http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v446/n7132/full/446114b.html

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Scriptural violence can foster aggression

Heidi Ledford

Elements of religious texts seem to inspire bad behaviour.

There once was a man and his concubine from the Israeli tribe of
Ephraim who were travelling in the land of Benjamin, another Israeli
tribe. As the couple dined in the city of Gibeah, a mob assembled
outside and pounded on the door. The mob captured the concubine, then
raped and beat her to death. The man collected her corpse the next day
and travelled home. The other tribes of Israel were outraged at the
crime, assembled an army and razed several Benjamite cities, killing
every man, woman, child and animal they could.

Around 500 students recently read a version of this story, which is
based on a passage from the Old Testament, as part of a psychological
study. For half of the participants the tale contained an additional
passage: when the man returned home, his tribe prayed to God and asked
what they should do. God commanded the tribe to "take arms against
their brothers and chasten them before the Lord".

After reading the story, the students participated in another exercise
intended to measure aggression. About half of the study participants
came from Brigham Young University, a religious university in Provo,
Utah, and almost all were members of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints. The other half came from the Free University in
Amsterdam. Only 50% of the Dutch group believed in God and 27% in the
Bible. But for both groups — whether the students were based in the
Netherlands or the United States, and believed in God or not — the
trend was the same: those who were told that God had sanctioned the
violence against the Israelite were more likely to act aggressively in
the subsequent exercise.

The study is indicative of a growing interest among psychologists and
sociologists in the origins of religious violence. That subject was
taboo until recently for many psychologists, and past research tended
to focus on the role of religion in psychological healing. But
heightening concern about religious terrorism has pushed negative uses
of religion to the forefront. "People often use God as a justification
for committing violent acts," says Brad Bushman, a social psychologist
at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and lead author of the
study. "And that just bothers me, I guess."

The results of Bushman's study, to be published in the March issue of
Psychological Science, do not indicate that religious people are more
aggressive than non-religious people (B. J. Bushman et al. Psychol.
Sci. 18, 204–207; 2007). Furthermore, the story us ed was an isolated
example of scriptural violence taken out of context, and thus does not
reflect the experience of reading the Bible as a whole. But it does
suggest that selective exposure to violent passages in a scriptural
canon can promote aggression.

That response probably reflects a long-standing finding in psychology
that people respond more aggressively to a depiction of violence that
they feel is justified, says Robert Ridge, a social psychologist at
Brigham Young University and a co-author ofthe study.

Sociologist Mark Juergensmeyer of the University of California, Santa
Barbara, says his research has also pointed to the motivational power
of scriptural violence, but that the context of the message is key.
"If violence is presented as the authoritative voice of God, it can
increase the possibility of more violence," says Juergensmeyer. "But
everything depends on how it is presented." The same passage placed in
a non-threatening, historical context might not promote aggression, he
argues.
Scriptural violence can foster aggression

Nevertheless, when scriptural violence is used to promote hostility,
it is extremely effective, Juergensmeyer adds. Invoking religious
justification allows a political leader to believe in promises of
immortality and spiritual rewards that can be powerful motivators.
"Religion is not the problem," he says. "But it can make a secular
problem worse."

People often choose to ignore the violent side to religion, says John
Hall, a sociologist at the University of California, Davis, and they
tend to dismiss those who commit religiously inspired violence as
members of the fringe. "There are built-in cultural lenses that we use
to dissociate religion from violence," he says. "When we see religious
movements that are prophetically inspired and engaged in violence,
there's a cultural tendency to say 'oh, they're not really
religious'."

That view represents a misleading, selective interpretation of most
religious canons, agrees theologian Hector Avalos of Iowa State
University in Ames. "People who choose the violent interpretation are
no less arbitrary than those who choose the peaceful one," he says.
Avalos has proposed a radical solution to theologically inspired
violence — cut the violent passages out of the scripture.

It's a wildly controversial idea that ought not to be, he says,
because spiritual leaders effectively do that on a regular basis. "A
lot of churches have a series of passages that they read during the
year," says Avalos. "And usually they don't choose the passages
involving genocide."


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