|
The following is an excerpt from the chapter:
The fact is that Religion has been hijacked by the state for its own
purposes. The league table of Major Faiths is more indicative of how
successful countries have been in expanding their empires through trade
and war than how popular are their indigenous Religions. Once its
purpose has been served the state has little or no use for doctrines
that stand in the way of personal ambition and commercial growth. That
members of democratic societies place more emphasis on the rewards of
this life than the next is a measure of the comfort and protection
afforded them by their circumstances. The prospect of an eternity in
hell for perpetrators of crimes is replaced by a temporary loss of
freedom and possessions. Victims demand financial compensation over
justice. Lawyers replace priests.
This picture might appear solely indicative of industrialized nations in
the 20th century, but it is not. Laodicea, the land to which Jesus
intended his message, consisted of several cities that had prospered
under a Roman administration. Its citizens are described as being
“neither hot nor cold” and so obsessed with riches that they pay only
lip service to the word of God. By contrast John, the author to whom the
revelation had been given, had been exiled to a prison on the Island of
Patmos for preaching God’s word. |