The Bible is a written work that has a lack of clear definition and somewhat ambiguous stories that allows readers to apply a new situation they may encounter throughout their lives to the same stories they've always read.
You will not read the same story twice when you compare it to how you interpreted it at an early age to one at a later age.
Your experiences change you. Your perception of reality and how you fit within the cogs that form the universe change constantly.
The book provides new insight with every new experience you may have. It is heavy with so much history and people of days gone by and perhaps you'll come to understand a person in the book that you once found detestable.
Perhaps someone you related to and felt was a saint no longer fits that notion because of how you see them and what you perceive as true sainthood has changed.
You understand yourself in this fashion. How has your experience in this reality, this dimension, this world changed you so dramatically that you understand a completely hidden side of this passage in this old book you didn't see before? Why have you changed in this way? What effected you to change?
You can come up with all the reasons in the world why people do what they do and try to boil it down to "because they interpreted the bible in this fashion and so it influenced them".
But how about you go deeper than that? The Bible merely states. It does not influence one's decisions. People influence their own decisions.
You can tell a lot about someone by how they interpret a passage in the Bible. (Or really, how they interpret anything ever.) But the Bible especially.
You can take it as literal or metaphoric but it doesn't truly matter. What matters is what YOU get out of it.
Reading the Bible is suppose to be part of your own personal journey towards understanding God. Each path begins with a different life experience then is paved through one's upbringing, beliefs and the challenges they 'll face. A path of an Atheist is different from a Christian and both have their own unique struggle over their beliefs. Therefore it's impossible to comment on how someone's path will end between them and God.
It's because of that, an Atheist's path will hold challenges that I'm not interested in having. I had a taste of it and it's definitely not the one I'm here to experience. This is why I stay clear of their paths by not mingling with any in my personal life.
It's sad and terrible when people attempt to use their holy texts as excuses for their behavior, but really blaming religion isn't the solution.
In fact, let me direct you to a few sources about a few known examples, Al-Qaeda and Religion as a driving force for Wars.
This is a good article.Quote:
Similarly, the 9/11 hijackers used cocaine and drank alcohol, slept with prostitutes and attended strip clubs … but they did not worship at any mosque. See
this,
this,
this, etc. Hardly the acts of devout Muslims.
He linked a lot more sources.
If they were SO devout that they were willing to kill so many people over their beliefs, why did they break their values?
Here's a interesting study.Quote:
As part of a special they were airing on the subject, the BBC asked Dr. Greg Austin, a research Fellow in the Department of Peace Studies, University of Bradford, to investigate religion's role in the history of war. Austin, with the help of colleagues Todd Kranock and Thom Oommen, conducted the War Audit, where they evaluated all the major conflicts over the past 3,500 years -- 73 wars in all. The wars were rated on a 0-5 scale for religious motivation, with 5 indicating the highest religious motivation. So for example, The First and Second Punic Wars (264-241 and 218-201 BC respectively) rated a 0, while the Crusades (1097-1291) rated a 5.
Quote:
Brace yourselves, those for whom religion equals war. The majority of all wars (44/73 or 60 percent) had no religious motivation whatsoever -- a zero rating. Only three wars -- the Arab conquests of 632-732, the much ballyhooed Crusades, and the Reformation Wars of the 16th and 17th centuries - earned a 5, and were thus considered to be truly religious wars. Only seven wars earned a rating of 3 or more -- less than 10 percent. Thus, the vast majority of all wars involved either no religious motivation or only a modest one. The authors concluded by noting that "there have been few genuinely religious wars in the last 100 years. The Israel/Arab wars were wars of nationalism and liberation of territory" (p. 16).
The authors of the War Audit claim that their work was not intended as "a piece of original academic analysis" (p. 1), but instead as something that would "stimulate discussion rather than provide the final word on the role of religion in violent conflict over time" (p. 15).
The question over what is driving people to commit senseless deeds in the name of the Lord is complex and it's rather ridiculous to try and say "religion stunts progress."
I mean really, what is religion in it's essence? A set of values that groups of like-minded people created through the experiences they've shared. Really, religions are basically the collections of history that different ethnic groups have compiled as time passed and was inspired by the experiences they all shared.
Religion seems like it was formed to provide a guidance. As spiritual guidance for a community.
Some fail because communities fail to be adaptive to change and fail to adapt their values to new challenges they face.
There is more to this story than just people going haywire because God/their Priest told them to.
My thoughts. Take with it as you will. I do my best to approach my reasoning in a practical manner but alas, I'm still rather young and uneducated.