STR Ambassador
July 26th 2004, 02:27 PM
Christianity has been called cruel because it teaches that Jews killed Jesus and that Jesus is the only way to heaven. The first incites persecution; the second denies that goodness matters in God's assessment. This challenge, though, misunderstands both the nature of history and the nature of justice.
Is Christianity Cruel? by Greg Koukl
I was stunned to read in a recent article by a prominent pro-Christian Jewish thinker an unusual attack on Christianity. In a piece entitled "When Religion Makes People Cruel" I found this comment: "Historically, the greatest evidence of the ability of religion to make a person cruel can be found among believing Christians."
The general point of the article was a good one: sometimes the directives of a particular religion seem at odds with basic morality. But is Christianity guilty here? Do the specific teachings of the New Testament produce cruel people and cruel situations?
The author gave two examples. First, pogroms against Jews have been justified because the Christian Bible blamed Jews for killing Jesus. Second, Christianity is cruel because it teaches that all non-Christians, regardless of how God-fearing, moral or kind, will suffer eternal torment, while all believers in Jesus, regardless of their behavior, have salvation.
The first point is a serious non-sequitur, and dissecting it will be a good lesson in clear-thinking. The second errs principally because of a misunderstanding of the role of goodness in salvation, an issue even many Christians are seriously confused on.
Our fundamental question is simple: Does the Bible teach these things, and do these teachings, by their nature, lead to cruelty in those who believe them?
Is It Cruel to Hold that Jews Killed Jesus?
The Christian Bible does, in fact, teach that Jewish leadership was responsible for the execution of Jesus. But this, in itself, is not cruel. First, it's not a religious teaching of Christianity, but an incidental historical footnote. Second, if the accusation sticks, then Judaism ends up being cruel, too. Let me explain.
First, the identity of Jesus' executioners is irrelevant to Christian dogma. What's critical to dogma is that Jesus truly died and was raised, not that any particular group was responsible for His death. Indeed, from the perspective of theology all men were responsible for the death of Christ because all sinned, and this the New Testament is very clear on.
The question here is historical, not doctrinal. The Gospel accounts merely report what happened, that Jews had Jesus executed for religious reasons. Historical facts are either true or false, not cruel or kind. If a particular thing is an historical fact, then it cannot be cruel to believe it.
Incidentally, the Babylonian Talmud makes the same historical claim. In Sanhedrin 43a it says, "On the eve of the Passover Yeshu (the Nazarene) was hanged. For forty days before the execution took place, a herald went forth and cried, 'He is going forth to be stoned because he has practiced sorcery and enticed Israel to apostasy.'" It's clear the Jews were responsible here because the crimes were religious.
Second, cruelty to Jews does not follow from the assertion that the Jews were instrumental in the death of Jesus. Nowhere in the Scriptures do we see this. Quite the contrary, the early Christians brought their message of forgiveness and reconciliation to the Jews first, with no animosity. Note, by the way, that no pogroms were initiated against Romans who actually carried out the execution.
Further, the Christians of the first couple of centuries were excessively pacifistic and wouldn't lift a finger to defend even themselves, much less take revenge on the Jews. Revenge was not only forbidden by the New Testament, it was unnecessary. The execution of Christ was used by God, according to Christianity, to accomplish salvation for all who would believe. The death of Jesus was a good thing to Christians, not an evil that needed avenging. It wasn't until centuries after Christ that the institutional church used such illegitimate justification for malicious actions against non-Christians.
Third, this line of thinking makes Judaism cruel also. In the first century the Jewish belief that Jesus was not the Messiah was the animus for systematic persecution of Christians. Stephen was murdered by a mob of Jewish leaders for pointing out that the Jews habitually rejected God's chosen deliverer--from Joseph, to Moses, down through the prophets, even to Messiah. In fact, most Christian martyrs from 33 A.D to 64 A.D. died at the hands of Jews.
