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comment by user-inactivated
user-inactivated  ·  4333 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: How Christopher Hitchens proved that nothing is sacred - Salon.com

In my limited experience with Christopher Hitchens, he seemed to think that quoting the more idiotic and archaic parts of the Bible and then trashing them was often a substitute for legitimate criticism of religion. (I've only read god is Not Great.)

I would love to have this refuted by an actual fan of his. Would someone do this and/or point me in the direction of one of his better works?





thenewgreen  ·  4332 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I've not read "God is not Great", so I can't speak to it. But the bible is held by most christians, certainly the fundamentalist "born again" branch to be the word of God. Period. They do not distinguish one book, one section or one verse as being more or less idiotic than another. That said, why wouldn't he go directly to it's weakest points? I would.

There was a nice debate about circumcision on Hubski that was started via a Hitch post. I shall try and find it.

Here it is. He is definitely not without hyperbole but he was also quite entertaining. Wish he were still around.

user-inactivated  ·  4332 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I wish he was still around too, for his turns of phrase.

My point was, if you purport to be an intellectual atheist, you should be above trashing fundamentalists. It's too easy, and most "regular" Christians will agree with you anyway. So it cheapens your argument, and causes rational Christians to ignore you.

The Bible is not held literally by very many Christians anymore, only those who happen to be most vocal, and arguing with people who think the world was created in six days is a supreme waste of time.

EDIT: this basically came up in the discussion you linked, I guess, with the pastor calling his arguments "infantile." At least in God Is Not Great, I might agree to an extent.