Terimakasih mas Ary. Saya akan coba cari di "The Battle for God" nya 
Karen.

Salam,



"Ary Setijadi Prihatmanto" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
Sent by: wanita-muslimah@yahoogroups.com
08/02/2006 04:23 AM
Please respond to
wanita-muslimah@yahoogroups.com


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Subject
Re: Karen Armstrong? Re: [wanita-muslimah] Wishful Thinking Re: 
[mediacare] Awal Kejatuhan Israel dan AS







----- Original Message ----- 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <wanita-muslimah@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, August 01, 2006 10:16 AM
Subject: Karen Armstrong? Re: [wanita-muslimah] Wishful Thinking Re:
[mediacare] Awal Kejatuhan Israel dan AS


> Apakah ada buku Karen Armstrong yang mengupas berita-berita peperangan
> akhir zaman ditinjau dari tradisi 3 agama Yahudi - Kristen - Islam? Juga
> penjelasan tentang mitos akhir zaman / Armagedon yang merupakan cara
> berfikir orang zaman dahulu?
>

Lha kok pas, di sebelah Pak ZAB forward artikel Karen Armstrong di 
Guardian.
Ada ulasan ttg urusan apocalyptic-nya. Silahkan dinikmati,

Hayo, siapa yang pengen jadi temennya Bush... cuman beda baju doang...
;-))

Salam
Ary


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Zainal Abidin Bagir" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [evolusi] Kaitan anti-evolusi dengan dukungan Bush pada Israel?

> Apa kaitan anti-evolusi dengan dukungan Bush pada Israel? Di bawah ini
> adalah tulisan menarik dari KAREN ARMSTRONG, penulis "Sejarah Tuhan".
> Menarik, karena ia melihat keterkaitan fundamentalisme George Bush 
dengan
> dukungan tanpa batas pada Israel yang sedang menggempur Palestina dan
> Lebanon, dengan vetonya atas undang2 mengenai Stem Cell di AS baru-baru
ini,
> dan juga dengan dukungannya pada Intelligent Design! Kesemuanya bermuara
> pada satu hal: fundamentalisme.
> z a
>

===================================================
Bush's fondness for fundamentalism is courting
disaster at home and abroad

By Karen Armstrong, the author of 'The Battle for God:
A History of Fundamentalism' (THE GUARDIAN, 31/07/06):

>From the very beginning, the conflict between religion
and modern science was couched in extreme, even
apocalyptic rhetoric. Thomas H Huxley, who popularised
the Origin of Species, insisted that people had to
choose between faith and science; there could be no
compromise: "One or the other would have to succumb
after a struggle of unknown duration." In response,
conservative Christians launched a crusade against
Darwinism. After the first world war, the Democratic
politician William Jennings Bryan claimed that there
was a direct link between evolutionary theory and
German militarism: the notion that only the strong
could or should survive had "laid the foundation for
the bloodiest war in history. The same science that
manufactured poisoned gases to suffocate soldiers is
preaching that man has a brutal ancestry."

The struggle continues - nowhere more so than among
the Christian right in the US, who still regard the
evolutionary hypothesis as surrounded by a murderous
nimbus of evil. In 1925, they tried to ban the
teaching of evolution in public schools and developed
creation science, based on a literal reading of the
first chapter of Genesis. More recently, they have
tried to introduce into the school curriculum the
teaching of intelligent design (ID), which claims that
the irreducible complexity of micro-organisms could
not have evolved naturally but must be the result of a
single creative act. The issue splits the nation down
the middle: fundamentalists want to win a battle for
God; liberals and secularists are fighting for truth
and rationality.

The same passions are likely to be aroused by
President Bush's decision last week to veto the Stem
Cell Research Enhancement Act, which would have
loosened the restrictions on federal funding for stem
cell research. "This bill would support the taking of
innocent human life in the hope of finding medical
benefits for others," Bush said. "It crosses a moral
boundary that our decent society needs to respect."

