From "Christianity, A Journey From Facts To Fiction"- Mirza Tahir Ahmad
Now we turn to the second very
important article of Christian faith. I must clarify however that all Christians
do not believe exactly in what follows. Even some Church leaders have deviated
from the stiff dogmatic attitude of the Church. Even so, the philosophy of ‘Sin
and Atonement’ is a fundamental principle of orthodox Christian faith.
The first component of the Christian
understanding of Sin and Atonement is that God is just, and exercises natural
justice. He does not forgive sins without exacting retribution; as it would be
against the dictates of absolute justice. It is this particular attribute of God
that makes necessary the Christian version of atonement.
The second component is that man is
sinful because Adam and Eve sinned. As a result their progeny began to inherit
sin, as if it was infused into their genes and, ever since, all children of Adam
are born congenital sinners.
The third component of this dogma is
that a sinful person cannot atone for another person’s sins; only a sinless
person can do so. Based on this, it becomes evident why, according to Christian
understanding, no prophet of God, however good or near perfection he may have
been, could have cleansed the mankind of sin or was able to rid them of it and
its consequences. Being a son of Adam, he could not have escaped the element of
congenital sin with which he was born.
This is a simple outline of the entire
doctrine. Here is the solution advanced by Christian theologists.
To solve this apparently unsolvable
problem, God conceived an ingenious plan. It is not clear as to whether he
consulted his ‘Son’ or if they both conceived the plan simultaneously or even if
it was entirely the idea of the ‘Son’, and then accepted by God the Father. The
features of this plan unfolded at the time of Christ as follows. Two thousand
years ago the ‘Son of God’, who literally shared eternity with Him, was born to
a human mother. As the ‘Son of God’, he combined within him the perfect traits
of a human being as well as those of God the Father. Next we are told that a
pious and chaste lady by the name of Mary, was chosen to be the mother of the
‘Son of God’. She conceived Jesus in partnership with God. In that respect,
being a literal ‘Son of God’, Jesus was born without sin, yet somehow he
retained his human character and entity. Thus he volunteered himself to take the
burden of the entire sin of those of mankind who would believe in him and accept
him as their saviour. By this clever device, it is claimed, God did not have to
compromise His eternal attribute of absolute justice.
Remember that according to this modus operandi, man would not go unpunished, however sinful
he may be. God would still be able to exact retribution from the sinful without
compromising His sense of justice. The only difference between this and the
previous position, which was responsible for this dramatic change, is the fact
that it would be Jesus who would be punished and not the sinful sons and
daughters of Adam. It would be the sacrifice of Jesus which would ultimately be
instrumental in atoning for the sins of the children of Adam.
However strange and bizarre this logic
may seem to be, this is exactly what is professed to have happened. Jesus
volunteered himself and was consequently punished for the sins he had never
committed.
Let us re-examine the story of Adam
from the beginning. Not a single step in the above doctrine can be accepted by
human conscience and logic.
Firstly, we have the idea that because
Adam and Eve sinned, so their progeny became genetically and eternally polluted
with sin. In contrast to this, the science of genetics reveals that human
thoughts and actions, be they good or bad, even if persistently adhered to
during the entire lifetime of a person, cannot be transferred to and encoded
into the genetic system of human reproduction. A lifespan is too short a period
to play any role in bringing about such profound changes. Even the vices of a
people, generation after generation, or good deeds for that matter, cannot be
transferred to the progeny as genetic characters. Perhaps millions of years are
required for etching human genes with new characteristics.
Not only this, even if by a most
absurd and unacceptable extension of one’s imagination one could conceive of
such a bizarre happening, the contrary will have to be accepted by the same
logic. This would mean that if a sinful person repented and came out clean at
the end of the day, then that act should also be recorded in the genetic system;
effectively cancelling out the effect of the previous sin. Scientifically this
may not happen, but certainly there is far more logic in this balanced picture
than imagining that it is only the propensity to sin which can be genetically
encoded and not the disposition to do good.
Secondly, by attempting to resolve the
problem of Adam by proposing that sin is genetically transferred to the future
generations of Adam, all that has been achieved is the total demolition of the
very foundation on which the Christian doctrine of ‘Sin and Atonement’ is based.
