Positive and Negative Effect of Religion
Positive and Negative Effect of Religion
Positive and Negative Effect of Religion
Negative
Effect of Religions
Kelvin Paul B. Panuncio
In third world countries such as Brazil, India, Africa etc. religion is very
important as from religion they can make 'sense' of life. Religion
answers: Who they are? What is their purpose of life? What is life and
death? and many other question. In this countries science has not
arrived thus religion answers all of these questions.
Other people follow religions (i.e. Buddisum) as they believe in their
way of life. By this I mean although they do believe science, big bang,
evolution etc. they also want to be vegetarians or do not want to have
alcohol or do not want to gamble etc. So religion can be like a border
line where the follower must not cross if they do so they will be
punished in the going to hell in Christinaty and Jewism or having a bad
karma in Hindisum and Buddisum.
But mostly religion brings people together for example, Chrismas or
Diwali or any other festivals can be like an excuse where family meet
(after long time), have fun and share memories as well as thinking
and praying to God. Similarly it bring people in a community together.
Thuggee Murders
Members of lndias Thuggee sect strangled
people as sacrifices to appease the
bloodthirsty goddess Kali, a practice
beginning in the 1500s. The number of
victims has been estimated to be as high as 2
million. Thugs were claiming about 20,000
lives a year in the 1800s until British rulers
stamped them out. At a trial in 1840, one
Thug was accused of killing 931 people.
Today, some Hindu priests still sacrifice goats
to Kali.
The Inquisition
The Medieval Inquisition is a series of Inquisitions (Roman Catholic
Church bodies charged with suppressing heresy) from around 1184,
including the Episcopal Inquisition (1184-1230s) and later the Papal
Inquisition (1230s). It was in response to large popular movements
throughout Europe considered apostate or heretical to Christianity, in
particular Catharism and Waldensians in southern France and northern
Italy. These were the first inquisition movements of many that would
follow.
Torture was used after 1252. On May 15, Pope Innocent IV issued a papal
bull entitled Ad exstirpanda, which authorized the use of torture by
inquisitors. The Inquisitors were forbidden to use methods that resulted
in bloodshed, mutilation or death. One of the more common forms of
medieval inquisition torture was known as strappado. The hands were
bound behind the back with a rope, and the accused was suspended this
way, dislocating the joints painfully in both arms. Weights could be
added to the legs dislocating those joints as well.
Islamic Jihads
Islamic jihads (holy wars), mandated by the Koran, killed
millions over 12 centuries. In early years, Muslim armies
spread the faith rapidly: east to India and west to Morocco.
Then splintering sects branded other Muslims as infidels
and declared jihads against them. The Kharijis battled
Sunni rulers. The Azariqis decreed death to all sinners
and their families. In 1804 a Sudanese holy man, Usman
dan Fodio, waged a bloody jihad that broke the religious
sway of the Sultan of Gobir. In the 1850s another
Sudanese mystic, Umar al-Hajj, led a barbaric jihad to
convert pagan African tribes.
This article is licensed under theGFDLbecause it contains
quotations from the Wikipedia articles:Mountain Meadow
Massacrew, andMedieval Inquisition. Other sources:
Religions Death Toll, by James A. Haught [1990]