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GOD is NOT GREAT: How religion poisons everything, 2007, Christopher HITCHENS.
Christopher Hitchens has been hailed as 'one of the most brilliant journalists of our time' (UK Observer). Here he makes the ultimate case against organised religion.
Combined with a detailed reading of the major religious texts, he documents the ways in which religion is a man-made wish, a cause of dangerous sexual repression, and a distortion of our origins in the cosmos. In Hitchens' view hell is replaced by the Hubble Telescope's awesome view of the universe, and Moses and the burning bush give way to the beauty and symmetry of the double helix. With chapters entitled 'Religion Kills', 'The "New" Testament Exceeds the Evil of the "Old" One', 'The Koran is Borrowed from Both Jewish and Christian Myths', and 'Is Religion Child Abuse?' Hitchens argues provocatively for a secular life based on science and reason rather than the myths of a man-made wish. (back cover) CHRISTOPHER HITCHENS is the author of Letters to a Young Contrarian, and the bestseller No One Left to Lie To: The Values of the Worst Family. A regular contributor to Vanity Fair, The Atlantic Monthly and Slate, Hitchens also writes for The Weekly Standard, The National Review and The Independent. He was named one of the world's 'Top 100 Public Intellectuals' by Foreign Policy and Britain's Prospect. (back cover) Hinduism's killing of widows is criticised (p 208), and their idea of a limited number of years for hell's duration is discussed (p 219). Judaism and Islam are criticised in the pages opposing the circumcision of little boys, and the animists and some Muslims are criticised for cutting part of little girls' pudendae (see p 223). He also excoriates the masturbation taboo (see pp 214-15 and 226ff). Bible: He sees a nightmare in the Old Testament stories, and shows that the Jewish savant Maimonides praised the crucifixion of Jesus as being a great achievement of the Jewish elders (p 111). The author sees evil in the New Testament, reminds us that Mary seems not to have remembered the prophecies of the Archangel Gabriel and is surprised at Jesus' childhood talks to the temple scholars (p 116). He gives evidence that the adulterous woman episode was not part of the original Gospel of John, chapter 8, verses 3-11 (pp 120-22). Orthodox Christian bishops and priests often blessed the genocidal army of Serbia's Slobodan Milosevic (a former Communist), which shelled the Croatian Catholic cities of Vukovar and Dubrovnik, and attacked the mainly Muslim city of Sarajevo. His thugs dynamited several historic minarets in Banja Luka during a cease-fire as part of an effort to destroy evidence of the Ottoman Muslim occupation of Serb lands (p 21). Roman Catholic Church: Fascism in southern Europe was not condemned by the RCC. Mussolini even gave as a justification for using poison gas against Abyssinia (Ethiopia), that the Christians there had persisted in Monophysitism (a dogma about whether Jesus had a human and/or divine nature). (see p 236) The Vatican signed a Concordat with the Nazi German dictator, Adolph Hitler, in 1933 (see p 228). "The cardinal of Austria proclaimed his enthusiasm at Hitler's takeover of his country at the time of the Anschluss." (p 236) The Nazis did not keep the promises they made in the Concordat. Yet, on the Vatican's orders, every year from 1939, on Hitler's birthday (April 20), the German leading bishop sent praise, and wrote that German Catholics were offering fervent prayers to heaven on their altars (see p 239). Nazi Germany's puppet regime in occupied Slovakia was actually led by an RC priest, Father Tiso (p 236). After the warmonger Hitler suicided in April 1945, the RC leader of the RC Irish Free State, Eamon de Valera, went to the German embassy in Dublin to offer Ireland's official condolences (p 237). After the atrocities of September 11, 2001, and an attack on Iraq was being discussed by the West, "the pope disgraced himself utterly by issuing a personal invitation to the wanted war criminal Tariq Aziz," who murdered children, and was a senior Catholic member of a ruling fascist-style party (Iraq's) (p 34). Islam: The Koran had been written on "paper, stones, palm leaves, shoulder blades, ribs, and bits of leather." Some Muslim authors say it was gathered together during the first caliphate, that of Abu Bakr, immediately after Mohammad's death; others say it was the fourth caliph, Ali, who did this. The majority, the Sunnis, say it was Caliph Uthman, reigned 644-656, who made the finalised decision (see pp 130-131). The Arabic language at the time had undotted and odd vowels, generating wildly different readings. Written Arabic even today uses dots to distinguish