Good
without God?
R. Joseph Hoffmann
Being good is not the same as being ethical ,or virtuous, or
doing good, or even leading a good life.
Let
me begin with two stories. The first comes from Voltaire, who is
reported to have said to his mistress, Marguerite, “Whatever you
do, don’t tell the servants there is no God or they’ll steal the
silver.”
Another, told by the writer Diderot in the 18th century, is about
the journey of Catholic missionaries to Tahiti--a dialogue between
a chief named Orou and a priest, who tries to explain the concept
of sin.
Orou says that many of the things Europeans find sinful are sources
of pride in his island.
He doesn’t understand the
idea of adultery, since in his culture generosity and sharing are
virtues. Marriage to a single man or woman is unnatural and
selfish. And surely there can be nothing wrong with being naked and
enjoying sexual pleasure for its own sake—otherwise, why do our
bodies exist. The horrified priest delivers a long sermon on
Christian beliefs, and ends by saying,
“And now that I have
explained the laws of our religion, you must do everything to
please God and to avoid the pains of hell.”
Orou says, “You mean, when
I was ignorant of these commandments, I was innocent, but now that
I know them, I am a guilty sinner who might go to hell.”
“Exactly,” the priest
says.
“Then why did you tell
me?” says Orou.
***
These stories indicate a
couple of things about the relationship between religion and
morality—or more precisely, the belief that God is the source of
morality. The first story suggests that belief in God is
“dissuasive.” By that I mean, religion is seen as a way of
preventing certain kinds of actions that we would do if we
believed there was no God. The kind of God religious
people normally think of in this case is the Old Testament God, or
the God who gives rules and expects them to be obeyed.
Not all religious people
believe these rules were given by God to Moses or Muhammad
directly, but most would agree that it’s a good idea, in general,
not to steal, commit adultery, hate your neighbor (or envy his
possessions obsessively), or kill other people. For at least a
thousand years busy theologians have tried to put these essentially
negative rules into more positive form: for example, by saying that
people should act out of love for each other, or love of God, and
not out of fear. Most Christians would say this is the essential
difference between the laws of the Old Testament and the teaching
of Jesus in the New. But they are only partly right. Both books of
the Bible and all of the Qur’an emphasize fear of God, judgment,
and the rewards and punishments of the hereafter as goads to
repentance, leading a better life, giving up your rotten ways. Even
the books of the Bible that are tainted with Greek thought—like the
Book of Proverbs--emphasize that “the Fear of the Lord is the
beginning of wisdom.” So it’s mischievous to say that fear and
trembling aren’t used for moral leverage throughout the
Bible.
Modern Christians, Jews,
and the Muslims who focus on God’s compassion and mercy, are
required to ignore a whole cartload of passages where God reminds
people, like any ancient father (and not a few modern mothers),
that his patience is wearing thin. Jeremiah 5:22 (NIV) “’Should you
not fear me?" declares the Lord. ‘Should you not tremble in my
presence?’" The answer is a deafening: “Yes.” Remember the flood?
Remember the first born sons of the Egyptians? Remember the plagues
and famines? Remember Sodom and Gomorrah? You love this God because
you ignore his commandments at your peril. He has chosen you; you
have not chosen him, and he can withdraw his favor whenever he
wants. (As Jackie Mason used to say, you look at Israel and you
have to wonder if “maybe the Samoans aren’t the chosen
people”).
The theme of the oldest
books of the Bible is very plain: God “loves” (more precisely, he
watches out for) the ones who keep his commandments and punishes
those who don’t. -- A simple message that theology has had two
thousand years to massage. In fact, the New Testament belongs to
the history of that massaging process. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John
were the first spin doctors--re-writing the script, transforming
Yahweh into a compassionate conservative. But let’s be clear that
the hero of the story is a typical Near Eastern tyrant: powerful,
vengeful, jealous by his own admission, proprietary (“His is the
world and all that dwells within”), and though slow to anger,
fearsome when his wrath is provoked, watchful to point of being
sleep- deprived (Ps 121.4). There is no unconditional love here.
