"The Bible depicts a world that, seen through modern eyes, is staggering in its savagery. People enslave, rape, and murder members of their immediate families. Warlords slaughter civilians indiscriminately, including the children. Women are bought, sold, and plundered like sex toys. And Yahweh tortures and massacres people by the hundreds of thousands for trivial disobedience or for no reason at all. These atrocities are neither isolated nor obscure. They implicate all the major characters of the Old Testament, the ones that Sunday-school children draw with crayons. And they fall into a continuous plotline that stretches for millennia, from Adam and Eve through Noah, the patriarchs, Moses, Joshua, the judges, Saul, David, Solomon, and beyond. According to the biblical scholar Raymund Schwager, the Hebrew Bible “contains over six hundred passages that explicitly talk about nations, kings, or individuals attacking, destroying, and killing others. . . . Aside from the approximately one thousand verses in which Yahweh himself appears as the direct executioner of violent punishments, and the many texts in which the Lord delivers the criminal to the punisher’s sword, in over one hundred other passages Yahweh expressly gives the command to kill people.” Matthew White, a self-described atrocitologist who keeps a database with the estimated death tolls of history’s major wars, massacres, and genocides, counts about 1.2 million deaths from mass killing that are specifically enumerated in the Bible. (He excludes the half million casualties in the war between Judah and Israel described in 2 Chronicles 13 because he considers the body count historically implausible.) The victims of the Noachian flood would add another 20 million or so to the total. The good news, of course, is that most of it never happened. Not only is there no evidence that Yahweh inundated the planet and incinerated its cities, but the patriarchs, exodus, conquest, and Jewish empire are almost certainly fictions. Historians have found no mention in Egyptian writings of the departure of a million slaves (which could hardly have escaped the Egyptians’ notice); nor have archaeologists found evidence in the ruins of Jericho or neighboring cities of a sacking around 1200 BCE. And if there was a Davidic empire stretching from the Euphrates to the Red Sea around the turn of the 1st millennium BCE, no one else at the time seemed to have noticed it."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Steven Pinker, The Better Angels of Our Nature (2012)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/David
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
David
20 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by David →
Related Quotes
"Jehovah has become King … He sits enthroned above the cherubs."
"Wash me O Lord for my iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin. For I acknowledge my transgressions, and my sin is always…"
"Search me, O God, and know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts: And see if there be any wicked way in me, lead me …"
"I grieve for you, Jonathan my brother; you were very dear to me. Your love for me was wonderful, more wonderful than …"
"Thy servant kept his father's sheep, and there came a lion, and a bear, and took a lamb out of the flock: [...] The L…"
"Thou comest to me with a sword, and with A spear, and with a shield: but I come to thee in the name of the Lord of ho…"
"בני אבשלום בני בני אבשלום מי יתן מותי אני תחתיך אבשלום בני בני"
"And Jonathan made a covenant with David because he loved him as himself. Jonathan took off the robe he was wearing an…"
"And as soon as the lad was gone, David arose out of a place toward the south, and fell on his face to the ground, and…"
"Blessed is the one who does not walk in step with the wicked or stand in the way that sinners take or sit in the comp…"