clearspira wrote: ↑Sun Sep 03, 2023 9:03 pm
All religions were made by men.
Note - I said ''religion''. Not ''God''.
I am not passing judgement on the existence of the subject of the religion. Only that the framework surrounding it was made by men.
Rich men who lived two thousand years ago. This is why there is no commandment for slavery or rape, because the men writing those commandments would have found treating their slaves and women properly to be unspeakable.
Religion itself is a form of man-made social control to keep the poor in check. Religion is imperfect and has glaring mistakes in it that lead to wars because the texts were made by men. Say what you like about Marx, but his ''opium of the people'' line nailed it.
And if we apply this to Star Trek, look at the Prophets. They are very real. And yet, as far as we can tell, they had NO SAY whatsoever in the Bajoran caste system, or the Kai, or earrings, or the stupid hats the Vedeks wear. The Bajorans invented that themselves independent of their gods. The most they ever did was send the orbs - and seeing as we know for a fact that whilst having an orb experience everyone looks like the people you know, that doesn't explain earrings either.
The ''Makers'' that the Triannons speak of are very real - only we call them the Sphere Builders. Yet it was the Triannons who decided to start wars in their name, give themselves tattoos and invent scripture. The Sphere Builders never told them this. Although in this case it has to be said that the Sphere Builders may actually have had a hand in these guys given how they were guarding the spheres from outsiders.
I mostly agree with your post here, though I've highlighted a key point with two or three main subsets that religion:
a) says nothing (negative) about rape
b) says nothing (negative) about slavery, and
c) was made by rich individuals to control those less rich
I can't speak for other religions, but Christianity and Judaism actually do address all three. Here are a few brief examples, though there are several others:
a) On rape being evil and the punishment being death:
* Deuteronomy 22:23-27, where the point is made that one automatically assumes "adultery" in the countryside is rape by the man and he, and only he, must die for it - and implicitly if a man rapes a woman in the city then again he must die if she, being surrounded by people nearby, didn't call for help (i.e. the question is whether she tried to resist him, and if you can't prove it either way you assume she did) as if she does the principle states she is again spared and the man must die
* Genesis 34, where Dinah's rape is shown to be a vile act, though the retribution against it was also vile
* Judges 19v11-30, where a concubine is raped to death, which is used to show how far the people have fallen, how evil they had become - it is a deliberately disturbing story that partially mirrors the accounts of Lot in Sodom, where everyone involved is presented as a monster but especially the rapists
* 2 Samuel 13, the entire story, where Tamar's rape is shown to have been a vile act committed against her that begins the destruction of David's family
b) On slavery being evil, as well as Christians being encouraged to free their slaves if they have any:
* Genesis 49:19-20 has Joseph's story itself as a condemnation of slavery, as it explicitly says what Joseph's brothers did was intended by them for evil, yet despite that God was able to bring about good (and remember, slavery in the Bible in general is very different form what modern people typically think of, with slaves being more like indentured servants and with specific rights)
* Exodus 21:16, which says slavers should die
* 1 Timothy 1v10, where slavers are regarded as sinners and thus must repent of their evil (and the story of Zacchaeus the tax collector in Luke 19 should remind everyone that sinners being forgiven means the sinner should repay those who they have wronged as well)
* the entire book of Philemon and especially 1:15-16, etc.
c) On the condemnation of the rich:
* The rich have to struggle to overcome a barrier to knowing God: Mark 10v17-27 (and also the Disciples were poor and effectively vagabonds spreading the Gospel, and didn't accumulate wealth or leisure but were persecuted, Mark 10v28, the entire book of Acts, numerous times in the Epistles)
* Don't regard the rich as being special or treat them with diffidence: James 2v1-9
* Those who are rich due to fraud and abuse of the poor are in serious danger: James 5v1-6
All this is to say that your points actually are addressed, and not ignored - the Bible has a special heart towards the weak and those who have been sinned against by others. I do encourage you to read each chapter and book in full as well, to see the broader message in each, and how they fit together.
On the topic of the man-made elements of religion, what is interesting is that many parts of that are also highlighted in the Bible, including when Yeshua says the Pharisees are alloying what God said with what their traditions teach (Mark 7v1-13, though one should keep going and read the whole passage), and how some elements were specifically given or allowed by Moses because of the peoples' stubborn hearts but it doesn't actually match what God wants even though Moses was in direct communication with God (Mark 10v2-9 and its parallel account in Matthew 19v3-9). What makes Christianity interesting is it very much is focused on the interplay between God and Man, including Man's own approach towards God, with the Bible specifically being for most of its writings being humans specifically talking to humans about God and studying the things God has revealed, in addition to parts specifically attributed to God.
... Okay, done addressing those points, otherwise yes, I think your observations are good ones.
(Oh, also just to be clear, Marx's line is specifically how opium was used at the time for medical reasons. Religion wasn't being presented as a drug to keep people docile, but a balm to ease the pain of life and help them to keep functioning despite being wounded.)
I generally agree with Chuck on this episode. Its handling is rather superficial, and its message is a good one albeit hamfisted and somewhat of a caricature, though there isn't too much more they could have done without just remaking
Let That Be Your Last Battlefield in all its details. There
are some subtle bits - the marks on the side of the head remind me of the Bajoran earrings and the different sides it is worn on - but it isn't my favourite episode of Enterprise, though Enterprise is not a show I often go back and watch.