inerrancy suppose every statement made in the Bible is true (opposed to accurate).[25] He indicates there are expressly false statements in the Bible which are reported accurately[25] (for example, Satan is a liar whose lies are accurately reported as to what he actually said).[25] Proponents of biblical inerrancy generally do not teach that the Bible was dictated directly by God, but that God used the "distinctive personalities and literary styles of the writers" of scripture and that God's inspiration guided them to flawlessly project his message through their own language and personality.[26]: Art. VIII 

Those who believe in the inspiration of scripture teach that it is infallible (or inerrant), that is, free from error in the truths it expresses by its character as the word of God.[27] However, the scope of what this encompasses is disputed, as the term includes 'faith and practice' positions, with some denominations holding that the historical or scientific details, which may be irrelevant to matters of faith and Christian practice, may contain errors.[28] Other scholars take stronger views,[29] but for a few verses these positions require more exegetical work, leading to dispute (compare the serious debate over the related issue of perspicuity, attracting biblical and philosophical discussion).

Infallibility refers to the original texts of the Bible, and all mainstream scholars acknowledge the potential for human error in transmission and translation; yet, through use of textual criticism modern (critical) copies are considered to "faithfully represent the original",[26]: Art. X  and our understanding of the original language sufficiently well for accurate translation. The opposing view is that there is too much corruption, or translation too difficult, to agree with modern texts.

Unfulfilled prophecy edit

Hundreds of years before the time of Jesus, Jewish prophets promised that a messiah would come. Judaism claims that Jesus did not fulfill these prophecies. Other skeptics usually claim that the prophecies are either vague or unfulfilled,[30] or that the Old Testament writings influenced the composition of New Testament narratives.[31] Christian apologists claim that Jesus fulfilled these prophecies, which they argue are nearly impossible to fulfill by chance.[32] Many Christians anticipate the Second Coming of Jesus, when he will fulfill the rest of Messianic prophecy, such as the Last Judgment, the general resurrection, establishment of the Kingdom of God, and the Messianic Age (see the article on Preterism for contrasting Christian views).

The New Testament traces Jesus' line to that of David; however, according to Stephen L. Harris:[33]

Jesus did not accomplish what Israel's prophets said the Messiah was commissioned to do: He did not deliver the covenant people from their Gentile enemies, reassemble those scattered in the Diaspora, restore the Davidic kingdom, or establish universal peace (cf. Isa. 9:6–7; 11:7–12:16, etc.). Instead of freeing Jews from oppressors and thereby fulfilling God's ancient promises—for land, nationhood, kingship, and blessing—Jesus died a "shameful" death, defeated by the very political powers the Messiah was prophesied to overcome. Indeed, the Hebrew prophets did not foresee that Israel's savior would be executed as a common criminal by Gentiles, making Jesus' crucifixion a "stumbling block" to scripturally literate Jews. (1 Cor.1:23)

Christian preachers reply to this argument by stating that these prophecies will be fulfilled by Jesus in the Millennial Reign after the Great Tribulation, according to New Testament prophecies, especially in the Book of Revelation.[citation needed]

The 16th-century Jewish theologian Isaac ben Abraham, who lived in Trakai, Lithuania, penned a work called Chizzuk Emunah (Faith Strengthened) that attempted to refute the ideas that Jesus was the Messiah prophesied in the Old Testament and that Christianity was the "New Covenant" of God. He systematically identified a number of inconsistencies he perceived in the New Testament, contradictions between the New Testament and the Old Testament, and Old Testament prophesies which remained unfulfilled in Jesus' lifetime. In addition, he questioned a number of Christian practices, such as Sunday Sabbath.[34] Written originally for Jews to persuade them not to convert to Christianity,[35] the work was eventually read by Christians. While the well-known Christian Hebraist Johann Christoph Wagenseil attempted an elaborate refutation of Abraham's arguments, Wagenseil's Latin translation of it only increased interest in the work and inspired later Christian freethinkers. Chizzuk Emunah was praised as a masterpiece by Voltaire.[34]

On the other hand, Blaise Pascal believed that "[t]he prophecies are the strongest proof of Jesus Christ". He wrote that Jesus was foretold, and that the prophecies came from a succession of people over a span of four thousand years.[36] Apologist Josh McDowell defends the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecy as supporting Christianity, arguing that prophecies fulfilled by Christ include ones relating to his ancestral line, birthplace, virgin birth, miracles, manner of death, and resurrection. He says that even the timing of the Messiah in years and in relation to events is predicted, and that the Jewish Talmud (not accepting Jesus as the Messiah, see also Rejection of Jesus) laments that the Messiah had not appeared despite the scepter being taken away from Judah.[37]

Prophecy of the Nazarene edit

Another example is Nazarene in Matthew 2:23: "And he came and dwelt in a city called Nazareth, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophets, He shall be called a Nazarene." The website for Jews for Judaism claims that "Since a Nazarene is a resident of the city of Nazareth and this city did not exist during the time period of the Jewish Bible, it is impossible to find this quotation in the Hebrew Scriptures. It was fabricated."[38][39] However, one common suggestion is that the New Testament verse is based on a passage relating to Nazirites, either because this was a misunderstanding common at the time, or through deliberate re-reading of the term by the early Christians. Another suggestion is "that Matthew was playing on the similarity of the Hebrew word nezer (translated 'Branch' or 'shoot' in Isaiah 11:1 and Jeremiah 23:5) with the Greek nazoraios, here translated 'Nazarene.'"[40] Christians also suggest that by using an indirect quotation and the plural term prophets, "Matthew was only saying that by living in Nazareth, Jesus was fulfilling the many Old Testament prophecies that He would be despised and rejected."[41] The background for this is illustrated by Philip's initial response in John 1:46 to the idea that Jesus might be the Messiah: "Nazareth! Can anything good come from there?"[40]

Virgin Birth and descent of Jesus edit

A fundamental principle of the Christian faith is that Jesus was born of Mary, a virgin.[42] Both Matthew and Luke trace the genealogy of Joseph back to David. According to Jewish tradition, the Messiah must be a descendant of David, but if Jesus was born of a virgin, he cannot be a descendant of David through Joseph.[43] Michael Martin asserts that Mary's virginity is a later addition to Christianity as indicated through Paul's letters.[44] Further, Martin notes that early Christian communities did not seem to have widely believed in the virgin birth. The confusion surrounding the virginity of Mary may result from Septuagint translation of both Hebrew: עַלְמָה, romanizedalmah "young girl" and Hebrew: בְּתוּלָה, romanizedbethulah, "virgin" into Greek: παρθένος, romanizedparthenos, which usually means virgin. Relying on this translation, Matthew tried to show that Jesus's virgin birth was foretold in Isaiah 7:14—which refers to an almah in Hebrew. [45][46][47]

Selective interpretation edit

Critics argue that the selective invocation of portions of the Old Testament is hypocritical, particularly when those portions endorse hostility towards women and homosexuals, when other portions are considered obsolete, such as dietary prohibitions. The entire Mosaic Law is described in Galatians 3:24–25 as a tutor which is no longer necessary, according to some interpretations, see also Antinomianism in the New Testament.

On the other hand, many of the Old Testament laws are seen as specifically abrogated by the New Testament, such as circumcision,[48] though this may simply be a parallel to Jewish Noahide Laws. See also Split of early Christianity and Judaism. On the other hand, other passages are pro-Law, such as Romans 3:31: "Do we then make void the law through faith? Certainly not! On the contrary, we establish the law." See also Pauline passages opposing antinomianism.

Mistranslation edit

Translation has given rise to a number of issues, as the original languages are often quite different in grammar as well as word meaning. While the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy[26] states that inerrancy applies only to the original languages, some believers trust their own translation to be the accurate one. One such group of believers is known as the King James Only movement. For readability, clarity, or other reasons, translators may choose different wording or sentence structure, and some translations may choose to paraphrase passages. Because some of the words in the original language have ambiguous or difficult to translate meanings, debates over the correct interpretation occur.

Criticisms are also sometimes raised because of inconsistencies arising between different English translations of the Hebrew or Greek text. Some Christian interpretations are criticized for reflecting specific doctrinal bias[38] or a variant reading between the Masoretic Hebrew and Septuagint Greek manuscripts often quoted in the New Testament.

Criticism of historical behavior edit

 
Pope Innocent III excommunicating the Albigensians (left), Massacre against the Albigensians by the crusaders

Certain interpretations of some moral decisions in the Bible are considered ethically questionable by human rights activists and scholars, historians, and critics of religion. Some of the passages most commonly criticized include colonialism, the subjugation of women, religious intolerance, condemnation of homosexuality and transgender identity, and support for the institution of slavery in both Old and New Testaments.

Colonialism edit

Christianity and colonialism are often closely associated because Catholicism and Protestantism were the religions of the European colonial powers[49] and acted in many ways as the "religious arm" of those powers.[50] Historian Edward E. Andrews argues that although Christian missionaries were initially portrayed as "visible saints, exemplars of ideal piety in a sea of persistent savagery", by the time the colonial era drew to a close in the last half of the twentieth century missionaries became viewed as "ideological shock troops for colonial invasion whose zealotry blinded them."[51]

Christianity is targeted by critics of colonialism because the tenets of the religion were used to justify the actions of the colonists.[52] For example, Michael Wood asserts that the indigenous peoples were not considered to be human beings and that the colonisers were shaped by "centuries of Ethnocentrism, and Christian monotheism, which espoused one truth, one time and version of reality."[53]

Slavery edit

Early Christian perspectives of slavery were formed in the contexts of Christianity's roots in Judaism, and as part of the wider culture of slavery in the Roman Empire. Slavery was widespread in the Roman Empire, including at the time of Augustus when Jesus was born. Both the Old and New Testaments recognize that the institution of slavery existed, with the former sanctioning it within certain limits (Leviticus 25:39-46, Exodus 21:2-21).

Saint Paul the Apostle in addressing slavery in Ephesians 6:-8[54] tells slaves to "obey your earthly masters" and "render service with enthusiasm, as to the Lord and not to men and women." Defenders of Christianity argue that nothing in the passage affirms slavery as a naturally valid or divinely mandated institution. Rather, Paul's discussion of the duties of Christian slaves and the responsibilities of Christian masters transforms the institution, even if it falls short of calling for outright abolition. St. Augustine thought slavery was a result of sin, but was part of the fallen world and so should be tolerated. However, others opposed it: John Chrysostom explicitly argued that slavery itself was a sin, but he did not advocate for its abolition; Origen called for the practice of manumission after six years as found in the Old Testament; others, such as Gregory of Nyssa, Acacius of Amida, and St. Patrick, called for the complete abolition of slavery.[55]

On the other hand, critics claim that Orthodox Christianity justified slavery on the ground that it was part of the divinely ordained hierarchical order. Slaves are enjoined to be submissive in the Ephesians passage above as well as other parts of the Bible, such as in Paul's Epistle to the Colossians: "Slaves, obey your earthly masters [kyrioi] according to the flesh in everything, not only while being watched and in order to please them, but wholeheartedly, fearing the Lord [kyrios]".[56] In addition, St. John Chrysostom wrote "The slave should be resigned to his lot, in obeying his master he is obeying God" while St. Augustine wrote: "...slavery is now penal in character and planned by that law which commands the preservation of the natural order and forbids disturbance".[57]

According to one view, today and from a human rights perspective, it is difficult to understand why early Christians did not object to the social institution of slavery. It is uncertain whether one can go so far as to criticise Early Christians, including Paul and other authors of Biblical texts, for their active or passive acceptance of slavery.[58] Peter Gruszka attributed the view of early Christian Fathers on slavery to their social environment. In the 2nd and 3rd centuries, the most prominent fathers such as Clement, Tertullian, Cyprian, Origen and others emerged in Africa and Egypt, where slavery did not exist on a large scale. Different was the social environment in Eastern Mediterranean, Syria, Palestine and especially Asia Minor, where slavery was a strong presence and therefore attracted the attention of the Cappadocian fathers of the 4th century.[59]

According to Jennifer Glancy, sexual exploitation of slaves in the Roman Empire was helped by Christian morality. Jesus urged his followers to act like slaves, implementing a slave morality. The early Christian theologians were unconcerned about slave morals.[60] In the Eastern Roman Empire (Byzantine), a shift in the view of slavery is noticed, which by the 10th century transformed gradually a slave-object into a slave-subject.[61]

Since the Middle Ages, the Christian understanding of slavery has been subjected to significant internal conflict and has endured dramatic change. Nearly all Christian leaders before the late 17th century recognised slavery, within specific biblical limitations, as consistent with Christian theology. The key verse used to justify slavery was Genesis 9:25-27: "Cursed be Canaan! The lowest of slaves will he be to his brothers. He also said, 'Blessed be the Lord, the God of Shem! May Canaan be the slave of Shem." which was interpreted to mean that Africans were the descendants of Ham, cursed with "the mark of Ham" to be servants to the descendants of Japheth (Europeans) and Shem (Asians).[62] In 1452, Pope Nicholas V instituted the hereditary slavery of captured Muslims and pagans, regarding all non-Christians as "enemies of Christ".[63]

The "Curse of Ham" along with Paul's Epistle to the Ephesians, VI, 5-7 helped American slave owners to balance their beliefs with slavery. The Southern Baptist Convention separated from the Triennial Convention in order to support slavery, which the southern churches regarded as "an institution of heaven".[64][65] The New Testament was ignored except in reminding that Jesus never condemned slavery and the Epistle to Philemon in which a runaway slave was returned to his owner.[66]

Christian abolitionist movements edit

Rodney Stark makes the argument in For the Glory of God: How Monotheism Led to Reformations, Science, Witch-Hunts, and the End of Slavery,[67] that Christianity helped to end slavery worldwide, as does Lamin Sanneh in Abolitionists Abroad.[68] These authors point out that Christians who viewed slavery as wrong on the basis of their religious convictions spearheaded abolitionism, and many of the early campaigners for the abolition of slavery were driven by their Christian faith and a desire to realize their view that all people are equal under God.[69] In the late 17th century, Anabaptists began to criticize slavery. Criticisms from the Society of Friends, Mennonites, and the Amish followed suit. Prominent among these Christian abolitionists were William Wilberforce and John Woolman. Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote her famous book, Uncle Tom's Cabin, according to her Christian beliefs in 1852. Earlier, in Britain and America, Quakers were active in abolitionism. A group of Quakers founded the first English abolitionist organization in 1783, and a Quaker petition brought the issue before government that same year. The Quakers continued to be influential throughout the lifetime of the movement, in many ways leading the way for the campaign. John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, was instrumental in starting abolitionism as a popular movement.[70]

Many modern Christians are united in the condemnation of slavery as wrong and contrary to God's will. Only peripheral groups such as the Ku Klux Klan and other so-called Christian hate groups on the racist fringes of the Christian Reconstructionist and Christian Identity movements advocate the reinstitution of slavery.[62] Full adherents to reconstructionism are few and marginalized among conservative Christians.[71][72][73] With these exceptions, Christian faith groups now condemn slavery, and see the practice as incompatible with basic Christian principles.[62][74]

In addition to aiding abolitionism, many Christians made further efforts toward establishing racial equality, contributing to the Civil Rights Movement.[75] The African American Review notes the important role Christian revivalism in the black church played in the Civil Rights Movement.[76] Martin Luther King Jr., an ordained Baptist minister, was a leader of the American civil rights movement and president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, a Christian Civil Rights organization.[77]

Christianity and women edit

 
The Woman's Bible (1895) is a collection of critical commentaries on texts within chapters of the Bible referring to women

Many feminists have accused notions such as a male God, male prophets, and the man-centered stories in the Bible of contributing to a patriarchy.[78] Though many women disciples and servants are recorded in the Pauline epistles, there have been occasions in which women have been denigrated and forced into a second-class status.[79] For example, women were told to keep silent in the churches for "it is a shame for a woman to speak in the church".[80] Suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton said in The Woman's Bible that "the Bible in its teachings degrades women from Genesis to Revelation".[81]

Elizabeth Clark cites early Christian writings by authors such as Tertullian, Augustine, and John Chrysostom as being exemplary of the negative view of women that has been perpetuated in church tradition.[82] Until the latter part of the 20th century, only the names of very few women who contributed to the formation of Christianity in its earliest years were widely known: Mary, the mother of Jesus;[83] Mary Magdalene, disciple of Jesus and the first witness to the resurrection; and Mary and Martha, the sisters who offered him hospitality in Bethany.[84]

Harvard scholar Karen King writes that more of the many women who contributed to the formation of Christianity in its earliest years are becoming known. Further, she concludes that for centuries in Western Christianity, Mary Magdalene has been wrongly identified as the adulteress and repentant prostitute presented in John 8—a connection supposed by tradition but nowhere claimed in the New Testament. According to King, the Gospel of Mary shows that she was an influential figure, a prominent disciple and leader of one wing of the early Christian movement that promoted women's leadership.

King claims that every sect within early Christianity which had advocated women's prominence in ancient Christianity was eventually declared heretical, and evidence of women's early leadership roles was erased or suppressed.[84]

Classicist Evelyn Stagg and New Testament scholar Frank Stagg in their jointly authored book, Woman in the World of Jesus, document very unfavorable attitudes toward women that prevailed in the world into which Jesus came. They assert that there is no recorded instance where Jesus disgraces, belittles, reproaches, or stereotypes a woman. They interpret the recorded treatment and attitude Jesus showed to women as evidence that the Founder of Christianity treated women with great dignity and respect.[85] Various theologians have concluded that the canonical examples of the manner of Jesus are instructive for inferring his attitudes toward women. They are seen as showing repeatedly and consistently how he liberated and affirmed women.[86] However, Schalom Ben-Chorin argues that Jesus' reply to his mother in John 2:4 during the wedding at Cana amounted to a blatant violation of the commandment to honor one's parent.[87][88]

Christianity and violence edit

Many critics of Christianity have cited the violent acts of Christian nations as a reason to denounce the religion. The science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke said that he could not forgive religions because they endorsed atrocities and wars over time.[89] Richard Dawkins makes a similar case in his book, The God Delusion. In the counterargument book The Dawkins Delusion?, Alister McGrath responds to Dawkins by suggesting that, far from endorsing "out-group hostility", Jesus commanded an ethic of "out-group affirmation". McGrath agrees that it is necessary to critique religion, but he says that Dawkins seems to be unaware that it possesses internal means of reform and renewal. While Christians may certainly be accused of failing to live up to Jesus' standard of acceptance, it lies at the heart of the Christian ethic.[90]

 
The St. Bartholomew's Day massacre of French Protestants in 1572

Peace, compassion and forgiveness of wrongs done by others are key elements of Christian teaching.[91] However, Christians have struggled since the days of the Church fathers with the question of when the use of force is justified.[92] Such debates have led to concepts such as just war theory. Throughout history, biblical passages have been used to justify the use of force against heretics,[93] sinners[94] and external enemies.[95] Heitman and Hagan identify the Inquisitions, Crusades, wars of religion and antisemitism as being "among the most notorious examples of Christian violence".[96] To this list, J. Denny Weaver adds, "warrior popes, support for capital punishment, corporal punishment under the guise of 'spare the rod and spoil the child', justifications of slavery, world-wide colonialism in the name of conversion to Christianity, the systemic violence of women subjected to men". Weaver employs a broader definition of violence that extends the meaning of the word to cover "harm or damage", not just physical violence per se. Thus, under his definition, Christian violence includes "forms of systemic violence such as poverty, racism, and sexism".[97]

Christians have also engaged in violence against those who they consider heretics and non-believers. In Letter to a Christian Nation, critic of religion Sam Harris writes that "...faith inspires violence in at least two ways. First, people often kill other human beings because they believe that the creator of the universe wants them to do it... Second, far greater numbers of people fall into conflict with one another because they define their moral community on the basis of their religious affiliation..."[98]

Christian theologians point to a strong doctrinal and historical imperative against violence which exists within Christianity, particularly Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, which taught nonviolence and love of enemies. Weaver says that Jesus' pacifism was "preserved in the justifiable war doctrine which declares that all war is sin even when it is occasionally declared to be a necessary evil, and it was also preserved in the prohibition of fighting by monastics and clergy as well as in a persistent tradition of Christian pacifism".[99][unreliable source?] Others point out sayings and acts of Jesus that do not fit this description: the absence of any censure of the soldier who asks Jesus to heal his servant, his overturning the tables and chasing the moneychangers from the temple with a rope in his hand, and through his Apostles, baptising a Roman Centurion who is never asked to first give up arms.[100][unreliable source?]