consonants like "b" and "t", and in its original form had no sign or symbol for short vowels. To take one instance of the difficulty, the Arabic words written on the outside of the Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem, are different from any version in the Koran. It is doubtful that the world really has a fully accurate Koran, in spite of what Muslim leaders say (see p 131). The Islamic belief that all is arranged by Allah in advance, in this is somewhat similar to Calvinism's predestination dogma (see p 234). After the 2003 invasion of Iraq, an Al-Qaeda leader, Jordanian ex-gaolbird named Abu Musab as-Zarqawi, launched a frenzied campaign of murder and sabotage against the long-oppressed Shiite majority! He wrote to his leader Osama Bin Laden that one reason was the Shiites were heretics to the Muslim faith, and secondly if a religious war could be induced in Iraq, the plans of the "crusader" West could be set at naught. (pp 26-27) Protestantism: Calvin's Geneva was a totalitarian state, and he burned Servetus, another reformer, alive. Some such Christians have an urge to ban books, silence dissenters, condemn outsiders, etc. (p 233) German Protestantism surrendered to the German Nazi regime, except for a few brave resisters (see p 238). Other faiths: The author also exposes Buddhism, the part that religion played in wartime Japan in inducing fanaticism and enrolling suicide pilots (p 201), the Orange People (Bhagwan Sri Rajneesh, pp 195-98), and even Saddam Hussein's use of Islam to bolster his cruel dictatorship (pp 25-26). The author attacks several religions for fostering anti-Judaism (which like most he calls "anti-Semitism"). Scripture he did like: The Bible verse that Hitchens likes is Philippians 4:8 (p 12). |
The papacy of the Roman Catholic Church is one of the world's oldest continuous institutions. Paul Collins, historian and inveterate Vatican watcher, has looked beyond the details of this astonishing parade of over 200 Bishops of Rome to uncover the dynamics of papal power.
VAN STRAATEN, Werenfried, 1989 (orig 1969-70), Where God Weeps, Ignatius Press, San Francisco (revised American edition). ISBN 0-89870-234-8; 252 pp, 13.5 x 20.5 cm (5 1/4 x 8 in), softcover, no index. (Originally in German: Wo Gott weint, 1969.)
Father Werenfried van Straaten is a Dutch member of the Catholic Norbertine order, whose name means "warrior of peace." He has been called by his many admirers and recipients of generosity "the bacon priest." He has worked in Europe, Asia, Latin America, Africa and behind the Iron Curtain through the movement "Aid to the Church in Need."
In this book he chronicles government corruption and lawless rebels destroying Christian communities, as well as Communistic repression of religious people, and the deception of some Christians by the peaceful co-existence propaganda of those times. Aid to the Church in Need www.aidto church.org has agents in several countries (see Aid to the Church in Need Mirror).
[1989]
Sporting a cover picture of two cartoon-like devil-imps, with horns, one seeming to shout "Noooo!", the message in the comic-style pages is that the "Great Tribulation" and "the Rapture" are about to befall the earth. The mini-booklet uses texts from the Book of Revelation (The Apocalypse) as well as other Bible books. Quote: "... if you reject Jesus and miss the Rapture, you will probably take the mark of the Beast to survive and be cast into the lake of fire."
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SYMBOLS:
* -- NEW*, and in later entries summarising the facts just an asterisk (*), signify predatory clergy whose offences were not known to the public, and probably/possibly not included in previous overall statistics and enumerations of the numbers of seducing etc. clergy. ≤ means "less than or equal to," and on this website might signify before or during that year or month, or, before or on that date. ≥ means "greater than or equal to," i.e., "at least," and on this website is given cognate meanings, such as "on or after". < means "less than," and on this website might also signify before a date. > means "greater than," and on this website might also signify after a date. < and >, or ( and ). At times, Internet addresses (URLs) or e-mail addresses in some situations might be marked off with "<" and ">" or with "(" and ")". ≅ means approximately equal to, but many times on this website "~" has been used, both with an extra meaning of around that period = circa. |
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INTENTION: The intention of the "Religion" group of Webpages is NOT to HARM religion, but to assist the faithful to understand their own and perhaps other religions. |
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