Of this salvation the prophets have inquired and searched carefully...
...which angels desire to look into.
~ 1 Pet 1:10-12
Saturday, January 28, 2017
Monday, January 23, 2017
Is Religion the Cause of Most Wars?
-- by Brett Kunkle
On
Sunday, I returned home from another Berkeley
Mission trip, where I intentionally exposed high school students to some
of my atheist friends in the Bay Area. For the last six months, we’ve taught
apologetics to these high schoolers from Upland Christian Academy. Now it was
time for them to “get off the sidelines and into the game” and engage
non-Christians with the truth. Of course, my atheist friends are more than
happy to oblige, so they meet with our missions teams, challenge them with a
short lecture, and then dive into some rigorous dialogue.
Without
fail, a couple of our atheist guests will contend, “Religion is the cause of
most wars.” This cultural mantra has been uttered so often and with so much
force, it has come to be accepted as an undeniable declaration. Prominent
atheists like Sam Harris contribute to the chorus of voices, arguing religion
is “the most prolific source of violence in our history” (The End of Faith
page 27). Richard Dawkins claims, “There’s no doubt that throughout
history religious faith has been a major motivator for war and for
destruction.”
But
as we trained students for this trip, we equipped them with a simple question
to expose such claims: “How did you come to that conclusion?” (also known as Columbo Question #2). We simply taught students to
recognize when someone makes a claim and then to request their supporting
reasons. When our atheist presenters were challenged to provide justification,
they could only offer up the Crusades, the Inquisition, 9-11, or vague
references to Islamic terrorism. Certainly we recognize religion’s role in
these examples, but three or four references cannot support the claim that most
wars are caused by religion.
Not
only were students able to demonstrate the paucity of evidence for this claim,
but we helped them discover that the facts of history show the opposite:
religion is the cause of a very small minority of wars. Phillips and Axelrod’s
three-volume Encyclopedia of Wars lays out the simple facts. They
examined 5 millennia worth of wars—1,763 total—and found that only 123 (or
about 7%) were “religious in nature.” If you remove the 66 wars waged in the
name of Islam, it cuts the number down to a little more than 3%.
A
second scholarly source, The
Encyclopedia of War edited by Gordon Martel, confirms this data, concluding
that only 6% of the wars listed in its pages can be labelled religious wars.
Thirdly, William Cavanaugh’s book, The Myth of Religious Violence,
exposes the “wars of religion” claim. And finally, a
recent report (2014) from the Institute for Economics and Peace further
debunks this myth.
We
didn’t stop there. We showed students it gets worse for the atheists’ claim. A
strong case can be made that atheism, not religion, and certainly not
Christianity, is responsible for a far greater degree of bloodshed. Indeed, R.J. Rummel’s work
in Lethal Politics and Death by Government has the secular body count at
more than 100 million...in the 20th century alone.
Our
students were able to see that a simple examination of the facts relieves
religion from blame for most of the world’s wars. In addition, we were able to
help cultivate in students a healthy skepticism of atheistic claims. If the
skeptic will shout such an unsubstantiated claim so loudly and with so much
force, what other skeptical claims might quickly fall apart under rational
scrutiny?
-
See more at:
http://str.typepad.com/weblog/2016/02/is-religion-the-cause-of-most-wars.html#sthash.MRJgDMEH.dpuf
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)