Historically, prohibitions on fighting by monastics and clerics have often been discarded; the notion of military monasticism emerged in the 12th century, in large part because of the advocacy of St. Bernard of Clairvaux. Bernard—and, once the papacy gave sanction to the idea, the entire Catholic Church—believed that existing Christian methods of serving the Church's ends in war were inadequate, and that a group of dedicated warrior monks could achieve spiritual merit by waging war, rather than despite it. In this view, war against heretics justified means of waging war that fell outside the bounds of just war; for example, the Teutonic Order, which received papal sanction, made frequent use of massacres and violence to compel conversion during the Baltic Crusades.[101]

Science edit

 
Galileo affair. Joseph-Nicolas Robert-Fleury, Galileo before the Holy Office, 19th-century

During the 19th century an interpretive model of the relationship between religion and science known today as the conflict theory developed, according to which interaction between religion and science almost inevitably leads to hostility and conflict. A popular example was the misconception that people from the Middle Ages believed that the Earth was flat, and that only science, freed from religious dogma, had shown that it was spherical. This thesis was a popular historiographical approach during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, but most contemporary historians of science now reject it.[102][103][104]

The notion of a war between science and religion remained common in the historiography of science during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[105] Most of today's historians of science consider that the conflict thesis has been superseded by subsequent historical research.[106] The framing of the relationship between Christianity and science as being predominantly one of conflict is still prevalent in popular culture.[107]

The astronomer Carl Sagan mentioned the dispute between the astronomical systems of Ptolemy (who thought that the Sun and planets revolved around the Earth) and Copernicus (who thought the Earth and planets revolved around the Sun). He states in Cosmos: A Personal Voyage that Ptolemy's belief was "supported by the church through the Dark Ages... [It] effectively prevented the advance of astronomy for 1,500 years."[108] Ted Peters in Encyclopedia of Religion writes that although there is some truth in this story, it has been exaggerated and has become "a modern myth perpetuated by those wishing to see warfare between science and religion who were allegedly persecuted by an atavistic and dogma-bound ecclesiastical authority".[109] In 1992, the Catholic Church's seeming vindication of Galileo attracted much comment in the media.[110][111]

Ethics edit

 
The monument to Giordano Bruno in the place he was executed in Rome

The philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche was a notable critic of the ethics of Christianity.

Jesus edit

Jesus is the central figure of Christianity. Since the time in which he is said to have lived, a number of noted individuals have criticised Jesus. Objects of criticism include the morality of the life of Jesus, in both his public and private lives, such as Jesus' mental health, morality of his teachings etc.

Early critics of Jesus and Christianity included Celsus in the second century and Porphyry in the third.[112][113] In the 19th century, Friedrich Nietzsche was highly critical of Jesus, whose teachings he considered to be "anti-nature" in their treatment of topics such as sexuality. More contemporary notable critics of Jesus include Ayn Rand, Hector Avalos, Sita Ram Goel, Christopher Hitchens, Bertrand Russell, and Dayananda Saraswati.

Ethics in the Bible edit

The ethics of the Bible have been criticized by some who call some of its teachings immoral. Slavery, genocide, supersessionism, the death penalty, violence, patriarchy, sexual intolerance, colonialism, and the problem of evil and a good God, are examples of criticisms of ethics in the Bible.

The ethics in the Bible have been criticized, such as the passages in the Old Testament in which God commands the Israelites to commit genocide against enemy peoples, and His command that no one among those same enemy peoples should be spared.[114] The existence of evil has been argued as evidence of no omnipotent, omnibenevolent being, however skeptical theism suggests that humans do not have the understanding of the big picture to make an adequate assessment. However, a counter argument by Stephen Maitzen suggests that the ethical inconsistency in the bible that is not followed by most Christians or Jews today, such as the execution of homosexuals, blasphemers, disobedient children, or the punishment for mixing linen and cloth, ultimately undermines the skeptical theism argument.[115] Christian ethics have also been criticized for breeding intolerance (such as antisemitic views), and for having a repressive nature. Criticism has also been aimed at the threat of Hell.[116]

Christianity and politics edit

 
Demonstration in support of secular education, Madrid 2011

Some leftists and libertarians, including Christians who disavow the Religious Right, use the term Christian fascism or Christofascism to describe what some see as an emerging neoconservative proto-fascist or Evangelical nationalist and possibly theocratic sentiment in the United States.[117]

Christian right edit

Conservative Christians are often accused of being intolerant by secular humanists and progressive Christians, who claim that they oppose science which seems to contradict their scriptural interpretation (creationism, use of birth control, climate change denial, abortion, research into embryonic stem cells, etc.), liberal democracy (separation of church and state), and progressive social policies (rights of people of other races and religions, of women, and of people with different sexual orientations).[118][119][120][121]

United States edit

Gallup polling shows that within the US, trust in organized religion has declined since the 1970s.[122] Phil Zuckerman, a sociology professor, argues that political campaigning against same-sex marriage in churches "is turning off so many people from Christianity", and it is responsible for a decline in the number of Christians in the United States.[123]

David Kinnaman, president of the Barna Institute, and Gabe Lyons of the Fermi Project published a study of the attitudes of 16- to 29-year-old Americans towards Christianity. They found that about 38% of all of those who were not regular churchgoers had negative impressions of Christianity, especially evangelical Christianity, which they associated with conservative political activism, hypocrisy, anti-homosexuality, authoritarianism, and judgmentalism.[124] About 17% had "very bad" perceptions of Christianity.[125][126][127]

Role of women edit

 
Separation of church and state. International Women's Day in Argentina, 2021.

There are three major viewpoints within modern Christianity over the role of women. They are respectively known as Christian feminism, Christian egalitarianism and complementarianism.

  • Christian feminists take a feminist position from a Christian perspective.[128]
  • Christian egalitarians advocate an ability-based, rather than a gender-based, ministry of Christians of all ages, ethnicities and socio-economic classes.[129] Egalitarians support the ordination of women and equal roles in marriage, but are theologically and morally more conservative than Christian feminists and prefer to avoid the label "feminist". A limited notion of gender complementarity is held by some, known as "complementarity without hierarchy".[130]
  • Complementarians support equality as well as the beneficial differences between men and women.[131] They maintain that men and women have their own unique strengths and weaknesses, therefore, they believe that men and women must work together in order to improve their strengths and help each other in times of weakness.

Some Christians argue that the belief that God is a man is not based on gender, instead, they argue that the belief that God is a man is based on the tradition which existed in the dominant Patriarchal society of the time in which men acted as the leaders and caretakers of their Families.[132] Thus, the idea of God being "The Father" is with regards to his relationship with what are "his children", Christians.

Most mainline Christians claim that the doctrine of the Trinity implies that God should be called Father rather than Mother, in the same way that Jesus was a man rather than a woman.[133] Jesus tells His followers to address God as Father.[134] He tells his disciples to be merciful as their heavenly Father is merciful.[135] He says the Father will give the Holy Spirit to those who ask[136] and that the Spirit of their Father will speak through them in times of persecution.[137] On Easter Sunday, he directs Mary Magdalene to tell the other disciples, "I am going to my Father and your Father...."[138] Mark Brumley points out that behind New Testament language of Divine Adoption and regeneration is the idea that God is our Father because He is the "source" or "origin" of our new life in Christ. He has saved us through Christ and sanctified us in the Spirit. Brumley claims this is clearly more than a metaphor; the analogy with earthly fatherhood is obvious. God is not merely like a father for Christ's followers; he is really their Father. Among Christians who hold to this idea, there is a distinct sense that Jesus' treatment of women should imply their equality in leadership and marital roles every bit as strongly as the definite male gender of Jesus should imply a name of Father for God. Instead of characterizing alternative naming as antifeminist, they characterize it as unnecessary and unsupported by the words which are found in the Bible.[133]

In 2000, the Southern Baptist Convention voted to revise its "Baptist Faith and Message" (Statement of Faith),[139] opposing women as pastors. While this decision is not binding and would not prevent women from serving as pastors, the revision itself has been criticized by some from within the convention. In the same document, the Southern Baptist Convention took a strong position of the subordinating view of woman in marriage: "A wife is to submit herself graciously to the servant leadership of her husband. She has the God-given responsibility to respect her husband and to serve as his helper in managing the household and nurturing the next generation."[139] (Emphasis added)

The Eastern Orthodox Church does not allow the ordination of female clergy. On the other hand, the Chaldean Catholic Church continues to maintain a large number of deaconesses who serve alongside male deacons during mass.[140] In some evangelical churches, it is forbidden for women to become pastors, deacons or church elders. In support of such prohibitions, the verse 1 Timothy 2:12 is often cited:[141]

But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence.

Doctrine edit

Miracles edit

 
David Hume's work Of Miracles argues against the existence of miracles.

Philosopher David Hume argued against the plausibility of miracles:[142]

1) A miracle is a violation of the known laws of nature;
2) We know these laws through repeated and constant experience;
3) The testimony of those who report miracles contradicts the operation of known scientific laws;
4) Consequently no one can rationally believe in miracles.

The Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church reject Hume's argument against miracles outright with the teachings of St. Gregory Palamas, who postulated that Reason alone was not sufficient to understand God's energies (activities such as miracles) and essence, but faith was.[143]

Miraculous healings through prayers, often involving the "laying on of hands", have been reported. However, reliance on faith healing alone can indirectly contribute to serious harm and even death.[144] Christian apologists including C.S. Lewis, Norman Geisler and William Lane Craig have argued that miracles are reasonable and plausible.[145][146][147]

Incarnation edit

Celsus found it hard to reconcile the Christian human God who was born and matured with the Jewish God who was supposed to be one and unchanging. He asked "if God wanted to reform humanity, why did he choose to descend and live on earth? How his brief presence in Jerusalem could benefit all the millions of people who lived elsewhere in the world or who had lived and died before his incarnation?"[148]

One classical response is Lewis's trilemma, a syllogism popularised by C. S. Lewis that intended to demonstrate the logical inconsistency of both holding Jesus of Nazareth to be a "great moral teacher" while also denying his divinity. The logical soundness of this trilemma has been widely questioned.[149]

Hell and damnation edit

 
A detail from Hieronymous Bosch's depiction of Hell

Christianity has been criticized as seeking to persuade people into accepting its authority through simple fear of punishment or, conversely, through hope of reward after death, rather than through rational argumentation or empirical evidence.[150] Traditional Christian doctrine dictates that, without faith in Jesus Christ or in the Christian faith in general, one is subject to eternal punishment in Hell.[151]

Critics regard the eternal punishment of those who fail to adopt Christian faith as morally objectionable, and consider it an abhorrent picture of the nature of the world. On a similar theme objections are made against the perceived injustice of punishing a person for all eternity for a temporal crime. Some Christians agree (see Annihilationism and Christian Universalism). These beliefs have been considered especially repugnant[152] when the claimed omniscient and omnipotent God makes, or allows a person to come into existence, with a nature that desires that which God finds objectionable.[153]

In the Abrahamic religions, Hell has traditionally been regarded as a punishment for wrongdoing or sin in this life, as a manifestation of divine justice. As in the problem of evil, some apologists argue that the torments of Hell are attributable not to a defect in God's benevolence, but in human free will. Although a benevolent God would prefer to see everyone saved, he would also allow humans to control their own destinies. This view opens the possibility of seeing Hell not as retributive punishment, but rather as an option that God allows, so that people who do not wish to be with God are not forced to be. C. S. Lewis most famously proposed this view in his book The Great Divorce, saying: "There are only two kinds of people in the end: those who say to God, 'Thy will be done,' and those to whom God says, in the end, 'Thy will be done.'"

Hell is not seen as strictly a matter of retributive justice even by the more traditionalist churches. For example, the Eastern Orthodox see it as a condition brought about by, and the natural consequence of, free rejection of God's love.[154] The Roman Catholic Church teaches that hell is a place of punishment[155] brought about by a person's self-exclusion from communion with God.[156] In some ancient Eastern Orthodox traditions, Hell and Heaven are distinguished not spatially, but by the relation of a person to God's love.

Some modern critics of the doctrine of Hell (such as Marilyn McCord Adams) claim that, even if Hell is seen as a choice rather than as punishment, it would be unreasonable for God to give such flawed and ignorant creatures as humans the awesome responsibility of their eternal destinies.[157] Jonathan Kvanvig, in his book, The Problem of Hell, agrees that God would not allow one to be eternally damned by a decision made under the wrong circumstances. For instance, one should not always honor the choices of human beings, even when they are full adults, if, for instance, the choice is made while depressed or careless. On Kvanvig's view, God will abandon no person until they have made a settled, final decision, under favorable circumstances, to reject God, but God will respect a choice made under the right circumstances. Once a person finally and competently chooses to reject God, out of respect for the person's autonomy, God allows them to be annihilated.[158]

Idolatry edit

Christians have sometimes been accused of idolatry, especially with regard to the iconoclastic controversy.[159] However, Orthodox and Roman Catholic Christian forbid worship of icons and relics as divine in themselves, while honouring those represented by them is accepted and philosophically justified by the Second Council of Constantinople. Jewish theologians often considered Christianity to be a form of idolatry due to its doctrines of the Trinity (which teaches that God is more than one person) and the incarnation (which teaches that God became man); notably, the famous medieval Jewish writer Maimonides considered Christianity to be a form of polytheism.[3]

Limbo edit

The Roman Catholic Church teaches that baptism is a necessity. In the 5th century, St. Augustine concluded that infants who die without baptism were consigned to hell.[160] By the 13th century, theologians referred to the "limbo of infants" as a place where unbaptized babies were deprived of the vision of God, but did not suffer because they did not know of that which they were deprived, and moreover enjoyed perfect natural happiness. The 1983 Code of Canon Law (1183 §2) specifies that "Children whose parents had intended to have them baptized but who died before baptism, may be allowed church funeral rites by the local ordinary".[161] In 2007, the 30-member International Theological Commission revisited the concept of limbo.[162][163] However, the commission also said that hopefulness was not the same as certainty about the destiny of such infants.[162] Rather, as stated in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1257, "God has bound salvation to the sacrament of Baptism, but he himself is not bound by his sacraments."[164] Hope in the mercy of God is not the same as certainty through the sacraments, but it is not without result, as demonstrated in Jesus' statement to the thief on the cross in Luke 23:42-43.

The concept of limbo is not accepted by the Orthodox Church or by Protestants.[165]

Atonement edit

The idea of atonement for sin is criticized by Richard Dawkins on the grounds that the image of God as requiring the suffering and death of Jesus to effect reconciliation with humankind is immoral. The view is summarized by Dawkins: "if God wanted to forgive our sins, why not just forgive them? Who is God trying to impress?"[166] Oxford theologian Alister McGrath maintains that Dawkins is "ignorant" of Christian theology, and therefore unable to engage religion and faith intelligently. He goes on to say that the atonement was necessary because of our flawed human nature, which made it impossible for us to save ourselves, and that it expresses God's love for us by removing the sin that stands in the way of our reconciliation with God.[167] Responding to the criticism that he is "ignorant" of theology, Dawkins asks, "Do you have to read up on leprechology before disbelieving in leprechauns?"[168] and "[y]es, I have, of course, met this point before. It sounds superficially fair. But it presupposes that there is something in Christian theology to be ignorant about. The entire thrust of my position is that Christian theology is a non-subject."[169] Dinesh D'Souza says that Dawkins' criticism "only makes sense if you assume Christians made the whole thing up." He goes on to say that Christians view it as a beautiful sacrifice, and that "through the extremity of Golgotha, Christ reconciles divine justice and divine mercy."[170] Andrew Wilson argues that Dawkins misses the point of the atonement, which has nothing to do with masochism, but is based on the concepts of holiness, sin and grace.[171]

Robert Green Ingersoll suggests that the concept of the atonement is simply an extension of the Mosaic tradition of blood sacrifice and "is the enemy of morality".[172][173] The death of Jesus Christ represents the blood sacrifice to end all blood sacrifices; the resulting mechanism of atonement by proxy through that final sacrifice has appeal as a more convenient and much less costly approach to redemption than repeated animal sacrifice—a common sense solution to the problem of reinterpreting ancient religious approaches based on sacrifice.

The prominent Christian apologist Josh McDowell, in More Than A Carpenter, addresses the issue through an analogy of a real-life judge in California who was forced to fine his daughter $100 for speeding, but then came down, took off his robe, and paid the fine for her from his billfold,[174] though as in this and other cases, illustrations are only cautiously intended to describe certain aspects of the atonement.[175]

Second Coming edit

Several verses in the New Testament contain Jesus' predictions that the Second Coming would take place within a century following his death.[original research?][176] Jesus appears to promise for his followers the second coming to happen before the generation he is preaching to vanishes.[according to whom?] This is seen as an essential failure in the teachings of Christ by many critics such as Bertrand Russell.[177]

However, Preterists argue that Jesus did not mean his second coming[178] but speaks about demonstrations of his might, formulating this as "coming in his kingdom", especially the destruction of the Second Temple in the Siege of Jerusalem in 70 AD, which he foretold, and by which time not all of his disciples were still living.[179] According to this view Matthew 10:23 should be understood in the same way.[180]

Inconsistency with regard to the Old Testament's conception of the afterlife edit

Most Christian traditions teach belief in life after death as a central and indispensable tenet of their faith. Critics argue that the Christian conception of the afterlife is inconsistent with that of the Hebrew Bible. George E. Mendenhall believes there is no concept of immortality or life after death in the Hebrew Bible.[181] The presumption is that the deceased are inert, lifeless, and engaging in no activity.[181]

The concept of Sheol (Hebrew: שְׁאוֹל), or a state of nothingness, was shared among Babylonian and Israelite beliefs. "Sheol, as it was called by the ancient Israelites, is the land of no return, lying below the cosmic ocean, to which all, the mighty and the weak, travel in the ghostly form they assume after death, known as Rephaim. There the dead have no experience of either joy or pain, perceiving no light, feeling no movement."[182] Obayashi concludes that the Israelites were satisfied with such a shadowy realm of afterlife because they were more deeply concerned with survival.[182]

Before the early Christian split from mainstream Judaism in the 1st century, the belief in an afterlife was already prevalent in Jewish thinking[note 1] among the Pharisees[183][note 2] and Essenes[note 3]. The themes of unity and Sheol, which largely shaped the ancient tradition of Judaism, had been undermined when only the most pious of Jews were massacred during the Maccabean revolt.

Criticism of Christians edit

Hypocrisy edit

Gaudium et spes claims that the example of Christians may be a contributory factor to atheism, writing, "...believers can have more than a little to do with the birth of atheism. To the extent that they neglect their own training in the faith, or teach erroneous doctrine, or are deficient in their religious, moral, or social life, they must be said to conceal rather than reveal the authentic face of God and religion."[184]

Secular and religious critics have accused many Christians of being hypocritical.[185] Tom Whiteman, a Philadelphia psychologist found that the primary reasons for Christian divorce include adultery, abuse (including substance, physical and verbal abuse), and abandonment whereas the number one reason cited for divorce in the general population was incompatibility.[186]

Sectarianism edit

Some have argued that Christianity is undermined by the inability of Christians to agree on matters of faith and church governance, and the tendency for the content of their faith to be determined by regional or political factors. Schopenhauer sarcastically suggested:[187]

To the South German ecclesiastic the truth of the Catholic dogma is quite obvious, to the North German, the Protestant. If then, these convictions are based on objective reasons, the reasons must be climatic, and thrive, like plants, some only here, some only there. The convictions of those who are thus locally convinced are taken on trust and believed by the masses everywhere.

Christians respond that Ecumenism has helped bring together such communities, where in the past mistranslations of Christological Greek terms may have resulted in seemingly different views. Non-denominational Christianity represents another approach towards reducing the divisions within Christianity, although many Christian groups claiming to be non-denominational wind up with similar problems.

Persecution by Christians edit

 
The torture used against accused witches, 1577
 
Women being hanged for witchcraft, Newcastle, 1655

Individuals and groups throughout history have been persecuted by certain Christians (and Christian groups) based upon sex, sexual orientation, race, and religion (even within the bounds of Christianity itself). Many of the persecutors attempted to justify their actions with particular scriptural interpretations. During Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, important Christian theologians advocated religious persecution to varying degrees.[citation needed] However, early modern Europe witnessed a turning point in the Christian debate on persecution and toleration. Nowadays all significant Christian denominations embrace religious toleration, and "look back on centuries of persecution with a mixture of revulsion and incomprehension".[188]

Early Christianity was a minority religion in the Roman Empire and the early Christians were themselves persecuted during that time. After Constantine I converted to Christianity, it became the dominant religion in the Roman Empire. Already under the reign of Constantine I, Christian heretics had been persecuted; beginning in the late 4th century AD also the ancient pagan religions were actively suppressed. In the view of many historians, the Constantinian shift turned Christianity from a persecuted into a persecuting religion.[189]

After the decline of the Roman Empire, the further Christianization of Europe was to a large extent peaceful.[190] However, encounters between Christians and Pagans were sometimes confrontational, and some Christian kings (Charlemagne, Olaf I of Norway) were known for their violence against pagans. In the late Middle Ages, the appearance of the Cathars and Bogomils in Europe laid the stage for the later witch-hunts. These (probably gnostic-influenced) sects were seen as heretics by the Catholic Church, and the Inquisition was established to counter them. In the case of the Cathars, the Albigensian Crusade violently suppressed them. In the Baltic countries, pagans were killed, subjugated or forcibly baptized.

