Healing Tao USA Medical and Spiritual Qigong (Chi Kung) Logo
Healing Tao USA
  • 501 c3 non-profit 

  • All purchases tax deductible
  • Home
    • Primordial Tai Chi for Enlightened Love
    • Our Mission
  • Workshops
    • Current Teaching Schedule
    • Become a Certified Instructor
  • Products
    • Guide to Best Buy Packages
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 1 & 2
      • Qigong (Chi Kung) Fundamentals 3 & 4
      • Fusion of the Five Elements 1, 2, & 3: Emotional & Psychic Alchemy
      • Inner Sexual Alchemy
    • Best Buy Packages Download
    • Video Downloads
    • Audio Downloads
    • DVDs
    • Audio CD Home Study Courses
    • eBooks & Print Books
    • Super Qi Foods & Elixirs
    • Sexual Qigong & Jade Eggs
    • Medical Qigong
    • Chinese Astrology
    • Other Cool Tao Products
      • Tao T-Shirts
      • Joyce Gayheart
        CD’s and Elixirs
      • Qi Weightlifting Equipment
  • Summer Retreats
  • Articles / Blog
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
    • 9 Stages of Alchemy
    • Tao Articles
    • Newsletter Archive
  • FAQ / Forum
    • FAQ
    • Forum Online Discussion
    • Loving Tao of Now
      (Michael’s blog)
  • Winn Bio
    • Short Bio
    • Michael Winn: The Long Story
    • Tao logo: Musical Cosmology
  • China Trip
    • China Dream Trip
    • Photos: Past China Trips
  • Contact
    • Office Manager – Buy Products
    • Summer Retreats – Register
    • Find Instructor Near You
    • Links
  • Cart

The Religion Wars (NYT book review)

Home › Forum Online Discussion › Philosophy › The Religion Wars (NYT book review)

  • This topic has 0 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 15 years, 10 months ago by Michael Winn.
Viewing 1 post (of 1 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • November 28, 2009 at 10:30 pm #32732

    Michael Winn

    THE RELIGIOUS WARS
    By Nicholas D. Kristof
    New York Times
    November 25, 2009

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/26/opinion/26kristof.html

    Just a few years ago, it seemed curious that an omniscient, omnipotent God
    wouldn’t smite tormentors like Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens and Sam
    Harris. They all published best-selling books excoriating religion and
    practically inviting lightning bolts.

    Traditionally, religious wars were fought with swords and sieges; today,
    they often are fought with books. And in literary circles, these battles
    have usually been fought at the extremes.

    Fundamentalists fired volleys of Left Behind novels, in which Jesus returns
    to Earth to battle the Anti-Christ (whose day job was secretary general of
    the United Nations). Meanwhile, devout atheists built mocking Web sites like
    http://www.whydoesGodhateamputees.com. That site notes that although believers
    periodically credit prayer with curing cancer, God never seems to regrow
    lost limbs. It demands an end to divine discrimination against amputees.

    This year is different, with a crop of books that are less combative and
    more thoughtful. One of these is “The Evolution of God,” by Robert Wright,
    who explores how religions have changed — improved — over the millennia.
    He notes that God, as perceived by humans, has mellowed from the capricious
    warlord sometimes depicted in the Old Testament who periodically orders
    genocides.

    (In 1 Samuel 15:3, the Lord orders a mass slaughter of the Amalekite tribe:
    “Now go and attack Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and do
    not spare them. But kill both man and woman, infant and nursing child.”
    These days, that would earn God an indictment before the International
    Criminal Court.)

    Mr. Wright also argues that monotheism emerged only gradually among
    Israelites, and that the God familiar to us may have resulted from a merger
    of a creator god, El, and a warrior god, Yahweh. Mr. Wright also argues that
    monotheism wasn’t firmly established until after the Babylonian exile, and
    he says that Moses’s point was that other gods shouldn’t be worshiped, not
    that they didn’t exist. For example, he notes the troubling references to a
    “divine council” and “gods” — plural — in Psalm 82.

    In another revelation not usually found in Sunday School classes, Mr. Wright
    cites Biblical evidence that God (both El and Yahweh) had a sex life, rather
    like the Greek gods, and notes archaeological discoveries indicating that
    Yahweh may have had a wife, Asherah.

    As for Christianity, Mr. Wright argues that it was Saint Paul — more than
    Jesus, an apocalyptic prophet — who emphasized love and universalism and
    built Christian faith as it is known today. Saint Paul focused on these
    elements, he says, partly as a way to broaden the appeal of the church and
    convert Gentiles.