Now here's the dilemma. This argument holds that Christians murdered Jews because they believed Jews killed Christ. Therefore, the belief that Jews killed Christ is evil and Christianity is cruel for teaching it. But Jews murdered Christians because Jews believed Jesus was not the Messiah, as Christians claimed. Therefore, the belief that Jesus is not the Messiah is evil, and Judaism is cruel for teaching it. What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.
Evil people of all religious persuasions may seize upon religious justification for their immoral behavior, even when the behavior itself is condemned by their religion. When that happens, it's simply mistaken to blame the religion. It may be that some of the greatest acts of cruelty came from professing Christians who used their religion as a cloak for evil. Christianity itself, though, doesn't cause such evil. Rather, it consistently condemns it.
Is It Cruel to Hold that Jesus is the Only Way to Heaven?
The second objection states that it's cruel to teach that all non-Christians, regardless of how God-fearing, moral or kind, will suffer eternal torment, while all believers in Jesus, regardless of their behavior, have salvation.
First, even if this depiction was entirely true, it escapes me how teaching this makes one cruel. Historically such thinking has stimulated great kindness: acts of charity, mercy and love to make more tangible and palatable a message of God's forgiveness that people desperately needed. History is replete with wonderful examples of self-sacrifice and profound acts of love from Christians whose chief motivation was their belief that people perish eternally without Christ. It may be that Christians are simply mistaken here, but I fail to see how such a view makes them cruel.
Second, this is largely a straw man; the depiction is not true. Christians do not believe that all "believers" in Christ, no matter what their behavior, have eternal salvation. In the Bible words are cheap and behavior is critical. Mere professions of faith are worthless. John says explicitly, "He who says, 'I know Him,' and does not keep His commandments, is a liar," and "Whoever does not practice righteousness is not of God." (1 Jn 2:4, 3:10) Jesus Himself said, "By their fruits you shall know them."
But what about good people? Does Christianity hold that goodness is irrelevant to God? Here we must take our time and weigh our words carefully.
First, the Old Testament puts the issue of human goodness in perspective. Isaiah 64:6-7 says, "For all of us have become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous deeds are like a filthy garment; and all of us wither like a leaf, and our iniquities, like the wind, take us away."
The Psalmist adds, "They are corrupt, they have committed abominable deeds; there is no one who does good. The Lord has looked down from heaven upon the sons of men, to see if there are any who understand, who seek after God. They have all turned aside; together they have become corrupt; there is no one who does good, not even one." (Psalm 14:1-3)
These are strong words. The prophet affirms that our iniquity overwhelms our goodness. The Psalmist declares that our corruption consumes us. This is God's perspective. We are all guilty, from the least to the great.
This is precisely the Christian testimony. The New Testament does not teach that good deeds are of no value. It teaches that good deeds cannot pay for bad deeds. This is a critical point of misunderstanding, even by Christians.
Why Good Deeds Can't Pay for Bad Deeds
Our problem is not goodness, but badness. Yes, God demands that we live ethically. But what about those moments when we don't? The most vital issue Christianity answers is "How can we be right with God when we are not thoroughly good?"
There is profound misunderstanding on this point, as I said, and part of the misunderstanding is because many err in defining goodness according to human standards, that is, good more or less--basically good. God, on this view, is concerned with what kind of individual one is "on average." He's not examining every corner of one's life to find any dirt there. If the good outweighs the bad, if good is predominant, then God winks at the occasional moral lapse.
But justice never works like that, does it? The law demands that "on average" each person obey every law always, not most laws usually. You can be an upstanding citizen all your life, but one single crime is still going to bring you before the court.
Further--and this is absolutely critical--no amount of good behavior pays for bad behavior. Period. Law requires consistent goodness, and that which is already owed cannot be used to pay for past errors.
God, like all lawgivers, requires no more nor less than moral perfection. "But that's impossible," you say. You're right. That's why we need a Savior.
The Christian claim is simply this: every person stands guilty before God in some measure. Good deeds cannot atone for bad deeds because one already owes God obedient, righteous, moral behavior. Instead, we must seek forgiveness, and since God is the one offended, we must seek forgiveness on His terms.
