Sep. 3rd, 2008

avevale_intelligencer: (Default)
Last night we watched yet another in the endless succession of documentary programmes which purport to "prove" that Christianity was founded on a falsehood. Of course, the programme makers themselves would rather appear on camera in person doing the can-can in the nude than do any such thing, but dancing around the idea for an hour is sufficiently sensational to keep people watching between the ad breaks, which is as far as most telly producers' ambitions seem to stretch these days.

I was particularly impressed by the way the scientists involved relied on the testimony of the Bible (that Jesus had four brothers) in order to discredit the testimony of the Bible (that he rose from the dead). One would of course expect that kind of doublethink, when the people who will regard the average man as a credulous hallucinating fool when he claims to have seen a UFO, or to believe in God, will take him for a sensible intelligent fellow when he goes into a witness box, or a jury box, to try a human being for murder. Similarly, it was stated that the Catholic Church denies the existence of the said four brothers as given in the Bible (which is of course a flat lie) in order to promote their idea of Mary as the Virgin Mother of God, which comes from, er, the Bible. It betrays a sort of frantic confusion when the same people who excoriate religious people for taking every word of the Bible literally also charge them with not taking every word of it literally.

The actual evidence, such as it is, consists of a number of bone boxes or ossuaries, on which someone has scribbled, rather in the manner of a schoolboy of old carving his name into his desk with the point of a pair of compasses, some fairly common names of the time such as Yeshua, Mariam, and Yose. I don't know (they didn't say) if any other ossuaries have been found that were carved in this distinctive manner; I would myself expect either something more competently done, or nothing at all. It looks more like the kind of thing someone might do in modern times, who had formed the idea that people were primitive back then and didn't know about straight lines or making your letters the same size...but I wouldn't know.

The simple fact is that there is no conclusive way these bone boxes can be substantively connected with anyone mentioned in the Bible (one of the actual scientists consulted had to point out, rather wearily, that just because two people's DNA proved they were not related did not actually prove that they were married) and the whole thing is a nonsense whipped up out of nothing at all for reasons at which I can only guess, and used by the production company to fill a blank hour on a dull Tuesday night.

The only reason I mention it is as yet another example of the kind of attack on religion which causes me to despair of the human capacity for rational thought. Like the person else-LJ who stated categorically that physical processes work perfectly well without "faith" and "belief" and then turned round (as [livejournal.com profile] eoforyth would say) and said that if "faith" and "belief" worked chi would have won the Lottery on Friday. What kind of process is supposed to govern the workings of the Lottery, if not the purely physical kind, is beyond the humble scope of this Nyrond's brain.

Attacking reason, as Father Brown said, is bad theology. It also seems that attacking theology is often inseparable from bad reason.

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