From the start of Christian rule in Europe, Jews were increasingly discriminated against, at times rising to outright persecution. This sometimes took the form of events like the Rhineland massacres, and the Blood libel was often the source (claiming Jews ritually murdered Christian children). Jews were also expelled from a number of countries, including from England and later Spain. In the latter case, if converted they could remain. However, as most did so only under duress, Judaism continued to be practiced in secret by many. As a result, the Spanish Inquisition was formed to root them out, along with the secret Muslims there. In the First Crusade, after the Siege of Jerusalem, all Jews and Muslims within the city were massacred by the Crusaders.[citation needed]

After the Protestant Reformation, the devastation caused by the partly religiously motivated wars (Thirty Years' War, English Civil War, French Wars of Religion) in Europe in the 17th century gave rise to the ideas of religious toleration, freedom of religion and religious pluralism.

Christianity in Nazi Germany edit

 
German Christians celebrating Luther-Day in Berlin in 1933

Adolf Hitler's 1920 Nazi Party Platform promoted Positive Christianity—which mixed ideas of racial purity and Nazi ideology with elements of Christianity and removed "Jewish" elements.[191][192]

Nazism aimed to transform the subjective consciousness of the German people—their attitudes, values and mentalities—into a single-minded, obedient "national community". The Nazis believed they would therefore have to replace class, religious and regional allegiances.[193] Under the Gleichschaltung process, Hitler attempted to create a unified Protestant Reich Church from Germany's 28 existing Protestant churches. The plan failed, and was resisted by the Confessing Church. Persecution of the Catholic Church in Germany followed the Nazi takeover. Hitler moved quickly to eliminate political catholicism. Amid harassment of the Church, the Reich concordat treaty with the Vatican was signed in 1933, and promised to respect Church autonomy. Hitler routinely disregarded the Concordat, closing all Catholic institutions whose functions were not strictly religious. Clergy, nuns, and lay leaders were targeted, with thousands of arrests over the ensuing years.[194]

Hitler was supportive of Christianity in public, yet hostile to it in private. Anti-clericalists like Joseph Goebbels and Martin Bormann saw the conflict with the Churches as a priority concern, and anti-church and anti-clerical sentiments were strong among grassroots party activists.[195] Hitler was born to a practising Catholic mother and an anticlerical father, but after leaving home Hitler never again attended Mass or received the sacraments. According to biographer Alan Bullock, Hitler retained some regard for the organisational power of Catholicism but held private contempt for its central teachings, which he said, if taken to their conclusion, "would mean the systematic cultivation of the human failure."[196]

Joseph Goebbels, the Reich Minister of Propaganda, used his position to widely publicise trials of clergy and nuns in his propaganda campaigns, showing the cases in the worst possible light. In 1928, soon after his election to the Reichstag, Goebbels wrote in his diary that National Socialism was a "religion" that needed a genius to uproot "outmoded religious practices" and put new ones in their place: "One day soon National Socialism will be the religion of all Germans. My Party is my church, and I believe I serve the Lord best if I do his will, and liberate my oppressed people from the fetters of slavery. That is my gospel."[197] As the war progressed, on the "Church Question", he wrote "after the war it has to be generally solved... There is, namely, an insoluble opposition between the Christian and a heroic-German world view".[195]

Hitler's chosen deputy and private secretary, Martin Bormann, was a rigid guardian of National Socialist orthodoxy and saw Christianity and Nazism as "incompatible" (mainly because of its Jewish origins),[194][198] as did the official Nazi philosopher, Alfred Rosenberg. In his "Myth of the Twentieth Century" (1930), Rosenberg wrote that the main enemies of the Germans were the "Russian Tartars" and "Semites"—with "Semites" including Christians, especially the Catholic Church.[199]

According to Bullock, Hitler considered the Protestant clergy to be "insignificant" and "submissive" and lacking in a religion to be taken seriously.[200] Hitler attempted to create a unified Protestant Reich Church from 28 separate regional churches through Gleichschaltung. His bid to create a unified Reich Church ultimately failed, and Hitler became disinterested in supporting the so-called "German Christians" Nazi aligned movement. Hitler initially lent support to Ludwig Muller, a Nazi and former naval chaplain, to serve as Reich Bishop, but his heretical views against Paul the Apostle and the Semitic origins of Christ and the Bible (see Positive Christianity) quickly alienated sections of the Protestant church. Lutheran Pastor Martin Niemöller created the Confessing Church movement to oppose the Nazification of Protestant churches.[201] Neimoller was arrested by the Gestapo in 1937, and sent to the concentration camps.[202] The Confessing Church seminary was prohibited that same year.[203]

Christian persecution complex edit

Christian persecution complex is the notion that Christian values and Christians are being oppressed by social groups and governments.[204] According to Elizabeth Castelli, some set the starting point in the middle of the 20th century while others point to the 1990s. After the September 11 attacks, it accelerated.[205] The concept that Christianity is being oppressed is popular among conservative politicians in contemporary politics in the United States, and they utilize this idea to address issues concerning LGBT people or the ACA's Contraceptives Mandate, which they perceive as an attack on Christianity.[206]

Others (like professor Candida Moss and lecturer Paul Cavill) point out that this mentality of being persecuted roots back to the earliest times.[207] It appeared during the era of early Christianity due to internal Christian identity politics.[208][209] Cavill claims that the New Testament teaches that persecutions are inherent to Christianity.[210]

Criticism by other religions edit

Hinduism edit

Ram Mohan Roy criticized Christian doctrines, and asserted that they are "unreasonable" and "self-contradictory".[211] He further adds that people (even from India) were embracing Christianity due to the economic hardship and weakness, just like European Jews were pressured to embrace Christianity by both encouragement and force.[212]

Vivekananda regarded Christianity as "collection of little bits of Indian thought. Ours is the religion of which Buddhism with all its greatness is a rebel child, and of which Christianity is a very patchy imitation."[213]

Philosopher Dayanand Saraswati, regarded Christianity as "barbarous religion, and a 'false religion' religion believed only by fools and by the people in a state of barbarism,"[214] he included that Bible contains many stories and precepts that are immoral, praising cruelty, deceit and encouraging sin.[215]

In 1956 the Niyogi Committee Report On Christian Missionary Activities was published by the Government of Madhya Pradesh. This influential report on controversial missionary activities in India recommended that suitable controls on conversions brought about through illegal means should be implemented.[216] Also in the 1950s, K.M. Panikkar's work "Asia and Western Dominance" was published and was one of the first post-Independence Indian critiques of Christian missions. It argued that the attempt to convert Asia has definitely failed, and that this failure was due to the missionaries' claim of a monopoly of truth which was alien to the Asian mind, their association with imperialism and the attitude of moral and racial superiority of the Christian West.[216]

The Indian writer and philosopher Ram Swarup was "most responsible for reviving and re-popularizing" the Hindu critique of Christian missionary practices in the 1980s.[217] He insisted that monotheistic religions like Christianity "nurtured among their adherents a lack of respect for other religions".[217] Other important writers who criticized Christianity from an Indian and Hindu perspective include Sita Ram Goel and Arun Shourie.[218][217] Arun Shourie urged Hindus to be "alert to the fact that missionaries have but one goal—that of harvesting us for the church"; and he wrote that they have "developed a very well-knit, powerful, extremely well-endowed organizational framework" for attaining that goal.[218] In his "widely read and cited" book Missionaries in India, Shourie tried to build a case that Christian evangelistic methods were cynically calculating and materialistic, and to Shourie, missionary strategizing "sounded more like the Planning Commission, if not the Pentagon, than like Jesus".[217][219]

Indian philosopher Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan wrote:

Unfortunately Christian religion inherited the Semitic creed of the 'jealous God' in the view of Christ as 'the only begotten son of God' so could not brook any rival near the throne. When Europe accepted the Christian religion, in spite of its own broad humanism, it accepted the fierce intolerance which is the natural result of belief in 'the truth once for all delivered to the saints.'[220]

Judaism edit

 
Jews burned alive for the alleged host desecration in Bavaria, in 1337

Shlomo ben Aderet called Christianity a lesser form of monotheism that lacks the unified deity of Judaism.[221] Also in the Middle Ages, Maimonides considered Christianity to be a prime example of idolatrous heresy.[3]

David Flusser viewed Christianity as "cheaper Judaism" and highly anti-Jewish. He also regarded the "failure of Christianity to convert the Jewish people to the new message" as "precisely the reason for the strong anti-Jewish trend in Christianity."[222]

Stephen Samuel Wise criticized the Christian community for its failure to rescue Jews from Europe during Nazi rule. He wrote that:

A Christian world that will permit millions of Jews to be slain without moving heaven by prayer and earth in every human way to save its Jews has lost its capacity for moral and spiritual survival.[223]

Islam edit

Muslim scholars have criticized Christianity, usually for its trinity concept. They argue that this doctrine is an invention, distortion of the idea about God, and presentation of the idea that there are three gods, a form of shirk, or polytheism.[224] According to Qu'ran 9:31, Christians should follow one God, but they have made multiple.

They have taken as lords beside Allah their rabbis and their monks and the Messiah son of Mary, when they were bidden to worship only One God.[225]

Origins edit

Some have argued that Christianity is not founded on a historical Jesus, instead, they have argued that Christianity is founded on a mythical creation.[226] This view proposes that the idea of Jesus was the Jewish manifestation of Hellenistic mystery cults that acknowledged the non-historic nature of their deity using it instead as a teaching device.[227] However, the position that Jesus was not a historical figure is essentially without support among biblical scholars and classical historians.[228]

Theologians and Biblical Scholars such as James H. Charlesworth caution against using parallels with life-death-rebirth gods in the widespread mystery religions prevalent in the Hellenistic culture to conclude that Jesus is a purely legendary figure. Charlesworth argues that "it would be foolish to continue to foster the illusion that the Gospels are merely fictional stories like the legends of Hercules and Asclepius. The theologies in the New Testament are grounded on interpretations of real historical events."[229]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Le Roy Froom, Prophetic Faith of Our Fathers , Vol. I, Washington D.C. Review & Herald 1946, p. 328.
  2. ^ Martin 1991, p. 3–4.
  3. ^ a b c Novak, David (1992). "Chapter 3: Maimonides's View of Christianity". Jewish-Christian Dialogue: A Jewish Justification. New York: Oxford Academic. pp. 57–72. ISBN 9780199853410.
  4. ^ Winter, H.R.; Bellows, T.J. (1981). People and Politics: An Introduction to Political Science. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-08153-1. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
  5. ^ a b Martin 1991, p. 4.
  6. ^ Kant, Immanuel. Critique of Pure Reason, pp. 553–69, cf. Kant's May 1793 letter (Ak 11:414) expressing "true respect for the Christian religion [that has] been my guide in this work" aiming at a "union of the Christian religion with the purest practical reason."
  7. ^ Robert R. Palmer and Joel Colton, A History of the Modern World (New York: McGraw Hill, 1995), pp. 388–92.
  8. ^ Robert R. Palmer and Joel Colton, A History of the Modern World (New York: McGraw Hill, 1995), p. 630.
  9. ^ Browning, W.R.F. "Biblical criticism." A Dictionary of the Bible. 1997 Encyclopedia.com. 8 Apr. 2010
  10. ^ a b Robinson, B.A. Biblical Criticism, including Form Criticism, Tradition Criticism, Higher Criticism, etc. Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance, 2008. Web: 8 Apr 2010.
  11. ^ a b Mather, G.A. & L.A. Nichols, Dictionary of Cults, Sects, Religions and the Occult, Zondervan (1993) (quoted in Robinson, Biblical Criticism
  12. ^ Bruce Metzger, cited in The Case for Christ, Lee Strobel
  13. ^ Ehrman, Bart D. (2005). Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why. HarperCollins. p. 91. ISBN 9780060738174. Retrieved 2 August 2013. 91 abbreviations.
  14. ^ Ehrman, Bart D. The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture. New York: Oxford U. Press, 1993
  15. ^ Wallace, Daniel B. "The Gospel According to Bart: A Review Article of Misquoting Jesus by Bart Ehrman," Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, June 2006 (also available at Bible.org)
    • Craig L. Blomberg, "Review of Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why," 2009-04-25 at the Wayback Machine Denver Seminary, February 2006
    • Howe, Thomas (2006). "A Response To Bart D_ Ehrman's Misquoting Jesus". International Society of Christian Apologetics. p. PDF download. Retrieved 31 July 2013.
  16. ^ Ehrman, Bart D. (2006). Whose Word Is It?. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 166. ISBN 978-0-8264-9129-9.
  17. ^ Bruce Metzger "A Textual Commentary on the New Testament", Second Edition, 1994, German Bible Society
  18. ^ Mk. 16
  19. ^ a b K. Aland and B. Aland, "The Text of the New Testament: An Introduction to the Critical Editions and to the Theory and Practice of Modern Text Criticism", 1995, op. cit., pp. 29–30.
  20. ^ See for example the list of alleged contradictions from The Skeptic's Annotated Bible and Robert G. Ingersoll's article Inspiration Of Bible.
  21. ^ M.W.J. Phelan. The Inspiration of the Pentateuch, Two-edged Sword Publications (March 9, 2005) ISBN 978-0-9547205-6-8
  22. ^ Ronald D. Witherup, Biblical Fundamentalism: What Every Catholic Should Know, Liturgical Press (2001), page 26.
  23. ^ France, R.T., Tyndale New Testament Commentaries: Matthew, Inter-Varsity Press, Leicester, England (1985), pg. 17.
  24. ^ Britannica Encyclopedia, Jesus Christ, p.17
  25. ^ a b c Lindsell, Harold. "The Battle for the Bible", Zondervan Publishing House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA (1976), pg. 38.
  26. ^ a b c "Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy".
  27. ^ As in 2 Timothy 3:16, discussed by Thompson, Mark (2006). A Clear and Present Word. New Studies in Biblical Theology. Downers Grove: Apollos. p. 92. ISBN 978-1-84474-140-3.
  28. ^ Norman L. Geisler; William E. Nix (2012), From God To Us Revised and Expanded: How We Got Our Bible, Moody Publishers, p. PT45, ISBN 978-0802483928 "faith and practice"
  29. ^ See notably Grudem, representative of recent scholarship with this emphasis (Grudem, Wayne (1994). Systematic Theology. Nottingham: Inter-Varsity Press. pp. 90–105. ISBN 978-0-85110-652-6.).
  30. ^ Till, Farrell (1991). "Prophecies: Imaginary and Unfulfilled". Internet Infidels. Retrieved 2007-01-16.
  31. ^ W. H. Bellinger; William Reuben Farmer, eds. (1998). Jesus and the Suffering Servant: Isaiah 53 and Christian Origins. Trinity Press. ISBN 9781563382307. Retrieved 2 August 2013. Did Jesus of Nazareth live and die without the teaching about the righteous Servant of the Lord in Isaiah 53 having exerted any significant influence on his ministry? Is it probable that this text exerted no significant influence upon Jesus' understanding of the plan of God to save the nations that the prophet Isaiah sets forth?" —Two questions addressed in a conference on "Isaiah 53 and Christian Origins" at Baylor University in the fall of 1995, the principal papers of which are available in "Jesus and the Suffering Servant.
  32. ^ Peter W. Stoner, Science Speaks, Moody Pr, 1958, ISBN 0-8024-7630-9
  33. ^ Harris, Stephen L. (2002). Understanding the Bible (6 ed.). McGraw-Hill College. pp. 376–377. ISBN 9780767429160. Retrieved 2 August 2013. (Further snippets of quote: B C D)
  34. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2007-09-29.
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  37. ^ McDowell, Josh (1999). "chapter 8". The New Evidence that Demands a Verdict. Thomas Nelson. ISBN 9781850785521.
  38. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-11-12. Retrieved 2013-08-01.
  39. ^ See also "Given the New Testament a Chance?" from the Messiah Truth website
  40. ^ a b David Sper, Managing Editor, "Questions Skeptics Ask About Messianic Prophecies," 2008-11-20 at the Wayback Machine RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI, 1997
  41. ^ See Psalms 22:6–8,22:13; 69:8, 69:20–21; Isaiah 11:1, 49:7, 53:2–3,53:8; Daniel 9:26
  42. ^ Martin 1991, p. 10-12 & 105.
  43. ^ Martin 1991, p. 111.
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  45. ^ Martin 1991, p. 121.
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  47. ^ Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 978-0-19-280290-3), article Virgin Birth of Christ
  48. ^ See, for example, the Council of Jerusalem described in Acts 15
  49. ^ Melvin E. Page, Penny M. Sonnenburg (2003). Colonialism: an international, social, cultural, and political encyclopedia, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 496. Of all religions, Christianity has been most associated with colonialism because several of its forms (Catholicism and Protestantism) were the religions of the European powers engaged in colonial enterprise on a global scale.
  50. ^ Bevans, Steven. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-10-27. Retrieved 2010-11-17. The modern missionary era was in many ways the 'religious arm' of colonialism, whether Portuguese and Spanish colonialism in the sixteenth Century, or British, French, German, Belgian or American colonialism in the nineteenth. This was not all bad — oftentimes missionaries were heroic defenders of the rights of indigenous peoples
  51. ^ Andrews, Edward (2010). "Christian Missions and Colonial Empires Reconsidered: A Black Evangelist in West Africa, 1766–1816". Journal of Church & State. 51 (4): 663–691. doi:10.1093/jcs/csp090. Historians have traditionally looked at Christian missionaries in one of two ways. The first church historians to catalogue missionary history provided hagiographic descriptions of their trials, successes, and sometimes even martyrdom. Missionaries were thus visible saints, exemplars of ideal piety in a sea of persistent savagery. However, by the middle of the twentieth century, an era marked by civil rights movements, anti-colonialism, and growing secularization, missionaries were viewed quite differently. Instead of godly martyrs, historians now described missionaries as arrogant and rapacious imperialists. Christianity became not a saving grace but a monolithic and aggressive force that missionaries imposed upon defiant natives. Indeed, missionaries were now understood as important agents in the ever-expanding nation-state, or "ideological shock troops for colonial invasion whose zealotry blinded them.
  52. ^ Meador, Jake (2010-09-17). "Cosmetic Christianity and the Problem of Colonialism – Responding to Brian McLaren". Retrieved 17 November 2010. According to Jake Meador, "some Christians have tried to make sense of post-colonial Christianity by renouncing practically everything about the Christianity of the colonizers. They reason that if the colonialists' understanding of Christianity could be used to justify rape, murder, theft, and empire then their understanding of Christianity is completely wrong.
  53. ^ Conquistadors, Michael Wood, p. 20, BBC Publications, 2000
  54. ^ Eph. 6:5–8
  55. ^ Glenn Sunshine, “Christianity and Slavery,” in True Reason: Confronting the Irrationality of the New Atheism, ed. Tom Gilson and Carson Weitnauer (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 2013), 292–293.
  56. ^ Glancy 2002, p. 141-145.
  57. ^ Ellerbe 1995, p. 90-92.
  58. ^ P.G. Kirchschlaeger, "Slavery and Early Christianity - A reflection from a human rights perspective", Acta theologica. vol.36 suppl.23 Bloemfontein 2016, paragraph 4.3. http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/actat.v23i1s.4
  59. ^ Youval Rotman, Byzantine Slavery and the Mediterranean World, Harvard University Press, 2009, pp 131, 132. Footnotes to Gruszka, Peter. "Die Ansichten über das Sklaventum in den Schriften ..." Antiquitas 10 (1983): 106-118.
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  61. ^ Youval Rotman, "Byzantine Slavery and the Mediterranean World", transl. by Jane Marie Todd, Cambridge, Massachusetts – London, Harvard University Press 2009. Book presentation in a) Nikolaos Linardos (University of Athens), Mediterranean Chronicle 1 (2011) pp. 281, 282, b) Alice Rio, American Historical Review, Vol. 115, Issue 5, 2010, pp. 1513–1514
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  63. ^ Jack D. Forbes (1993), Africans and Native Americans: The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red-Black Peoples, University of Illinois Press, p. 27, ISBN 978-0252063213
  64. ^ Griswold, Eliza (June 10, 2021). "Southern Baptist Convention: How the Convention's battle over race reveals an emerging evangelical schism". Retrieved August 17, 2023. Founders of the new organization claimed that, according to the Bible, slavery was an institution of heaven. They pushed the idea that Black people were descended from the Biblical figure Ham, Noah's cursed son, and that their subjugation was therefore divinely ordained
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  67. ^ Rodney Stark, For the Glory of God: How Monotheism Led to Reformations, Science, Witch-Hunts, and the End of Slavery ISBN 978-0-691-11436-1 (2003)
  68. ^ Lamin Sanneh, Abolitionists Abroad: American Blacks and the Making of Modern West Africa, Harvard University Press ISBN 978-0-674-00718-5 (2001)
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  103. ^ Quotation: "In the late Victorian period it was common to write about the "warfare between science and religion" and to presume that the two bodies of culture must always have been in conflict. However, it is a very long time since these attitudes have been held by historians of science." (p. 195) Shapin, S. (1996). The Scientific Revolution. University of Chicago Press Chicago, Ill.
  104. ^ Quotation: "In its traditional forms, the [conflict] thesis has been largely discredited." (p. 42) Brooke, J. H. (1991). Science and Religion: Some Historical Perspectives. Cambridge University Press.
  105. ^ Quotation from Ferngren's introduction at "Gary Ferngren (editor). Science & Religion: A Historical Introduction. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8018-7038-0.": "…while [John] Brooke's view [of a complexity thesis rather than conflict thesis] has gained widespread acceptance among professional historians of science, the traditional view remains strong elsewhere, not least in the popular mind." (p. x)
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  107. ^ From Ferngren's introduction:
    "…while [John] Brooke's view [of a complexity thesis rather than conflict thesis] has gained widespread acceptance among professional historians of science, the traditional view remains strong elsewhere, not least in the popular mind. (p. x)-Gary Ferngren, (2002); Introduction, p. ix)
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  151. ^ "Since we all inherit Adam's sin, we all deserve eternal damnation. All who die unbaptized, even infants, will go to hell and suffer unending torment. We have no reason to complain of this, since we are all wicked. (In the Confessions, the Saint enumerates the crimes of which he was guilty in the cradle.) But by God's free grace certain people, among those who have been baptized, are chosen to go to heaven; these are the elect. They do not go to heaven because they are good; we are all totally depraved, except insofar as God's grace, which is only bestowed on the elect, enables us to be otherwise. No reason can be given why some are saved and the rest damned; this is due to God's unmotivated choice. Damnation proves God's justice; salvation His mercy. Both equally display His goodness." A history of Western Philosophy by Bertrand Russell, Simon & Schuster, 1945
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  203. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica Online - Dietrich Bonhoeffer; web 25 April 2013
  204. ^ Hoover 2015, p. 23: According to Hoover Linda "...Castelli (2007) believed the reluctance to self-disclose could be the “Christian persecution complex” (p. 156), an ideology that Christian values are unfavorably targeted by social and governmental opposition..."
  205. ^ Årsheim 2016, p. 7:According to Elizabeth Castelli, this engagement can be ascribed to a ‘Christian persecution complex’ that gathered pace throughout the 1990s, with the adoption of the US International Religious Freedom Act in 1998 as a significant milestone, and with the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001 as an accelerating factor (Castelli 2007: 173). This complex “…mobilizes the language of religious persecution to shut down political debate and critique by characterizing any position not in alignment with this politicized version of Christianity as an example of anti-religious bigotry and persecution. Moreover, it routinely deploys the archetypal figure of the martyr as a source of unquestioned religious and political authority.” (Castelli 2007: 154).
  206. ^ Ben-Asher 2017, p. 22: «...The notion that Christianity is under attack is prevalent in contemporary arguments for religious exemptions. Conservative legislatures, politicians and the media frequently characterize issues such as same-sex marriage and the ACA’s Contraceptives Mandate as attacks on Christians or Christianity....
  207. ^ "Professor Candida Moss". birmingham.ac.uk. Retrieved 2018-02-21.
  208. ^ Janes & Houen 2014, p. 24: Indeed, a recent study by Candida Moss, The Myth of Persecution has suggested that Christian "persecution complex" was the result of internal Christian identity politics
  209. ^ "Dr Paul Cavill". hist.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 2018-02-27.
  210. ^ Cavill 2013, p. 81: The early christian persecution complex is often underemphasised, but is important. The New Testament teaches that persecution is the inevitable by-product of effective Christianity
  211. ^ "Raja Rammohun Roy: Encounter with Islam and Christianity and the Articulation of Hindu Self-Consciousness. Page 166, by Abidullah Al-Ansari Ghazi, year = 2010
  212. ^ "Raja Rammohun Roy: Encounter with Islam and Christianity and the Articulation of Hindu Self-Consciousness. Page 169, by Abidullah Al-Ansari Ghazi, year = 2010
  213. ^ "Neo-Hindu Views of Christianity", p. 96, by Arvind Sharma, year = 1988
  214. ^ "Gandhi on Pluralism and Communalism", by P. L. John Panicker, p.39, year = 2006
  215. ^ "Dayānanda Sarasvatī, his life and ideas", p. 267, by J. T. F. Jordens
  216. ^ a b Chapter 6 Hindutva, Secular India and the Report of the Christian Missionary Activities Enquiry Committee: 1954-57 Sebastian C.H. Kim, in Nationalism and Hindutva: A Christian Response: Papers from the 10th CMS Consultation, Mark T. B. Laing, 2005 ISBN 9788172148386
  217. ^ a b c d Pentecostals, Proselytization, and Anti-Christian Violence in Contemporary India by Chad M. Bauman, Oxford University Press, 2015
  218. ^ a b The Debate on Conversion Initiated by the Sangh Parivar, 1998-1999 Author: Sebastian Kim, Source: Transformation, Vol. 22, No. 4, Christianity and Religions (October 2005), pp. 224- 237
  219. ^ Dr. Timothy Hembrom. Book review on "Arun Shourie and his Christian Critic" and on S.R. Goel, Catholic Ashrams, in the Indian Journal of Theology "Book Reviews," Indian Journal of Theology 37.2 (1995): 93-99.
  220. ^ Schilpp, Paul Arthur (1992). The Philosophy of Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan. Motilal Banarsidass Publ. p. 641. ISBN 9788120807921 – via Google Books.
  221. ^ "Judaism and Other Religions", p. 88, publisher = Palgrave Macmillan
  222. ^ Anti-Judaism and Early Christian Identity: A Critique of the Scholarly Consensus, by Miriam S. Taylor, p. 41
  223. ^ Wise Criticizes Christian World for Failure to Rescue Jews in Nazi Europe 19 February 1943
  224. ^ Christianity: An Introduction, p. 125, by Alister E. McGrath
  225. ^ "At-Tawba, Al Qu'ran". University of Leeds. Retrieved 5 February 2017.
  226. ^ Examples of authors who argue the Jesus myth theory: Thomas L. Thompson The Messiah Myth: The Near Eastern Roots of Jesus and David (Jonathan Cape, Publisher, 2006); Michael Martin, The Case Against Christianity (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1991), 36–72; John Mackinnon Robertson
  227. ^ Freke, Timothy and Gandy, Peter (1999) The Jesus Mysteries. London: Thorsons (Harper Collins)
  228. ^ Historian Michael Grant stated, "To sum up, modern critical methods fail to support the Christ myth theory. It has 'again and again been answered and annihilated by first rank scholars.' In recent years, 'no serious scholar has ventured to postulate the non historicity of Jesus' or at any rate very few, and they have not succeeded in disposing of the much stronger, indeed very abundant, evidence to the contrary." —Michael Grant, Jesus: An Historian's Review of the Gospels (Scribner, 1995).
    • "There are those who argue that Jesus is a figment of the Church’s imagination, that there never was a Jesus at all. I have to say that I do not know any respectable critical scholar who says that any more." —Burridge, R & Gould, G, Jesus Now and Then, Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2004, p.34.
    • Michael James McClymond, Familiar Stranger: An Introduction to Jesus of Nazareth, Eerdrmans (2004), page 24: "most scholars regard the argument for Jesus' non-existence as unworthy of any response".
  229. ^ Charlesworth, James H., ed. (2006). Jesus and Archaeology. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans. ISBN 978-0-8028-4880-2.

