Why I am not a Christian
***1/2/***** Essay
Why I am not a Christian
Bertrand Russell
This is a collection of essays by
Bertrand Russell. Many of these deal with religion and with issues related to
religion. The eponymous essay Why I am not a Christian is one of the finest
essay written on religion or the lack of it (contrary to the popular notion, a
person who is conventionally known not to have religion may well be one of the
most religious in his beliefs on atheism, while a supposed believer may actually
be quite casual and ignorant about his beliefs). In a clear and sparkling prose
Russell puts forth his reasons for not believing in Christianity. He writes
about Christianity but the arguments are true for all religions, so in effect
he speaks for atheists. One may not agree with his reasons but none can deny
the force and cogency of his arguments. His sharp intellect and clear thinking are
evident throughout. His arguments can be understood by a layperson, i.e., these
are not presented in philosophical jargon. He is candid and fearless in
expressing his unconventional opinions. One can only thank this intellectual
and a marvellous author to clearly state in words, the thoughts which have
hounded many of us some time in our lives. He wants us ‘to stand upon our own
feet and look fair and square at the world- its good facts, its bad facts, its
beauties, and its ugliness: see the world as it is, and be not afraid of it’.
According to him the whole conception of god is ‘quite unworthy of free men.’
He is unsparing of religion and churchmen even in some other essays in the
collection. In another essay, Has Religion Bad or Useful Contributions to Civilisation,
he says ‘my own view on religion is that of Lucretius. I regard it as a disease
born of fear and as a source of untold misery to the human race’.
There are other essays which
apparently do not deal with religion but in these he talks about issues which religion
has come to dominate like morality, education and idea of being good. In a
wickedly humorous essay Nice People, he writes about the hypocrites in our
society. In Freedom and the Colleges, he puts forth his views on education and
maintains the same iconoclastic creed in the essay Our Sexual Ethics. In the
end there is an account, by the editor Paul Edwards, of the shenanigans
deployed by the so-called religious lobby to prevent Bertrand Russell from
taking up the post of professor of Philosophy at the College of the City of New
York. The highbrow intellectuals, the religious fanatics, the rabble-rousing
politicians and the totally ignorant and unconcerned parties looking for
instantaneous fame spared no canards and no devious means to calumniate
Bertrand Russell. Unfortunately, this incidence which happened 60 years back
still keeps repeating in India with mere change of the names of the players.
These are the essays which open
closed and cobwebbed recesses in mind and force one to think anew and deeply on
issues which one confronts in his daily life.
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