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Tuesday, September 05, 2006
Does religion make people better or worse
By Dennis Prager
Poll
Will Hillary Clinton fight for the nomination past June 1st?


I have devoted much of my life to arguing that religion is the finest vehicle for individuals and societies to become decent, good, moral (you choose the term you prefer). For example, in 2005, I devoted 24 columns to making the case for Judeo-Christian values as the finest system of values ever devised.

However, this advocacy of religion comes with two caveats.

First, the claimed superiority of Judeo-Christian values in no way means that all believing Jews and Christians are good people, let alone better than all other people. There have always been and there are today morally superior individuals in every religion. And there are morally superior individuals among atheists and people of no organized religion.

Second, there is no religion that has not made, or at least enabled, some of its adherents to be morally worse than they would have been had they not adopted that religion.

So our question is not whether there are good or bad people in every religion. The question is whether any given religion is likely to make one who believes in it a better or worse person than he would have been had he not believed in that religion.

Let's begin with my religion, Judaism. I recall a young man who attended a Jewish institute I used to direct. When he first arrived at the institute, he was a particularly kind and nonjudgmental individual -- and completely secular. After his month-long immersion in studying and living Judaism, he decided to become a fully practicing Jew. When I met him a year later he was actually less kind and was aggressively judgmental of the religiosity of fellow Jews, including me and others who had brought him to Judaism. In one year he had become in his eyes holier than the teachers who brought him to religion in the first place.

Now, of course, there are teachings in Judaism that, if honored (such as the Prophet Micah's admonition to "walk humbly with your God"), would have prevented him from becoming sanctimonious. But the religion's emphasis on legal observance enabled him to count the number of laws fellow Jews did not observe and judge them accordingly.

One major benefit of Judaism's being law-based is that it can provide an individual with a way to regularly ascertain right from wrong, to provide ethical rules on a daily basis. It can move him to visit the sick when he would rather be at home watching television, to resist gossiping, to give more charity than he otherwise would, to show honor to parents who may not deserve it, and so much more. But it can also lead him to judge fellow Jews by their level of ritual observance, to substitute law worship for God worship, and can lead a Jew to retreat from almost any social interaction with the non-Jewish world. Continued...

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About The Author
Dennis Prager is a radio show host, contributing columnist for Townhall.com, and author of 4 books including Happiness Is a Serious Problem: A Human Nature Repair Manual.

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Kind of like the Christian who does evil
but expects to go to heaven because he is 'saved.' Now don't jump me, but I think there are things that being saved - won't save you FROM. Like murder. If you knowingly and coldbloodenly commit murder, I don't see HOW you can be saved, just like that. And I also doubt some of those death row inmates have more than a cursory knowledge of the Bible. They tend to use anyone they can sink their claws into.

All that aside, much evil has been done in the name of all religions. But I do think that more is CONDONED or encouraged by Islam than either of the other two.

But you will not hear from the 'moderates.' We here at TownHall (I think without exception?) Know they won't speak up. Whether thru fear or acceptance doesn't matter. They will NOT speak.

Thought...
You are mistaken in that belief. Any "Christian" who goes around committing evil isn't really one. Now everyone sins, but no real Christian would willingly commit sins just because he or she thinks there's no need to worry about the consequences.

It is written that Christ died to atone for all sin for all time. That includes murder. No one sin is really worse than another. Any sin keeps you from Heaven whether lying, or stealing, or mass murder. Saddam and Castro are the most blessed men on the planet although they don't know it. They still live, they can still repent and be saved. Like the moderates who never speak, we know that those two won't, but the opportunity is currently open for them. If they were to repent they would be welcomed into Heaven the same as the holiest follower. That is the essence of true Christianity. Salvation is possible even for the worst of us.
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