Sources edit

  • Årsheim, Helge (2016). "Internal affairs? Assessing NGO engagement for religious freedom at the United Nations and beyond". In Stensvold, Anne (ed.). Religion, state and the United Nations: Value politics. London: Routledge. pp. 79–94. ISBN 978-1-138-93865-6. SSRN 2892536.
  • Ben-Asher, Noah (September 21, 2017). "Faith-Based Emergency Powers". Harvard Journal of Law and Gender. 41: 269–300. SSRN 3040902.
  • Cavill, Paul (2013). "Anglo-Saxons Saints' Lives and Deaths". In Kojecký, Roger; Tate, Andrew (eds.). Visions and revisions: The word and the text (Unabridged ed.). Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4438-4332-4.
  • Ellerbe, Helen (1995). The Dark Side of Christian History. Morningstar Books. ISBN 978-0-9644873-4-5.
  • Glancy, Jennifer A. (2002). Slavery in Early Christianity. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-1-4514-1094-5.
  • Hoover, Linda (2015). Effects of Negative Media on Evangelical Christians' Attitudes Toward Evangelism (PhD).
  • Janes, Dominic; Houen, Alex, eds. (2014). Martyrdom and terrorism: Pre-modern to contemporary perspectives. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-995985-3.
  • Martin, Michael (1991). The Case Against Christianity. Temple University Press. ISBN 978-1-56639-081-1.

Further reading edit

Skeptical of Christianity edit

  • A Rationalist Encyclopaedia: A book of reference on religion, philosophy, ethics and science, Gryphon Books (1971).
  • Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon, by Daniel Dennett
  • Civilization and its discontents, by Sigmund Freud
  • Death and Afterlife, Perspectives of World Religions, by Hiroshi Obayashi
  • Einstein and Religion, by Max Jammer
  • From Jesus to Christianity, by L. Michael White
  • Future of an illusion, by Sigmund Freud
  • Harvesting our souls: Missionaries, their design, their claims. by Shourie, Arun. (2006). New Delhi: Rupa.
  • History of Hindu-Christian encounters, AD 304 to 1996. by Goel, Sita Ram. 2016.
  • Hindu view of Christianity and Islam. by Swarup, Ram (1992).
  • Letter to a Christian Nation, by Sam Harris
  • Light of truth : Or an English translation of the Satyarth Prakash. Dayananda, S., & Bharadwaja, C. (1915). Allahabad: Arya Pratinidhi Sabha.
  • Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why, by Bart Ehrman
  • Missionaries in India: Continuities, changes, dilemmas. Shourie, Arun. (2006). New Delhi: Rupa.
  • My Illumination by Richard Green
  • Out of my later years and the World as I see it, by Albert Einstein
  • Russell on Religion, by Louis Greenspan (Includes most all of Russell's essays on religion)
  • The Antichrist, by Friedrich Nietzsche
  • The God Delusion, by Richard Dawkins
  • God Is Not Great, by Christopher Hitchens
  • The Varieties of Scientific Experience: A Personal View of the Search for God, by Carl Sagan
  • Understanding the Bible, by Stephen L Harris
  • Where God and Science Meet [Three Volumes]: How Brain and Evolutionary Studies Alter Our Understanding of Religion, by Patrick McNamara
  • Why I am not a Christian and other essays, by Bertrand Russell
  • Why I Became an Atheist: A Former Preacher Rejects Christianity, by John W. Loftus (Prometheus Books, 2008)
  • The Christian Delusion, edited by John W. Loftus, foreword by Dan Barker (Prometheus Books, 2010)
  • Christian Missionary Activities Enquiry Committee (Madhya Pradesh, India), and Sita Ram Goel. 1998. Vindicated by time: the Niyogi Committee report on Christian missionary activities. New Delhi: Voice of India.
  • The End of Christianity, edited by John W. Loftus (Prometheus Books, 2011)
  • The Historical Evidence for Jesus, by G. A. Wells (Prometheus Books, 1988)
  • The Jesus Puzzle, by Earl Doherty (Age of Reason Publications, 1999)
  • The encyclopedia of Biblical errancy, by C. Dennis McKinsey (Prometheus Books, 1995)
  • godless, by Dan Barker (Ulysses Press 2008)
  • The Jesus Mysteries by Timothy Freke and Peter Gandy (Element 1999)
  • The reason driven life by Robert M. Price (Prometheus Books, 2006)
  • The Case Against Christianity by Michael Martin
  • The case against the case for Christ by Robert M. Price (American atheist press 2010)
  • God, the failed hypothesis by Victor J. Stenger (Prometheus Books, 2007)
  • Jesus never existed by Kenneth Humphreys (Iconoclast Press, 2005)

