Today it
is relatively rare to find racist Christianity. Nowadays, fundamentalist megachurches
proclaim that members of any race are equally invited to donate money to their
coffers. But it wasn’t so long ago that many white fundamentalist Christian
groups did not want to associate with members of other races.
It is
even rarer to find Christians who insist that the Earth is the center of the
universe. The only example of which I know is http://www.fixedearth.com. But it was not
very far in the past that churches all insisted on geocentrism as a fundamental
belief.
In these
and in many other cases, the advances in belief—advances toward racial harmony
and a scientific understanding of the universe—were the result of forces and
processes that were not inherently religious. After slavery was abolished,
people began to gradually realize that people of other races were fully human
and deserved the same rights as one’s own race. Partly this was due to the
utter failure of supremacists to find scientific verification for their
beliefs, but mainly, I believe, because more and more people became acquainted
with members of other races and discovered, usually pleasantly, that people
they might once have disdained were actually nice, ordinary people. In many
cases it was devout people who led the push toward racial harmony—and there is
hardly a better example than Martin Luther King Jr.—but it was not religion
itself that led these advances. None of the leaders, or followers, of racial
integration re-read their Bibles and discovered, “Holy Moley! Right there is a
verse that we’ve been overlooking for two thousand years.” The Bible did not
change. There were, or so the fundamentalists claim, no new revelations from
God. The advances in racial harmony, inside and outside of churches, came from
accumulated experience which most religious groups have now acknowledged.
Reason and experience led the way; religion followed.
It is
clear that the conversion of religious people to heliocentrism occurred because
science advanced, and religion followed.
Science,
experience, and reason are the head of the animal of society; religion is the
tail, sometimes wagging, sometimes dragging.
No comments:
Post a Comment