The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 257. India, Europe & Biblical Revolution | Vishal Mangalwadi
Episode Date: May 31, 2022This episode was recorded on April 28th, 2022.Vishal Mangalwadi and I discuss the history of India and the role the Bible played in shaping it as a country. We explore the influence of missionaries, I...ndia's caste system, power, the impact of the British empire on slavery, widow burning and infanticide, the revolutionary nature of the distribution of the Bible, and more.Vishal Mangalwadi is a social reformer, political columnist, Indian Christian philosopher, writer, and lecturer. He is the author of 20 books, including The Book that Made Your World: How the Bible Created the Soul of Western Civilization.—Links— Follow Vishal on Twitter: https://twitter.com/mangalwadi_vRevelation Movement: https://revelationmovement.comThird Education Revolution: https://thirdeducationrevolution.com—Chapters— 0:00 — Intro3:18 — Benefits of Christianity7:25 — The Parable of The Blind Men & the Elephant 8:46 — The Vedas, Quran, and the Bible13:53 — A Biblical Perspective19:27 — Truth in the Bible22:01 — Origins of Language25:29 — Enlightenment & Revolutionary Effect of the Bible's Distribution 28:52 — Natural Right31:53 — The Rule of Law38:56 — History of India44:35 — Consequences of the Mughal Empire 49:00 — Caste System, Karma, Non-Evident Equality 52:40 — The Doctrine of Human Equality & Translating the Bible55:35 — Missionaries in India58:32 — Exploitation, Slavery, Power1:01:14 — Conscience & the Soul1:07:26 — Missionaries as Educators 1:09:15 — The British Empire vs. Slavery1:17:12 — Language as Discriminatation1:21:07 — English & Indian Vernacular1:25:20 — Widow Burning & Infanticide1:36:20 — Effects of the Biblical Revolution 1:45:11 — Outro  #Bible #India #Language #Slavery #British
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everyone, I am pleased to have with me today Dr. Michelleichel Mangolvati, born in 1949.
Dr. Mangolvati is founder, president of the book of the Millennium International Slash
Revelation Movement.
He's an Indian philosopher and social reformer, born and raised in India.
Vichel studied philosophy at the University of Alehabad, 1967 to 1969, and indoor, 1971 to 1973, in Hindu Ashrams
and at the LaBrie Fellowship in Switzerland in 1976, along with his wife Ruth, he founded
a community to serve the rural poor in India.
The shall continue to his direct involvement in community transformation until 1997, including service
at the headquarters of two national political parties. There, he worked toward the empowerment
and liberation of Indian peasants and the lower castes. In 1977, Asia's then-largest
publisher, V.Cas publishing house, published his first book, The World of Guru's. His next two books, when the New Age
Gets Old, IVP 1992, and India, the Grand Experiment, HIPAA Ran 1997, brought his work to the
attention of American and European readers. At the turn of the millennium, Vichelle and his wife
Ruth were invited to the US to make a television series exploring the Bible's role in creating
the modern world. Their research prepared in the process of making a documentary film has
been presented in text form and on a variety of electronic and social media platforms.
He's lectured in more than 40 countries and published 17 books, served as the honorary professor of
applied theology in the Gospel and Plow Faculty of Theology, the Sam Higginbottom Institute
of Agriculture, Technology, and Sciences in El Halabad, India since 2013.
I recently read two of his newer books, The Book That Made Your World,
his newer books, The Book That Made Your World, and Thomas Nelson 2011. And in what is some ways our companion volume and an extension, this book changed everything, sought after press
media 2019. It was very interesting to me to encounter the views of a non-Westerner on the
biblical corpus and its effects on, well, its broad effects on civilization.
I was also extremely impressed and happy to have had the opportunity to read books that were so
deeply researched and widely ranging. I learned all sorts of things about Western history,
and certainly a lot about Indian history. Things I had no idea about, so ignorant when it comes to history that it's embarrassing.
So it was a pleasure to encounter these books and to get some sense of the depth and breadth of scholarship that went into their production.
I thought we could have a pretty interesting conversation on the...
Well, on the history of India, on the role the Bible played in shaping India as a modern country, on your views of the Bible and the West, all of that.
So welcome to my discussion.
Thank you, sir.
I'm on it.
Well, it's a pleasure to have you here.
So can you maybe start by telling everyone how you came across the Bible and why you've
made it in some ways, I would say the centerpiece of your life, it's study.
Yes, while I was studying philosophy in Allahabad University, I couldn't have any childish faith because my professors did not believe the Bible or Hindu scriptures.
I had become a Christian as a teenager because I was going through a moral struggle.
