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Choosing
the God We Want
by Mano Singham
The series of articles on the burden of proof
in relation to the existence of god (see part
1, part 2,
and
part 3) produced
some very thoughtful comments by readers that explore many facets
of the issue, and I would urge those interested
to read those comments.
What initiated that series of articles
was Laplace's comment that he had no need to hypothesize the existence
of god to understand
the workings of the universe. I agree with that point, that
whether
or not one believes in god is a matter of choice and that there
is no evidence for the existence of god that is compelling
in the way that science requires in support of its hypotheses.
In
the absence of such compelling positive evidence, I simply
proceed on the assumption of non-existence of god.
But the issue
of choice is not just between the existence and non-existence
of god. Religious people who personally feel
that there exists evidence for the existence of god also
have to make
a choice, except that in their case they have to choose what
kind of god to believe in. Believing in a Christian god means
rejecting a Jewish or Muslim or Hindu or other vision of
god.
But the need for making choices does
not end there. Even if one has chosen to believe in a Christian
god, one has
to make
further
choices. The fact is that there are many different kinds
of god portrayed in the Bible – vengeful, loving, murderous,
merciful,
just, capricious, cruel, generous, and so on. A god who
can order
every living thing in the world to be drowned except for
one family and two representatives of each species (in
Noah's flood)
is revealing quite a different attitude to life and death
from a god who tells Abraham (Genesis 18:16-33) that he
cannot bring
himself to destroy the wicked town of Sodom because of
the possibility that it might contain even as few as ten righteous
persons who
did not deserve to die. It is impossible to make the case
that there is a single vision of god in the Bible, unless
one also
asserts that human comprehension is too weak to understand
and resolve the different portrayals into one non-contradictory
whole.
It is clear that what most religious
believers have done is chosen what type of god they wish to believe
in and
what type
to reject.
In the contemporary political context, some Christians
have chosen the gay-lifestyle hating god, while others
have chosen
a gay-lifestyle
accepting god, and so on. Depending on what choice was
made results in each person having to explain away those
features
that seem
to contradict the view of god they have chosen. This
partly explains why churches tend to splinter into so many different
denominations
and why there are so many disagreements about what god
expects from people and how god expects people to behave.
If
you want to believe in a kind and loving god, you have some stiff
challenges to overcome, not limited to
the appalling
massacre of people in the great flood. For example,
take the
story of
Abraham and Isaac. For those not familiar with this
story (Genesis chapters 21 and 22), Abraham and Sarah did not
have children
for a long time and finally (when Abraham was 100 years
old) she gave birth to Isaac. But then god decides
to 'test' Abraham
and asks him to sacrifice Isaac as a burnt offering.
Abraham obeys, making all the preparations for this
horrendous sacrifice until at the very last moment, just as he
is
about to kill
the boy, god stops him. God is impressed by Abraham's
unquestioning
obedience and rewards him.
This story is disturbing
on a whole host of levels. What kind of god would ask a parent
to kill his child
as a
test of faith?
And what kind of person would be willing to kill
his own child to prove his faith? If we knew of anyone
today who
was planning
to sacrifice his child to prove his worthiness to
god, would we not feel justified in labeling that person
as dangerously
hallucinating and do everything we could to stop
him, including forcible restraint and even incarceration?
So why is Abraham's
behavior seen as somehow noble? And why is god given
a pass for asking someone to commit murder? Even
if one were
to
assume that
god and Abraham were engaged in some monstrous game
of chicken, not believing that the sacrifice will
be actually
carried
out but simply playing mind games, waiting for the
other to relent
first so that the murder is avoided, this episode
still does not reflect well on either party.
Or take the tsunami
which killed hundreds of thousands of people in South East Asia
in December 2004. I moderated
a discussion of faculty members from the major religions to
discuss the question of theodicy (theories to justify the
ways of God
to people, or
understanding why bad things happen to good people).
But the very topic of theodicy assumes that what
we think of
as bad
(such as the deaths of children) are in fact not
deliberate acts of
god. Why should we think that? How do we know that
god did not deliberately kill all these people
out of a sense
of
whimsy or
out of callousness or because he was bored or because
he likes seeing people suffer?
The answer is that
we don't really know the answers to these questions or to the
ones raised about
Abraham and
Isaac because
we have no way of knowing the true nature of
god even if we believed in god's existence. What most
people
have done
is
choose to believe
in a god who would not casually murder people.
They are not compelled to make such a choice
by anything
in the
Bible.
This illustrates a paradox. Believers
in a god will often explain away disturbing facts by arguing
that
we mere
mortals cannot
really understand god's ineffable plan, but
at the same time argue that they know god's nature.
The
reality is
that people
are choosing a god that is congenial to their
world-view.
Choice is always involved whether
one is a believer or not. While believers choose one
vision of
god and reject
all others,
atheists
go just one step further and reject all visions
of god. It is not such a big step.
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