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A Little History of Religion A Little History of Religion by Richard Holloway
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“But if we are all God’s children, why does God spend so much time in history ordering one branch of his universal family to wipe out another branch? Why did his love for his Jewish children have to be expressed by the extermination of his Palestinian children? Why did he later abandon his Jewish children in favour of his Christian children and encourage his new favourites to torment their older siblings? Why did he order his Muslim children who worship him as One to persecute his pagan children who worship him as Many? Why is there so much violence in religious history, all done by groups who claim God is on their side?
Unless you are prepared to believe that God actually plays favourites like some kind of demented tyrant, then there are only two ways out of this dilemma. The obvious one is to decide that there is no God. What is called God is a human invention used, among other things, to justify humankind’s love of violence and hatred of strangers. Getting rid of God won’t solve the problem of human violence but it will remove one of its pretexts.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“Fundamentalists didn’t try to disprove science. They didn’t argue against it. They pronounced against it! It was the equivalent of a parent clinching an argument with a child by shouting: ‘because I say so’. That’s what fundamentalist religion does. It refutes not by evidence but by authority. Why is Darwin wrong? Because the Bible says so! But they did more than pontificate. They tried to ban science itself. That’s”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“So yes, religion has caused and continues to cause some of the worst violence in history. And yes, it has used God to justify it. So if we mean by God the loving creator of the universe, then either he doesn’t exist or religion has got him wrong. Either way, religion should make us wary. That doesn’t necessarily mean we should abandon it altogether. We may decide to stick with it but to do so with humility, admitting the evil it has done as well as the good. It’s up to us.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“As we have seen so often in this book, religion may begin with mystical experiences but it always leads to politics. It starts with the voice heard by the prophets who are its chosen instruments. And what they hear always leads to actions that affect the way people live: with politics. Sometimes the politics are bad. People are persecuted for following the wrong faith or for listening to the wrong voice. Or they are forced to embrace the message announced by the latest hot prophet. So the history of religion becomes a study in different forms of oppression. But sometimes the politics are good. They are about liberation, not oppression. We saw good politics in the stand the Pennsylvanian Quakers made against slavery in 1688. And in the African American Church today the politics of Christianity are still about liberation. The tactics of Moses and the promises of Jesus are used to make the world a better place. Religion is no longer used as an opiate to dull the pain of injustice and inequality but as a stimulant to overcome it. That’s what keeps many people in the religion game.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“The theory they used to prevent women voting was that the female brain could not comprehend the complexity of politics. Politics was for men. Child-bearing was for women. And the best supplier of reasons for keeping people in their place has always been religion. We saw it at work in the debate over slavery. The Bible and the Qur’an both took slavery for granted. They took the subordination of women for granted too. So we run up against the awkward fact that sacred texts can be used to supply ammunition for those who want to keep people under control.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“The most revolutionary change that hit the world in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries was the liberation of women. The Bible and the Qur’an came from societies controlled by men. No surprise there. That’s how the world everywhere was run until fairly recently. And there is something worth noting before we go deeper into the issue. History shows that the men in charge never volunteer to give up their privileges. They don’t wake up one day and say, ‘I’ve suddenly realised that the way I control and dominate others is wrong. I must change my ways. So I’ll share my power with them. I’ll give them the vote!’ That’s never how it works. History shows that power always has to be wrested from those who have it. The suffragettes who fought for the vote or suffrage for women learned that lesson. Men didn’t volunteer to give women the vote. Women had to fight them for it.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“fundamentalist religion does. It refutes not by evidence but by authority”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“Their books weren’t ink marks on paper but God himself compressed between covers. No wonder they often ended up fighting with each other over who had the best words and the best symbols for God.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“Symbols become sacred to people because they represent loyalties deeper than words can express. That’s why they hate to see their symbols violated.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“Events that come on tiptoe often change the world.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“بينما يهتم الفن أن يكشف لنا حقيقة حياتنا. هذا هو السبب في أن القصة يمكن أن تبكيك عندما ترى نفسك فيها، وتكتشف أن هذا هو أنت”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“Buddha would have agreed with an insight of the seventeenth-century French contemplative Blaise Pascal: ‘all human evil comes from a single cause, man’s inability to sit still in a room’.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“The answer he gave was that the way out was by the path of moderation between extremes. He called it the Middle Path.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“don’t believe 2+2=4. I know it. I am certain of”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“Cuộc đời là để sống tốt và trọn vẹn trong chính nó, chứ không chỉ là khúc dạo đầu cho những gì có thể xảy đến sau cái chết.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“Confucianism and Taoism were native to China, but its third religion, Buddhism, was an import from India.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“Lao Tse told them to relax and learn from the life of a plant. It doesn’t have to be told how to do its thing. It follows its nature.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion
“Buddhism is a practice, not a creed. It is something to do rather than something to believe. The key to its effectiveness is controlling the restless craving mind through meditation. By sitting still and watching how they breathe, by meditating on a word or a flower, practitioners move through different levels of consciousness to the calm that diminishes desire. Buddha would have agreed with an insight of the seventeenth-century French contemplative Blaise Pascal: ‘all human evil comes from a single cause, man’s inability to sit still in a room’.”
Richard Holloway, A Little History of Religion