Defending Christianity edit

criticism, christianity, long, history, which, stretches, back, initial, formation, religion, roman, empire, critics, have, challenged, christian, beliefs, teachings, well, christian, actions, from, crusades, modern, terrorism, arguments, against, christianity. Criticism of Christianity has a long history which stretches back to the initial formation of the religion in the Roman Empire Critics have challenged Christian beliefs and teachings as well as Christian actions from the Crusades to modern terrorism The arguments against Christianity include the suppositions that it is a faith of violence corruption superstition polytheism homophobia bigotry pontification abuses of women s rights and sectarianism In the early years of Christianity the Neoplatonic philosopher Porphyry emerged as one of the major critics with his book Against the Christians along with other writers like Celsus and Julian Porphyry argued that Christianity was based on false prophecies that had not yet materialized 1 Following the adoption of Christianity under the Roman Empire dissenting religious voices were gradually suppressed by both governments and ecclesiastical authorities 2 however Christianity did face theological criticisms from other Abrahamic religions like Judaism and Islam in the meantime such as Maimonides who argued that it was idolatry 3 A millennium later the Protestant Reformation led to a fundamental split in European Christianity and rekindled critical voices about the Christian faith both internally and externally In the 18th century Deist philosophers such as Voltaire and Jean Jacques Rousseau were critical of Christianity as a revealed religion 4 With the Age of Enlightenment Christianity was criticized by major thinkers and philosophers such as Voltaire David Hume Thomas Paine and the Baron d Holbach 5 The central theme of these critiques sought to negate the historical accuracy of the Christian Bible and focused on the perceived corruption of Christian religious authorities 5 Other thinkers like Immanuel Kant offered critiques of traditional arguments for the existence of God while professing to defend Christian theology on novel grounds 6 In modern times Christianity has faced substantial criticism from a wide array of political movements and ideologies In the late eighteenth century the French Revolution saw a number of politicians and philosophers criticizing traditional Christian doctrines precipitating a wave of secularism in which hundreds of churches were closed down and thousands of priests were deported or killed 7 Following the French Revolution prominent philosophers of liberalism and communism such as John Stuart Mill and Karl Marx criticized Christian doctrine on the grounds that it was conservative and anti democratic Friedrich Nietzsche wrote that Christianity fosters a kind of slave morality which suppresses the desires which are contained in the human will 8 The Russian Revolution the Chinese Revolution and several other modern revolutionary movements have also led to the criticism of Christian ideas The contemporary LGBT movements have criticized Christianity for homophobia and transphobia The formal response of Christians to such criticisms is described as Christian apologetics Philosophers like Augustine of Hippo and Thomas Aquinas have been some of the most prominent defenders of the Christian religion since its foundation Contents 1 Scripture 1 1 Biblical criticism 1 1 1 Textual criticism 1 2 Internal consistency 1 3 Unfulfilled prophecy 1 3 1 Prophecy of the Nazarene 1 4 Virgin Birth and descent of Jesus 1 5 Selective interpretation 1 6 Mistranslation 2 Criticism of historical behavior 2 1 Colonialism 2 2 Slavery 2 2 1 Christian abolitionist movements 2 3 Christianity and women 2 4 Christianity and violence 2 5 Science 3 Ethics 3 1 Jesus 3 2 Ethics in the Bible 3 3 Christianity and politics 3 3 1 Christian right 3 3 2 United States 3 4 Role of women 4 Doctrine 4 1 Miracles 4 2 Incarnation 4 3 Hell and damnation 4 4 Idolatry 4 5 Limbo 4 6 Atonement 4 7 Second Coming 4 8 Inconsistency with regard to the Old Testament s conception of the afterlife 5 Criticism of Christians 5 1 Hypocrisy 5 2 Sectarianism 5 3 Persecution by Christians 5 4 Christianity in Nazi Germany 5 5 Christian persecution complex 6 Criticism by other religions 6 1 Hinduism 6 2 Judaism 6 3 Islam 7 Origins 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 Further reading 11 1 Skeptical of Christianity 11 2 Defending ChristianityScripture editMain article Criticism of the Bible Biblical criticism edit Main article Biblical criticism Biblical criticism in particular higher criticism covers a variety of methods which have been used since the Enlightenment in the early 18th century as scholars began to apply the same methods and perspectives which had already been applied to other literary and philosophical texts to biblical documents 9 It is an umbrella term which covers various techniques which are mainly used by mainline and liberal Christian theologians to study the meaning of biblical passages It uses general historical principles and it is primarily based on reason rather than revelation or faith There are four primary types of biblical criticism 10 Form criticism an analysis of literary documents particularly the Bible to discover earlier oral traditions stories legends myths etc upon which they were based Tradition criticism an analysis of the Bible concentrating on how religious traditions grew and changed over the time span during which the text was written Higher criticism the study of the sources and literary methods employed by the biblical authors 10 11 Lower criticism the discipline and study of the actual wording of the Bible a quest for textual purity and understanding 11 Textual criticism edit See also Textual criticism Within the abundance of biblical manuscripts exist a number of textual variants The vast majority of these textual variants are the inconsequential misspelling of words word order variations 12 and the mistranscription of abbreviations 13 Text critics such as Bart D Ehrman have proposed that some of these textual variants and interpolations were theologically motivated 14 Ehrman s conclusions and textual variant choices have been challenged by some conservative evangelical reviewers including Daniel B Wallace Craig Blomberg and Thomas Howe 15 In attempting to determine the original text of the New Testament books some modern textual critics have identified sections as probably not original In modern translations of the Bible the results of textual criticism have led to certain verses being left out or marked as not original These possible later additions include the following 16 17 The ending of Mark 18 The story in John of the woman taken in adultery the Pericope Adulterae An explicit reference to the Trinity in 1 John the Johannine CommaIn The Text of the New Testament Kurt and Barbara Aland compare the total number of variant free verses and the number of variants per page excluding orthographic errors among the seven major editions of the Greek NT Tischendorf Westcott Hort von Soden Vogels Merk Bover and Nestle Aland concluding 62 9 or 4999 7947 agreement 19 They concluded 19 Thus in nearly two thirds of the New Testament text the seven editions of the Greek New Testament which we have reviewed are in complete accord with no differences other than in orthographical details e g the spelling of names etc Verses in which any one of the seven editions differs by a single word are not counted This result is quite amazing demonstrating a far greater agreement among the Greek texts of the New Testament during the past century than textual scholars would have suspected In the Gospels Acts and Revelation the agreement is less while in the letters it is much greater With the discovery of the Hebrew Bible texts among the Dead Sea Scrolls questions have been raised about the textual accuracy of the Masoretic text citation needed Internal consistency edit See also The Bible and History and Internal consistency and the Bible Inconsistencies have been pointed out by critics and skeptics 20 presenting as difficulties the different numbers and names for the same feature and different sequences for what is supposed to be the same event Responses to these criticisms include the modern documentary hypothesis two source hypothesis in various guises and assertions that the Pastoral Epistles are pseudonymous Contrasting with these critical stances are positions supported by traditionalists considering the texts to be consistent with the Torah written by a single source 21 22 but the Gospels by four independent witnesses 23 and all of the Pauline Epistles except possibly the Hebrews as having been written by Paul the Apostle While consideration of the context is necessary when studying the Bible some find the accounts of the Resurrection of Jesus within the four Gospels of Matthew Mark Luke and John difficult to reconcile E P Sanders concludes that the inconsistencies make the possibility of a deliberate fraud unlikely A plot to foster belief in the Resurrection would probably have resulted in a more consistent story Instead there seems to have been a competition I saw him So did I The women saw him first No I did they didn t see him at all and so on 24 Harold Lindsell points out that it is a gross distortion to state that people who believe in biblical inerrancy suppose every statement made in the Bible is true opposed to accurate 25 He indicates there are expressly false statements in the Bible which are reported accurately 25 for example Satan is a liar whose lies are accurately reported as to what he actually said 25 Proponents of biblical inerrancy generally do not teach that the Bible was dictated directly by God but that God used the distinctive personalities and literary styles of the writers of scripture and that God s inspiration guided them to flawlessly project his message through their own language and personality 26 Art VIII Those who believe in the inspiration of scripture teach that it is infallible or inerrant that is free from error in the truths it expresses by its character as the word of God 27 However the scope of what this encompasses is disputed as the term includes faith and practice positions with some denominations holding that the historical or scientific details which may be irrelevant to matters of faith and Christian practice may contain errors 28 Other scholars take stronger views 29 but for a few verses these positions require more exegetical work leading to dispute compare the serious debate over the related issue of perspicuity attracting biblical and philosophical discussion Infallibility refers to the original texts of the Bible and all mainstream scholars acknowledge the potential for human error in transmission and translation yet through use of textual criticism modern critical copies are considered to faithfully represent the original 26 Art X and our understanding of the original language sufficiently well for accurate translation The opposing view is that there is too much corruption or translation too difficult to agree with modern texts Unfulfilled prophecy edit See also Unfulfilled Christian religious predictions Hundreds of years before the time of Jesus Jewish prophets promised that a messiah would come Judaism claims that Jesus did not fulfill these prophecies Other skeptics usually claim that the prophecies are either vague or unfulfilled 30 or that the Old Testament writings influenced the composition of New Testament narratives 31 Christian apologists claim that Jesus fulfilled these prophecies which they argue are nearly impossible to fulfill by chance 32 Many Christians anticipate the Second Coming of Jesus when he will fulfill the rest of Messianic prophecy such as the Last Judgment the general resurrection establishment of the Kingdom of God and the Messianic Age see the article on Preterism for contrasting Christian views The New Testament traces Jesus line to that of David however according to Stephen L Harris 33 Jesus did not accomplish what Israel s prophets said the Messiah was commissioned to do He did not deliver the covenant people from their Gentile enemies reassemble those scattered in the Diaspora restore the Davidic kingdom or establish universal peace cf Isa 9 6 7 11 7 12 16 etc Instead of freeing Jews from oppressors and thereby fulfilling God s ancient promises for land nationhood kingship and blessing Jesus died a shameful death defeated by the very political powers the Messiah was prophesied to overcome Indeed the Hebrew prophets did not foresee that Israel s savior would be executed as a common criminal by Gentiles making Jesus crucifixion a stumbling block to scripturally literate Jews 1 Cor 1 23 Christian preachers reply to this argument by stating that these prophecies will be fulfilled by Jesus in the Millennial Reign after the Great Tribulation according to New Testament prophecies especially in the Book of Revelation citation needed The 16th century Jewish theologian Isaac ben Abraham who lived in Trakai Lithuania penned a work called Chizzuk Emunah Faith Strengthened that attempted to refute the ideas that Jesus was the Messiah prophesied in the Old Testament and that Christianity was the New Covenant of God He systematically identified a number of inconsistencies he perceived in the New Testament contradictions between the New Testament and the Old Testament and Old Testament prophesies which remained unfulfilled in Jesus lifetime In addition he questioned a number of Christian practices such as Sunday Sabbath 34 Written originally for Jews to persuade them not to convert to Christianity 35 the work was eventually read by Christians While the well known Christian Hebraist Johann Christoph Wagenseil attempted an elaborate refutation of Abraham s arguments Wagenseil s Latin translation of it only increased interest in the work and inspired later Christian freethinkers Chizzuk Emunah was praised as a masterpiece by Voltaire 34 On the other hand Blaise Pascal believed that t he prophecies are the strongest proof of Jesus Christ He wrote that Jesus was foretold and that the prophecies came from a succession of people over a span of four thousand years 36 Apologist Josh McDowell defends the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecy as supporting Christianity arguing that prophecies fulfilled by Christ include ones relating to his ancestral line birthplace virgin birth miracles manner of death and resurrection He says that even the timing of the Messiah in years and in relation to events is predicted and that the Jewish Talmud not accepting Jesus as the Messiah see also Rejection of Jesus laments that the Messiah had not appeared despite the scepter being taken away from Judah 37 Prophecy of the Nazarene edit Another example is Nazarene in Matthew 2 23 And he came and dwelt in a city called Nazareth that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophets He shall be called a Nazarene The website for Jews for Judaism claims that Since a Nazarene is a resident of the city of Nazareth and this city did not exist during the time period of the Jewish Bible it is impossible to find this quotation in the Hebrew Scriptures It was fabricated 38 39 However one common suggestion is that the New Testament verse is based on a passage relating to Nazirites either because this was a misunderstanding common at the time or through deliberate re reading of the term by the early Christians Another suggestion is that Matthew was playing on the similarity of the Hebrew word nezer translated Branch or shoot in Isaiah 11 1 and Jeremiah 23 5 with the Greek nazoraios here translated Nazarene 40 Christians also suggest that by using an indirect quotation and the plural term prophets Matthew was only saying that by living in Nazareth Jesus was fulfilling the many Old Testament prophecies that He would be despised and rejected 41 The background for this is illustrated by Philip s initial response in John 1 46 to the idea that Jesus might be the Messiah Nazareth Can anything good come from there 40 Virgin Birth and descent of Jesus edit See also Almah Virgin birth of Jesus and Isaiah 7 14 A fundamental principle of the Christian faith is that Jesus was born of Mary a virgin 42 Both Matthew and Luke trace the genealogy of Joseph back to David According to Jewish tradition the Messiah must be a descendant of David but if Jesus was born of a virgin he cannot be a descendant of David through Joseph 43 Michael Martin asserts that Mary s virginity is a later addition to Christianity as indicated through Paul s letters 44 Further Martin notes that early Christian communities did not seem to have widely believed in the virgin birth The confusion surrounding the virginity of Mary may result from Septuagint translation of both Hebrew ע ל מ ה romanized almah young girl and Hebrew ב תו ל ה romanized bethulah virgin into Greek par8enos romanized parthenos which usually means virgin Relying on this translation Matthew tried to show that Jesus s virgin birth was foretold in Isaiah 7 14 which refers to an almah in Hebrew 45 46 47 Selective interpretation edit Main article Christian views on the Old Covenant See also Cafeteria Christianity Critics argue that the selective invocation of portions of the Old Testament is hypocritical particularly when those portions endorse hostility towards women and homosexuals when other portions are considered obsolete such as dietary prohibitions The entire Mosaic Law is described in Galatians 3 24 25 as a tutor which is no longer necessary according to some interpretations see also Antinomianism in the New Testament On the other hand many of the Old Testament laws are seen as specifically abrogated by the New Testament such as circumcision 48 though this may simply be a parallel to Jewish Noahide Laws See also Split of early Christianity and Judaism On the other hand other passages are pro Law such as Romans 3 31 Do we then make void the law through faith Certainly not On the contrary we establish the law See also Pauline passages opposing antinomianism Mistranslation edit See also Bible errata Bible translations and English translations of the Bible Translation has given rise to a number of issues as the original languages are often quite different in grammar as well as word meaning While the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy 26 states that inerrancy applies only to the original languages some believers trust their own translation to be the accurate one One such group of believers is known as the King James Only movement For readability clarity or other reasons translators may choose different wording or sentence structure and some translations may choose to paraphrase passages Because some of the words in the original language have ambiguous or difficult to translate meanings debates over the correct interpretation occur Criticisms are also sometimes raised because of inconsistencies arising between different English translations of the Hebrew or Greek text Some Christian interpretations are criticized for reflecting specific doctrinal bias 38 or a variant reading between the Masoretic Hebrew and Septuagint Greek manuscripts often quoted in the New Testament Criticism of historical behavior edit nbsp Pope Innocent III excommunicating the Albigensians left Massacre against the Albigensians by the crusadersCertain interpretations of some moral decisions in the Bible are considered ethically questionable by human rights activists and scholars historians and critics of religion Some of the passages most commonly criticized include colonialism the subjugation of women religious intolerance condemnation of homosexuality and transgender identity and support for the institution of slavery in both Old and New Testaments Colonialism edit Main articles Christianity and colonialism and Doctrine of discovery Christianity and colonialism are often closely associated because Catholicism and Protestantism were the religions of the European colonial powers 49 and acted in many ways as the religious arm of those powers 50 Historian Edward E Andrews argues that although Christian missionaries were initially portrayed as visible saints exemplars of ideal piety in a sea of persistent savagery by the time the colonial era drew to a close in the last half of the twentieth century missionaries became viewed as ideological shock troops for colonial invasion whose zealotry blinded them 51 Christianity is targeted by critics of colonialism because the tenets of the religion were used to justify the actions of the colonists 52 For example Michael Wood asserts that the indigenous peoples were not considered to be human beings and that the colonisers were shaped by centuries of Ethnocentrism and Christian monotheism which espoused one truth one time and version of reality 53 Slavery edit Main article Christianity and slavery Early Christian perspectives of slavery were formed in the contexts of Christianity s roots in Judaism and as part of the wider culture of slavery in the Roman Empire Slavery was widespread in the Roman Empire including at the time of Augustus when Jesus was born Both the Old and New Testaments recognize that the institution of slavery existed with the former sanctioning it within certain limits Leviticus 25 39 46 Exodus 21 2 21 Saint Paul the Apostle in addressing slavery in Ephesians 6 8 54 tells slaves to obey your earthly masters and render service with enthusiasm as to the Lord and not to men and women Defenders of Christianity argue that nothing in the passage affirms slavery as a naturally valid or divinely mandated institution Rather Paul s discussion of the duties of Christian slaves and the responsibilities of Christian masters transforms the institution even if it falls short of calling for outright abolition St Augustine thought slavery was a result of sin but was part of the fallen world and so should be tolerated However others opposed it John Chrysostom explicitly argued that slavery itself was a sin but he did not advocate for its abolition Origen called for the practice of manumission after six years as found in the Old Testament others such as Gregory of Nyssa Acacius of Amida and St Patrick called for the complete abolition of slavery 55 On the other hand critics claim that Orthodox Christianity justified slavery on the ground that it was part of the divinely ordained hierarchical order Slaves are enjoined to be submissive in the Ephesians passage above as well as other parts of the Bible such as in Paul s Epistle to the Colossians Slaves obey your earthly masters kyrioi according to the flesh in everything not only while being watched and in order to please them but wholeheartedly fearing the Lord kyrios 56 In addition St John Chrysostom wrote The slave should be resigned to his lot in obeying his master he is obeying God while St Augustine wrote slavery is now penal in character and planned by that law which commands the preservation of the natural order and forbids disturbance 57 According to one view today and from a human rights perspective it is difficult to understand why early Christians did not object to the social institution of slavery It is uncertain whether one can go so far as to criticise Early Christians including Paul and other authors of Biblical texts for their active or passive acceptance of slavery 58 Peter Gruszka attributed the view of early Christian Fathers on slavery to their social environment In the 2nd and 3rd centuries the most prominent fathers such as Clement Tertullian Cyprian Origen and others emerged in Africa and Egypt where slavery did not exist on a large scale Different was the social environment in Eastern Mediterranean Syria Palestine and especially Asia Minor where slavery was a strong presence and therefore attracted the attention of the Cappadocian fathers of the 4th century 59 According to Jennifer Glancy sexual exploitation of slaves in the Roman Empire was helped by Christian morality Jesus urged his followers to act like slaves implementing a slave morality The early Christian theologians were unconcerned about slave morals 60 In the Eastern Roman Empire Byzantine a shift in the view of slavery is noticed which by the 10th century transformed gradually a slave object into a slave subject 61 Since the Middle Ages the Christian understanding of slavery has been subjected to significant internal conflict and has endured dramatic change Nearly all Christian leaders before the late 17th century recognised slavery within specific biblical limitations as consistent with Christian theology The key verse used to justify slavery was Genesis 9 25 27 Cursed be Canaan The lowest of slaves will he be to his brothers He also said Blessed be the Lord the God of Shem May Canaan be the slave of Shem which was interpreted to mean that Africans were the descendants of Ham cursed with the mark of Ham to be servants to the descendants of Japheth Europeans and Shem Asians 62 In 1452 Pope Nicholas V instituted the hereditary slavery of captured Muslims and pagans regarding all non Christians as enemies of Christ 63 The Curse of Ham along with Paul s Epistle to the Ephesians VI 5 7 helped American slave owners to balance their beliefs with slavery The Southern Baptist Convention separated from the Triennial Convention in order to support slavery which the southern churches regarded as an institution of heaven 64 65 The New Testament was ignored except in reminding that Jesus never condemned slavery and the Epistle to Philemon in which a runaway slave was returned to his owner 66 Christian abolitionist movements edit Main article Christian abolitionism Rodney Stark makes the argument in For the Glory of God How Monotheism Led to Reformations Science Witch Hunts and the End of Slavery 67 that Christianity helped to end slavery worldwide as does Lamin Sanneh in Abolitionists Abroad 68 These authors point out that Christians who viewed slavery as wrong on the basis of their religious convictions spearheaded abolitionism and many of the early campaigners for the abolition of slavery were driven by their Christian faith and a desire to realize their view that all people are equal under God 69 In the late 17th century Anabaptists began to criticize slavery Criticisms from the Society of Friends Mennonites and the Amish followed suit Prominent among these Christian abolitionists were William Wilberforce and John Woolman Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote her famous book Uncle Tom s Cabin according to her Christian beliefs in 1852 Earlier in Britain and America Quakers were active in abolitionism A group of Quakers founded the first English abolitionist organization in 1783 and a Quaker petition brought the issue before government that same year The Quakers continued to be influential throughout the lifetime of the movement in many ways leading the way for the campaign John Wesley the founder of Methodism was instrumental in starting abolitionism as a popular movement 70 Many modern Christians are united in the condemnation of slavery as wrong and contrary to God s will Only peripheral groups such as the Ku Klux Klan and other so called Christian hate groups on the racist fringes of the Christian Reconstructionist and Christian Identity movements advocate the reinstitution of slavery 62 Full adherents to reconstructionism are few and marginalized among conservative Christians 71 72 73 With these exceptions Christian faith groups now condemn slavery and see the practice as incompatible with basic Christian principles 62 74 In addition to aiding abolitionism many Christians made further efforts toward establishing racial equality contributing to the Civil Rights Movement 75 The African American Review notes the important role Christian revivalism in the black church played in the Civil Rights Movement 76 Martin Luther King Jr