If God is absolutely Just, then where is the sense of justice in eternally
condemning the entire progeny of Adam and Eve for the transient sin they
committed and repented? A sin for which they themselves were heavily punished
and driven out of heaven in such disgrace. What manner of justice would it be
for God, who even after having more than punished Adam and Eve for their
personal sins, still did not have His passion of revenge abated until He had
condemned the entire human race to a helpless degradation of being born as
congenital sinners? What chance did the children of Adam have to escape sin? If
parents make a mistake why should their innocent children suffer for that
mistake eternally?
That being so, again what distorted
sense of justice does God claim to possess and to enjoy, to punish a people who
are designed to act sinfully, however much they abhor sin? Sin is made a part
and parcel of their mechanism. There is no chance any more for a child of Adam
to remain innocent. If sin was a crime, then logic demands that it should be a
crime of the Creator and not that of the creation. In that case, what justice
could require the punishment of the innocent, for the crimes of the
perpetrator?
How different from the Christian
understanding of sin and its consequences is the proclamation of the Holy Quran,
which says:
Compared to the Christian concept of
Sin and Atonement these declarations of the Holy Quran are pure music to the
soul.
Let us now turn to the Biblical
account of what actually happened at the time of the sin of Adam and Eve and the
consequences that ensued the punishment. According to Genesis, God accepted
their apology only partially and an eternal punishment was meted out to them,
prescribed as follows:
To the woman he said, ‘I will greatly
increase your pains in childbearing; with pain you will give birth to children.
Your desire will be for your husband and he will rule over you.’
To Adam he said, ‘Because you listened
to your wife and ate from the tree about which I commanded you, ‘You must not
eat of it,’ ‘Cursed is the ground because of you; through painful toil you will
eat of it all the days of your life. It will produce thorns and thistles for
you, and you will eat the plants of the field. By sweat of your brow you will
eat your food until you return to the ground, since from it were you taken; for
dust you are and to dust you will return.’ (Genesis 3:16–19)
Mankind existed long before Adam and
Eve came to be born. Western scientists themselves discovered the remains of
many a prehistoric man and labelled them under different distinctive titles.
Neanderthal man is perhaps the most widely known of them. They lived between
100,000 to 35,000 years ago, mostly in the regions of Europe, Near East and
Central Asia. A carcass of a fully developed human being has been discovered,
who happened to roam the earth about 29,000 years before Adam and Eve are known
to have begun their short lived sojourn in paradise. At that time, human beings
were physically just like us and lived in Europe, Africa and Asia, and later
during the Ice Age they spread to the Americas as well. Again in Australia, the
authentic cultural history of Aborigines is traceable up to 40,000 years
ago.
Compared to these relatively recent
times, a skeleton of a female from Hedar in Ethiopia has been discovered which
is 2.9 million years old. Now according to the Biblical chronology, Adam and Eve
lived around six thousand years ago. One may look back in wonderment at the
reported history of human beings, or Homo Sapiens as they are titled in
scientific jargon.
Having read the Biblical account of how
Adam and Eve were punished, one cannot help wondering if the pain and throes of
labour were unknown to woman until the beginning of the era of Adam and Eve. A
scientist will be hard to come by, who believes in such fantasies. Again, we
have plenty of irrefutable evidence that man, long before Adam and Eve, had
occupied all the continents of the world, even remote Pacific islands and had
always laboured hard to survive. Therefore, to say that Adam and Eve were the
first to commit a sin and because of that, painful child birth was ordained as
punishment, is totally proven wrong by the study of life. Even animals, who are
much lower in the order of life, give birth in pain. If one watches a cow giving
birth to a calf, her suffering seems similar to the pain of a human female. Many
such animals, we know, inhabited the earth millions and millions of years before
Adam and Eve.
To earn ones livelihood with labour is
common to man, but not distinctive at all. Women also labour for their earnings
and livelihood. Before that, every specie of life earns its livelihood through
labour. This fact is the key motivator in the evolution of life. The struggle
for existence is perhaps the very first distinctive mark of life which separates
it from the world of the inanimate. It is a natural phenomenon, with nothing
whatsoever to do with sin.
