How Do Buddhists Do the Problem of Evil?

The simple answer is that they don’t. For Buddhism, it’s the problem of desire. Christianity has the problem, not Buddhism. Why is this? Buddhism starts with the problem of evil, suffering or “dukkha,” as its first statement of faith in the four noble truths. However, it is not the problem we think. Buddhism concedes that suffering or evil is what life is made of. It does not begin with an all powerful and good God, and the ensuing moral and logical entailments. In fact, in Buddhism, the question of God’s existence is not raise. Buddhism begins from a different starting point, suffering, not God’s existence.

So how is suffering, inflicted by both man and nature, understood by a Buddhist?

It starts by what cannot be said. The Buddha, the one who is awake and attained Nirvana, the extinguishing of desires, had an experience that does not fit the categories of language. So even the Buddha’s own attempts, and especially mine, to describe the unexplainable will come short of the real thing. That said, language can lead us to an understanding of Buddhism, however imperfect.

Understanding Buddhism begins with its historical context. Buddhism developed as a response to the social evils of Buddha’s day against the prevailing corruptions of Hinduism, a kind of protestant reformation in response to 16th century Catholicism. For Buddha, it was the corruption and abuse of the Brahmins hold on religious teachings, and a challenge to the individual to think clearly about his own religious values. Buddha‘s enlightenment and message was aimed in part at the power structures of his day. He argues logically for a belief without authority, ritual, speculation, and tradition as a response to the religious and social cast. Instead, he preaches a religion of self effort, lacking grace which calls the individual to action. As self effort, Buddhism is a religion of discipline that diminishes personal ego. This leads to an awakening, a state of Nirvana or the extinguishing of desire, and shapes the Buddha preaching to transform the social evils of his time.

So, how does one extinguishing desire?

It begins with the four noble truths. These truths are Buddha’s insights aimed at life’s most troubling problem, suffering. The first truth is that life is suffering, or “dukkha.” This is not philosophical skepticism by the Buddha, but a simple observation or assessment of life. For most us who have lived long enough, it’s intuitive, as we’ve seen too much in our own lives and the plight of others to know that life is a struggle of varying degrees. The Buddha describes suffering as dislocation and outlines six points of common dislocation (suffering or evil) that all men and women share:
1. The pain at birth
2. The pathology of sickness
3. The morbidity of decay
4. The fear of death
5. Being bond to what one dislikes (ie disease or defects)
6. Being separated from what one loves

The second noble truth identifies the cause of suffering or dislocation, desire or “tanha.” This is best described as egotistical desires, because not all desire is bad, like the desire for happiness or liberation of others. Desire as the personal fulfillment for the ego is a kind of bondage that we live in. The Buddha’s teaching is very foreign to the Western mind. It is at the opposite spectrum of our more current popular Darwinian values, nor is exactly the kind of philosophical thinking that would produce the US Declaration of Independence. But, it is a very powerful insight into the human condition. “Tanha” is more than just desire, it is also a force that ruptures our desires and helps us pull back from our egotistical pursuits. For those philosophers in the audience, Tanha may have been the Buddha’s response to Descartes problem of the ego. Even the Book of Geneses links the problem of ego in the garden to sin and evil in this world.

For Buddha, suffering describes a failure to link ourselves to the destiny of the whole. When we look at a group picture, who do we see first? Ourselves, of course! Herein lies the problem, individualism, or the simple inclination to focus on ourselves imprisons us to a life of suffering. We don’t think about the whole group first, but me first. So, the third noble truth follows from the second, the cure, the overcoming of life as desire. The forth noble prescribes the path to overcoming, the Eightfold path, a series of disciplines or working out of one’s awakening or salvation from desire to Nirvana.

To bring our thoughts full circle, the problem for Buddhism is not evil, but desire. The Buddha concedes evil or suffering as an observation of the world. Buddha’s next logical step describes the cause or source of the problem. Suffering exists and has its roots in desire or dislocation. Life’s pains are tied to our own egotistical perceptions of ourselves. This may sound simplest, but not so in Buddhism.

So how does a Buddhist interpert and engage the sufferings or evils of this world?

