Thursday, January 31, 2008

HELLO OUT THERE: A BLOGGER'S CURIOSITY

This is my third-ever blog entry. It is strange to be writing without knowing whether these words will ever be read by anyone. Why would they be?

My two previous blogs have engendered no responses, and I do not think this site allows me to know whether anyone is even reading the entries, although I can discover that 17 people have checked our my profile here.

So, the question remains: Is anyone listening? Is writing blog entries worthwhile? Let me know?

Friday, January 25, 2008

RELIGION & WAR

My agnostic friend enjoys pointing out that religion fuels many wars and much violence. Currently Muslims, Jews and Christians are in opposition in many places, and as I understand it, sects within Islam are killing each other as the result of a disagreement over which line of believers are the true successors of their founding prophet.

My own church has a history of popes literally leading armies into battle, as well as the murderous tortures of the Inquisition. Today its sins of violence are more along the line of scandalous predations on the young and attacks on the rights of gay people.

In my small home town I recall one intersection with churches on three of the four corners. I seriously doubt that many of the parishioners really understood clearly the long-past theological disputes which had severed these Christian worshipers from each other. Socially amiable, these congregations were divided by a kind of violence of the mind.

To my mind, ou greates human qualities - whether gifts from God as I believe them to be, or the result of evolution as my agnostic friend might hold, are free will and conscience. Thus to enslave another in body or mind, or to harm another physically or intangibly because of what he or she believes, are atrocious acts.

I read once, scrawled on a wall at Jesuit Georgetown University in Washington, DC: "If you truly believe there is no God, it is your moral duty to be an atheist."

Still, in many parts of the world, people of differing faiths live together in peace. I think today we need great Gandhi-like leaders who can heal the antagonisms between warring creeds and angry factions. In the meantime, each of us can try to choose harmony over anger, and peace over contention, at every opportunity.