I love history. It was my minor in college, so I was especially interested in reading Greg Koukl’s chapter called “Christianity’s Real Record ” in his book Faith Is Not Wishing. He deals with the question of whether followers of Christ actually have been the cause of great evil in the world.
Current critics of Christianity and religion in general see a history littered with examples to support their point of view. They bring up witchhunts, crusades, and religious jihad. For example, Thomas Friedman, a popular New York Times columnist, said our battle is not really against terrorism but against any religion that claims to be true, which he calls “religious totalitarianism.”
What is his solution? Pluralism, the idea that “God speaks multiple languages.” But Greg points out the self-defeating nature of Friedman’s argument. Friedman’s claim that God is a pluralist is, in fact, a narrow, exclusivist religious claim that he thinks is true. He’s dogmatic about this doctrine of God, and is also militant about it since he believes people who disagree with him should be silenced.
Friedman actually misdiagnoses the problem, according to Greg. Friedman sees it as religious dogma, but everyone, including Friedman, is dogmatic about issues of truth. The problem is not religious dogma, but religious error. The problem with Muslim terrorists is not fundamentalism, but that their fundamental beliefs are simply false.
Another key problem with Friedman is his complaint that religion has been responsible for more devastation than anything else in history. But the crimes themselves have been exaggerated. In some cases, conflicts that appear to be religious in nature are actually political or cultural wars that divided along religious lines (Northern Ireland is a prime example). Yes, people did die in the Crusades, the Inquisition, religious wars of the Reformation, and the Salem witch trials. However, the numbers of deaths are far smaller than what some people have suggested. In addition, the Crusades were a defensive war, the Spanish Inquisition involved the government more so than the church, and the Salem witch trials were stopped by Christians.
Friedman’s look at history is incorrect also because the greatest evil in the world actually comes from those who deny God’s existence. The greatest evil has always resulted from a denial of God, not pursuit of him. Greg points out that noted radio talk show host Dennis Prager has said, “In the 20th century alone, more innocent people have been murdered, tortured, and enslaved by secular ideologies – Nazism and communism – then by all religions in history.” Think about communist China, the USSR, and Cambodia – millions were slaughtered in each of these countries where people in charge were convinced that there is no God to whom they must answer.
The above represents only half of Greg’s chapter on Christianity’s real record. I’m going to save the other half for a future blog.