Wednesday, April 20, 2016

God Is Not One

This week's book recommendation.
Since my early twenties when I started seriously questioning my religious beliefs, I've enjoyed reading books about religion. Not books that preach, but books that explore. Questions about when and how the universe was created, whether there is a god, many gods, or no god, and the various ways people rely upon religion to explain and navigate the world fascinate me, as does how religious beliefs affect people's relationships. That last point inspired me to write my Awakening thriller series, where characters with genuine, deeply-held beliefs oppose one another. All of which is why I love the book God Is Not One: The Eight Rival Religions That Run The World by Stephen Prothero.

Prothero's Reasons For Writing About Differences In Religious Beliefs


Prothero's premise is that while people often say things like "we all worship the same God," we actually "...live in a world where religion seems as likely to detonate a bomb as to defuse one." (See Prothero's Introduction.) No one tries to argue that every political party, type of government, or economic system is the same, as the current U.S. presidential primary races highlight. Yet popular culture and even religious scholars often view different religious as merely varying ways to get to the same place. 

The Eight Religions The Book Discusses


Throughout God Is Not One, Prothero shows the differences among Islam, Christianity, Confucianism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Yoruba Religion, Judaism, and Daoism. Why these and not others are included in itself raises interesting questions. Prothero organizes his analysis using a four-point structure. For each religion, he examines:

  • the problem
  • the solution (or religious goal)
  • the technique (for reaching/achieving the solution)
  • an exemplar who illustrates the path from problem to solution 

A Timely Example Of Differences


As an example of differences in the first two points, Prothero explains how Christianity sees the problem as sin, with salvation as the solution. But in Buddhism, suffering is the problem and awakening is the solution. In contrast to both of those religions, in Judaism, the problem is exile; the solution is returning to God. I find these comparisons particularly timely for the U.S., which is now in the midst of the presidential primary election season. The race includes candidates who normally court the vote of a specific segment of the Christian population, argue the U.S. is a Christian nation, and deplore businesses who attempt to recognize that not all their customers are Christian. Yet because the primaries are hotly contested this year in New York, those same candidates have needed to attempt to broaden their appeal to non-Christian voters. I confess to not following every single thing politicians say (shocking, I know), but I feel safe in guessing that one way politicians attempt to deal with such conundrums is to assert that we all worship the same God and hold the same values.

Who Shouldn't Read This Book 


If you're uninterested in religion or philosophy, God Is Not One won't appeal to you. But if you are curious about what, how, and why cultures and individuals profess certain religious beliefs, I think you'll find this fascinating. Also, while the book is well-researched, the tone is fairly conversation, so you won't feel like you're reading a textbook.

If you read God Is Not One and have thoughts about it or can suggest other similar books, please share below.

4 comments:

  1. Being an atheist like yourself is ignorant. So you believe that the universe just popped into existence? You must not have read the Bible and the prophecies that have come true and have yet to come true. You have no faith and being a lesbian is a sin. You sinner.

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    1. I've never understood the argument that there must be a god because how else could the Universe have come into being? That raises the same question -- if there's a god that created the Universe how did that god come into being? If the answer is God has simply always existed, why couldn't the Universe have simply always existed? All that being said, I'm not sure how any of your comments relate to the book being reviewed. Prothero is not an atheist, nor does he advocate atheism, and there's nothing in the book regarding lesbians.

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    2. I've never understood the argument that there must be a god because how else could the Universe have come into being? That raises the same question -- if there's a god that created the Universe how did that god come into being? If the answer is God has simply always existed, why couldn't the Universe have simply always existed? All that being said, I'm not sure how any of your comments relate to the book being reviewed. Prothero is not an atheist, nor does he advocate atheism, and there's nothing in the book regarding lesbians.

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  2. And change your photo. Are you trying to look like a feminist? Why don't you have the guts to just come out and say that you are a feminist and don't need a man for some reason. Someone surely messed you up.

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