The New Testament teaching is that God's terms involve Jesus, and a rejection of Jesus is a rejection of God's forgiveness. One who rejects forgiveness is still in his sin; he's still under judgment.
Here's a simple way of putting it. One day every single one of us, the morally great and small alike, will stand before God to be judged for his or her crimes, such as they are--some more, some less. Either we pay for them ourselves, or we let Jesus pay for them for us. That's it. If we refuse forgiveness through Jesus, then we stand alone to endure God's penalty.
That's the New Testament teaching. There's nothing bizarre, unfair, outlandish or cruel about it. The only cruelty is knowing this information and withholding it.
I certainly agree that religion can make people cruel. But that's only because the religion itself is false and therefore does not reflect God's morality, or because the religion is true, but its ethics are either misunderstood or misapplied. The latter happens frequently with Christianity. That's not the fault of its founder, though, or its founding principles; it's the fault of its followers.
Law requires consistent goodness, and that which is already owed cannot be used to pay for past errors.
The death of Jesus was a good thing to Christians, not an evil that needed avenging.
The prophet affirms that our iniquity overwhelms our goodness. The Psalmist declares that our corruption consumes us.
The law demands that "on average" each person obey every law always, not most laws usually.
Stand to Reason - Training Christian Ambassadors in knowledge, wisdom, and character - www.str.org
Notice - The featuring of a particular ministry does not constitute endorsement of every single item or point of view published by said ministry by each and every member of TheologyWeb leadership. We strive to have a varied cross-section of representations of differing opinions on secondary Christian issues. The only requirement for the featuring of a particular ministry is that said ministry subscribes to the essentials artictulated in the TheologyWeb statement of faith found here in our Mission Statement (http://www.theologyweb.com/forum/mission/)
Notice – The ministries featured in this section are guests of this site and very often not active members of debate forums. Additionally, this area is frequented and highlighted for guests who also very often are not acclimated to debate. As such, the rules of conduct here will be more strict than in the general forum. This will be something within the discretion of the Moderators, but we simply ask that you conduct yourselves in a manner considerate of the fact that these ministries are our invited guests. You can always feel free to start a related thread in general forum without such extra restrictions. Thank you.
Is Christianity Cruel? by Greg Koukl
I was stunned to read in a recent article by a prominent pro-Christian Jewish thinker an unusual attack on Christianity. In a piece entitled "When Religion Makes People Cruel" I found this comment: "Historically, the greatest evidence of the ability of religion to make a person cruel can be found among believing Christians."
The general point of the article was a good one: sometimes the directives of a particular religion seem at odds with basic morality. But is Christianity guilty here? Do the specific teachings of the New Testament produce cruel people and cruel situations?
The author gave two examples. First, pogroms against Jews have been justified because the Christian Bible blamed Jews for killing Jesus. Second, Christianity is cruel because it teaches that all non-Christians, regardless of how God-fearing, moral or kind, will suffer eternal torment, while all believers in Jesus, regardless of their behavior, have salvation.
The first point is a serious non-sequitur, and dissecting it will be a good lesson in clear-thinking. The second errs principally because of a misunderstanding of the role of goodness in salvation, an issue even many Christians are seriously confused on.
Our fundamental question is simple: Does the Bible teach these things, and do these teachings, by their nature, lead to cruelty in those who believe them?
Is It Cruel to Hold that Jews Killed Jesus?
The Christian Bible does, in fact, teach that Jewish leadership was responsible for the execution of Jesus. But this, in itself, is not cruel. First, it's not a religious teaching of Christianity, but an incidental historical footnote. Second, if the accusation sticks, then Judaism ends up being cruel, too. Let me explain.
First, the identity of Jesus' executioners is irrelevant to Christian dogma. What's critical to dogma is that Jesus truly died and was raised, not that any particular group was responsible for His death. Indeed, from the perspective of theology all men were responsible for the death of Christ because all sinned, and this the New Testament is very clear on.
