Michael Gersen, the man who coined the phrase “Axis of Evil”, had an op-ed defending religion in the Washington Post. There is the nice irony that if his beliefs are correct, the consequences of his wicked act will be worse for him than if death really is the end. But let’s lead that aside. What he does believe is that religion is good for other people, and for society:
The death of God has greater consequences than expanded golf time on Sunday mornings. And it is not simply religious fundamentalists who have recognized it. America’s Founders embraced public neutrality on matters of religion, but they were not indifferent to the existence of religious faith. George Washington warned against the “supposition that morality can be maintained without religion.” The Founders generally believed that the virtues necessary for self-government — self-sacrifice, honesty, public spirit — were strengthened by religious beliefs and institutions.
I know perfectly well that he is not asserting that the founders themselves were orthodox Christians. This is clever of him. But the point that we ought to respect certain pieties is a sensible one. All religions are equally true to the populace, false to the philosopher, and useful to the magistrate — and we need to remember that there are damn few philosophers and magistrates. This is the point that Hitchens elaborately misses. He asks
Let Gerson name one ethical statement made, or one ethical action performed, by a believer that could not have been uttered or done by a nonbeliever. And here is my second challenge. Can any reader of this column think of a wicked statement made, or an evil action performed, precisely because of religious faith? The second question is easy to answer, is it not? The first — I have been asking it for some time — awaits a convincing reply. By what right, then, do the faithful assume this irritating mantle of righteousness? They have as much to apologize for as to explain.
The argument here is a statistical one. There will always be atheists, agnostics, and so on who behave at least as well as Christians. Some will do so out of a completely admirable, unillusioned altruism, just as some religious believers do. Many more will do so — just like most religious believers — through a mechanism of psychological reward that seems to me at least as implausible as a belief in heaven: I’m old enough to remember when progress seemed as real as paradise.
In both cases, though, it seems obvious that more people behave well because they believe they will be rewarded for it, or at least not too severely punished than do so in a completely disinterested fashion. Since that is the case,and since we all have an interest in living in a society where people do on the whole behave well to one another, then surely Washington and Jefferson were right to suppose religious belief was useful to society. A country where only naturally good people behave well is not going to be pleasant or even prosperous. Arguments about outliers, like those that Hitchens makes, simply miss the point.
The idea that people should only believe what is true seems to me stupid, cruel and unnatural.