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Cain
and Abel
October 5, 2002
In accordance with Jewish tradition,
this first Shabbat after Simchat Torah, we have begun, again, reading
the Torah from the very beginning. In doing so, we see the dawn
of civilization through the eyes of the biblical author. And we
are reminded by a story told there that murder was present in society
from its very inception. “And it came to pass, when they were
in the field, that Cain rose up against Abel, his brother, and slew
him.”
According to our rabbis, the story of Cain and Abel is not simply
about a murderous quarrel between the two sons of Adam and Eve.
Rather, it is the archetype of the quarrels that throughout the
millennia have plague the human race.
But what is it that Cain and Abel fought over? Our rabbis, cited
in the midrash, offer several opinions. Anticipating Freud by some
two thousand years, Rabbi Yehudah proposed that the argument was
over the Eve. They fought over their mother to whom they were both
attracted – shades of the Oedipus complex. Accordingly, the
first murder in history had sex as its motive.
Another rabbi anticipated Karl Marx. This is how he described the
argument. Cain and Abel said to each other, let us divide the world.
You take the land and I will take the moveable property. But then
one said: “the ground you are standing on is mine. Remember,
I got all the land.” The other said, “the clothes you
are wearing are mine. Remember, I got all the movable property.”
The war of words got out of hand and Cain killed Abel. The source
of conflict, as Karl Marx was to say one day, is the distribution
of wealth.
A third rabbi offered yet another explanation for the fratricide.
Rabbi Joshua explained that Cain and Abel, in fact, each possessed
both land and moveable property. So what was the dispute about?
One said: “God’s temple will be built on my land.”
The other said: “No, it will be built on my land!” Accordingly,
the first conflict in history was a holy war.
Our world today is pretty much post Freud and Marx, but holy wars
are unfortunately still with us. However, this is not the way it
is supposed to be. Religion is supposed to be – and often
is – a source of consolation, hope and compassion. It fosters
brotherhood by uniting people of different racial, ethnic and national
origins into a single communion of believers. Religious teachings
hold up the ideal of peace.
But religion also fuels intolerance that can ignite violence. In
India today there are bloody conflicts between Hindus, Moslems and
Christians; in the Holy Land between Jews, Christians and Moslems;
in Sudan between Moslems and Animists and in Ireland, not so long
ago, between Catholics and Protestants.
These conflicts are provoked by doctrinaire believers who claim
that have exclusive possession of God’s blueprint to what
is right and to what God wants of human beings. I don’t think
it is simplistic to say that any religion that claims it, alone,
knows the path to salvation approved by God lays the groundwork
for violence against those who believe differently. And this is
why. Because if you believe that you alone hold the keys to God’s
kingdom you want to do two things: you want to bring as many people
in through the door as you can, even if you have to nudge them and
maybe even force them through.
Second, you want to make certain that you are not seduced by the
false doctrines of others that will keep you from entering the kingdom.
The only way you can keep the false ideas of others, the sins of
others, from corrupting you, the fanatically pious claim, is by
creating a society where sinful acts and heretical ideas are outlawed,
punished and constantly purged. It is that kind of society that
Islamic nations such as Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Iran and the former
Taliban Afghanistan have sought to establish – and I might
add, with a good measure of success. But for these nations, it is
not sufficient to establish the law of Islam just in their own country.
They understand that borders can’t prevent the detested civilization
of the west from creeping in via the internet, TV, books and magazines.
According to fanatic Islamists, there is only one way to gain protection
from the long reach of the loathsome western civilization –
destroy it. That is what El Qaeda attempted to do on September 11th,
taking aim at New York City – in their view the capitol of
corrupt western civilization, the modern Sodom and Gemorrah, the
exemplar of sexual perversity, liberalism, and godlessness.
So, on one hand, you have to eliminate the sinners around you so
that you don’t get you off track and so that you don’t
get locked out of Paradise. On the other hand, you want to bring
as many people as you can through the door with you – even
if by force. After all, you are doing them a favor. You are saving
their souls. Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand had no problem issuing
the flourish Jewish community of Spain a choice: either become Christians
or get out of the country. And they had no problem appointing the
priest, Torquemada, as grand inquisitor to burn any person at the
stake who lapsed back and practiced Judaism. After all, condemning
people to a few moments of hideous suffering at the stake was a
small price to pay for saving these souls from an eternity of Hell
in the afterlife.
But what about free-will you ask? What about the right of every
human being to make choices about the religious conduct of his or
her life? The answer is that free choice is to be honored when dealing
with mundane issues. But when the most important things imaginable
are involved – the proper religious doctrine, the fate of
one’s soul, living in accordance with God’s will, it
cannot be left to freedom of choice. People need to be forced to
do what is right even against their will. This is the voice of religious
fanaticism speaking.
I assume that many of us hear a different voice. Many of us believe
that people can be fervent in their own beliefs without forcing
them onto others. In our United States of America, we have many
very strong religious communities, living side by side, following
the teachings of their own faith. While there are issues that cause
friction between liberal and conservative religious expressions
– abortion and separation of Church and State being prominent
among them, very often there is also cooperation among religious
denominations and faith groups.
Cooperation has been a hard lesson for religions to learn. The natural
instinct is for a religion to strive for ascendancy over the others.
In the process, they often denigrate competing belief systems and
show contempt toward their adherents. For example, Christian theologians
taught that God abrogated his covenant with the Jewish people and
entered into a new and exclusive one with the followers of Christianity.
In practical terms, this led to the widespread feeling among Christians
that Jews were a people despised by God, and therefore, all good
people should despise them as well.
But today many Church theologians speak of God’s dual covenant:
one with the Jewish people and one with the Christians. Just recently
Bishop William Keeler of Baltimore released a document prepared
under his guidance that dealt with the Catholic Church’s missionary
activities directed toward Jews. It stated: “A deepening Catholic
appreciation of the eternal covenant between God and the Jewish
people, together with a recognition of the divinely given mission
to Jews to witness to God’s faithful love, leads to the conclusion
that campaigns that target Jews for conversion to Christianity are
no longer theologically acceptable to the Catholic Church.”
The new attitude exemplified here makes a big difference in how
the two faiths relate to each other.
The spiritual leaders of Islam, in our day, by and large, have yet
to embarked on a similar ecumenical journey. But I should point
out that historically speaking, Islam’s attitude toward Judaism
and Christianity has not always been as hostile as it appears today.
When Islam was in ascendancy in the Middle Ages, with much of the
world under its domination, Jews and Christians faired well much
of the time, although they had to accept certain limitations. A
synagogue building or church spire could not be higher than the
local mosque, for example.
But a weakened Islam today feels threatened and is less tolerant.
Most Moslem countries today are Judenrein and Christians who live
in them often suffer discrimination and even physical violence as
has occurred recently in Pakistan.
However, it is possible to hope that Moslem scholars will recognize
the need to rethink certain of their theological premises just as
Christian theologians have done. The paradigm for doing so already
exists. Sufis, who are Muslim mystics, have redefined the doctrine
of “jihad”. Instead of connoting a war against the infidels,
it has been transformed into a spiritual concept: “jihad”
means going to war against one’s own imperfections.
The challenge of all religions today is to promote the life enhancing,
moral and spiritual teachings of their faith, while transforming
the negative residues into something positive. Surely it is possible
for people to cherish their own beliefs while, at the same time,
showing respect - and even admitting legitimacy – to the beliefs
of others. Only when the voices advocating religious tolerance and
cooperation find greater acceptance than those promoting religious
triumphalism and claiming exclusive possession of the truth will
the holy wars, begun by Cain and Abel, finally come to an end.
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