With God On Their Side
by , 11-04-2013 at 09:57 AM (3715 Views)
I listened to Bob Dylan’s song "With God On Our Side” (link below) today, and it occurred to me that there might be something to it. And I also noticed that the song refers to “god”, rather than the “Gods”, a singular, monotheist god, and the people who believe that they have god on their side are monotheists. We polytheists worry as much about which God is on the other guy’s side as much we crow about the Gods (if any) on our side, and we have no problem imagining that the other guy actually may be right, or that one of the Gods might really be on his side; we know in our hearts that he is not right, but we can conceive of the possibility that he is. On the other hand, monotheists seem to think that there is only one answer, and they seem to think that they have that single right answer. I am wondering if monotheism is a symptom of single-mindedness, or if it is the cause of single-mindedness, or is there a single underlying cause for both problems. But they do seem to go hand-in-hand.
Wars of religion have not been rare among monotheists, but the only religious wars that I know of involving polytheists were wars in defense against attacks by monotheists. Certainly there have been wars between groups of polytheists, but the wars weren’t over whose Gods were better; they were about substantial matters like who controls the land or water or whatever. Both sides would pray to their Gods and Goddesses and hope for the best, but both sides often had the same collections of Gods and Goddesses. No, the only religious war between polytheists was in a novel by H. Beam Piper (Lord Kalvan of Otherwhen). The priests of one god were trying to take power, but I won’t recount the story. Homer introduced the Gods and Goddesses to the Iliad, but they were playing their own game and using humans as pieces to move around.
I’d have to look into more carefully, but I don’t think that the major ancient polytheistic religions claimed that they were “true”, and they certainly never claimed to be complete. In contrast, the major monotheistic religions claim to be true and complete. In the book of Revelations is a statement that the Bible was complete and nothing should be added or removed (Rev 22:18&19). The Koran claims that the Prophet was “the Seal of the Prophets”, the one who finalized everything. While both of those are derived from Judaism, Judaism makes no such claim; although it indicates that Yahweh is the God of the Jews, rather than being the one and only, but that brings up a lot of extraneous matters, so I won’t go there. But that doesn’t provide an answer to the question at hand, and I don’t think that there is a definite answer to that question.
Not being a single-minded person, I can leave a question unanswered. Just knowing that the question exists is very useful and informative. Perhaps some other polytheist or maybe an atheist has looked into it and knows whether monotheism is a cause or an effect or both. Asperger’s Syndrome has come up before, and I wonder whether that might be the cause of monotheism. Asperger’s is a spectrum of symptoms, and monotheism might just be at the beginning of the spectrum.
Dylan’s song is very monotheistic, but it might come across that way because he was trying to show the monotheists through their attitudes. It ends with the lines: If God's on our side / He'll stop the next war. It’s worth thinking about, but that isn’t the best song that Bob Dylan wrote.
Bob Dylan and Joan Baez singing "With God or Our Side"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3eKEe3VzA4Y