Again, if this be the punishment
prescribed as a consequence of Adam and Eve’s sin, then one wonders what would
happen after Atonement? If Jesus Christ atoned for the sins of the sinful human
beings, was the punishment prescribed for the Sin abolished after the
Crucifixion? Did those who believed in Jesus Christ as the ‘Son of God’, if they
were women, cease to have painful childbirth? Did the believing men start
earning their livelihood without exerting manual labour? Did the propensity to
sin cease to pass on to the future generations and innocent children started
being given birth to? If the answer to all of these questions were to be ‘yes,’
then of course there would be some justification in seriously contemplating the
Christian philosophy of Sin and Atonement. But Alas, the answer to all these
questions are no, no and no. If nothing seems to have changed since the
Crucifixion, both in the Christian and non-Christian worlds, then what would be
the meaning of Atonement?
Even after Jesus Christ the sense of
common justice continues to dictate to human beings all over the world that if
any person commits a sin, punishment of that sin has to be given to that person
alone and to none else. Every man and woman must suffer the consequences of
their sins by themselves. Children are always born innocent. If this is not the
truth then God’s attribute of Justice is thrown overboard.
We as Muslims believe that all divine
books are based on eternal truth and none can make any claims contrary to that.
When we come across inconsistencies and contradictions in any so called divinely
revealed book, our attitude is not that of total denial and rejection but that
of cautious and sympathetic examination. Most of the statements of the Old
Testament and the New Testament, which we find at variance with the truth of
nature, we either try to reconcile by reading some underlying cryptic or
metaphoric message, or reject part of the text as the work of human hands rather
than that of God. While Christianity itself was true, it could not have
contained any distortions, unacceptable facts or beliefs giving a lie to nature.
That is why we started not with the textual examination but with the
fundamentals themselves, which through centuries of consensus have become
indisputable components of Christian philosophy. Rudimentary among them are the
Christian understanding of Sin and Atonement. I would much rather believe that
someone, somewhere during the history of Christianity, misunderstood things and
tried to interpret them in the light of his knowledge and misled the following
generations because of that.
Let us suppose for the sake of argument
that Adam and Eve sinned literally as described in the Old Testament, and were
duly punished. As the story goes, the punishment was handed out not only to them
but to their entire progeny. Once that punishment was prescribed and delivered,
why was there the need for any other punishment at all? Once a sin has been
punished, it is done with. Once a judgement has been passed, no one has the
right to continuously add more and more punishments. In the case of Adam and Eve
it is not only that they were severely reprimanded and if anything more than
punished for the sin they had committed, but also the nature of the punishment
which was extended to their progeny in itself is highly questionable. Of that we
have said enough. What we are attempting to point to is a far more heinous
violation of absolute justice. To be punished continuously for the sins of our
forefathers is one thing but to be compelled to continue to sin as a consequence
of one’s forefather’s error is simply abominable.
Let us get down to the hard realities
of human experience and try to understand the Christian philosophy of crime and
punishment in relation to our everyday experience. Let us suppose a judgement is
passed against a criminal, which is far too severe and harsh in proportion to
the crime committed. That could, of course, lead to loud and severe condemnation
of such a gross disproportionate penalty by every sensible man. In view of this,
we find it very difficult to believe that the penalty imposed on Adam for his
sin, came from a Just God. It is not just a case of an out of proportion
penalty. It is a penalty, that according to the Christian understanding of God’s
conduct, outlived the life span of Adam and Eve and was extended generation
after generation to their progeny. For the progeny to suffer for the punishment
of their parents is actually an extension of the violation of justice beyond its
ultimate limits. But we are not talking of that either. If we had the misfortune
to observe a judgement passed by any contemporary judge, making it compulsory
for the children, grand children and great grand children, etc. of a criminal to
be coerced by law to continue to sin and commit crimes and be punished
accordingly till eternity then what would be the reaction of contemporary
society, which has acquired a universal sense of justice through
civilisation?
