Better answers: The case for Judeo-Christian values
Dennis Prager (archive)
January 4, 2005
With this first column of 2005, I inaugurate a periodic series of
columns devoted to explaining and making the case for what are called
Judeo-Christian values.
There is an epic battle taking place in the world over what value
system humanity will embrace. There are essentially three competitors:
European secularism, American Judeo-Christianity and Islam. I have
described this battle in previous columns.
Now, it is time to make the case for Judeo-Christian, specifically
biblical, values. I believe they are the finest set of values to guide
the lives of both individuals and societies. Unfortunately, they are
rarely rationally explained -- even among Jewish and Christian
believers, let alone to nonbelievers and members of other faiths.
So this is the beginning of an admittedly ambitious project. Vast
numbers of people are profoundly disoriented as to what is good and
what is bad. Just to give one example: Take the moral confusion over
the comparative worth of human and animal life.
The majority of American students I have asked since 1970 whether they
would save their dog or a stranger have voted against the stranger.
A Tucson, Ariz., woman in late 2004 sent firefighters into her burning
home telling them that her three babies were inside. The babies for
whom the firemen risked their lives were the woman's three cats.
The best known animal rights organization, People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals (PETA), funded by the best educated in our
society, has launched an international campaign titled "Holocaust on
your plate," which equates the barbecuing of millions of chickens with
the cremating of millions of Jews in the Holocaust. To PETA and its
supporters, there is no difference between chicken life and human life.
Only a very morally confused age could produce so many people who do
not recognize the immeasurable distance between human and animal worth.
We live in that age.
We do in large measure because values based on God and the Bible have
been replaced by secular values. The result was predicted by the
British thinker G.K. Chesterton at the turn of the 20th century: "When
people stop believing in God, they don't believe in nothing -- they
believe in anything."
Yes, the moral record of Christian Europe is a mixed one -- especially
vis a vis its one continuous religious minority -- Jews. And one has to
be quite naive to believe that belief in God and the Bible guarantees
moral clarity, let alone moral behavior.
But Chesterton was right. The collapse of Christianity in Europe led to
the horrors of Nazism and Communism. And to the moral confusions of the
present -- such as the moral equation of the free United States with
the totalitarian Soviet Union, or of life-loving Israel with its
death-loving enemies.
The oft cited charge that religion has led to more wars and evil than
anything else is a widely believed lie. Secular successors to
Christianity have slaughtered and enslaved more people than all
religions in history (though significant elements within a
non-Judeo-Christian religion, Islam, slaughter and enslave today, and
if not stopped in Sudan and elsewhere could match Nazism or Communism).
In fact, it was a secular Jew, the great German Jewish poet Heinrich
Heine, who understood that despite its anti-Semitism and other moral
failings, Christianity in Europe prevented the wholesale slaughter of
human beings that became routine with Christianity's demise. In 1834,
99 years before Hitler and the Nazis rose to power, Heine warned:
A drama will be enacted in Germany compared to which the French
Revolution will seem harmless and carefree. Christianity restrained the
martial ardor for a time but it did not destroy it; once the
restraining talisman [the cross] is shattered, savagery will rise
again. . . .
What is needed today is a rationally and morally persuasive case for
embracing the values that come from the Bible. This case must be more
compelling than the one made for anti-biblical values that is presented
throughout the Western world's secular educational institutions and
media (news media, film and television).
That is what I intend to do. Events in the news will compel columns on
those events, but I do not believe that anything I can do with my life
can match the importance of making the case for guiding one's life and
one's society by the values of the Bible. As a Jew, by "biblical" I am
referring to the Old Testament, but this should pose no problem to
Christian readers, since this is the first part of their Bible as well.
Indeed, as the greatest Jewish thinker, Maimonides, pointed out over
800 years ago, it is primarily Christians who have spread knowledge of
the Jews' Bible to the human race.
return