How does a Buddhist see a holocaust or a Hitler? What about The Peoples Revolution and Chairman Mau, or even natural disasters? Simply put, he sees suffering as the corruption of desires. Not an easy thing to say to a holocaust victim. The remedy lies in the method to extinguish desire and the Eightfold Path. It’s a mindset change, and allot of personal and physical discipline to get there. The Eightfold path is how a Buddhist monk works outs his path to Nirvana.  It has bread a variety of worldwide monastic movements from Zen to the Dalai Lama. For these reasons, a Buddhist lives a simple life, a prescription for evil but not a prescription for the fuel of capitalism that Adam Smith could depend on to build a free market economy (ego is good in Capitalism). Part of the attraction of Buddhism in the West is its confrontation of materialism as a root problem for suffering or empty lives.

So how does one evaluate Buddhism from the Western world?

From a secularist point of view, you can’t. The Secularist version of tolerance, generally speaking, states that you can’t adjudicate or judge between religious faiths. Not only is this uninteresting, but very problematic, as it presupposes no criteria for evil, so societies like Hitler’s Fascist state, Stalin’s Communism, or Mao’s People’s Revolution, or any other societies that violate our Western perceptions of human rights cannot be judged apart from the value that “might is right.” That’s another story.  However, for the Western Christian mind, there are elements in Buddhism to learn from, respected, and discern in our application of faith.

In many respects, Christians and Buddhists share the common diagnosis for evil, ego. Ego made its day beau in the Garden of Eden, and in the first crime of man against man, Cain and Able. And, in its history, Christianity has recognized the Buddhist solution, the overcoming of desire. Christianity own rich traditions in Monastic and lay movements have sought the betterment of societies through reflection and values as well as education and health. Much can be learnt from the Buddhist insight into ego, the Eightfold Path, against our own narcissistic western cultural behaviors of consumption. Unfortunately, the western Christian has lost is dialogue with its own monasticism, its understanding of vice and virtue as root causes for evil as found in the Sermon on the Mount. And perhaps, in the Buddhist tradition, Western Christianity has become tainted with evil (our egotistical inclinations), although I believe they would be too polite to say so. The height of our narcissism is heard in the 9/11 tragedy. We confront suffering and evil with shopping. I don’t recall shopping in either the Eightfold Path or the Sermon on the Mount!

There is a discerning point that differentiates Christianity from Buddhism in the on the ground engagement with evil and suffering. Buddhism is essentially a monastic movement whose call, with sectarian variety, is based on the Eightfold Path. And although it softens the ego in man, and makes for some extremely nice people (Larry Ellison of Oracle excluded), it does not return them back into society with same aggressive social reforms that Christianity has done. Not that Buddhist aren’t people of social reform, as recently seen in Nepal, but their primary occupation is with the Eightfold Path, attainment of Nivarna, and other factors like Karma. Part of the extinguishing of desire can be to engage in acts of compassion and care for the other. But it does not return its devotees back into the world with the same force as a Christian to address the immediate needs of the individual. This is generalization, which means there are exceptions, but it is a true one.

Now, it could be argued the Christians occupation is with heaven, and that its global missionary movement and good works could be reduced to hegemony and imperialism. These popular, but statistically untrue statements are the superficial understandings and conjecture of Secularism in the Western academy as debunked by such scholars as the Yale historian, Sanneh Lamin . Although in Christianity, heaven is a goal, it is not the primary goal. Heaven is the destination, but not the journey. For the Hebrew God, Yahweh, the primary concern has always been for the under belly of society. All men, who share the imago dei, the image of God in man, have inalienable human rights anchored in this common identity, that within us, God exist and we affront Him with social and economic injustices. The encounter with God returns the Christian back into this world with a passion for human rights and the forgiveness he or she has been given by God (i.e. John Newton, Amazing Grace and the abolition of the slave trade). The climax of this encounter is God becoming man, in this world, in Jesus Christ demonstrating the supremacy of all human life. However, such an event does raises the questions of evil and God’s goodness and power. Better to have this problem than not (can you say Nietzsche, The Genealogy of Morals).