In the fifth century, Augustine the
Bishop of Hippo, was involved in a confrontation with the Pelagian movement,
concerning the controversy of the nature of the fall of Adam and Eve. He
proclaimed the Pelagian movement as being heretical because it taught that
Adam’s sin affected only himself and not the human race as a whole; that every
individual is born free of sin and is capable in his own power of living a
sinless life and that there had even been persons who had succeeded in doing
so.
Those in the right were labeled as
heretics. Day was denounced as night and night as day. Heresy is truth and truth
heresy.
Let us now re-examine the theme that
God does not forgive the sinful without punishing them because it is against His
sense of justice. One is horrified to realise that for century after century
Christians have believed in something which is most certainly beyond the grasp
of the human intellect and contrary to human conscience. How on earth, or heaven
for that matter, could God forgive a sinful person merely because an innocent
person has volunteered himself to take the punishment instead? The moment God
does so, He violates the very fundamental principles of justice. A sinful person
must suffer for his sins. In short, a multitude of complex human problems would
arise if the punishment is transferred to someone else.
It is argued by Christian theologians
that such a transfer of punishment does not violate any principle of justice,
because of the voluntary acceptance by the innocent person of the other person’s
punishment. What would you say in the case of a debtor, they ask, who is
overloaded with debts beyond his capacity to pay and some God fearing
philanthropist decides to relieve him of his burden by paying his entire debts
on his behalf? Our answer would be that indeed we would loudly applaud such an
act of immense generosity, kindness and sacrifice. But what would be the
reaction of the person who confronts us with such a question, if the debt
payable runs into trillions of pounds sterling and there steps forward a
philanthropist who takes out a penny from his pocket, demanding that all that is
due to the debtor should be cancelled out against that kindly penny offered as a
substitute for that debt. What we have in the case of Jesus Christ offering
himself to be punished, for the sins of all humanity, is far more grotesquely
unproportionate. Again, it is not only one debtor or all the debtors of one
single generation, but we are talking about billions of born and unborn
defaulters extending up to Doomsday.
But that is not all. To conceive of
crime as only a debtor who owes money to someone else is the most naive
definition of sin that I have ever come across. This scenario which has been
presented deserves to occupy our attention a little longer before we turn to
some other aspects of crime and punishment.
Let us consider the case of a debtor
called A, who owes a hundred thousand pounds to person B. If a rich
philanthropist, in full command of his senses, seriously and genuinely wants to
relieve the debtor of his burden, the common law would require him to pay to B
all that person A owed him. But suppose the hypothetical philanthropist steps
forward with the plea that person A should be absolved of his responsibility of
payment to person B and instead he himself should be beaten up a little bit or
imprisoned for three days and nights at the most, in his place. If it really
happened in real life it would be a treat to watch the horrified faces of the
astounded judge and the confounded poor creditor B. But the philanthropist has
yet to complete his plea for clemency. He would further stipulate: ‘O my lord,
that is not all I want in return for my sacrifice. I require all the debtors of
the entire kingdom alive today or to be born until the end of time to be
absolved of their dues in return for my suffering of three days and nights.’ At
this point one’s mind boggles.
How one wishes to propose to God, the
Just God, that at least those who had been robbed of the fruits of their labour,
or of the savings of their lives should have been compensated to some degree at
least. But the Christian God, it seems, is far more kind and clement to the
criminal than to the innocent who suffer at the hands of the criminal. A strange
sense of justice indeed which results in the forgiveness of robbers, usurpers,
the abusers of children, the torturers of the innocent and the perpetrators of
all sorts of beastly crimes against humanity, provided that they believe in
Jesus Christ in their dying moments. What of the incalculable debt they owe to
their tormented victims. A few moments of Jesus in hell seem sufficient to purge
them of their long lives of unpunished heinous guilt, generation after
generation.
Let us now consider a different, more
serious, category of crime, the consequences of which human nature simply cannot
accept to be transferable. For instance, someone mercilessly abuses a child and
even rapes and murders it. Human sensibilities would no doubt be violated to an
unbearable degree. Suppose such a person continues to cause similar and greater
suffering all around him without ever being caught and brought to justice.
Having lived his life of crime unpunished by human hands, death closes in upon
him but he determines to elude even the greater punishment of the Judgement Day
and suddenly decides, at last, to have faith in Jesus Christ as his saviour.
