RELIGION IS EVIL
Religion began as humanity’s first attempt to explain the
unknown. Before science, before medicine, before astronomy, people looked at
lightning, disease, drought, death, and the stars and invented stories to make
terror bearable. That impulse was understandable. But what may once have served
as primitive comfort has evolved into one of the most destructive forces in
human history.
The problem is not spirituality, awe, wonder, or the search
for meaning. The problem is organized religion: systems of belief demanding
loyalty to claims without evidence, rewarding obedience over inquiry, and
dividing humanity into tribes of “saved” and “unsaved,” “believers” and
“infidels.” Religion has become institutionalized fiction defended as eternal
truth. And when fiction is elevated above fact, civilization itself is
endangered.
As God Is Not Great argued relentlessly, religion poisons
everything because it inserts dogma where skepticism should exist. It teaches
people not how to think, but what to think. It conditions the mind to accept
authority without evidence. Once a population becomes comfortable believing
extraordinary claims without proof, it becomes vulnerable to manipulation by
priests, politicians, dictators, and demagogues. The surrender of critical
thinking is religion’s greatest danger.
Richard Dawkins made a similar point in The God Delusion:
religion survives not because it is true, but because it is culturally
inherited and emotionally reinforced. Children are not born religious. They are
taught religion before they possess the intellectual tools to challenge it.
Faith is therefore often less a conclusion than an indoctrination.
The central defect of religion is epistemological: it
elevates faith over evidence. Science says, “Show me.” Religion says, “Believe
first.” Science changes when new evidence appears; religion clings to ancient
texts regardless of contradiction. Science admits uncertainty; religion
pretends certainty. One advances civilization. The other anchors civilization
to superstition.
Throughout history, religion has repeatedly stood against
human progress. It resisted astronomy when the church condemned Galileo Galilei.
It resisted evolutionary biology when Darwin undermined literal creation myths.
It resisted modern medicine, stem-cell research, contraception, and countless
social reforms. Even today, religious extremism obstructs education, suppresses
women, persecutes minorities, and justifies violence around the globe.
Worse still, religion often transforms ordinary people into
moral absolutists convinced they possess divine authority. History is soaked in
blood spilled in the name of God: crusades, inquisitions, witch trials,
sectarian wars, terrorism, and endless persecution. No atheist has ever flown
an airplane into a building because evolution demanded it. No scientific
journal ever ordered the execution of heretics. Religious certainty is uniquely
dangerous because it convinces people that cruelty is righteousness.
Religion also feeds narcissism. The belief that the universe
was designed specifically for one species on one tiny planet, and that an
all-powerful creator is personally concerned with individual thoughts, prayers,
diets, rituals, and sexual behavior, is perhaps the greatest act of
self-importance in human history. Many religions teach not humility, but cosmic
favoritism: “We alone possess truth.” From that premise flows intolerance.
At the psychological level, religion exploits humanity’s
greatest fear: death. Most religions promise immortality, reunion, reward, and
cosmic justice. These promises comfort people, but comfort does not equal
truth. Humanity desperately wants permanence, meaning, and continuation beyond
death. Religion monetizes and institutionalizes that fear. It offers certainty
where none exists.
The tragedy is that morality does not require religion at
all. Human beings evolved empathy, cooperation, and reciprocal behavior long
before organized theology. We know murder, cruelty, dishonesty, and betrayal
are wrong not because a scripture commands it, but because conscience and
social evolution made moral behavior essential to survival. A child understands
fairness before understanding doctrine.
Indeed, religion often corrupts morality by replacing
independent ethical reasoning with obedience. If something is “good” only
because God commands it, morality becomes submission rather than understanding.
History demonstrates the danger of this mindset: otherwise decent people have
defended slavery, misogyny, homophobia, and violence because they believed
divine authority sanctioned it.
The modern world now faces a profound choice. One path
continues humanity’s long struggle toward reason, science, evidence, and
universal human rights. The other retreats into tribalism, superstition,
nationalism, and religious certainty. Artificial intelligence, biotechnology,
climate science, and global cooperation require rational thinking on a
planetary scale. Religion fragments humanity into competing mythologies
precisely when collective reason is most necessary.
None of this means religious individuals cannot be kind,
generous, or moral. Many are. But their goodness comes from their humanity, not
their theology. The best people transcend the cruelty of their religions, while
the worst people often find justification within them.
Humanity’s future depends on whether we finally outgrow the
childhood need for supernatural explanations and accept the harder but nobler
task of confronting reality honestly. Facts are the currency of a just society,
and science is the arbiter of facts. Civilization advances only when truth
outranks comfort.
Religion asks humanity to kneel before mystery. Reason asks
humanity to investigate it.
One posture leads backward. The other leads forward.
William James Spriggs
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