A God of One's Own: Religion's Capacity for Peace and Potential for Violence

A God of One's Own: Religion's Capacity for Peace and Potential for Violence

A God of One's Own: Religion's Capacity for Peace and Potential for Violence

A God of One's Own: Religion's Capacity for Peace and Potential for Violence

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Overview

Religion posits one characteristic as an absolute: faith. Compared to faith, all other social distinctions and sources of conflict are insignificant. The New Testament says: 'We are all equal in the sight of God'. To be sure, this equality applies only to those who acknowledge God's existence. What this means is that alongside the abolition of class and nation within the community of believers, religion introduces a new fundamental distinction into the world the distinction between the right kind of believers and the wrong kind. Thus overtly or tacitly, religion brings with it the demonization of believers in other faiths.

The central question that will decide the continued existence of humanity is this: How can we conceive of a type of inter-religious tolerance in which loving one's neighbor does not imply war to the death, a type of tolerance whose goal is not truth but peace?

Is what we are experiencing at present a regression of monotheistic religion to a polytheism of the religious spirit under the heading of 'a God of one's own'? In Western societies, where the autonomy of the individual has been internalized, individual human beings tend to feel increasingly at liberty to tell themselves little faith stories that fit their own lives to appoint 'Gods of their own'. However, this God of their own is no longer the one and only God who presides over salvation by seizing control of history and empowering his followers to be intolerant and use naked force.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780745646190
Publisher: Polity Press
Publication date: 09/14/2010
Pages: 264
Sales rank: 932,699
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Ulrich Beck is Professor of Sociology at the University of Munich.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements ix

I The diary of ‘a God of one’s own’: Etty Hillesum. An unsociological introduction 1

II The return of the Gods and the crisis of European modernity. A sociological introduction 19

III Tolerance and violence: The two faces of the religions 47

IV Heresy or the invention of a ‘God of one’s own’ 93

V The cunning of unintended consequences: How to civilize global religious conflicts. Five models 137

VI Peace instead of Truth? The futures of the religions in the world risk society 164

Bibliography 201

Index 220

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