Christians can learn much about the Buddha’s insight into ego and suffering. Unfortunately, the Christian record has its virtues linked to its vices (i.e. humility that is political pretense) whereas Buddhism history is not so checker by vice, its value as a monastic movement. Perhaps there is a middle ground between the two. Where the Buddhist can learn from social engagement and the liberating power of Christ in society, and, the Christian, from Buddhism about insight into egos, motives and manners.

Here are some closing thoughts on evil and world views:

For the Buddhist, it’s the problem of desire.
For the Secularist, it’s not a problem (especially a Darwinian Secularist).
For the Muslim, it is the will of God.
For the Hindu, it’s an illusion.
For the Jew/Christian, it’s their problem.

30 thoughts on “How Do Buddhists Do the Problem of Evil?

  1. http://optagon.page.tl/Did-The-Buddha-believe-in-God-f-.htm

    …within Buddhism, in the most famous of its scriptures, the Dhammapada(47), the Buddha clearly espouses a belief in a supreme Creator. Buddha, contrary to being an atheist or a person who never answered or avoided answering the question of God’s existence, as present day Buddhist sects and most Western and Eastern scholars portray, also believed in One God:

    Who is capable of praising one like a coin of finest
    gold, one whom the knowing praise after finding him
    impeccable, controlled, intelligent, insightful, ethical, and
    composed day in and day out? Even the gods(48) praise such
    a one, even the Creator [brahmuna] (17:9,10).(49)

    In the Sutta-Pitaka which is part of the Tripitaka texts, translated by T.W . R. Davids of the Buddhist Pali Text Society, the Buddha has categorically stated, in the Tevigga Sutta, that he had a relationship with the Creator and they should listen to him and follow his ways , since they too want to know how to relate to the Creator.

    …to the Tathagat [the fully enlightened person] when
    asked touching the path which leads to the world of
    Brahma [the Creator], there can be neither doubt nor
    difficulty. For Brahma I [do] know Vashetta [the young
    Brahmin the Buddha was addressing], and the world of
    Brahma and the path that leads to it. Yes, I know it ever as one
    who has entered the Brahma world, and has been born within
    it!(50)

    To paraphrase, Buddha is saying that: “Vashetta, I know, as an enlightened person that the path to God has certainty and is easy. I know God and the path that leads to God, since I am part of God’s creation.” Buddha also believed in hell, a paradisiacal state in the next life, and the accountability of deeds in the hereafter:

    One who speaks untruth goes to hell, as does one
    who claims not to have done what he has in fact done.
    Both become equal after death, people of base deeds in
    the hereafter. (22:1)

    When a person long absent from home returns safely
    from afar, relatives, friends, and well-wishers rejoice at his
    return. In the same way, when one who has done good
    is gone from this world to the beyond, his good deeds receive
    him, like relatives receiving a returning loved one. (16:11, 12)

    In the book Outline of Mahayana (Chapter IX) D.T. Suzuki explains that God is referred to by the term Dharmakaya-Buddha or the religious object of Buddhism. In fact in a Tibetan text, the Dharmakaya is described with eight attributes, which are: Sameness, Depth, Everlastingness, Oneness, Harmony, Purity, Radiance, and Enjoyment [some of which are explained as]:

    Sameness, because the Dharmakayas of all Buddhas are
    not different.
    Depth, because it is ineffable.
    Everlastingness, becaus e it has no beginning or end.
    Oneness, because the Dharmadhatu (Absolute Reality)
    and Transcendent Awareness (are not different).
    Harmony, because it is beyond positive and negative poles.
    Purity, because it is free from the three taints of hatred, greed,
    and delusion.
    Possessing enjoyment, because with its wealth of qualities
    it is the basis of all enjoyment.(51)

    Suzuki elaborates that “The Dharmakaya assumes three essential aspects: intelligence (prajna), love (karuna) and will (pranidhanabala).” In fact, Professor Robert F. Thurman, Columbia University, who is also a Buddhist monk, passionately emphasizes that: “Buddha not only believed in God, he knew God. There were numerous atheists in Buddha’s time – the Charvaka materialists – and the Buddha specifically critiqued their lack of belief in any spiritual reality.”(52) In a chapter entitled: “The Differing Viewpoints of Buddhism and the Other World Religions regarding Ultimate Reality” William Stoddart, in his book, Outline of Buddhism, explains that the true Buddhist belief is really theistic, but that the existence of Ultimate Reality (i.e. God) who is both immanent and transcendent, has been misunderstood because of the emphasis of the immanence component. In fact, Thurman emphasizes that Islam clearly depicts the physical inconceivability of God, in that there is nothing like God and that Buddhism, if understood correctly, has one and the same goal. It is easy to see how the emphasis of the Buddha on the non-corporeality of God has led to many erroneously believing that there is no God in Buddhism.