    Mr. Wright detects an evolution toward an image of God as a more beneficient
    and universal deity, one whose moral compass favors compassion for humans of
    whatever race or tribe, one who is now firmly in the antigenocide camp. Mr.
    Wright’s focus is not on whether God exists, but he does suggest that
    changing perceptions of God reflect a moral direction to history — and that
    this in turn perhaps reflects some kind of spiritual force.

    “To the extent that ‘god’ grows, that is evidence — maybe not massive
    evidence, but some evidence — of higher purpose,” Mr. Wright says.

    Another best-seller this year, Karen Armstrong’s “The Case for God,”
    likewise doesn’t posit a Grandpa-in-the-Sky; rather, she sees God in terms
    of an ineffable presence that can be neither proven nor disproven in any
    rational sense. To Ms. Armstrong, faith belongs to the realm of life’s
    mysteries, beyond the world of reason, and people on both sides of the “God
    gap” make the mistake of interpreting religious traditions too literally.

    “Over the centuries people in all cultures discovered that by pushing their
    reasoning powers to the limit, stretching language to the end of its tether,
    and living as selflessly and compassionately as possible, they experienced a
    transcendence that enabled them to affirm their suffering with serenity and
    courage,” Ms. Armstrong writes. Her book suggests that religion is not meant
    to regrow lost limbs, but that it may help some amputees come to terms with
    their losses.

    Whatever one’s take on God, there’s no doubt that religion remains one of
    the most powerful forces in the world. Today, millions of people will be
    giving thanks to Him — or Her or It.

    Another new book, “The Faith Instinct,” by my Times colleague Nicholas Wade,
    suggests a reason for the durability of faith: humans may be programmed for
    religious belief, because faith conferred evolutionary advantages in
    primitive times. That doesn’t go to the question of whether God exists, but
    it suggests that religion in some form may be with us for eons to come.

    I’m hoping that the latest crop of books marks an armistice in the religious
    wars, a move away from both religious intolerance and irreligious
    intolerance. That would be a sign that perhaps we, along with God, are
    evolving toward a higher moral order.

  • Author
    Posts

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.

Signup for FREE eBook – $20 value

Inner Smile free eBook with Signup to Newsletter

Way of the Inner Smile
130 page eBook

+ Qi Flows Naturally news

+ Loving the Tao of Now blog

Enter Email Only - Privacy Protected

Forum Login

Log In
Register Lost Password

Qigong Benefits – Michael Winn

Michael Winn Qi Products:

Best Buy Packages
  1. Qigong Fundamentals 1 & 2
  2. Qigong Fundamentals 3 & 4
  3. Fusion of Five Elements 1, 2, 3
  4. Sexual Energy Cultivation
  5. Primordial Tai Chi / Primordial Qigong
  6. Inner Sexual Alchemy Kan & Li
  7. Sun-Moon Alchemy Kan & Li
  8. Inner Smile Gift
Individual Products
  1. Qigong Fundamentals 1
  2. Qigong Fundamentals 2
  3. Qigong Fundamentals 3
  4. Qigong Fundamentals 4
  5. Fusion of Five Elements 1
  6. Fusion of Five Elements 2 & 3
  7. Sexual Energy Cultivation
  8. Tao Dream Practice
  9. Primordial Tai Chi / Primordial Qigong
  10. Deep Healing Qigong
  11. Internal Alchemy (Kan & Li Series)

100% RISK FREE 1-Year Guarantee

Michael Winn, President, Healing Tao USA Michael Winn, President, Healing Tao USA

Michael Winn, Pres.
Healing Tao USA

Use Michael Winn's Qi Gong products for one whole year — I guarantee you'll be 100% delighted and satisfied with the great Qi results. Return my product in good condition for immediate refund.

Guarantee Details

Your Natural Path is Our Mission

OUR PROMISE: Every Michael Winn Qi gong & meditation product will empower you to be more relaxed, smiling, joyful, and flowing in harmony with the Life Force.

yin-yang

Each Qigong video, book, or audio course will assist your authentic Self to fulfill worldly needs and relations; feel the profound sexual pleasure of being a radiant, healthy body; express your unique virtues; complete your soul destiny; realize peace – experience eternal life flowing in this human body Now.

© 2025 Healing Tao USA · design by dragonbutterfly design · built by mojomonger