Does He Know A Mother's Heart
Religion
Does He Know a
Mother’s Heart: How Suffering Refutes Religions
Arun Shourie
Suffering and evil in world are the greatest hindrance in acceptance of
the concept of an all-powerful, all-knowing God. How could an omnipotent,
incomparably loving and infinitely compassionate god bring to bear upon his own
creation the soul-searing, unremitting suffering engendered by millions of
misfortunes; A whole life spent in penury, Children afflicted with debilitating
congenital malformations of mind and body, loss of children in their
adolescence, a lifetime spent in sorrows of unrequited love, mothers being
raped in front of their children, miseries visited by wars and natural calamities.
It is an unending list. Happiness has only few forms while sorrow visits mankind
in countless garbs. When confronted with ubiquitous misery and god’s alleged
omnipotence, the simplest statement of the conflict between facts and faith has
been phrased by the Greek philosopher Epicurus.
‘Is God willing to prevent
evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent.
Is he able but not willing?
then he is malevolent.
Is he both able and willing?
Then whence cometh evil?
Is he neither able nor
willing? Then why call him God?’
Suffering calls the bluff of the concept of God most conspicuously and
unambiguously.
Arun Shourie’s son was a spastic. He lived in to his fourth decade and
became the epicentre of the love of his parents. Arun Shourie’s wife Anita,
after a car accident, suffered early onset Parkinsonism, a debilitating
affliction of mind. Shourie was thus entrusted with responsibility of two
specially-abled people at home. In this book, the theme of which is amply clear
in the subtitle, Shourie examines if religion explains suffering adequately or
suffering refutes the concept of God.
In a short first section of the book Shourie writes briefly about his
life with his son and wife. This is written beautifully and is moving in its candour.
He writes with marked brevity, eschews sentimentalism, yet portrays the
poignancy of human suffering. Major girth of the book occupies itself with
refuting the religious explanations of human suffering. Shourie takes up
Judaism first. He then goes on to Christianity and Islam. He discusses
philosophies of two Hindu saints, Ramakrishna Paramahansa and Ramanna Maharishi
as representing Hindu views on suffering. Religion of every form and colour has
universally and abjectly failed to give even a faintly believable and mildly
reasonable explanation of suffering. The only explanation religions could
cobble up was that suffering is because of evil in human heart. It took the
form of ‘Karma’ in Hinduism. Bible preaches that all humanity for eternity has
to atone for the original sin committed by mythological Adam and Eve. Such
crass and shoddy attempt to explain the universal, unfathomable sorrows of
human existence! Words fail to express the gross, naked insincerity of
originators and perpetrators of religion. Religious explanations for our
suffering are mockery of our miseries. God was created in the image of human
beings, is undoubtable, but in the image of the most vain, vengeful,
intolerant, lying and degenerate specimen of our species, is a fact that is
most regretful. A few passages from each religious text would have sufficed to
illustrate clearly the ridiculousness of religion’s explanation of suffering.
Shourie instead writes a lengthy exegesis as he fills page after page with
these laughable explications masquerading as deep philosophical arguments. This
is one glaring fault of the book: redundancy and long-windedness of arguments.
Science now offers incontrovertible facts about origin of universe and myriad
life forms on earth. Science has unravelled the fascinating and mysterious
nature of human mind. In light of this, religious exposition of human condition
seems like an infantile fantasy and does not require verbose arguments to
expose its falsehoods. Shourie devotes one full chapter to elucidate Mahatma
Gandhi’s thoughts on human suffering. Deeply religious as Gandhi was, his
explanations are as hollow and meaningless.
Shourie finds that Buddhism comes closest to offering a believable
reason for human suffering and suggests practical ways to circumvent it. Unfortunately,
he has devoted least space to discussion of Buddhism, while he has quoted
unending, repetitive passages from Bible, Koran and teachings of Hindu saints.
Book could have been much slimmer and better structured. It provides
laboured reading of a very pertinent subject. There are innumerable books on
the subject that are highly readable and offer a wider coverage too.
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