    47. Thomas Cleary (Translator), (1995), Dhammapada: The
    Sayings of Buddha.

    48. Deva in the original Pali; this likely refers to the created angels
    or the good spirit entities.

    49. Thomas Cleary (Translator), (1995), Dhammapada: The
    Sayings of Buddha.

    50. Muller, F. Max, (1881), The Sacred Books of the East, p. 186.

    51. Guenther, Herbet (Translator), (1970), The Jewel Ornament of
    Liberation, p.264-5.
    http://www.kheper.net/topics/Buddhism/dharmakaya.htm

    52. Henry, Gray (Editor), (1997), Islam in Tibet and the
    Illustrated Narrative: Tibetan Caravans,pp. 35-37.

    http://optagon.page.tl/Did-The-Buddha-believe-in-God-f-.htm

    • You have misunderstood Buddhism. There is no eternal supreme controller in Buddhism. Brahma in Buddhism is not similar to Brahma/God in Hindu, Islam or Christianity. He is a being. His post is Brahma.It is just like ” president ” of USA.

    • Optagon,

      I feel that you may be confused about the use of the title Brahma in Buddhism. Brahma does mean Creator, however, he is not actually supreme or immortal, he is simply someone who (through virtue and diligent meditation) has entered into the first levels of the Form Heavens (still within the wheel of rebirth), which is called the Brahmaloka. So his title of Creator is a honorific, not a fact.

      In religions that cannot transcend the Samsara, their head deity is considered to be the most senior and supreme in their world view. Its just like how the highest rank in some monarchies is that of Count, Prince or Duke (instead of King or Emperor).

      Thus, Buddhism positively acknowledges other mainstream religions because they encourage people to give alms, be filial, refrain from killing or stealing and so forth. Whether you are Buddhist or not, as long as you do good, you will see karmic rewards and good rebirths. So in the Shurangama Sutra, it is stated that the Christian God is actually Sakka, the Lord of the 2nd Heaven within the Desire Realm of the Samsara.

      When the Buddha states he knew the Brahma world, he is saying that he outranks them so he knows everything about them, just like a Field Marshal knows everything a Colonel knows.

      As for accountability of deeds, karma is a central pillar of Buddhism. The virtuous are reborn in the realms of Heaven while the very evil are pushed into the infernal realms. The only difference is that no rebirth within the Six realms (which includes Heaven, Hell, Animals..) is eternal, but as the lifespans in the hells etc. are so long, it practically feels like forever. So do good and don’t mess up!

      However, the roots of all religions are shared. The Buddhas and Bodhisattvas want only to educate all beings to do good (so they could have better rebirths) and to (when they are able) to accept Buddhism so they can transcend the Samsara. Thus, Buddhas and Bodhisattvas manifest as different Gods, Sages and even regular people to teach whatever teachings the audience can accept, so that they will do good.

      I highly recommend everyone watch Venerable Master Chin Kung’s lecture (English subtitles) on the shared roots of all religions:

      Namo Amitabha,

      Bc

  2. Well written and very enlightening. I am a member of a discussion group called Socrates Cafe that meets weekly at Science of the Mind in Boca Raton Florida. Your arguments will be part of our next meeting.
    Thanks

    Donald Sheldon

  3. Well said, and with great objectivity! As a Christian father who just finished watching The Last Airbender with his sons, I was wondering about some of the differences. I realize a movie can be very misleading about religious motives or beliefs, so I wanted to do some research. Your elaboration was extremely helpful. Thanks!