God is not a model for progressive parenting; he’s not interested
in the self-esteem of his people, has not read Dr Wayne Dyer, and
will not break down weeping on Oprah! for being compulsive. The
message of God the Father is, “Do this or else.”
A larger question posed by
Voltaire’s little story is whether the motivation of fear is
ever ethical. If you do something because there is a
threat of pain and suffering if you don’t, or if you hold
off doing something you would really like to do—for the same
reason—are you being moral?
What Voltaire is really
saying—as Nietzsche, Marx and Freud would later say—is that
religion is useful for keeping certain kinds of people in line.
Eighteenth- and Nineteenth- century European society could be
neatly divided into those who knew better and those who served the
ones who did. Marx went so far as to suggest that the social
deference the moneyed classes paid to religion was simply intended
to convince the lower classes that religion is true—in fact, that’s
exactly what Voltaire is saying: Religion is a mechanism used by
the knowledgeable to keep the unknowledgeable in their place. It
has social advantages—Marx’s Jewish father conveniently “converted”
from Judaism to the Prussian State Church in order to go on working
as a lawyer. And we all know the younger Marx’s most famous verdict
on the topic: “Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the
heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It
is the opium of the people. The abolition of religion as the
illusory happiness of the people is the demand for their real
happiness.”
What’s missing from this
critique, of course, is the question of whether a “religious act”
can ever be a “moral act.” Clearly, belief in God (or a specific
kind of God) provides behavioral incentives. As a system of control
based on fear, religion keeps people from “being bad,” or at least
doing things considered bad by the controller. But it does this
inefficiently. Clearly it offers people an explanation for why they
behave in certain ways, ranging from the “Bible tells me so” to
“Papa dixit”—the pope says so. As a means of consolation, it
teaches people to deal with the fear and insecurity created by
oppression. But it does this at the expense of self-fulfillment,
wholeness. It is the security of an abusive relationship, where
comfort consists in being able to predict and manipulate eruptions
of violence. In fact, to look back to the sacrificial origins of
religion, this was precisely its social role. Even the story of the
crucifixion, which many people believe is all about love and
forgiveness, is the story of a God so angry at the sinful
imperfections of humanity that he transfers his violence to his
only son, who becomes the redemptive victim—the buy-back price—for
sins he didn’t commit.
Let’s call this religious
approach to behavior “Being Good.” Being good is not the same as
being ethical or virtuous, or doing good, or even leading a good
life. It’s a mother wagging an imperative finger at a three year
old and saying “You’d better be good.” It always involves threat
and reward. Two generations ago, the image would have included
threats of belts or woodsheds spankings, going to bed without
dinner. I guess, unfortunately, in some places it still does. But
you don’t get ethics out of this. You get obedience and
submission.
***
What about Diderot’s story
about the missionary and the tribal chief? If the story about
Voltaire suggests that religion is dissuasive and coercive,
Diderot’s suggests another reason why religion doesn’t sit well
with ethics: Religion is prescriptive, and like politics, it’s
local. In 2000 years of massaging the message, it has
changed because we have changed our minds. Most of the biblical
rules about property, goods and chattels, adultery and incest were
typical throughout the Middle East; in fact, as Freud recognized,
the taboos against murder and incest are the earliest form of laws
in some tribal societies. But the books we call the basis of the
“Judaeo-Christian -ethic” weren’t written by tribes—tribes don’t
write. And the body of laws we call the Ten Commandments contain
lots of rules that have been quietly put in trunks and sent to the
attic.
For example, we all
applaud the wisdom of the commandment that says, “Honor your father
and your mother.” It has a nice ring, especially during school
vacations. But Deuteronomy 21.20 says that disobedient sons should
be stoned in front of the elders at the gates of the city. And
Exodus 21.17 says that anyone who insults his mother and father
shall be put to death. As for adultery, which belongs to ancient
property law in the Jewish system, the punishment is
stoning—normally only for the woman (Deut. 22.21). In Deut. 22.28,
the penalty for raping an unbetrothed virgin is a fine of 50
shekels--plus taking her on as a wife. There are laws protecting
the rights of the firstborn sons of unloved wives when a man has
several wives (Deut. 21.15) and even laws about how long a Jewish
warrior must wait (one month) before he can have intercourse with a
woman he has captured in battle (21.10). According to Leviticus
19.23, raping another man’s female slave is punishable by making an
offering to the priest, who is required to forgive him. There are
laws covering how long you can keep a Hebrew male-slave—6 years—but
if you sell your daughter as a slave to another man she
cannot be freed, unless after the master has had sex with her he
finds her “unpleasing”—in which case she can be put up for sale
(ransom) (Exodus 21. 7ff.). On it goes—throughout the books of the
Torah—the Law.
