“Only a God Can Save Us Now”: Why a Religious Morality Is Best Suited to Overcome Religiously Inspired Violence and Spare Innocents from Harm
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Religiously Inspired Violence
3. Secular Ethical Theories
The act of killing an innocent person—which infringes his right not to be killed and thereby extinguishes all his other rights—cannot be justified unless as a way to avert the greater evil of far greater numbers of individuals suffering a similar loss, or a violation, of all rights. … We must distinguish between a war in which W, as a political community, is under threat of destruction qua such community in the sense that P would take full control of its institutions if successful, and a war in which W is under threat of destruction qua community via a genocide (be it carried out by acts of killing or mass starvation) or the mass enslavement of its individual members. In the latter case, but not in the former, there is some justification, on the part of W’s leaders, for ordering the deliberate targeting of (considerably fewer) innocent non-combatants as the only way to stave off the threat.
4. Religiously Inspired Responses to Terrorism and the Harming of Non-Combatants
In traditional warfare, it was the rule that armies attacked armies and not noncombatants. If this tradition were strictly adhered to, then the demoralization of the enemy could only be effected by the destruction of the enemy’s army and fleet. This process proved a most bloody one, and, during the war, adherence to it resulted in appalling slaughter. … If, during the recent war [World War I], Germany could have been forced to disband her army and scrap her navy by a sudden and enormous loss of national morale, which entailed little bloodshed and small damage to her industries, would not the world today be more prosperous? … And, supposing even if this sudden blow had cost the lives of a few thousand German women and children would such loss have rendered this novel type of warfare immortal? … When, however, it is realized that to enforce policy, and not to kill, is the objective, and that the policy of a nation, though maintained and enforced by her sailors and soldiers, is not fashioned by them, but by the civilian population, surely, then if a few civilians get killed in the struggle they have nothing to complain of.
It is the concept of non-combatancy that has first been jettisoned from our minds; and this has happened because the concept of degrees of cooperation, the concept justifying the repulsion of objectively “guilty” forces as well as those “formally” or personally responsible for their direction, the concept of an indirect yet unavoidable and foreknown effect alongside the legitimately intended effects or military action, or the concept of double effects flowing from the same neutral or good action as cause, bringing along with the good result also a tragically necessary evil consequence in the limited, but not directly intended, yet foreseen destruction of civilian life (still not the same as wholesale murder, nor the same as a single murder)—all these notions have eroded from the minds of men.
Non-combatants, i.e., those not engaged in actual aggression, nor under arms, nor in training, nor helping aggression, may not be directly attacked. The ordinary populace, going about their private business, children, youths under military age and not training are non-combatants. … Air raids on fortified towns, barracks, places of shelter for the forces, [and] munition factories, are permissible, but reasonable care must be taken, if possible, though usually this is impossible, to spare the lives and property of non-combatants. Indiscriminate air raids on non-combatants to sap the morale of a people are wrong.(Davis 1946, pp. 149–50; see also Biju 2015)
There are, however, degrees of cooperation; and even in the course of a long and bitterly contested war, it is impossible to admit that the vast bulk of the civil population has cooperated or even can cooperate so closely, either physically or morally, as to make them combatants. Women and children in the home, the aged, the sick, and the defective may lend the greatest moral support to both armies, but this does not make them combatants. The farmer, the baker, the tailor, the shop clerk, may all associate with and lend their services to the men and women in the armies, but, in the opinion of the present writer, their cooperation is too remote to make them actual belligerents. … If it is to be admitted that the entire civil population has become combatant in character and therefore subject to a completely devastating attack, it is because degrees of cooperation have lost all meaning, because sympathy for one’s own has become the equivalent of physical opposition, and because a merely remote and potential danger can be reckoned as actual aggression.
Given the corporate nature of warfare, determinations of guilt or innocence which underlie designation as combatant or noncombatant must be based upon a person’s particular activity, and the extent to which the activity directly contributes not simply to the war-makers (in terms of their health, stomachs, or moral support) but to their war-making activity. Munitions workers, pilots who shuttle soldiers to battle, and civilian contractors who erect an invading military’s barracks may all be legitimate targets. But even with this recognition, surely a great majority of a nation’s non-fighting persons remain noncombatants.
5. Religiously Inspired Ethics at the End of the War
6. Further Considerations
7. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Vincelette, A. “Only a God Can Save Us Now”: Why a Religious Morality Is Best Suited to Overcome Religiously Inspired Violence and Spare Innocents from Harm. Religions 2023, 14, 1495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14121495
Vincelette A. “Only a God Can Save Us Now”: Why a Religious Morality Is Best Suited to Overcome Religiously Inspired Violence and Spare Innocents from Harm. Religions. 2023; 14(12):1495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14121495
Chicago/Turabian StyleVincelette, Alan. 2023. "“Only a God Can Save Us Now”: Why a Religious Morality Is Best Suited to Overcome Religiously Inspired Violence and Spare Innocents from Harm" Religions 14, no. 12: 1495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14121495
APA StyleVincelette, A. (2023). “Only a God Can Save Us Now”: Why a Religious Morality Is Best Suited to Overcome Religiously Inspired Violence and Spare Innocents from Harm. Religions, 14(12), 1495. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14121495