  4. really cool but u should write less and in more kiddy words cant really understand it! but other than that its really good

  5. Unfortunately, Buddhism is not the perfect picture of peace and worldly detachment. Buddhists in Myanmar, the dominate religion of Burma/Myanmar, are attacking Muslims, not in isolated cases, but on a scale that can be only described as genocide. The propaganda, lead by a prominent Buddhist monk under a program call 696 calls for Buddhist to boycott Muslin business and has incited mass killings of Muslims in Myanmar. It sounds like a recent chapter in European history pre WW2!

    Although these monks can’t be said to reflect the mainstream Buddhist teaching (what happened to detachment?), it represents religion gone bad which no religion is exempt from, (especially true of secularist views or “religion”). You can watch more in this online report on PBS:

  6. The real question is who is the greater Master? Who would teach who ?

    A. Jesus Christ
    B. Buddha

    What would Buddha say and do if he saw a stranger suffering ?

    What would Jesus Christ say and do if he saw a stranger suffering ?

    Who would help that stranger for the purpose and reason of true Love .

    Who would give his life to save that stranger ?

    John 3:16
    For God so Loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whomever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.

    • The question should be who is the greater student? Sages are all equal, but what is taught depends on the level of the student and what he or she can accept at that time.

      Namo Amitabha,

      Bc

      • All religions are not the same. They all contradict each other. It is impossible for all religions to be correct. There can only be one. The oldest written religion in the world started in Iraq in 3000 BC. It is called the Sumerian religion. The sumerian clay tablets speak about the 1st humans very similar to the Bible. Then the story changes to contradict the bible. Then Hinduism 1750 BC. Then around 1400BC Moses begins to teach the Torah wich is similar to the Sumerian clay tablets.

        Around 400 BC Shakyamuni-Buddha begins to teach and contradicts what was written from the begining of human civilization in Iraq. Then Jesus begins to teach around 30AD about what was written in Iraq in the beginning. After Jesus came Mohammad around 600AD. He begins to teach a different story and contradicts Jesus.

    • The problem of evil in Christianity was solved by Jesus Christ at the cross. The Jewish crowd told Jesus in Mathew 27:40. “Look at you now!” they yelled at him. “You said you were going to destroy the Temple and rebuild it in three days. Well then, if you are the Son of God, save yourself and come down from the cross!”

      Jesus being God in the flesh did not save himself at the cross, Why? Jesus being God was right in the middle of death called suffering or evil. This is best illustrated as a light that shines in the darkness and the darkness cannot overcome it. Would Buddha give up his Salvation also called enlightenment / Nirvana for you ? Buddha never did give up his Nirvana for anyone. Buddha just points the way to Nirvana. Jesus did give up his Salvation for you and Me. Is Buddha really a light? or is he in the dark?

      • Law of Causality,

        Sacrificing ones own advancement for the benefit of suffering sentient beings is a central characteristic of Mahayana vows:

        “His Sanskrit name is Ksitigarbha —“Earth Store” .

        There are ten aspects of the Earth: it is wide and extensive; it supports all living beings; it is impartial; it receives the great rain; it produces grasses and trees; it holds all planted seeds; it holds many treasures; it produces medicines; it is not moved by the blowing wind; and it does not tremble at the lion’s roar.”

        The past vows of Earth Store Bodhisattva are the vows he made in his past lives—not at the present, because by now he has already fulfilled his vows. What were the vows he made? He vowed:

        Until the hells are empty I vow to forgo Buddhahood;
        Only when all beings are saved will I then certify to Bodhi.

        “Hells” refers to all the hells. Anytime the hells are not empty, he will hold off on becoming a Buddha; only when the hells are completely empty will he become a Buddha. Now, think about that. How great is the power of that vow?

        Earth Bodhisattva says, “I will be in the hells to receive and guide all the hungry ghosts. For each day that they have not been led from suffering to bliss, for one more day I will hold off on Buddhahood. The hungry ghosts in the hells must completely gain deliverance, leave suffering, and attain bliss, and then I will become a Buddha.”

        Source: http://www.cttbusa.org/esscommentary/earthstore_preface.htm

  7. Capitalism and discrimination, blind faith and wrong values are the real problems of humanity.
    Strive to destroy these, mankind will be safe and …..