an ordained Baptist minister was a leader of the American civil rights movement and president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference a Christian Civil Rights organization 77 Christianity and women edit See also Biblical patriarchy Women in Christianity and Women in the Bible nbsp The Woman s Bible 1895 is a collection of critical commentaries on texts within chapters of the Bible referring to womenMany feminists have accused notions such as a male God male prophets and the man centered stories in the Bible of contributing to a patriarchy 78 Though many women disciples and servants are recorded in the Pauline epistles there have been occasions in which women have been denigrated and forced into a second class status 79 For example women were told to keep silent in the churches for it is a shame for a woman to speak in the church 80 Suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton said in The Woman s Bible that the Bible in its teachings degrades women from Genesis to Revelation 81 Elizabeth Clark cites early Christian writings by authors such as Tertullian Augustine and John Chrysostom as being exemplary of the negative view of women that has been perpetuated in church tradition 82 Until the latter part of the 20th century only the names of very few women who contributed to the formation of Christianity in its earliest years were widely known Mary the mother of Jesus 83 Mary Magdalene disciple of Jesus and the first witness to the resurrection and Mary and Martha the sisters who offered him hospitality in Bethany 84 Harvard scholar Karen King writes that more of the many women who contributed to the formation of Christianity in its earliest years are becoming known Further she concludes that for centuries in Western Christianity Mary Magdalene has been wrongly identified as the adulteress and repentant prostitute presented in John 8 a connection supposed by tradition but nowhere claimed in the New Testament According to King the Gospel of Mary shows that she was an influential figure a prominent disciple and leader of one wing of the early Christian movement that promoted women s leadership King claims that every sect within early Christianity which had advocated women s prominence in ancient Christianity was eventually declared heretical and evidence of women s early leadership roles was erased or suppressed 84 Classicist Evelyn Stagg and New Testament scholar Frank Stagg in their jointly authored book Woman in the World of Jesus document very unfavorable attitudes toward women that prevailed in the world into which Jesus came They assert that there is no recorded instance where Jesus disgraces belittles reproaches or stereotypes a woman They interpret the recorded treatment and attitude Jesus showed to women as evidence that the Founder of Christianity treated women with great dignity and respect 85 Various theologians have concluded that the canonical examples of the manner of Jesus are instructive for inferring his attitudes toward women They are seen as showing repeatedly and consistently how he liberated and affirmed women 86 However Schalom Ben Chorin argues that Jesus reply to his mother in John 2 4 during the wedding at Cana amounted to a blatant violation of the commandment to honor one s parent 87 88 Christianity and violence edit Main article Christianity and violence Many critics of Christianity have cited the violent acts of Christian nations as a reason to denounce the religion The science fiction writer Arthur C Clarke said that he could not forgive religions because they endorsed atrocities and wars over time 89 Richard Dawkins makes a similar case in his book The God Delusion In the counterargument book The Dawkins Delusion Alister McGrath responds to Dawkins by suggesting that far from endorsing out group hostility Jesus commanded an ethic of out group affirmation McGrath agrees that it is necessary to critique religion but he says that Dawkins seems to be unaware that it possesses internal means of reform and renewal While Christians may certainly be accused of failing to live up to Jesus standard of acceptance it lies at the heart of the Christian ethic 90 nbsp The St Bartholomew s Day massacre of French Protestants in 1572Peace compassion and forgiveness of wrongs done by others are key elements of Christian teaching 91 However Christians have struggled since the days of the Church fathers with the question of when the use of force is justified 92 Such debates have led to concepts such as just war theory Throughout history biblical passages have been used to justify the use of force against heretics 93 sinners 94 and external enemies 95 Heitman and Hagan identify the Inquisitions Crusades wars of religion and antisemitism as being among the most notorious examples of Christian violence 96 To this list J Denny Weaver adds warrior popes support for capital punishment corporal punishment under the guise of spare the rod and spoil the child justifications of slavery world wide colonialism in the name of conversion to Christianity the systemic violence of women subjected to men Weaver employs a broader definition of violence that extends the meaning of the word to cover harm or damage not just physical violence per se Thus under his definition Christian violence includes forms of systemic violence such as poverty racism and sexism 97 Christians have also engaged in violence against those who they consider heretics and non believers In Letter to a Christian Nation critic of religion Sam Harris writes that faith inspires violence in at least two ways First people often kill other human beings because they believe that the creator of the universe wants them to do it Second far greater numbers of people fall into conflict with one another because they define their moral community on the basis of their religious affiliation 98 Christian theologians point to a strong doctrinal and historical imperative against violence which exists within Christianity particularly Jesus Sermon on the Mount which taught nonviolence and love of enemies Weaver says that Jesus pacifism was preserved in the justifiable war doctrine which declares that all war is sin even when it is occasionally declared to be a necessary evil and it was also preserved in the prohibition of fighting by monastics and clergy as well as in a persistent tradition of Christian pacifism 99 unreliable source Others point out sayings and acts of Jesus that do not fit this description the absence of any censure of the soldier who asks Jesus to heal his servant his overturning the tables and chasing the moneychangers from the temple with a rope in his hand and through his Apostles baptising a Roman Centurion who is never asked to first give up arms 100 unreliable source Historically prohibitions on fighting by monastics and clerics have often been discarded the notion of military monasticism emerged in the 12th century in large part because of the advocacy of St Bernard of Clairvaux Bernard and once the papacy gave sanction to the idea the entire Catholic Church believed that existing Christian methods of serving the Church s ends in war were inadequate and that a group of dedicated warrior monks could achieve spiritual merit by waging war rather than despite it In this view war against heretics justified means of waging war that fell outside the bounds of just war for example the Teutonic Order which received papal sanction made frequent use of massacres and violence to compel conversion during the Baltic Crusades 101 Science edit See also Christianity and science nbsp Galileo affair Joseph Nicolas Robert Fleury Galileo before the Holy Office 19th centuryDuring the 19th century an interpretive model of the relationship between religion and science known today as the conflict theory developed according to which interaction between religion and science almost inevitably leads to hostility and conflict A popular example was the misconception that people from the Middle Ages believed that the Earth was flat and that only science freed from religious dogma had shown that it was spherical This thesis was a popular historiographical approach during the late 19th and early 20th centuries but most contemporary historians of science now reject it 102 103 104 The notion of a war between science and religion remained common in the historiography of science during the late 19th and early 20th centuries 105 Most of today s historians of science consider that the conflict thesis has been superseded by subsequent historical research 106 The framing of the relationship between Christianity and science as being predominantly one of conflict is still prevalent in popular culture 107 The astronomer Carl Sagan mentioned the dispute between the astronomical systems of Ptolemy who thought that the Sun and planets revolved around the Earth and Copernicus who thought the Earth and planets revolved around the Sun He states in Cosmos A Personal Voyage that Ptolemy s belief was supported by the church through the Dark Ages It effectively prevented the advance of astronomy for 1 500 years 108 Ted Peters in Encyclopedia of Religion writes that although there is some truth in this story it has been exaggerated and has become a modern myth perpetuated by those wishing to see warfare between science and religion who were allegedly persecuted by an atavistic and dogma bound ecclesiastical authority 109 In 1992 the Catholic Church s seeming vindication of Galileo attracted much comment in the media 110 111 Ethics editMain article Philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche Christianity and morality nbsp The monument to Giordano Bruno in the place he was executed in RomeThe philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche was a notable critic of the ethics of Christianity Jesus edit Main article Criticism of Jesus See also Historicity of Jesus and Mental health of Jesus Jesus is the central figure of Christianity Since the time in which he is said to have lived a number of noted individuals have criticised Jesus Objects of criticism include the morality of the life of Jesus in both his public and private lives such as Jesus mental health morality of his teachings etc Early critics of Jesus and Christianity included Celsus in the second century and Porphyry in the third 112 113 In the 19th century Friedrich Nietzsche was highly critical of Jesus whose teachings he considered to be anti nature in their treatment of topics such as sexuality More contemporary notable critics of Jesus include Ayn Rand Hector Avalos Sita Ram Goel Christopher Hitchens Bertrand Russell and Dayananda Saraswati Ethics in the Bible edit Main article Ethics in the Bible The ethics of the Bible have been criticized by some who call some of its teachings immoral Slavery genocide supersessionism the death penalty violence patriarchy sexual intolerance colonialism and the problem of evil and a good God are examples of criticisms of ethics in the Bible The ethics in the Bible have been criticized such as the passages in the Old Testament in which God commands the Israelites to commit genocide against enemy peoples and His command that no one among those same enemy peoples should be spared 114 The existence of evil has been argued as evidence of no omnipotent omnibenevolent being however skeptical theism suggests that humans do not have the understanding of the big picture to make an adequate assessment However a counter argument by Stephen Maitzen suggests that the ethical inconsistency in the bible that is not followed by most Christians or Jews today such as the execution of homosexuals blasphemers disobedient children or the punishment for mixing linen and cloth ultimately undermines the skeptical theism argument 115 Christian ethics have also been criticized for breeding intolerance such as antisemitic views and for having a repressive nature Criticism has also been aimed at the threat of Hell 116 Christianity and politics edit Main article Christianity and politics See also Christian left Christian right and Religion and politics nbsp Demonstration in support of secular education Madrid 2011Some leftists and libertarians including Christians who disavow the Religious Right use the term Christian fascism or Christofascism to describe what some see as an emerging neoconservative proto fascist or Evangelical nationalist and possibly theocratic sentiment in the United States 117 Christian right edit Conservative Christians are often accused of being intolerant by secular humanists and progressive Christians who claim that they oppose science which seems to contradict their scriptural interpretation creationism use of birth control climate change denial abortion research into embryonic stem cells etc liberal democracy separation of church and state and progressive social policies rights of people of other races and religions of women and of people with different sexual orientations 118 119 120 121 United States edit Gallup polling shows that within the US trust in organized religion has declined since the 1970s 122 Phil Zuckerman a sociology professor argues that political campaigning against same sex marriage in churches is turning off so many people from Christianity and it is responsible for a decline in the number of Christians in the United States 123 David Kinnaman president of the Barna Institute and Gabe Lyons of the Fermi Project published a study of the attitudes of 16 to 29 year old Americans towards Christianity They found that about 38 of all of those who were not regular churchgoers had negative impressions of Christianity especially evangelical Christianity which they associated with conservative political activism hypocrisy anti homosexuality authoritarianism and judgmentalism 124 About 17 had very bad perceptions of Christianity 125 126 127 Role of women edit nbsp Separation of church and state International Women s Day in Argentina 2021 There are three major viewpoints within modern Christianity over the role of women They are respectively known as Christian feminism Christian egalitarianism and complementarianism Christian feminists take a feminist position from a Christian perspective 128 Christian egalitarians advocate an ability based rather than a gender based ministry of Christians of all ages ethnicities and socio economic classes 129 Egalitarians support the ordination of women and equal roles in marriage but are theologically and morally more conservative than Christian feminists and prefer to avoid the label feminist A limited notion of gender complementarity is held by some known as complementarity without hierarchy 130 Complementarians support equality as well as the beneficial differences between men and women 131 They maintain that men and women have their own unique strengths and weaknesses therefore they believe that men and women must work together in order to improve their strengths and help each other in times of weakness Some Christians argue that the belief that God is a man is not based on gender instead they argue that the belief that God is a man is based on the tradition which existed in the dominant Patriarchal society of the time in which men acted as the leaders and caretakers of their Families 132 Thus the idea of God being The Father is with regards to his relationship with what are his children Christians Most mainline Christians claim that the doctrine of the Trinity implies that God should be called Father rather than Mother in the same way that Jesus was a man rather than a woman 133 Jesus tells His followers to address God as Father 134 He tells his disciples to be merciful as their heavenly Father is merciful 135 He says the Father will give the Holy Spirit to those who ask 136 and that the Spirit of their Father will speak through them in times of persecution 137 On Easter Sunday he directs Mary Magdalene to tell the other disciples I am going to my Father and your Father 138 Mark Brumley points out that behind New Testament language of Divine Adoption and regeneration is the idea that God is our Father because He is the source or origin of our new life in Christ He has saved us through Christ and sanctified us in the Spirit Brumley claims this is clearly more than a metaphor the analogy with earthly fatherhood is obvious God is not merely like a father for Christ s followers he is really their Father Among Christians who hold to this idea there is a distinct sense that Jesus treatment of women should imply their equality in leadership and marital roles every bit as strongly as the definite male gender of Jesus should imply a name of Father for God Instead of characterizing alternative naming as antifeminist they characterize it as unnecessary and unsupported by the words which are found in the Bible 133 In 2000 the Southern Baptist Convention voted to revise its Baptist Faith and Message Statement of Faith 139 opposing women as pastors While this decision is not binding and would not prevent women from serving as pastors the revision itself has been criticized by some from within the convention In the same document the Southern Baptist Convention took a strong position of the subordinating view of woman in marriage A wife is to submit herself graciously to the servant leadership of her husband She has the God given responsibility to respect her husband and to serve as his helper in managing the household and nurturing the next generation 139 Emphasis added The Eastern Orthodox Church does not allow the ordination of female clergy On the other hand the Chaldean Catholic Church continues to maintain a large number of deaconesses who serve alongside male deacons during mass 140 In some evangelical churches it is forbidden for women to become pastors deacons or church elders In support of such prohibitions the verse 1 Timothy 2 12 is often cited 141 But I suffer not a woman to teach nor to usurp authority over the man but to be in silence Doctrine editMiracles edit See also Miracle and Faith healing nbsp David Hume s work Of Miracles argues against the existence of miracles Philosopher David Hume argued against the plausibility of miracles 142 1 A miracle is a violation of the known laws of nature 2 We know these laws through repeated and constant experience 3 The testimony of those who report miracles contradicts the operation of known scientific laws 4 Consequently no one can rationally believe in miracles The Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church reject Hume s argument against miracles outright with the teachings of St Gregory Palamas who postulated that Reason alone was not sufficient to understand God s energies activities such as miracles and essence but faith was 143 Miraculous healings through prayers often involving the laying on of hands have been reported However reliance on faith healing alone can indirectly contribute to serious harm and even death 144 Christian apologists including C S Lewis Norman Geisler and William Lane Craig have argued that miracles are reasonable and plausible 145 146 147 Incarnation edit Main article Incarnation Christianity Celsus found it hard to reconcile the Christian human God who was born and matured with the Jewish God who was supposed to be one and unchanging He asked if God wanted to reform humanity why did he choose to descend and live on earth How his brief presence in Jerusalem could benefit all the millions of people who lived elsewhere in the world or who had lived and died before his incarnation 148 One classical response is Lewis s trilemma a syllogism popularised by C S Lewis that intended to demonstrate the logical inconsistency of both holding Jesus of Nazareth to be a great moral teacher while also denying his divinity The logical soundness of this trilemma has been widely questioned 149 Hell and damnation edit See also Problem of Hell and Hell in Christianity nbsp A detail from Hieronymous Bosch s depiction of HellChristianity has been criticized as seeking to persuade people into accepting its authority through simple fear of punishment or conversely through hope of reward after death rather than through rational argumentation or empirical evidence 150 Traditional Christian doctrine dictates that without faith in Jesus Christ or in the Christian faith in general one is subject to eternal punishment in Hell 151 Critics regard the eternal punishment of those who fail to adopt Christian faith as morally objectionable and consider it an abhorrent picture of the nature of the world On a similar theme objections are made against the perceived injustice of punishing a person for all eternity for a temporal crime Some Christians agree see Annihilationism and Christian Universalism These beliefs have been considered especially repugnant 152 when the claimed omniscient and omnipotent God makes or allows a person to come into existence with a nature that desires that which God finds objectionable 153 In the Abrahamic religions Hell has traditionally been regarded as a punishment for wrongdoing or sin in this life as a manifestation of divine justice As in the problem of evil some apologists argue that the torments of Hell are attributable not to a defect in God s benevolence but in human free will Although a benevolent God would prefer to see everyone saved he would also allow humans to control their own destinies This view opens the possibility of seeing Hell not as retributive punishment but rather as an option that God allows so that people who do not wish to be with God are not forced to be C S Lewis most famously proposed this view in his book The Great Divorce saying There are only two kinds of people in the end those who say to God Thy will be done and those to whom God says in the end Thy will be done Hell is not seen as strictly a matter of retributive justice even by the more traditionalist churches For example the Eastern Orthodox see it as a condition brought about by and the natural consequence of free rejection of God s love 154 The Roman Catholic Church teaches that hell is a place of punishment 155 brought about by a person s self exclusion from communion with God 156 In some ancient Eastern Orthodox traditions Hell and Heaven are distinguished not spatially but by the relation of a person to God s love Some modern critics of the doctrine of Hell such as Marilyn McCord Adams claim that even if Hell is seen as a choice rather than as punishment it would be unreasonable for God to give such flawed and ignorant creatures as humans the awesome responsibility of their eternal destinies 157 Jonathan Kvanvig in his book The Problem of Hell agrees that God would not allow one to be eternally damned by a decision made under the wrong circumstances For instance one should not always honor the choices of human beings even when they are full adults if for instance the choice is made while depressed or careless On Kvanvig s view God will abandon no person until they have made a settled final decision under favorable circumstances to reject God but God will respect a choice made under the right circumstances Once a person finally and competently chooses to reject God out of respect for the person s autonomy God allows them to be annihilated 158 Idolatry edit Christians have sometimes been accused of idolatry especially with regard to the iconoclastic controversy 159 However Orthodox and Roman Catholic Christian forbid worship of icons and relics as divine in themselves while honouring those represented by them is accepted and philosophically justified by the Second Council of Constantinople Jewish theologians often considered Christianity to be a form of idolatry due to its doctrines of the Trinity which teaches that God is more than one person and the incarnation which teaches that God became man notably the famous medieval Jewish writer Maimonides considered Christianity to be a form of polytheism 3 Limbo edit The Roman Catholic Church teaches that baptism is a necessity In the 5th century St Augustine concluded that infants who die without baptism were consigned to hell 160 By the 13th century theologians referred to the limbo of infants as a place where unbaptized babies were deprived of the vision of God but did not suffer because they did not know of that which they were deprived and moreover enjoyed perfect natural happiness The 1983 Code of Canon Law 1183 2 specifies that Children whose parents had intended to have them baptized but who died before baptism may be allowed church funeral rites by the local ordinary 161 In 2007 the 30 member International Theological Commission revisited the concept of limbo 162 163 However the commission also said that hopefulness was not the same as certainty about the destiny of such infants 162 Rather as stated in the Catechism of the Catholic Church 1257 God has bound salvation to the sacrament of Baptism but he himself is not bound by his sacraments 164 Hope in the mercy of God is not the same as certainty through the sacraments but it is not without result as demonstrated in Jesus statement to the thief on the cross in Luke 23 42 43 The concept of limbo is not accepted by the Orthodox Church or by Protestants 165 Atonement edit The idea of atonement for sin is criticized by Richard Dawkins on the grounds that the image of God as requiring the suffering and death of Jesus to effect reconciliation with humankind is immoral The view is summarized by Dawkins if God wanted to forgive our sins why not just forgive them Who is God trying to impress 166 Oxford theologian Alister McGrath maintains that Dawkins is ignorant of Christian theology and therefore unable to engage religion and faith intelligently He goes on to say that the atonement was necessary because of our flawed human nature which made it impossible for us to save ourselves and that it expresses God s love for us by removing the sin that stands in the way of our reconciliation with God 167 Responding to the criticism that he is ignorant of theology Dawkins asks Do you have to read up on leprechology before disbelieving in leprechauns 168 and y es I have of course met this point before It sounds superficially fair But it presupposes that there is something in Christian theology to be ignorant about The entire thrust of my position is that Christian theology is a non subject 169 Dinesh D Souza says that Dawkins criticism only makes sense if you assume Christians made the whole thing up He goes on to say that Christians view it as a beautiful sacrifice and that through the extremity of Golgotha Christ reconciles divine justice and divine mercy 170 Andrew Wilson argues that Dawkins misses the point of the atonement which has nothing to do with masochism but is based on the concepts of holiness sin and grace 171 Robert Green Ingersoll suggests that the concept of the atonement is simply an extension of the Mosaic tradition of blood sacrifice and is the enemy of morality 172 173 The death of Jesus Christ represents the blood sacrifice to end all blood sacrifices the resulting mechanism of atonement by proxy through that final sacrifice has appeal as a more convenient and much less costly approach to redemption than repeated animal sacrifice a common sense solution to the problem of reinterpreting ancient religious approaches based on sacrifice The prominent Christian apologist Josh McDowell in More Than A Carpenter addresses the issue through an analogy of a real life judge in California who was forced to fine his daughter 100 for speeding but then came down took off his robe and paid the fine for her from his billfold 174 though as in this and other cases illustrations are only cautiously intended to describe certain aspects of the atonement 175 Second Coming edit Main article Second Coming Several verses in the New Testament contain Jesus predictions that the Second Coming would take place within a century following his death original research 176 Jesus appears to promise for his followers the second coming to happen before the