The late Christopher
Hitchens wrote a best-selling bromide against religion entitled
God is not
Great: How Religion Poisons Everything. In that book, he claimed "As I write
these words, and as you read them, people of faith are in their different ways
planning your and my destruction, and the destruction of all the hard-won human
attainments that I have touched upon. Religion poisons everything."
1
Richard Dawkins takes a similarly dismissive view of religion in general and
Christianity in particular. In chapter six of his book
The God Delusion. Dawkins
seeks to lay out how an evolutionary paradigm can account not only for
self-preservation ,but altruistic actions such as older relatives caring for
younger ones or acts of altruism that result in mutual benefit of both parties.
2
Dawkins, Hitchens, Sam Harris and other atheists have all claimed that they
base their beliefs on reason and evidence. They hold up evidence as the highest
ideal. But the ruthless murders of black parishioners in Charleston have
provided evidence contradicting the position that religion is detrimental to
humanity. It is proving that Christianity has the power to transform a story
into something very different than the expected narrative.
Different than expected
We have
watched in horror as cities like Ferguson or Baltimore erupt into violent
protests and citizens riot after the death of a single black man. In each of
those cases, there was some considerable gray area as to the actions of the
officers involved: Michael Brown had just stolen from a convenience store and
wouldn’t comply with the officer’s requests. Freddy Gray was under arrest
and was being transported when he died from injuries that may or may not have
been inflicted accidentally.
In Charleston we have nine people attending
a Bible study who were mercilessly shot by Dylann Roof with the intent,
according to investigators, "to start a race war."
3
Outrage over these events should have been more acute than the others, yet there
have been no riots. What was the difference?
AME Elder and interim pastor
Rev. Norvel Goff, Sr, explained, "A lot of folk expected us to do something
strange and break out in a riot. They just don't know us because we are a people
of faith, and we believe that when we put our forces and our heads together,
working for a common good, there is nothing we cannot accomplish together in the
name of Jesus."
4
While the lack of looting and rioting
is in itself noteworthy, that wasn’t the most amazing thing to happen in
Charleston. Just 36 hours after Roof slaughtered them, the victims’ family
members stood in court, stared directly at roof
and they forgave him. CNN quotes
victim Ethel Lance’s daughter as she said to Roof , "I will never be able to
hold her again, but I forgive you. And have mercy on your soul. You hurt me. You
hurt a lot of people but God forgives you, and I forgive you."
5
Felicia Sanders was in the church during Roof’s rampage. She saw her son
Tywanza die while trying to reason with him. She and her daughter only survived
by playing dead. Yet, Sanders looked at Roof and asked God for mercy for him.
"Every fiber in my body hurts, and I will never be the same. As we said in the
Bible study, we enjoyed you. But may God have mercy on you."
These Christians
were doing something that was the opposite of poisonous, something that in the
natural order would make no sense at all. They were following the example of
Jesus, who taught that we should love our enemies and pray for those who
persecute us. Jesus forgave his murderers from the Cross and his followers at
the Emmanuel AME Church would seek to do the same.
The power of their actions
was noticed by those both inside and outside the faith. Jewish columnist Jonah
Goldberg wrote in his column, "Not being a Christian, I can only marvel at
the dignity and courage of the victims' relatives who forgave the shooter. If I
could ever manage such a thing, it would probably take me decades. It took them
little more than a day."
6 Charles C.S. Cooke tweeted the
video of the families offering forgiveness and commented:
Did the fact that Christians who followed their Lord’s command poison things
in South Carolina or is this evidence that directly contradicts that claim?
There is no way for Dawkins, Harris, or the other New Atheists to spin this as
some kind of evolutionarily advantageous action. It isn’t. In fact, forgiving a
threat instead of destroying it would be evolutionary deleterious. It makes no
sense given a naturalist accounting, but it makes all the sense in the world
given a supernaturalist accounting.
For those atheists who say they’re all
about reason and evidence, here it is. Anyone issuing a retraction yet?
References
1. Hitchens, Christopher.
God Is Not
Great: How Religion Poisons Everything. New York: Twelve Books, 2007. 23.
2. Dawkins, Richard.
The God Delusion. Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 2006. Print. 217-218.
3. Ellis, Ralph, Greg
Botelho, and Ed Payne. "Charleston Church Shooting: Questions Swirl around
Suspect Dylann Roof."
CNN. Cable News Network, 19 June 2015. Web. 24 June 2015.
http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/19/us/charleston-church-shooting-main/index.html.
4. Rodriguez, Vanessa. "Peace, Not Rioting at
Charleston Church."
Christian Examiner. Christian Examiner Newspapers, 22 June
2015. Web. 24 June 2015.
http://www.christianexaminer.com/article/defiant.forgiveness.sends.message.to.charleston.mass.murderer/49132.htm.
5. Ellis, 2015.
6.
Goldberg, Jonah. "In the South, Grace and Dignity after Charleston Church
Shootings."
Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles Times, 23 June 2015. Web. 24 June
2015.
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-0623-goldberg-charleston-dignity-20150623-column.html.