Would all his sins suddenly melt into nothingness and would he be left to glide
into the other world free of sin like a new born babe? Perhaps such a one who
defers his belief in Jesus till the time of death proves to be much wiser than
the one who does so earlier in life. There always remained for the latter a
danger of committing sins after belief and falling prey to the devils designs
and insinuations. Why not wait till death is close upon you giving the devil
little chance and time to rob you of your faith in Jesus? A free life of crime
and pleasure, here on earth, and a rebirth in an eternal state of redemption is
no mean bargain indeed.
Is this the wisdom of justice that the
Christians attribute to God? Such a sense of justice or such a God himself is
totally unacceptable to human conscience, which He Himself created, without,
alas, being able to discriminate right from wrong.
Looking at the same question in the
light of human experience and human understanding, one has every right to
denounce this philosophy to be meaningless and without foundation. It has no
reality or substance. Human experience teaches us that it is always the
prerogative of those who suffer at the hands of others, to forgive or not to
forgive. Sometimes governments, to celebrate a day of national rejoicing or for
other reasons, may declare an amnesty to criminals without discrimination. But
that does not in itself justify the act of pardoning those who have done some
irreparable harm and caused perpetual suffering to their fellow innocent
citizens. It should be remembered that if the act of indiscriminate pardon at
the hands of a government can by any measure be justified and if this is not
considered by Christian theologians as a violation of the sense of justice then
why do they not extend the same courtesy to God and concede to Him the right of
forgiveness as and when He so pleases? After all, He is the Supreme Sovereign,
the Creator and Master of everything. If He pardons anyone for any crime that
may have been committed against fellow beings, the Supreme Master has the
unlimited power to compensate the aggrieved so generously as to make him
perfectly satisfied with His decision. That being so where is the need for the
sacrifice of His innocent ‘Son’? This in itself constitutes a mockery of
justice. We are born attuned to the attributes of God. He so declares in the
Holy Bible:
This tenet, common to both Christian
and Muslims alike, requires that human conscience is the best reflective mirror
of God’s conduct in a given situation. It is a matter of every day experience
with us that many a times we forgive without having violated the sense of
justice in the least. If we are wronged personally, then in respect of the crime
committed against us we can go to any length in forgiveness. If a child hurts
his parents by being disobedient or by causing damage to some precious household
article, or by earning them a bad name; he has sinned against them. His parents
may forgive him without their conscience pricking them or blaming them for
having violated the sense of justice. But if their child destroys the property
of their neighbour, or injures the child of another person, how could they
decide to forgive the child for causing suffering to others? It would be deemed
an act of injustice even according to their own consciences if they did so.
Crime and punishment have the same
relationship as cause and effect, and they have to be proportionate to some
degree. This aspect of the relationship between crime and punishment has already
been discussed at some length with regards to financial misconduct of one man
against another. The same argument applies with greater severity to other crimes
like injuring, maiming or murdering innocent citizens or violating their honour
in any manner. The greater the enormity of the crime, the more severe one would
expect the nature and extent of punishment to be. If God can forgive all and
sundry, as I do believe that He and only He can, then the question of Atonement
in exchange for punishing an innocent person does not come into play at all. If,
however, it is a question of the transference of one criminal’s punishment to
another innocent person who has opted for such a measure, then justice would
most certainly demand that the punishment must be transferred in its entirety to
the other person, without decreasing or diluting it to any degree. Again of that
we have already said enough.
Do the Christians believe that this
dictate of justice was applied in the case of Jesus the ‘Son’ by God the Father?
If so, it means that all the punishment due to all the criminals of the
Christian world born at the time of Christ or ever afterwards till Judgement Day
was amassed, concentrated and brought to an infernal intensity of such a degree
that the suffering of Jesus Christ for merely three days and nights equalled the
torture of all the punishment which the above mentioned sinners had earned or
were to earn till that last day. If so, no Christian should ever be punished on
earth by any Christian government. Otherwise, that would be tantamount to an act
of gross injustice. All that the courts of law should do after reaching the
verdict of guilty would be to ask the Christian criminal to pray to Jesus the
‘Son’ to save him. And the matter should be rested and brought to a close there
and then. It would simply be a case of book transfer of criminal’s account to
that of Jesus Christ.