The sheer ferocity of the
God who gives, or rather shouts these commandments to his chosen
people is distant from our time. The voice is unfamiliar: Failure
to do what he says results in terror: In fact, that’s the very word
he uses: “I will bring upon you sudden terror, wasting disease,
recurring fever, plagues that will blind you….those that hate you
will hound you until there is no place to run; I will multiply your
calamities seven times more than your sins deserve. … I will send
wild beasts among you and they will tear your children from you. …
If you defy me , I will scourge you seven times over. …I will send
pestilence …cut short your daily bread, until ten women can bake
your bread in a single oven. … I will punish you seven times over.
… Instead of meat, you shall eat your sons and your daughters.”
Don’t take my word for it: read Leviticus 26. It has literary
flair. The God of the Old Testament is a three dimensional
figure—far bigger than Zeus and twice as malignant. (Perhaps Zeus
was able to give freer rein to his sexual appetites, whereas Yahweh
limits himself to one Galilean virgin?) And look though you may,
you will not find these laws “repealed” in later books, at least
not in the way modern laws can be amended and repealed. But it’s
absolutely certain that anyone who tried to obey these laws in
twentieth century Europe or America would be slapped into jail, and
the defense “The Bible told me so” would not be an adequate
defense. --Try posting these commandments above the
blackboard in your neighborhood school.
One way of charting the
so-called progress of western civilization is to trace how human
values eventually triumph over the ferocity of religious law. The
kind of morality that Diderot’s priest represents, like the
morality of the Bible, and even the reductionist versions of
biblical and Quranic teaching that modern religious denominations
espouse, is not ethics. It is not ethics because ethics can’t be
grounded in what I’m going to call “irrelative prescriptive
dissuasion.” If you say to me, “Well: no one believes these things
any more,” then I say “Good for us for not believing. Then time to
stop letting the Bible be the source of moral authority when the
conduct of its hero is not up to our standards of civil behavior.”
If you say, “There is great wisdom and poetry in scripture,” then I
say “Please then, let’s treat it like other great books that
express ideas, customs, and values that have no authority over how
we lead our lives.” I have no quarrel with those who want to
appreciate the Bible as a product of its own time and culture—with
all the conditions that attach to appreciation of that kind. My
quarrel is with people who want to make it a document for our time
and culture.
And I suppose my quarrel
extends to people who consider themselves experts, when what they
are expert in is reading around, into, or past the text. Liberal
theologians are immensely gifted at reinventing the God of the
Bible in the light of modern social concerns. But the project is a
literary--not an ethical one. At another extreme, which is really a
false opposite, are the fundamentalists who claim to defend the
literal truth of the Bible while ignoring two-thirds of the text
and focusing on the “literal” truth of bits and pieces.
Can the Bible make you
good? If you accept the framework, beginning with Adam and Eve, and
the creation of a race doomed to be perpetually three years-old and
scolded into obedience, I suppose it can.
Reduced to basic form, the
temptation in the Garden of Eden is a story about a cookie jar and
a sly, accusing mother. But it takes more than avoiding mousetraps
for a choice to be moral or an action to be ethical. A moral act is
one in which you can entertain doubt freely, where a person
confronts human choices and human consequences, personal and
social.
To be fair: the Bible and
its cousins are important records of those human choices and their
social consequences, coming from an age which is no longer relevant
to us. To make it a book for our time is an abuse of the book and a
misunderstanding of its importance. More depressingly for some,
perhaps, there will probably be no book to replace it. Not even one
by a secular humanist. But there will be wisdom, and reason and
choice-making, and that will make us humanly better, if not exactly
good.
Notes by Bevsiem:
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