generation he is preaching to vanishes according to whom This is seen as an essential failure in the teachings of Christ by many critics such as Bertrand Russell 177 However Preterists argue that Jesus did not mean his second coming 178 but speaks about demonstrations of his might formulating this as coming in his kingdom especially the destruction of the Second Temple in the Siege of Jerusalem in 70 AD which he foretold and by which time not all of his disciples were still living 179 According to this view Matthew 10 23 should be understood in the same way 180 Inconsistency with regard to the Old Testament s conception of the afterlife edit See also Afterlife Christianity Most Christian traditions teach belief in life after death as a central and indispensable tenet of their faith Critics argue that the Christian conception of the afterlife is inconsistent with that of the Hebrew Bible George E Mendenhall believes there is no concept of immortality or life after death in the Hebrew Bible 181 The presumption is that the deceased are inert lifeless and engaging in no activity 181 The concept of Sheol Hebrew ש או ל or a state of nothingness was shared among Babylonian and Israelite beliefs Sheol as it was called by the ancient Israelites is the land of no return lying below the cosmic ocean to which all the mighty and the weak travel in the ghostly form they assume after death known as Rephaim There the dead have no experience of either joy or pain perceiving no light feeling no movement 182 Obayashi concludes that the Israelites were satisfied with such a shadowy realm of afterlife because they were more deeply concerned with survival 182 Before the early Christian split from mainstream Judaism in the 1st century the belief in an afterlife was already prevalent in Jewish thinking note 1 among the Pharisees 183 note 2 and Essenes note 3 The themes of unity and Sheol which largely shaped the ancient tradition of Judaism had been undermined when only the most pious of Jews were massacred during the Maccabean revolt Criticism of Christians editHypocrisy edit Gaudium et spes claims that the example of Christians may be a contributory factor to atheism writing believers can have more than a little to do with the birth of atheism To the extent that they neglect their own training in the faith or teach erroneous doctrine or are deficient in their religious moral or social life they must be said to conceal rather than reveal the authentic face of God and religion 184 Secular and religious critics have accused many Christians of being hypocritical 185 Tom Whiteman a Philadelphia psychologist found that the primary reasons for Christian divorce include adultery abuse including substance physical and verbal abuse and abandonment whereas the number one reason cited for divorce in the general population was incompatibility 186 Sectarianism edit Main articles Sectarianism and Christian denomination Some have argued that Christianity is undermined by the inability of Christians to agree on matters of faith and church governance and the tendency for the content of their faith to be determined by regional or political factors Schopenhauer sarcastically suggested 187 To the South German ecclesiastic the truth of the Catholic dogma is quite obvious to the North German the Protestant If then these convictions are based on objective reasons the reasons must be climatic and thrive like plants some only here some only there The convictions of those who are thus locally convinced are taken on trust and believed by the masses everywhere Christians respond that Ecumenism has helped bring together such communities where in the past mistranslations of Christological Greek terms may have resulted in seemingly different views Non denominational Christianity represents another approach towards reducing the divisions within Christianity although many Christian groups claiming to be non denominational wind up with similar problems Persecution by Christians edit Main articles Christian debate on persecution and toleration and Christianity and violence nbsp The torture used against accused witches 1577 nbsp Women being hanged for witchcraft Newcastle 1655Individuals and groups throughout history have been persecuted by certain Christians and Christian groups based upon sex sexual orientation race and religion even within the bounds of Christianity itself Many of the persecutors attempted to justify their actions with particular scriptural interpretations During Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages important Christian theologians advocated religious persecution to varying degrees citation needed However early modern Europe witnessed a turning point in the Christian debate on persecution and toleration Nowadays all significant Christian denominations embrace religious toleration and look back on centuries of persecution with a mixture of revulsion and incomprehension 188 Early Christianity was a minority religion in the Roman Empire and the early Christians were themselves persecuted during that time After Constantine I converted to Christianity it became the dominant religion in the Roman Empire Already under the reign of Constantine I Christian heretics had been persecuted beginning in the late 4th century AD also the ancient pagan religions were actively suppressed In the view of many historians the Constantinian shift turned Christianity from a persecuted into a persecuting religion 189 After the decline of the Roman Empire the further Christianization of Europe was to a large extent peaceful 190 However encounters between Christians and Pagans were sometimes confrontational and some Christian kings Charlemagne Olaf I of Norway were known for their violence against pagans In the late Middle Ages the appearance of the Cathars and Bogomils in Europe laid the stage for the later witch hunts These probably gnostic influenced sects were seen as heretics by the Catholic Church and the Inquisition was established to counter them In the case of the Cathars the Albigensian Crusade violently suppressed them In the Baltic countries pagans were killed subjugated or forcibly baptized From the start of Christian rule in Europe Jews were increasingly discriminated against at times rising to outright persecution This sometimes took the form of events like the Rhineland massacres and the Blood libel was often the source claiming Jews ritually murdered Christian children Jews were also expelled from a number of countries including from England and later Spain In the latter case if converted they could remain However as most did so only under duress Judaism continued to be practiced in secret by many As a result the Spanish Inquisition was formed to root them out along with the secret Muslims there In the First Crusade after the Siege of Jerusalem all Jews and Muslims within the city were massacred by the Crusaders citation needed After the Protestant Reformation the devastation caused by the partly religiously motivated wars Thirty Years War English Civil War French Wars of Religion in Europe in the 17th century gave rise to the ideas of religious toleration freedom of religion and religious pluralism Christianity in Nazi Germany edit Main article Religion in Nazi Germany nbsp German Christians celebrating Luther Day in Berlin in 1933Adolf Hitler s 1920 Nazi Party Platform promoted Positive Christianity which mixed ideas of racial purity and Nazi ideology with elements of Christianity and removed Jewish elements 191 192 Nazism aimed to transform the subjective consciousness of the German people their attitudes values and mentalities into a single minded obedient national community The Nazis believed they would therefore have to replace class religious and regional allegiances 193 Under the Gleichschaltung process Hitler attempted to create a unified Protestant Reich Church from Germany s 28 existing Protestant churches The plan failed and was resisted by the Confessing Church Persecution of the Catholic Church in Germany followed the Nazi takeover Hitler moved quickly to eliminate political catholicism Amid harassment of the Church the Reich concordat treaty with the Vatican was signed in 1933 and promised to respect Church autonomy Hitler routinely disregarded the Concordat closing all Catholic institutions whose functions were not strictly religious Clergy nuns and lay leaders were targeted with thousands of arrests over the ensuing years 194 Hitler was supportive of Christianity in public yet hostile to it in private Anti clericalists like Joseph Goebbels and Martin Bormann saw the conflict with the Churches as a priority concern and anti church and anti clerical sentiments were strong among grassroots party activists 195 Hitler was born to a practising Catholic mother and an anticlerical father but after leaving home Hitler never again attended Mass or received the sacraments According to biographer Alan Bullock Hitler retained some regard for the organisational power of Catholicism but held private contempt for its central teachings which he said if taken to their conclusion would mean the systematic cultivation of the human failure 196 Joseph Goebbels the Reich Minister of Propaganda used his position to widely publicise trials of clergy and nuns in his propaganda campaigns showing the cases in the worst possible light In 1928 soon after his election to the Reichstag Goebbels wrote in his diary that National Socialism was a religion that needed a genius to uproot outmoded religious practices and put new ones in their place One day soon National Socialism will be the religion of all Germans My Party is my church and I believe I serve the Lord best if I do his will and liberate my oppressed people from the fetters of slavery That is my gospel 197 As the war progressed on the Church Question he wrote after the war it has to be generally solved There is namely an insoluble opposition between the Christian and a heroic German world view 195 Hitler s chosen deputy and private secretary Martin Bormann was a rigid guardian of National Socialist orthodoxy and saw Christianity and Nazism as incompatible mainly because of its Jewish origins 194 198 as did the official Nazi philosopher Alfred Rosenberg In his Myth of the Twentieth Century 1930 Rosenberg wrote that the main enemies of the Germans were the Russian Tartars and Semites with Semites including Christians especially the Catholic Church 199 According to Bullock Hitler considered the Protestant clergy to be insignificant and submissive and lacking in a religion to be taken seriously 200 Hitler attempted to create a unified Protestant Reich Church from 28 separate regional churches through Gleichschaltung His bid to create a unified Reich Church ultimately failed and Hitler became disinterested in supporting the so called German Christians Nazi aligned movement Hitler initially lent support to Ludwig Muller a Nazi and former naval chaplain to serve as Reich Bishop but his heretical views against Paul the Apostle and the Semitic origins of Christ and the Bible see Positive Christianity quickly alienated sections of the Protestant church Lutheran Pastor Martin Niemoller created the Confessing Church movement to oppose the Nazification of Protestant churches 201 Neimoller was arrested by the Gestapo in 1937 and sent to the concentration camps 202 The Confessing Church seminary was prohibited that same year 203 Christian persecution complex edit Main article Christian persecution complex Christian persecution complex is the notion that Christian values and Christians are being oppressed by social groups and governments 204 According to Elizabeth Castelli some set the starting point in the middle of the 20th century while others point to the 1990s After the September 11 attacks it accelerated 205 The concept that Christianity is being oppressed is popular among conservative politicians in contemporary politics in the United States and they utilize this idea to address issues concerning LGBT people or the ACA s Contraceptives Mandate which they perceive as an attack on Christianity 206 Others like professor Candida Moss and lecturer Paul Cavill point out that this mentality of being persecuted roots back to the earliest times 207 It appeared during the era of early Christianity due to internal Christian identity politics 208 209 Cavill claims that the New Testament teaches that persecutions are inherent to Christianity 210 Criticism by other religions editHinduism edit Ram Mohan Roy criticized Christian doctrines and asserted that they are unreasonable and self contradictory 211 He further adds that people even from India were embracing Christianity due to the economic hardship and weakness just like European Jews were pressured to embrace Christianity by both encouragement and force 212 Vivekananda regarded Christianity as collection of little bits of Indian thought Ours is the religion of which Buddhism with all its greatness is a rebel child and of which Christianity is a very patchy imitation 213 Philosopher Dayanand Saraswati regarded Christianity as barbarous religion and a false religion religion believed only by fools and by the people in a state of barbarism 214 he included that Bible contains many stories and precepts that are immoral praising cruelty deceit and encouraging sin 215 In 1956 the Niyogi Committee Report On Christian Missionary Activities was published by the Government of Madhya Pradesh This influential report on controversial missionary activities in India recommended that suitable controls on conversions brought about through illegal means should be implemented 216 Also in the 1950s K M Panikkar s work Asia and Western Dominance was published and was one of the first post Independence Indian critiques of Christian missions It argued that the attempt to convert Asia has definitely failed and that this failure was due to the missionaries claim of a monopoly of truth which was alien to the Asian mind their association with imperialism and the attitude of moral and racial superiority of the Christian West 216 The Indian writer and philosopher Ram Swarup was most responsible for reviving and re popularizing the Hindu critique of Christian missionary practices in the 1980s 217 He insisted that monotheistic religions like Christianity nurtured among their adherents a lack of respect for other religions 217 Other important writers who criticized Christianity from an Indian and Hindu perspective include Sita Ram Goel and Arun Shourie 218 217 Arun Shourie urged Hindus to be alert to the fact that missionaries have but one goal that of harvesting us for the church and he wrote that they have developed a very well knit powerful extremely well endowed organizational framework for attaining that goal 218 In his widely read and cited book Missionaries in India Shourie tried to build a case that Christian evangelistic methods were cynically calculating and materialistic and to Shourie missionary strategizing sounded more like the Planning Commission if not the Pentagon than like Jesus 217 219 Indian philosopher Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan wrote Unfortunately Christian religion inherited the Semitic creed of the jealous God in the view of Christ as the only begotten son of God so could not brook any rival near the throne When Europe accepted the Christian religion in spite of its own broad humanism it accepted the fierce intolerance which is the natural result of belief in the truth once for all delivered to the saints 220 Judaism edit See also Christianity and Judaism nbsp Jews burned alive for the alleged host desecration in Bavaria in 1337Shlomo ben Aderet called Christianity a lesser form of monotheism that lacks the unified deity of Judaism 221 Also in the Middle Ages Maimonides considered Christianity to be a prime example of idolatrous heresy 3 David Flusser viewed Christianity as cheaper Judaism and highly anti Jewish He also regarded the failure of Christianity to convert the Jewish people to the new message as precisely the reason for the strong anti Jewish trend in Christianity 222 Stephen Samuel Wise criticized the Christian community for its failure to rescue Jews from Europe during Nazi rule He wrote that A Christian world that will permit millions of Jews to be slain without moving heaven by prayer and earth in every human way to save its Jews has lost its capacity for moral and spiritual survival 223 Islam edit See also Christianity and Islam Muslim scholars have criticized Christianity usually for its trinity concept They argue that this doctrine is an invention distortion of the idea about God and presentation of the idea that there are three gods a form of shirk or polytheism 224 According to Qu ran 9 31 Christians should follow one God but they have made multiple They have taken as lords beside Allah their rabbis and their monks and the Messiah son of Mary when they were bidden to worship only One God 225 Origins editSee also Historicity of Jesus Christ myth theory and Christianity and Paganism Some have argued that Christianity is not founded on a historical Jesus instead they have argued that Christianity is founded on a mythical creation 226 This view proposes that the idea of Jesus was the Jewish manifestation of Hellenistic mystery cults that acknowledged the non historic nature of their deity using it instead as a teaching device 227 However the position that Jesus was not a historical figure is essentially without support among biblical scholars and classical historians 228 Theologians and Biblical Scholars such as James H Charlesworth caution against using parallels with life death rebirth gods in the widespread mystery religions prevalent in the Hellenistic culture to conclude that Jesus is a purely legendary figure Charlesworth argues that it would be foolish to continue to foster the illusion that the Gospels are merely fictional stories like the legends of Hercules and Asclepius The theologies in the New Testament are grounded on interpretations of real historical events 229 See also edit nbsp Christianity portal nbsp Religion portal nbsp Society portalAnti Catholicism Anti clericalism Anti Mormonism Anti Protestantism The Bible and violence Biblical literalism Christian fundamentalism Christian terrorism Christianity and Theosophy Criticism of Jesus Criticism of the Bible Criticism of religion Christ myth theory History of Christian thought on persecution and tolerance Internal consistency of the Bible Criticism of Protestantism Criticism of the Catholic Church Kriminalgeschichte des Christentums Ludwig Feuerbach Persecution of Christians Sectarian violence among ChristiansNotes edit See Jewish eschatology Olam Haba the afterlife and the world to come See Pharisees Pharisaic principles and values See Essenes Rules customs theology and beliefsReferences editCitations edit Le Roy Froom Prophetic Faith of Our Fathers Vol I Washington D C Review amp Herald 1946 p 328 Martin 1991 p 3 4 a b c Novak David 1992 Chapter 3 Maimonides s View of Christianity Jewish Christian Dialogue A Jewish Justification New York Oxford Academic pp 57 72 ISBN 9780199853410 Winter H R Bellows T J 1981 People and Politics An Introduction to Political Science Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 08153 1 Retrieved 2023 01 25 a b Martin 1991 p 4 Kant Immanuel Critique of Pure Reason pp 553 69 cf Kant s May 1793 letter Ak 11 414 expressing true respect for the Christian religion that has been my guide in this work aiming at a union of the Christian religion with the purest practical reason Robert R Palmer and Joel Colton A History of the Modern World New York McGraw Hill 1995 pp 388 92 Robert R Palmer and Joel Colton A History of the Modern World New York McGraw Hill 1995 p 630 Browning W R F Biblical criticism A Dictionary of the Bible 1997 Encyclopedia com 8 Apr 2010 a b Robinson B A Biblical Criticism including Form Criticism Tradition Criticism Higher Criticism etc Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance 2008 Web 8 Apr 2010 a b Mather G A amp L A Nichols Dictionary of Cults Sects Religions and the Occult Zondervan 1993 quoted in Robinson Biblical Criticism Bruce Metzger cited in The Case for Christ Lee Strobel Ehrman Bart D 2005 Misquoting Jesus The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why HarperCollins p 91 ISBN 9780060738174 Retrieved 2 August 2013 91 abbreviations Ehrman Bart D The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture New York Oxford U Press 1993 Wallace Daniel B The Gospel According to Bart A Review Article of Misquoting Jesus by Bart Ehrman Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society June 2006 also available at Bible org Craig L Blomberg Review of Misquoting Jesus The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why Archived 2009 04 25 at the Wayback Machine Denver Seminary February 2006 Howe Thomas 2006 A Response To Bart D Ehrman s Misquoting Jesus International Society of Christian Apologetics p PDF download Retrieved 31 July 2013 Ehrman Bart D 2006 Whose Word Is It Continuum International Publishing Group p 166 ISBN 978 0 8264 9129 9 Bruce Metzger A Textual Commentary on the New Testament Second Edition 1994 German Bible Society Mk 16 a b K Aland and B Aland The Text of the New Testament An Introduction to the Critical Editions and to the Theory and Practice of Modern Text Criticism 1995 op cit pp 29 30 See for example the list of alleged contradictions from The Skeptic s Annotated Bible and Robert G Ingersoll s article Inspiration Of Bible M W J Phelan The Inspiration of the Pentateuch Two edged Sword Publications March 9 2005 ISBN 978 0 9547205 6 8 Ronald D Witherup Biblical Fundamentalism What Every Catholic Should Know Liturgical Press 2001 page 26 France R T Tyndale New Testament Commentaries Matthew Inter Varsity Press Leicester England 1985 pg 17 Britannica Encyclopedia Jesus Christ p 17 a b c Lindsell Harold The Battle for the Bible Zondervan Publishing House Grand Rapids Michigan USA 1976 pg 38 a b c Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy As in 2 Timothy 3 16 discussed by Thompson Mark 2006 A Clear and Present Word New Studies in Biblical Theology Downers Grove Apollos p 92 ISBN 978 1 84474 140 3 Norman L Geisler William E Nix 2012 From God To Us Revised and Expanded How We Got Our Bible Moody Publishers p PT45 ISBN 978 0802483928 faith and practice See notably Grudem representative of recent scholarship with this emphasis Grudem Wayne 1994 Systematic Theology Nottingham Inter Varsity Press pp 90 105 ISBN 978 0 85110 652 6 Till Farrell 1991 Prophecies Imaginary and Unfulfilled Internet Infidels Retrieved 2007 01 16 W H Bellinger William Reuben Farmer eds 1998 Jesus and the Suffering Servant Isaiah 53 and Christian Origins Trinity Press ISBN 9781563382307 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Did Jesus of Nazareth live and die without the teaching about the righteous Servant of the Lord in Isaiah 53 having exerted any significant influence on his ministry Is it probable that this text exerted no significant influence upon Jesus understanding of the plan of God to save the nations that the prophet Isaiah sets forth Two questions addressed in a conference on Isaiah 53 and Christian Origins at Baylor University in the fall of 1995 the principal papers of which are available in Jesus and the Suffering Servant Peter W Stoner Science Speaks Moody Pr 1958 ISBN 0 8024 7630 9 Harris Stephen L 2002 Understanding the Bible 6 ed McGraw Hill College pp 376 377 ISBN 9780767429160 Retrieved 2 August 2013 Further snippets of quote B C D a b Biography of Isaac ben Abraham of Troki Archived from the original on 2007 09 29 TorahLab Store Pascal Blaise 1958 Pensees Translator W F Trotter chapter x xii xiii McDowell Josh 1999 chapter 8 The New Evidence that Demands a Verdict Thomas Nelson ISBN 9781850785521 a b English Handbook Page 34 999KB PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 11 12 Retrieved 2013 08 01 See also Given the New Testament a Chance from the Messiah Truth website a b David Sper Managing Editor Questions Skeptics Ask About Messianic Prophecies Archived 2008 11 20 at the Wayback Machine RBC Ministries Grand Rapids MI 1997 See Psalms 22 6 8 22 13 69 8 69 20 21 Isaiah 11 1 49 7 53 2 3 53 8 Daniel 9 26 Martin 1991 p 10 12 amp 105 Martin 1991 p 111 Martin 1991 p 112 Martin 1991 p 121 The NAS New Testament Greek Lexicon Archived from the original on 2016 04 04 Retrieved 2008 10 02 Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 19 280290 3 article Virgin Birth of Christ See for example the Council of Jerusalem described in Acts 15 Melvin E Page Penny M Sonnenburg 2003 Colonialism an international social cultural and political encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO p 496 Of all religions Christianity has been most associated with colonialism because several of its forms Catholicism and Protestantism were the religions of the European powers engaged in colonial enterprise on a global scale Bevans Steven Christian Complicity in Colonialism Globalism PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 27 Retrieved 2010 11 17 The modern missionary era was in many ways the religious arm of colonialism whether Portuguese and Spanish colonialism in the sixteenth Century or British French German Belgian or American colonialism in the nineteenth This was not all bad oftentimes missionaries were heroic defenders of the rights of indigenous peoples Andrews Edward 2010 Christian Missions and Colonial Empires Reconsidered A Black Evangelist in West Africa 1766 1816 Journal of Church amp State 51 4 663 691 doi 10 1093 jcs csp090 Historians have traditionally looked at Christian missionaries in one of two ways The first church historians to catalogue missionary history provided hagiographic descriptions of their trials successes and sometimes even martyrdom Missionaries were thus visible saints exemplars of ideal piety in a sea of persistent savagery However by the middle of the twentieth century an era marked by civil rights movements anti colonialism and growing secularization missionaries were viewed quite differently Instead of godly martyrs historians now described missionaries as arrogant and rapacious imperialists Christianity became not a saving grace but a monolithic and aggressive force that missionaries imposed upon defiant natives Indeed missionaries were now understood as important agents in the ever expanding nation state or ideological shock troops for colonial invasion whose zealotry blinded them Meador Jake 2010 09 17 Cosmetic Christianity and the Problem of Colonialism Responding to Brian McLaren Retrieved 17 November 2010 According to Jake Meador some Christians have tried to make sense of post colonial Christianity by renouncing practically everything about the Christianity of the colonizers They reason that if the colonialists understanding of Christianity could be used to justify rape murder theft and empire then their understanding of Christianity is completely wrong Conquistadors Michael Wood p 20 BBC Publications 2000 Eph 6 5 8 Glenn Sunshine Christianity and Slavery in True Reason Confronting the Irrationality of the New Atheism ed Tom Gilson and Carson Weitnauer Grand Rapids MI Kregel Publications 2013 292 293 Glancy 2002 p 141 145 Ellerbe 1995 p 90 92 P G Kirchschlaeger Slavery and Early Christianity A reflection from a human rights perspective Acta theologica vol 36 suppl 23 Bloemfontein 2016 paragraph 4 3 http dx doi org 10 4314 actat v23i1s 4 Youval Rotman Byzantine Slavery and the Mediterranean World Harvard University Press 2009 pp 131 132 Footnotes to Gruszka Peter Die Ansichten uber das Sklaventum in den Schriften Antiquitas 10 1983 106 118 Habits of Slavery in Early Christianity Brandeis University in Breton Retrieved September 17 2018 Youval Rotman Byzantine Slavery and the Mediterranean World transl by Jane Marie Todd Cambridge Massachusetts London Harvard