Was Phinehas a religious terrorist? In dialogue with Paul Cliteur
Abstract
The Dutch philosopher Paul Cliteur wrote a defence of secular thought in his recent book:
“The secular outlook. In defence of moral and political secularism” (Chichester: Wiley-
Blackwell, 2010). In this book he criticizes Christianity amongst other modern religions
as inherently violent and as a danger to the liberal democracies and the human rights
environments of our age. He is lead to this conclusion by an exegesis of several passages of
Scripture. One of these passages is the story of Phinehas in Numbers 25:1-18. According to
his exegesis Phinehas can be considered to be a biblical terrorist in the name of God, and he
states that this conclusion can entice Christians to condone violence on religious grounds.
This article evaluates Cliteur’s use of Scripture from a Reformed Theological Ethical
perspective and asks the question whether his conclusion is valid. This evaluation is done
within the scope of the revelation of God in the book of nature, the written word and the
incarnate word. From this perspective Cliteur’s use of scripture in an a-historical way and
without the evidence of the book of nature (natural law) and the revelation in Christ as the
incarnate word can be termed as Biblicist, and thus as invalid.
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