Frelga wrote:Judging is seldom a very useful activity - condemning our ancestors for their beliefs is precisely what we think is wrong if we do it nowadays.
I don't think it wrong to condemn hateful actions just because they are justified by religion.
And judging is an extremely useful activity. How else are we going to decide
anything?
Sure, you can say that they didn't know any better, that they did the best they could. But that does not make a wrong any righter.
This is getting kind of circular, isn't it?
"Justified" isn't the word. "Required" is the word.
I have a very hard time with this. I can imagine some poor peasant in the 16th century, with a lifetime of teachings poured into his ear, a person whose life was an unending drudgery of labour, who saw nothing of beauty but what might be in his church, who heard no music but might be heard in his church, who could not read and who could not write, who saw no one but the people he always knew and who had a pretty savage fear of strangers, who believed utterly in Hell and who longed for Heaven, who lived in terror of damnation - and I can't "judge" him for believing what he was taught. It's as simple as that.
We know better, or we think we do. But we are still surrounded by people acting from ignorance and hate, aren't we? These beliefs and attitudes are "wrong", certainly. But merely saying they're wrong doesn't do much. It has taken millennia for us to arrive at our present pinnacle of civilization, but we still go to war, we still act like irresponsible spoiled children.
I can call something wrong. I can, as they say, hate the sin but love the sinner. But I have an issue with any assertion that we are much better. Some of us are. But a lot of us aren't.
Dig deeper.