  8. It is frightening and sad that Buddhas system is perfectly contradictory and self deceptive. It is the work of Satan. For the Desire to extinguish Desire, is Desire itself. The foundation of Buddhas whole system is Desire, which caused him to live PERPECTUALLY in the very SIN he was trying to avoid, the SIN OF DESIRE. For to DESIRE to extinguish DESIRE, is DESIRE. Therefore for Buddha would never have been able to eradicate sin in his life, for his premise to eradicate the sin of Desire was the very sin itself, Desire. Therefore he practiced sin his whole life! Committing sin can never eradicate sin. He believed the lie of Satan, “…you will be like God”. I do not know what happened at the moment of his physical death, but I do know that he had a chance right up to the end to receive forgiveness of his sins from the only true God eternal and our creator and lover and savior of sinners Yeshua (Jesus) if he received Jesus as his savior . Buddhas death does not concern the living anymore. What about you. “for God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whoever believes on him will not perish but have everlasting life.” Jesus loves you my neighbor and will save you from your sins if you trust him as your God and savior. He is the only one that had no sin, proven by the HISTORICAL FACT and his LIFE in those he has saved, by his RESURECTION. He is the only one that had victory over SIN, DEATH, AND THE GRAVE. Love because of Jesus me.

    • Barry,

      The Buddha’s system is not contradictory, it is a marvelous stage based solution to achieve the inconceivable and unsurpassed.

      A typical man cannot simply wave one’s hand and have all duality, desire and attachment simply disappear. No. There must be a formula, and the first step is to realize the pain of impermanence and become Resolute in leaving the Wheel of Rebirth. Buddhism is about using the usefully false to cultivate the true, just as the sculptor uses disposable Plaster moulds to create a Gold statue.

      Then comes the formula:

      Sila, Samadhi and Prajna (Virtue, Meditation and Wisdom) are the three stages to Buddhahood.

      First, we must purify ourselves of coarse hatreds and greed for food, wealth, lust, fame and sleep. We reduce the influence of these cravings (and the attendant bad karma) by cultivating virtue (5 precepts/10 virtues/ 8 precepts..) and doing good deeds. Eventually, our hearts will settle as our forbearance wears away our incessant cravings, hatreds and ambitions.

      As our heart settles, we can start to cultivate Samadhi, which will rid ourselves of attachments to illusory concepts, attachments, duality and delusions that keep us from the wisdom which will liberate us. Even attachment for the concept of Dharma and the wish for Buddhahood must be eventually cast off to achieve liberation:

      “.. If you are caught up in the idea of a dharma, you are also caught up in the ideas of a self, a person, a living being, and a life span. If you are caught up in the idea that there is no dharma, you are still caught up in the ideas of a self, a person, a living being, and a life span. That is why we should not get caught up in dharmas or in the idea that dharmas do not exist. This is the hidden meaning when the Tathagata says,’Bhiksus, you should know that all of the teachings I give to you are a raft.?All teachings must be abandoned, not to mention non-teachings.”
      – Diamond Sutra

      Moreover, Christianity is also a form of Dharma spoken by the Bodhisattvas to people who cannot yet accept Buddhism:

  9. Its very interesting how Christians only focus on the peaceful message that Jesus propagated, but wilfully choose to ignore their god of the Testament ( which is actually Jesus according Christian theology) who was an absolute monster.

    For example:

    1. God drowns the whole earth.
    In Genesis 7:21-23, God drowns the entire population of the earth: men, women, children, fetuses, and perhaps unicorns. Only a single family survives. In Matthew 24:37-42, gentle Jesus approves of this genocide and plans to repeat it when he returns.

    2. God kills half a million people.
    In 2 Chronicles 13:15-18, God helps the men of Judah kill 500,000 of their fellow Israelites.

    3. God slaughters all Egyptian firstborn.
    In Exodus 12:29, God the baby-killer slaughters all Egyptian firstborn children and cattle because their king was stubborn.

    4. God kills 14,000 people for complaining that God keeps killing them.
    In Numbers 16:41-49, the Israelites complain that God is killing too many of them. So, God sends a plague that kills 14,000 more of them.