For the sake of illustration let us
bring the United States of America into sharper focus and zoom in on the state
of crime there. The crimes of mugging and murder are so widespread that it is
difficult to keep a count of them. Once I remember in New York, I tuned in to a
radio station which was devoted entirely to the reporting of capital crime. It
was a most horrifying experience. It was so painful that half an hour was the
maximum I could take it, no more. Almost every five minutes a new murder was
committed in America and was reported, sometimes with grisly coverage by
reporters who were actually witnessing the very murder in progress. It is not
our intention to present a detailed picture of crime in America, but it is a
matter of common knowledge that today America stands among the foremost in the
list of countries where of all sorts of crime are rampant; particularly in
larger cities such as Chicago, New York and Washington. In New York, mugging is
common place along with the maiming of innocent citizens who dare to resist it.
This daily occurrence creates a most obnoxious picture of mutilation and murder
for paltry gains.
Leaving aside for the moment, the
rising trend of crime throughout the world, in the case of America alone, one
cannot fail to wonder about the relationship between the Christian concept of
Sin and Atonement with the crimes committed daily. However much removed they may
be from Christian value in their practice, at least this much goes to their
credit that they do believe in the Christian doctrine of Sin and Redemption and
also in Christ as their saviour—alas—to what avail. The majority of the
criminals in America, of course, are so-called Christians. Though Muslims and
others are no exception. Just because all such criminals who belong to
Christianity and believe in the reported voluntary sacrifice of Jesus Christ for
the sake of the believing sinners, would they all be pardoned by God? If so in
what way? Ultimately, a sizeable percentage from among them may get caught and
get punished by the law of the land, but still a large number would either
remain unapprehended or may only be punished for a part of the crimes which they
may have committed over many years.
What would Christianity offer to those
who are punished by law and what would it promise those who remain unapprehended
here on earth? Will both be punished to varying degrees or will they be punished
indiscriminately?
Another dilemma relating to a
criminal’s redemption because of his belief in Jesus Christ arises out of a less
clear and undefined situation. If, for instance, a Christian commits a crime
against an innocent non-Christian victim, he would be forgiven of course because
of the blessings of his faith in Jesus. The punishment of his crime will then be
transferred to the account of Jesus instead. But what would be the profit and
loss statement of the poor innocent non-Christian victim. Poor Jesus and the
poor victim, both being punished for a crime they did not commit.
One’s faculties are confounded if we
try to imagine the enormity of all the crimes ever committed by humanity since
the dawn of Christianity till the time when the sun of existence sets on human
life. Have all these crimes been transferred to the account of Jesus Christ,
peace and blessing of Allah be upon him? Have all these sins been accounted for
in the small space of three days and three nights that Jesus is supposed to have
suffered? Still one keeps on wondering, how could the vast sea of criminals so
intensely embittered by the deadly poison of crime be sweetened and cleansed
entirely of the effects of their crimes by the mere act of their believing in
Jesus. Again, one’s thoughts are carried back to the remote past, when poor Adam
and Eve so naively committed their first crime only because they were very
cunningly duped and ensnared by Satan. Why was their sin not also washed clean?
Did they not have faith in God? Was it a minor act of goodness to have faith in
God the Father and was it their fault anyway that they had never been told of a
‘Son’ living eternally with God the Father? Why did not the ‘Divine Son’ take
pity on them and beseech God the Father to punish him for their crimes instead?
How one wishes that had happened, it might have been so much easier to be
punished only for that one single faltering moment on the part of Adam and Eve.
The entire story of humanity would certainly have been rewritten in the book of
fate. A heavenly earth would have been created instead and Adam and Eve would
not have been banished eternally from heaven, along with the untold number of
their unhappy progeny. Jesus alone would have been banished from heaven merely
for three days and three nights and that would have been that. Sadly, neither
God the Father nor Jesus, thought of this. Look how Jesus’ holy lovable reality
is unfortunately transformed into a bizarre and unbelievable myth.
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