The question here is historical, not doctrinal. The Gospel accounts merely report what happened, that Jews had Jesus executed for religious reasons. Historical facts are either true or false, not cruel or kind. If a particular thing is an historical fact, then it cannot be cruel to believe it.
Incidentally, the Babylonian Talmud makes the same historical claim. In Sanhedrin 43a it says, "On the eve of the Passover Yeshu (the Nazarene) was hanged. For forty days before the execution took place, a herald went forth and cried, 'He is going forth to be stoned because he has practiced sorcery and enticed Israel to apostasy.'" It's clear the Jews were responsible here because the crimes were religious.
Second, cruelty to Jews does not follow from the assertion that the Jews were instrumental in the death of Jesus. Nowhere in the Scriptures do we see this. Quite the contrary, the early Christians brought their message of forgiveness and reconciliation to the Jews first, with no animosity. Note, by the way, that no pogroms were initiated against Romans who actually carried out the execution.
Further, the Christians of the first couple of centuries were excessively pacifistic and wouldn't lift a finger to defend even themselves, much less take revenge on the Jews. Revenge was not only forbidden by the New Testament, it was unnecessary. The execution of Christ was used by God, according to Christianity, to accomplish salvation for all who would believe. The death of Jesus was a good thing to Christians, not an evil that needed avenging. It wasn't until centuries after Christ that the institutional church used such illegitimate justification for malicious actions against non-Christians.
Third, this line of thinking makes Judaism cruel also. In the first century the Jewish belief that Jesus was not the Messiah was the animus for systematic persecution of Christians. Stephen was murdered by a mob of Jewish leaders for pointing out that the Jews habitually rejected God's chosen deliverer--from Joseph, to Moses, down through the prophets, even to Messiah. In fact, most Christian martyrs from 33 A.D to 64 A.D. died at the hands of Jews.
Now here's the dilemma. This argument holds that Christians murdered Jews because they believed Jews killed Christ. Therefore, the belief that Jews killed Christ is evil and Christianity is cruel for teaching it. But Jews murdered Christians because Jews believed Jesus was not the Messiah, as Christians claimed. Therefore, the belief that Jesus is not the Messiah is evil, and Judaism is cruel for teaching it. What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.
Evil people of all religious persuasions may seize upon religious justification for their immoral behavior, even when the behavior itself is condemned by their religion. When that happens, it's simply mistaken to blame the religion. It may be that some of the greatest acts of cruelty came from professing Christians who used their religion as a cloak for evil. Christianity itself, though, doesn't cause such evil. Rather, it consistently condemns it.
Is It Cruel to Hold that Jesus is the Only Way to Heaven?
The second objection states that it's cruel to teach that all non-Christians, regardless of how God-fearing, moral or kind, will suffer eternal torment, while all believers in Jesus, regardless of their behavior, have salvation.
First, even if this depiction was entirely true, it escapes me how teaching this makes one cruel. Historically such thinking has stimulated great kindness: acts of charity, mercy and love to make more tangible and palatable a message of God's forgiveness that people desperately needed. History is replete with wonderful examples of self-sacrifice and profound acts of love from Christians whose chief motivation was their belief that people perish eternally without Christ. It may be that Christians are simply mistaken here, but I fail to see how such a view makes them cruel.
Second, this is largely a straw man; the depiction is not true. Christians do not believe that all "believers" in Christ, no matter what their behavior, have eternal salvation. In the Bible words are cheap and behavior is critical. Mere professions of faith are worthless. John says explicitly, "He who says, 'I know Him,' and does not keep His commandments, is a liar," and "Whoever does not practice righteousness is not of God." (1 Jn 2:4, 3:10) Jesus Himself said, "By their fruits you shall know them."
But what about good people? Does Christianity hold that goodness is irrelevant to God? Here we must take our time and weigh our words carefully.
First, the Old Testament puts the issue of human goodness in perspective. Isaiah 64:6-7 says, "For all of us have become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous deeds are like a filthy garment; and all of us wither like a leaf, and our iniquities, like the wind, take us away."
