Freedom of expression and religion
As a Christian
believer, and therefore some kind of religious, I find it hard to admit the
obvious fact that religion and freedom of expression historically have not gone
well together. This is in particular the case with the monotheistic religions,
Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Blasphemy, expressed in words, images or actions,
has been severely punished. Heretics, those who have deviated from correct and
established formulations of faith, have been severely punished. Deviation from
what was seen as orthodox teaching according to canon law in the medieval
church could be a crystal clear case of capital punishment. It was therefore
logic that the early reformer of the 15th century, Johan Hus, Roman
Catholic Priest and professor of theology, at the time also rector of the Karl
University of Prague (founded in 1348), after lengthy legal proceedings, had to
be burned at the stake.
By and large there has
been no or very little tolerance for those who have blasphemed against, or have
been seen to blaspheme against God.
My conviction is that
we have something vital to learn from the secular movement(s) in Europe, i.e.
the Enlightenment and even the French revolution. But slowly, and inevitably (and interestingly, in arriving at the
conviction of freedom of expression the Christian background may have been more
of an influenced than many times so perceived) Christians have started to apply
insights from their own core beliefs.
Is it not that Jesus
died on a cross, the ultimate, most humiliating form of execution at the time?
The dreams of his followers were shattered completely. But is it not that this
humiliating fact of history carries with it some need of compensation? Is it
not that Christians might have felt a need of also saying: “Well, this
happened, but in the end almighty God will show his strength”? Have we forgotten
that this Jesus, on the cross, is confessed to be, also, at that very moment, God
revealed to us?
Dying on a cross,
Jesus was made the spectacle of the world. He was mocked, ridiculed, laughed
at. Early Christians, before the church became state religion in the 4th
century, had to bear the same kind of ridicule, for example Jesus was on
drawings portrayed as a horse, fixed on a cross.
In these days, after
the brutal murders of French satirists at Charlie Hebdo, we should bear these
things in mind these days, continuously and vigorously supporting the right of
freedom of expression, but while doing that, also remember that there is at
least one religious who did not want us to retaliate.
1 comment:
Not to forget that brutal murderers specifically also singled out jews and the police.
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