    5. Genocide after genocide after genocide.
    In Joshua 6:20-21, God helps the Israelites destroy Jericho, killing “men and women, young and old, cattle, sheep and donkeys.” In Deuteronomy 2:32-35, God has the Israelites kill everyone in Heshbon, including children. In Deuteronomy 3:3-7, God has the Israelites do the same to the people of Bashan. In Numbers 31:7-18, the Israelites kill all the Midianites except for the virgins, whom they take as spoils of war. In 1 Samuel 15:1-9, God tells the Israelites to kill all the Amalekites – men, women, children, infants, and their cattle – for something the Amalekites’ ancestors had done 400 years earlier.

    6. God kills 50,000 people for curiosity.
    In 1 Samuel 6:19, God kills 50,000 men for peeking into the ark of the covenant. (Newer cosmetic translations count only 70 deaths, but their text notes admit that the best and earliest manuscripts put the number at 50,070.)

    7. 3,000 Israelites killed for inventing a god.
    In Exodus 32, Moses has climbed Mount Sinai to get the Ten Commandments. The Israelites are bored, so they invent a golden calf god. Moses comes back and God commands him: “Each man strap a sword to his side. Go back and forth through the camp from one end to the other, each killing his brother and friend and neighbor.” About 3,000 people died.

    8. The Amorites destroyed by sword and by God’s rocks.
    In Joshua 10:10-11, God helps the Israelites slaughter the Amorites by sword, then finishes them off with rocks from the sky.

    9. God burns two cities to death.
    In Genesis 19:24, God kills everyone in Sodom and Gomorrah with fire from the sky. Then God kills Lot’s wife for looking back at her burning home.

    10. God has 42 children mauled by bears.
    In 2 Kings 2:23-24, some kids tease the prophet Elisha, and God sends bears to dismember them. (Newer cosmetic translations say the bears “maul” the children, but the original Hebrew, baqa, means “to tear apart.”)

    11. A tribe slaughtered and their virgins raped for not showing up at roll call.
    In Judges 21:1-23, a tribe of Israelites misses roll call, so the other Israelites kill them all except for the virgins, which they take for themselves. Still not happy, they hide in vineyards and pounce on dancing women from Shiloh to take them for themselves.

    12. 3,000 crushed to death.
    In Judges 16:27-30, God gives Samson strength to bring down a building to crush 3,000 members of a rival tribe.

    13. A concubine raped and dismembered.
    In Judges 19:22-29, a mob demands to rape a godly master’s guest. The master offers his daughter and a concubine to them instead. They take the concubine and gang-rape her all night. The master finds her on his doorstep in the morning, cuts her into 12 pieces, and ships the pieces around the country.

    14. Child sacrifice.
    In Judges 11:30-39, Jephthah burns his daughter alive as a sacrificial offering for God’s favor in killing the Ammonites.

    15. God helps Samson kill 30 men because he lost a bet.
    In Judges 14:11-19, Samson loses a bet for 30 sets of clothes. The spirit of God comes upon him and he kills 30 men to steal their clothes and pay off the debt.

    16. God demands you kill your wife and children for worshiping other gods.
    In Deuteronomy 13:6-10, God commands that you must kill your wife, children, brother, and friend if they worship other gods.

    17. God incinerates 51 men to make a point.
    In 2 Kings 1:9-10, Elijah gets God to burn 51 men with fire from heaven to prove he is God.

    18. God kills a man for not impregnating his brother’s widow.
    In Genesis 38:9-10, God kills a man for refusing to impregnate his brother’s widow.

    19. God threatens forced cannibalism.
    In Leviticus 26:27-29 and Jeremiah 19:9, God threatens to punish the Israelites by making them eat their own children.

    20. The coming slaughter.
    According to Revelation 9:7-19, God’s got more evil coming. God will make horse-like locusts with human heads and scorpion tails, who torture people for 5 months. Then some angels will kill a third of the earth’s population. If he came today, that would be 2 billion people.

    • AND Christians created the western world white European heterosexual christians!!!! The Buddhist countries are shit holes

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