The Psalmist adds, "They are corrupt, they have committed abominable deeds; there is no one who does good. The Lord has looked down from heaven upon the sons of men, to see if there are any who understand, who seek after God. They have all turned aside; together they have become corrupt; there is no one who does good, not even one." (Psalm 14:1-3)
These are strong words. The prophet affirms that our iniquity overwhelms our goodness. The Psalmist declares that our corruption consumes us. This is God's perspective. We are all guilty, from the least to the great.
This is precisely the Christian testimony. The New Testament does not teach that good deeds are of no value. It teaches that good deeds cannot pay for bad deeds. This is a critical point of misunderstanding, even by Christians.
Why Good Deeds Can't Pay for Bad Deeds
Our problem is not goodness, but badness. Yes, God demands that we live ethically. But what about those moments when we don't? The most vital issue Christianity answers is "How can we be right with God when we are not thoroughly good?"
There is profound misunderstanding on this point, as I said, and part of the misunderstanding is because many err in defining goodness according to human standards, that is, good more or less--basically good. God, on this view, is concerned with what kind of individual one is "on average." He's not examining every corner of one's life to find any dirt there. If the good outweighs the bad, if good is predominant, then God winks at the occasional moral lapse.
But justice never works like that, does it? The law demands that "on average" each person obey every law always, not most laws usually. You can be an upstanding citizen all your life, but one single crime is still going to bring you before the court.
Further--and this is absolutely critical--no amount of good behavior pays for bad behavior. Period. Law requires consistent goodness, and that which is already owed cannot be used to pay for past errors.
God, like all lawgivers, requires no more nor less than moral perfection. "But that's impossible," you say. You're right. That's why we need a Savior.
The Christian claim is simply this: every person stands guilty before God in some measure. Good deeds cannot atone for bad deeds because one already owes God obedient, righteous, moral behavior. Instead, we must seek forgiveness, and since God is the one offended, we must seek forgiveness on His terms.
The New Testament teaching is that God's terms involve Jesus, and a rejection of Jesus is a rejection of God's forgiveness. One who rejects forgiveness is still in his sin; he's still under judgment.
Here's a simple way of putting it. One day every single one of us, the morally great and small alike, will stand before God to be judged for his or her crimes, such as they are--some more, some less. Either we pay for them ourselves, or we let Jesus pay for them for us. That's it. If we refuse forgiveness through Jesus, then we stand alone to endure God's penalty.
That's the New Testament teaching. There's nothing bizarre, unfair, outlandish or cruel about it. The only cruelty is knowing this information and withholding it.
I certainly agree that religion can make people cruel. But that's only because the religion itself is false and therefore does not reflect God's morality, or because the religion is true, but its ethics are either misunderstood or misapplied. The latter happens frequently with Christianity. That's not the fault of its founder, though, or its founding principles; it's the fault of its followers.
Law requires consistent goodness, and that which is already owed cannot be used to pay for past errors.
The death of Jesus was a good thing to Christians, not an evil that needed avenging.
The prophet affirms that our iniquity overwhelms our goodness. The Psalmist declares that our corruption consumes us.
The law demands that "on average" each person obey every law always, not most laws usually.
Stand to Reason - Training Christian Ambassadors in knowledge, wisdom, and character - www.str.org
Notice - The featuring of a particular ministry does not constitute endorsement of every single item or point of view published by said ministry by each and every member of TheologyWeb leadership. We strive to have a varied cross-section of representations of differing opinions on secondary Christian issues. The only requirement for the featuring of a particular ministry is that said ministry subscribes to the essentials artictulated in the TheologyWeb statement of faith found here in our Mission Statement (http://www.theologyweb.com/forum/mission/)
Notice – The ministries featured in this section are guests of this site and very often not active members of debate forums. Additionally, this area is frequented and highlighted for guests who also very often are not acclimated to debate. As such, the rules of conduct here will be more strict than in the general forum. This will be something within the discretion of the Moderators, but we simply ask that you conduct yourselves in a manner considerate of the fact that these ministries are our invited guests. You can always feel free to start a related thread in general forum without such extra restrictions. Thank you.