His opponents point out that while the president
zealously champions the rights of the unborn, he is
less concerned about the plight of existing American
children. The US infant mortality rate is only the
42nd best in the world; the average baby has a better
chance of surviving in Havana or Beijing; infant
mortality rates are unacceptably high among those who
cannot afford adequate healthcare, especially in the
African-American community. And, finally, at the same
time as Bush decided to veto the stem cell bill,
Israeli bombs were taking the lives of hundreds of
innocent Lebanese civilians, many of them children,
with the tacit approval of the US.

Is there a connection between a religiously motivated
mistrust of science, glaring social injustice and a
war in the Middle East? Bush and his administration
espouse many of the ideals of the Christian right and
rely on its support. American fundamentalists are
convinced that the second coming of Christ is at hand;
they have developed an end-time scenario of genocidal
battles based on a literal reading of Revelation that
is absolutely central to their theology. Christ cannot
return, however, unless, in fulfilment of biblical
prophecy, the Jews are in possession of the Holy Land.
Before the End, the faithful will be "raptured" or
snatched up into the air in order to avoid the
Tribulation. Antichrist will massacre Jews who are not
baptised; but Christ will defeat the mysterious "enemy
from the north", and establish a millennium of peace.

This grim eschatology, developed in the late 19th
century, was in part a reaction to the "social gospel"
of the more liberal Christians, who believed that
human beings were naturally evolving towards
perfection and could build the New Jerusalem here on
earth by fighting social injustice. The
fundamentalists, however, believed that God was so
angry with the faithless world that he could save it
only by initiating a devastating catastrophe; they
would see the terrible battles of the first world war,
which showed that science could be used to lethal
effect in the new military technology, as the
beginning of the End.

The fundamentalists' rejection of science is deeply
linked to their apocalyptic vision. Even the
relatively sober ID theorists segue easily into
Rapture-speak. "Great shakings and darkness are
descending on Planet Earth," says the ID philosopher
Paul Nelson, "but they will be overshadowed by even
more amazing displays of God's power and light. Ever
the long-term strategist, YHVH is raising up a mighty
army of cutting-edge Jewish End-time warriors." They
all condemn the attempt to reform social ills. When
applied socially, evolutionary theory "leads straight
to all the woes of modern life", says the leading ID
ideologue Philip Johnson: homosexuality, state-backed
healthcare, divorce, single-parenthood, socialism and
abortion. All this, of course, is highly agreeable to
the Bush administration, which is itself selectively
leery of science. It has, for example, persistently
ignored scientists' warnings about global warming. Why
bother to implement the Kyoto treaty if the world is
about to end? Indeed, some fundamentalists see
environmental damage as a positive development,
because it will hasten the apocalypse.

This nihilistic religiosity is based on a perversion
of the texts. The first chapter of Genesis was never
intended as a literal account of the origins of life;
it is a myth, a timeless story about the sanctity of
the world and everything in it. Revelation was not a
detailed programme for the End time; it is written in
an apocalyptic genre that has quite a different
dynamic. When they described the Jews' return to their
homeland, the Hebrew prophets were predicting the end
of the Babylonian exile in the sixth century BC - not
the second coming of Christ. The prophets did preach a
stern message of social justice, however, and like all
the major world faiths, Christianity sees charity and
loving-kindness as the cardinal virtues.
Fundamentalism nearly always distorts the tradition it
is trying to defend.

Whatever Bush's personal beliefs, the ideology of the
Christian right is both familiar and congenial to him.
This strange amalgam of ideas can perhaps throw light
on the behaviour of a president, who, it is said,
believes that God chose him to lead the world to
Rapture, who has little interest in social reform, and
whose selective concern for life issues has now
inspired him to veto important scientific research. It
explains his unconditional and uncritical support for
Israel, his willingness to use "Jewish End-time
warriors" to fulfil a vision of his own - arguably
against Israel's best interests - and to see Syria and
Iran (who seem to be replacing Saddam as the "enemy of
the north") as entirely responsible for the unfolding
tragedy.

Fundamentalists do not want a humanly constructed
peace; many, indeed, regard the UN as the abode of
Antichrist. The willingness of the US to turn a blind
eye to the suffering of innocent people in Lebanon
will certainly fuel the rage of the extremists and
lead to further acts of terror. We can only hope that
it does not take us all the way to Armageddon.



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