University Press 2009 Book presentation in a Nikolaos Linardos University of Athens Mediterranean Chronicle 1 2011 pp 281 282 b Alice Rio American Historical Review Vol 115 Issue 5 2010 pp 1513 1514 a b c Robinson B A 2006 Christianity and slavery Retrieved 2007 01 03 Jack D Forbes 1993 Africans and Native Americans The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red Black Peoples University of Illinois Press p 27 ISBN 978 0252063213 Griswold Eliza June 10 2021 Southern Baptist Convention How the Convention s battle over race reveals an emerging evangelical schism Retrieved August 17 2023 Founders of the new organization claimed that according to the Bible slavery was an institution of heaven They pushed the idea that Black people were descended from the Biblical figure Ham Noah s cursed son and that their subjugation was therefore divinely ordained Webb Simon December 28 2020 The Forgotten Slave Trade The White European Slaves of Islam Rae Noel February 23 2018 How Christian Slaveholders Used the Bible to Justify Slavery Time Retrieved September 18 2018 Rodney Stark For the Glory of God How Monotheism Led to Reformations Science Witch Hunts and the End of Slavery ISBN 978 0 691 11436 1 2003 Lamin Sanneh Abolitionists Abroad American Blacks and the Making of Modern West Africa Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 00718 5 2001 Ostling Richard N 2005 09 17 Human slavery why was it accepted in the Bible Salt Lake City Deseret Morning News Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2007 01 03 Abolitionist Movement MSN Encyclopedia Encarta Microsoft Archived from the original on 2009 10 29 Retrieved 2007 01 03 Martin William 1996 With God on Our Side The Rise of the Religious Right in America New York Broadway Books Diamond Sara 1998 Not by Politics Alone The Enduring Influence of the Christian Right New York Guilford Press p 213 Ortiz Chris 2007 Gary North on D James Kennedy Archived 2009 10 11 at the Wayback Machine Chalcedon Blog 6 September 2007 Ostling Richard N 2005 09 17 Human slavery why was it accepted in the Bible Salt Lake City Deseret Morning News Associated Press Retrieved 28 October 2014 Civil Rights Movement in the United States MSN Encyclopedia Encarta Microsoft Archived from the original on 2009 10 29 Retrieved 2007 01 03 Religious Revivalism in the Civil Rights Movement African American Review Winter 2002 Archived from the original on 2016 01 12 Retrieved 2007 01 03 Martin Luther King The Nobel Peace Prize 1964 The Nobel Foundation Retrieved 2006 01 03 Frankenberry Nancy 1 January 2011 Feminist Philosophy of Religion In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy The Status of Women in the Old Testament 1 Cor 14 34 35 The Woman s Bible Index Clark Elizabeth Women in the Early Church Liturgical Press 1984 ISBN 0 8146 5332 4 Jesus Many Faces Jesus Family Tree From Jesus To Christ FRONTLINE PBS PBS a b King Karen L Women in Ancient Christianity the New Discoveries Karen L King is Professor of New Testament Studies and the History of Ancient Christianity at Harvard University in the Divinity School Stagg Evelyn and Frank Woman in the World of Jesus Philadelphia Westminster Press 1978 ISBN 0 664 24195 6 Bilezikian Gilbert Beyond Sex Roles 2nd ed Grand Rapids Michigan Baker 1989 ISBN 978 0 8010 0885 6 pp 82 104 Ex 20 12 Schalom Ben Chorin Brother Jesus the Nazarene through Jewish eyes U of Georgia Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 8203 2256 8 p 66 Clarke Arthur C amp Watts Alan January At the Interface Technology and Mysticism Playboy Chicago Ill HMH Publishing 19 1 94 ISSN 0032 1478 OCLC 3534353 Alister McGrath and Joanna Collicutt McGrath The Dawkins Delusion Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge 2007 ISBN 978 0 281 05927 0 Luke 6 Peoples Dr Glenn Andrew 2012 11 06 Whittling down the pacifist narrative Did early Christians serve in the army www rightreason org Retrieved 7 August 2014 1Kings 18 17 46 Deuteronomy 17 5 Psalm 18 37 International encyclopedia of violence research Volume 2 Springer 2003 ISBN 9781402014666 J Denny Weaver 2001 Violence in Christian Theology Cross Currents Archived from the original on 25 May 2012 Retrieved 28 October 2014 3rd paragraph I am using broad definitions of the terms violence and nonviolence Violence means harm or damage which obviously includes the direct violence of killing in war capital punishment murder but also covers the range of forms of systemic violence such as poverty racism and sexism Nonviolence also covers a spectrum of attitudes and actions from the classic Mennonite idea of passive nonresistance through active nonviolence and nonviolent resistance that would include various kinds of social action confrontations and posing of alternatives that do not do bodily harm or injury Sam Harris 2006 Letter to a Christian Nation Alfred A Knopf pp 80 81 ISBN 978 0 307 26577 7 J Denny Weaver 2001 Violence in Christian Theology Cross Currents Archived from the original on 2012 05 25 Retrieved 2010 10 27 War A Catholic Dictionary Containing some Account of the Doctrine Discipline Rites Ceremonies Councils and Religious Orders of the Catholic Church W E Addis T Arnold Revised T B Scannell and P E Hallett 15th Edition Virtue amp Co 1953 Nihil Obstat Reginaldus Philips Imprimatur E Morrogh Bernard 2 October 1950 In the Name of God Violence and Destruction in the World s Religions M Jordan 2006 p 40 Christiansen Eric The Northern Crusades London Penguin Books pg 75 Quotation The conflict thesis at least in its simple form is now widely perceived as a wholly inadequate intellectual framework within which to construct a sensible and realistic historiography of Western science p 7 from the essay by Colin A Russell The Conflict Thesis in Gary Ferngren editor Science amp Religion A Historical Introduction Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2002 ISBN 0 8018 7038 0 Quotation In the late Victorian period it was common to write about the warfare between science and religion and to presume that the two bodies of culture must always have been in conflict However it is a very long time since these attitudes have been held by historians of science p 195 Shapin S 1996 The Scientific Revolution University of Chicago Press Chicago Ill Quotation In its traditional forms the conflict thesis has been largely discredited p 42 Brooke J H 1991 Science and Religion Some Historical Perspectives Cambridge University Press Quotation from Ferngren s introduction at Gary Ferngren editor Science amp Religion A Historical Introduction Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2002 ISBN 0 8018 7038 0 while John Brooke s view of a complexity thesis rather than conflict thesis has gained widespread acceptance among professional historians of science the traditional view remains strong elsewhere not least in the popular mind p x Gary Ferngren editor Science amp Religion A Historical Introduction Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2002 ISBN 0 8018 7038 0 Introduction p ix From Ferngren s introduction while John Brooke s view of a complexity thesis rather than conflict thesis has gained widespread acceptance among professional historians of science the traditional view remains strong elsewhere not least in the popular mind p x Gary Ferngren 2002 Introduction p ix Sagan Carl Cosmos A Personal Voyage Episode 3 The Harmony of the Worlds quoted in Ted Peters Science and Religion Encyclopedia of Religion p 8182 Cowell Alan 31 October 1992 After 350 Years Vatican Says Galileo Was Right It Moves The New York Times Retrieved 24 June 2020 Vatican admits Galileo was right New Scientist 7 November 1992 Retrieved 24 June 2020 Chadwick Henry ed 1980 Contra Celsum Cambridge University Press p xxviii ISBN 978 0 521 29576 5 Stevenson J 1987 Frend W H C ed A New Eusebius Documents illustrating the history of the Church to AD 337 SPCK p 257 ISBN 978 0 281 04268 5 Morriston Wes 2 August 2011 Ethical Criticism of the Bible The Case of Divinely Mandated Genocide Sophia 51 1 117 135 doi 10 1007 s11841 011 0261 5 S2CID 159560414 Maitzen Stephen 1 November 2007 Skeptical Theism and God s Commands Sophia 46 3 237 243 doi 10 1007 s11841 007 0032 5 S2CID 170737294 Singer Peter 1991 A Companion to Ethics Blackwell Oxford pp 91 105 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Billy Graham s legacy is the evangelical pursuit of politics instead of Jesus NBC News February 25 2018 Retrieved January 6 2022 Chip Berlet Following the Threads in Ansell Amy E Unraveling the Right The New Conservatism in American Thought and Politics pp 24 Westview Press 1998 ISBN 0 8133 3147 1 MPs turn attack back on Cardinal Pell Sydney Morning Herald 2007 06 06 Pope warns Bush on stem cells BBC News 2001 07 23 Andrew Dickson White 1898 A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom p X Theological Opposition to Inoculation Vaccination and the Use of Anaesthetics Archived from the original on 2008 09 17 Retrieved 2008 09 28 Cathy Lynn Grossman 17 June 2015 Americans confidence in religion hits a new low Religion News Service U S has become notably less Christian major study finds LA Times 12 May 2015 About 91 of young outsiders felt that Christians were anti homosexual 87 of them felt that Christians were judgmental and 85 of them thought that Christians were hypocritical Millennials Leave Their Churches Over Science Lesbian amp Gay Issues Public Religion Research Institute 10 June 2011 Banks Adelle 2007 10 10 Study Youth see Christians as judgmental anti gay USA Today Archived from the original on 2023 03 05 Retrieved 2015 06 22 America s Change of Mind on Same Sex Marriage and LGBTQ Rights Barna 3 Jul 2013 Archived from the original on 2013 08 15 Retrieved 2015 06 22 See About the Evangelical and Ecumenical Women s Caucus Archived from the original on July 10 2011 Home Christians for Biblical Equality CBE Pierce Ronald W Groothuis Rebecca Merrill eds 2004 Discovering Biblical Equality Complementarity without Hierarchy IVP p 17 Grudem Wayne A Should We Move Beyond the New Testament to a Better Ethic Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society JETS 47 2 June 2004 299 346 Eck Diana L Encountering God A Spiritual Journey from Bozeman to Banaras 2003 p 98 a b Brumley Mark Why God is Father and not Mother The Catholic Faith Magazine July August 1999 Accessed 25 Feb 2013 Mt 6 9 13 Lk 6 36 Lk 11 13 Mt 10 20 Jn 20 17 a b Baptist Faith and Message Archived 2009 03 03 at the Wayback Machine الاحتفال بعيد انتقال العذراء مريم في سان دييكو The 9 Most Important Issues Facing the Evangelical Church Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2009 03 16 Hume David 2000 Chapter 10 Of Religion In Tom L Beauchamp ed An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding A Critical Edition Oxford University Press p 86 ISBN 9780198250609 Retrieved 1 August 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Homilies of Saint Gregory Palamas Vol 1 ISBN 1 878997 67 X Homilies of Saint Gregory Palamas Vol 2 ISBN 187899767X Bruce L Flamm 2004 Inherent Dangers of Faith Healing Studies The Scientific Review of Alternative Medicine Archived from the original on August 16 2007 Are Miracles Logically Impossible Come Reason Ministries Convincing Christianity Retrieved 2007 11 21 Miracles are not possible some claim Is this true ChristianAnswers net Retrieved 2007 11 21 Paul K Hoffman A Jurisprudential Analysis Of Hume s in Principal Argument Against Miracles PDF Christian Apologetics Journal Volume 2 No 1 Spring 1999 Copyright c 1999 by Southern Evangelical Seminary Archived from the original PDF on October 26 2007 Retrieved 2007 11 21 Howard W Clarke The Gospel of Matthew and Its Readers Indiana University Press 2003 p 12 William Lane Craig Reasonable Faith Christian Truth and Apologetics Crossway Books 1994 pages 38 39 Let no cultured person draw near none wise and none sensible for all that kind of thing we count evil but if any man is ignorant if any man is wanting in sense and culture if anybody is a fool let him come boldly to become a Christian Celsus AD178 Since we all inherit Adam s sin we all deserve eternal damnation All who die unbaptized even infants will go to hell and suffer unending torment We have no reason to complain of this since we are all wicked In the Confessions the Saint enumerates the crimes of which he was guilty in the cradle But by God s free grace certain people among those who have been baptized are chosen to go to heaven these are the elect They do not go to heaven because they are good we are all totally depraved except insofar as God s grace which is only bestowed on the elect enables us to be otherwise No reason can be given why some are saved and the rest damned this is due to God s unmotivated choice Damnation proves God s justice salvation His mercy Both equally display His goodness A history of Western Philosophy by Bertrand Russell Simon amp Schuster 1945 Bible Teaching and Religious Practice essay Europe and Elsewhere Mark Twain 1923 Albert Einstein Out of My Later Years New York Philosophical Library 1950 p 27 What do Orthodox Christians teach about death and what happens when we die Archived from the original on 2002 09 01 Retrieved 2008 09 15 Catechism of the Catholic Church 1035 Libreria Editrice Vaticana ISBN 0 89243 565 8 1994 the revised version issued 1997 has no changes in this section Catechism of the Catholic Church 1033 Libreria Editrice Vaticana ISBN 0 89243 565 8 1994 Richard Beck Christ and Horrors Part 3 Horror Defeat Universalism and God s Reputation Experimental Theology March 19 2007 Jonathan Kvanvig The Problem of Hell New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 508487 0 1993 The Works of Thomas Manton by Thomas Manton p 99 A Tender Age Chapter 2 Canon Law 1983 permanent dead link a b Vatican commission Limbo reflects restrictive view of salvation Archived from the original on 2007 05 08 Retrieved 2008 01 22 n Vatican abolishes Limbo Catechism of the Catholic Church New York Doubleday 1994 pp 845 ISBN 978 0 385 47967 7 Limbo Recent statements by the Catholic church Protestant views on Limbo at Religioustolerance org Root of All Evil 9 January 2006 via IMDb McGrath Alister 2004 Dawkins God Genes Memes and the Meaning of Life Oxford England Blackwell Publishing p 81 ISBN 978 1 4051 2538 3 Dawkins Richard September 17 2007 Do you have to read up on leprechology before disbelieving in them RichardDawkins net Archived from the original on 2007 12 14 Retrieved 2007 11 14 Marianna Krejci Papa 2005 Taking On Dawkins God An interview with Alister McGrath Archived 2015 02 07 at the Wayback Machine Science amp Theology News 2005 04 25 Dinesh D Souza What s So Great About Christianity Regnery Publishing ISBN 1 59698 517 8 2007 Andrew Wilson Deluded by Dawkins Kingsway Publications ISBN 978 1 84291 355 0 2007 Ingersoll Biography Chapter XI Brandt Eric T and Timothy Larsen 2011 The Old Atheism Revisited Robert G Ingersoll and the Bible Journal of the Historical Society 11 2 211 238 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5923 2011 00330 x a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link More Than A Carpenter Tyndale House Wheaton Illinois 1977 ISBN 978 0 8423 4552 1 Jeffery Steve Ovey Michael Sach Andrew 2007 Pierced for our transgressions Nottingham Inter Varsity Press ch 13 ISBN 978 1 84474 178 6 Most notably Matthew 10 22 23 16 27 28 23 36 24 29 34 26 62 64 Mark 9 1 14 24 30 14 60 62 and Luke 9 27 In his famous essay Why I Am Not a Christian Matt 16 28 Dr Knox Chamblin Professor of New Testament Emeritus Columbia Theological Seminary Commentary on Matthew 16 21 28 Archived 2012 03 04 at the Wayback Machine see last 4 paragraphs Theodor Zahn F F Bruce J Barton Payne etc hold this opinion What is the meaning of Matthew 10 23 Archived 2021 02 23 at the Wayback Machine a b From Witchcraft to Justice Death and Afterlife in the Old Testament George E Mendenhall a b Hiroshi Obayashi Death and Afterlife Perspectives of World Religions See Introduction Acts 23 6 8 Gaudium et spes 19 The Evangelical Scandal 13 April 2005 Marriage 103 The Raw Reality of Divorce and its Terrible Results Archived from the original on 2008 03 27 Retrieved 2008 01 22 Schopenhauer Arthur trans T Bailey Saunders Religion A Dialogue The Essays of Arthur Schopenhauer see e g John Coffey Persecution and Toleration on Protestant England 1558 1689 2000 p 206 see e g John Coffey Persecution and Toleration on Protestant England 1558 1689 2000 p 22 Lutz E von Padberg 1998 Die Christianisierung Europas im Mitterlalter Reclam in German p 183 William L Shirer 1960 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich London Secker amp Warburg pp 238 39 Robert Michael Philip Rosen 2007 Dictionary of Antisemitism from the Earliest Times to the Present Lanham Scarecrow Press p 321 ISBN 9780810858688 Ian Kershaw The Nazi Dictatorship Problems and Perspectives of Interpretation 4th Edn Oxford University Press New York 2000 pp 173 74 a b Encyclopedia Britannica Online Fascism Identification with Christianity 2013 Web 14 Apr 2013 a b Ian Kershaw Hitler a Biography 2008 Edn WW Norton amp Company London p 381 382 Alan Bullock Hitler A Study in Tyranny HarperPerennial Edition 1991 p219 American Experience The Man Behind Hitler Transcript PBS PBS Archived from the original on 2017 03 28 Retrieved 2017 08 26 Encyclopedia Britannica Online Martin Bormann web 25 April 2013 Encyclopedia Britannica Online Alfred Rosenberg web 25 April 2013 Alan Bullock Hitler A Study in Tyranny HarperPerennial Edition 1991 p219 Ian Kershaw Hitler a Biography 2008 Edn WW Norton amp Company London p 295 297 Encyclopedia Britannica Online Martin Niemoller web 24 April 2013 Encyclopedia Britannica Online Dietrich Bonhoeffer web 25 April 2013 Hoover 2015 p 23 According to Hoover Linda Castelli 2007 believed the reluctance to self disclose could be the Christian persecution complex p 156 an ideology that Christian values are unfavorably targeted by social and governmental opposition Arsheim 2016 p 7 According to Elizabeth Castelli this engagement can be ascribed to a Christian persecution complex that gathered pace throughout the 1990s with the adoption of the US International Religious Freedom Act in 1998 as a significant milestone and with the 9 11 terrorist attacks in 2001 as an accelerating factor Castelli 2007 173 This complex mobilizes the language of religious persecution to shut down political debate and critique by characterizing any position not in alignment with this politicized version of Christianity as an example of anti religious bigotry and persecution Moreover it routinely deploys the archetypal figure of the martyr as a source of unquestioned religious and political authority Castelli 2007 154 Ben Asher 2017 p 22 The notion that Christianity is under attack is prevalent in contemporary arguments for religious exemptions Conservative legislatures politicians and the media frequently characterize issues such as same sex marriage and the ACA s Contraceptives Mandate as attacks on Christians or Christianity Professor Candida Moss birmingham ac uk Retrieved 2018 02 21 Janes amp Houen 2014 p 24 Indeed a recent study by Candida Moss The Myth of Persecution has suggested that Christian persecution complex was the result of internal Christian identity politics Dr Paul Cavill hist cam ac uk Retrieved 2018 02 27 Cavill 2013 p 81 The early christian persecution complex is often underemphasised but is important The New Testament teaches that persecution is the inevitable by product of effective Christianity Raja Rammohun Roy Encounter with Islam and Christianity and the Articulation of Hindu Self Consciousness Page 166 by Abidullah Al Ansari Ghazi year 2010 Raja Rammohun Roy Encounter with Islam and Christianity and the Articulation of Hindu Self Consciousness Page 169 by Abidullah Al Ansari Ghazi year 2010 Neo Hindu Views of Christianity p 96 by Arvind Sharma year 1988 Gandhi on Pluralism and Communalism by P L John Panicker p 39 year 2006 Dayananda Sarasvati his life and ideas p 267 by J T F Jordens a b Chapter 6 Hindutva Secular India and the Report of the Christian Missionary Activities Enquiry Committee 1954 57 Sebastian C H Kim in Nationalism and Hindutva A Christian Response Papers from the 10th CMS Consultation Mark T B Laing 2005 ISBN 9788172148386 a b c d Pentecostals Proselytization and Anti Christian Violence in Contemporary India by Chad M Bauman Oxford University Press 2015 a b The Debate on Conversion Initiated by the Sangh Parivar 1998 1999 Author Sebastian Kim Source Transformation Vol 22 No 4 Christianity and Religions October 2005 pp 224 237 Dr Timothy Hembrom Book review on Arun Shourie and his Christian Critic and on S R Goel Catholic Ashrams in the Indian Journal of Theology Book Reviews Indian Journal of Theology 37 2 1995 93 99 Schilpp Paul Arthur 1992 The Philosophy of Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan Motilal Banarsidass Publ p 641 ISBN 9788120807921 via Google Books Judaism and Other Religions p 88 publisher Palgrave Macmillan Anti Judaism and Early Christian Identity A Critique of the Scholarly Consensus by Miriam S Taylor p 41 Wise Criticizes Christian World for Failure to Rescue Jews in Nazi Europe 19 February 1943 Christianity An Introduction p 125 by Alister E McGrath At Tawba Al Qu ran University of Leeds Retrieved 5 February 2017 Examples of authors who argue the Jesus myth theory Thomas L Thompson The Messiah Myth The Near Eastern Roots of Jesus and David Jonathan Cape Publisher 2006 Michael Martin The Case Against Christianity Philadelphia Temple University Press 1991 36 72 John Mackinnon Robertson Freke Timothy and Gandy Peter 1999 The Jesus Mysteries London Thorsons Harper Collins Historian Michael Grant stated To sum up modern critical methods fail to support the Christ myth theory It has again and again been answered and annihilated by first rank scholars In recent years no serious scholar has ventured to postulate the non historicity of Jesus or at any rate very few and they have not succeeded in disposing of the much stronger indeed very abundant evidence to the contrary Michael Grant Jesus An Historian s Review of the Gospels Scribner 1995 There are those who argue that Jesus is a figment of the Church s imagination that there never was a Jesus at all I have to say that I do not know any respectable critical scholar who says that any more Burridge R amp Gould G Jesus Now and Then Wm B Eerdmans 2004 p 34 Michael James McClymond Familiar Stranger An Introduction to Jesus of Nazareth Eerdrmans 2004 page 24 most scholars regard the argument for Jesus non existence as unworthy of any response Charlesworth James H ed 2006 Jesus and Archaeology Grand Rapids Michigan Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 4880 2 Sources edit Arsheim Helge 2016 Internal affairs Assessing NGO engagement for religious freedom at the United Nations and beyond In Stensvold Anne ed Religion state and the United Nations Value politics London Routledge pp 79 94 ISBN 978 1 138 93865 6 SSRN 2892536 Ben Asher Noah September 21 2017 Faith Based Emergency Powers Harvard Journal of Law and Gender 41 269 300 SSRN 3040902 Cavill Paul 2013 Anglo Saxons Saints Lives and Deaths In Kojecky Roger Tate Andrew eds Visions and revisions The word and the text Unabridged ed Newcastle upon Tyne UK Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 4438 4332 4 Ellerbe Helen 1995 The Dark Side of Christian History Morningstar Books ISBN 978 0 9644873 4 5 Glancy Jennifer A 2002 Slavery in Early Christianity Oxford University Press ISBN 978 1 4514 1094 5 Hoover Linda 2015 Effects of Negative Media on Evangelical Christians Attitudes Toward Evangelism PhD Janes Dominic Houen Alex eds 2014 Martyrdom and terrorism Pre modern to contemporary perspectives New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 995985 3 Martin Michael 1991 The Case Against Christianity Temple University Press ISBN 978 1 56639 081 1 Further reading editThis further reading section may need cleanup Please read the editing guide and help improve the section August 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Skeptical of Christianity edit For a more comprehensive list see Bibliography of books critical of Christianity A Rationalist Encyclopaedia A book of reference on religion philosophy ethics and science Gryphon Books 1971 Breaking the Spell Religion as a Natural Phenomenon by Daniel Dennett Civilization and its discontents by Sigmund Freud Death and Afterlife Perspectives of World Religions by Hiroshi Obayashi Einstein and Religion by Max Jammer From Jesus to Christianity by L Michael White Future of an illusion by Sigmund Freud Harvesting our souls Missionaries their design their claims by Shourie Arun 2006 New Delhi Rupa History of Hindu Christian encounters AD 304 to 1996 by Goel Sita Ram 2016 Hindu view of Christianity and Islam by Swarup Ram 1992 Letter to a Christian Nation by Sam Harris Light of truth Or an English translation of the Satyarth Prakash Dayananda S amp Bharadwaja C 1915 Allahabad Arya Pratinidhi Sabha Misquoting Jesus The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why by Bart Ehrman Missionaries in India Continuities changes dilemmas Shourie Arun 2006 New Delhi Rupa My Illumination by Richard Green Out of my later years and the World as I see it by Albert Einstein Russell on Religion by Louis Greenspan Includes most all of Russell s essays on religion The Antichrist by Friedrich Nietzsche The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins God Is Not Great by Christopher Hitchens The Varieties of Scientific Experience A Personal View of the Search for God by Carl Sagan Understanding the Bible by Stephen L Harris Where God and Science Meet Three Volumes How Brain and Evolutionary Studies Alter Our Understanding of Religion by Patrick McNamara Why I am not a Christian and other essays by Bertrand Russell Why I Became an Atheist A Former Preacher Rejects Christianity by John W Loftus Prometheus Books 2008 The Christian Delusion edited by John W Loftus foreword by Dan Barker Prometheus Books 2010 Christian Missionary Activities Enquiry Committee Madhya Pradesh India and Sita Ram Goel 1998 Vindicated by time the Niyogi Committee report on Christian missionary activities New Delhi Voice of India The End of Christianity edited by John W Loftus Prometheus Books 2011 The Historical Evidence for Jesus by G A Wells Prometheus Books 1988 The Jesus Puzzle by Earl Doherty Age of Reason Publications 1999 The encyclopedia of Biblical errancy by C Dennis McKinsey Prometheus Books 1995 godless by Dan Barker Ulysses Press 2008 The Jesus Mysteries by Timothy Freke and Peter Gandy Element 1999 The reason driven life by Robert M Price Prometheus Books 2006 The Case Against Christianity by Michael Martin The case against the case for Christ by Robert M Price American atheist press 2010 God the failed hypothesis by Victor J Stenger Prometheus Books 2007 Jesus never existed by Kenneth Humphreys Iconoclast Press 2005 Defending Christianity edit For a more comprehensive list see List of Christian apologetic works The Jury Returns A Juridical Defense of Christianity by John Warwick Montgomery An Excerpt from Evidence for Faith Chapter 6 Part 2 The Infidel Delusion by Patrick Chan Jason Engwer Steve Hays and Paul Manata Atheist Delusions The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies by David Bentley Hart Dethroning Jesus by Darrell Bock Daniel B Wallace Jesus Among Other Gods by Ravi Zacharias Mere Christianity by C S Lewis Orthodoxy by G K Chesterton Reasonable Faith by William Lane Craig Reinventing Jesus by J Ed Komoszewski M James Sawyer Daniel B Wallace The Case for Christ by Lee Strobel The Dawkins Letters by David Robertson The Reason For God by Timothy J Keller Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Criticism of Christianity amp oldid 1216962993, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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