I was addicted to shoplifting and lying and I hated myself for this habit of lying when
there was nothing to be gained from lying, and I would
meditate and try and control my tongue. But in the evening when I look back on the day,
I have just deceived everybody that was habit. And I will try and have more willpower to
control myself, until someone explained to me that your problem is not will lack of willpower
you're quite stubborn. You have a disease it's called sin that rules you but there is a good
news that there is a savior who can save you from sin. So I asked Jesus to deliver me from my habit of lying, but he also went ahead
and delivered me from my habit of stealing. I was able to go back to the shops from where I had
stolen and offer a restitution. Thankfully nobody took the money. They were all pleased. These
were little things that I had told you. How old were you? How old were you? This is how I was about 14 or so. I was still a teenager
struggling with this modern struggle. Why do you think it was that turning to Christianity
actually worked when your own attempts hadn't produced any positive results?
That is actually a very good question because I had already realized that my attempt
to control my time.
I hadn't heard the word addiction.
I didn't know what addiction was, what it meant.
So I just thought that I had these terrible habits and I knew they were wrong.
I didn't know how to get out of them.
And so when I was told that there is a savior who came to save sinners like me as a child,
I believed in I asked Jesus to forgive my sins and to change me. So the transformation was real.
I got ready excited. You know, it's not easy to go back to the shops and confess that you
had stolen.
So the transformation was real, but at the university, I found that I couldn't really
believe the Bible to be true.
That was, nobody was directly attacking the Bible in the university, but my professors
were obviously a lot more learned than my pastors.
And if the professors didn't believe the Bible,
why should I follow the pastors? So it was easy to doubt the Bible. The difficult question was,
what then do you believe? And I decided that I'm going to believe what the best philosophers
and scientists believe. So what do they think is the truth? I began reviewing my course, reviewing all the notes, all the books, and I began to realize
that my professors knew that the philosophers knew that they didn't know the truth, and
that they could not know the truth. So by 1969, philosophy departments in India
already knew that the enlightenment failed.
Nobody in any university believed that I know the truth,
and I can teach the truth.
So I began to feel that perhaps the Buddha was right.
I come from the same people group as the Buddha
and his parable of the five blind men
trying to make sense of an elephant
and fighting that elephant is like a pillar
or like a wall or like a rope.
We all have some truth, but that is relative truth,
relative to our experience of the elephant.
None of us really know the truth. none of us really know the elephant. So I thought perhaps the Buddha was right and we should
be humble enough in knowing that none of us know the truth and we should listen to each other rather
than fighting with each other. But that raised the question that if the five blind men are there who do not know
the elephant, could there be a sixth person who is not blind, who sees the elephant and
who can communicate to me of what I'm experiencing of the elephant?
So obviously, the concept of blindness exists because there is someone who is not blind.
So the sight must exist for the concept of blindness to exist.
So I decided, is there someone who knows the truth? Has he spoken?
This started on my philosophical quest to see,
I first went to the Hindu,
the Geetha Presgoorat that sells Hindu scriptures
and asked them for a copy of the Vedas,
the most ancient sacred Hindu scriptures,
which are supposed to be revelation.
And I was amazed that the,
my professors who
have been touched teaching us the philosophy of the way
thus, but they never brought a copy of the way thus into the
classroom. And I had never seen a copy of the way thus. So I
went to buy one and I was told that sorry, the way thus
I'm not printed, they cannot be translated. I was told that the way the way they are not printed, they cannot be translated.
I was surprised to learn that actually Sanskrit never had a script because it was oral language,
sophisticated grammar, but no script.
So the way they were not supposed to be written down, they were to be memorized, but memorizing was not enough.
You needed correct enunciation and pronunciation and
internation and went to offer the melted butter into the fire
etc. rituals.
That was the purpose.
So Vedas were never written to know the truth.
And in fact, the Upanishad which followed the Vedas,
Munda Kaupanishad, for example, from which our national motto comes,
which is Satyamav Jaya thing, truth alone triumphs.
The Upanishad says that no amount of study of the Vedas will ever lead you to truth,
because the Vedas are not written to give you knowledge of wisdom of truth,
they are magical sounds composed to give you power.
So I said, well, it'll be very nice to have some power, but right now I'm looking for truth.
So I went to the Muslim books because I was in a city called Allahabad which is a Persian name,
a board of Allah. This city was established by Muslims just two years ago. Its name was changed
to a Hindu name, but at that time it was still a scene as a Muslim city. And I was surprised
that the Quran was not available neither in my mother tongue which is India's national language, Hindi or Urdu, which was the language of my tongue, which is the national language of Pakistan right now.
So the Quran was not available. The shopkeepers explained to me that you have to study Arabic to study Quran. So I said, well, it will be very nice
to know foreign language, but at this moment I'm not interested in studying a language. If the Quran
is God's word, why is it not available to me in my language? So it was my older sister who encouraged me
to read the Bible, and I said to her that I've already read the Bible.
I think these are childish stories.
She said, no, no, no, you were a child when you read it.
Now you think you are a philosopher.
So read it as a critical philosopher.
And as I began rereading the Bible,
I found Genesis very exciting because it
was answering questions that the university had not answered about
who am I? What is man?
Yeah, well, in your book, one of the things you do quite nicely,
a couple of comments and what you've said. I mean, you make a
quite a remarkable and insightful case, I would say, for the
particulars of the vision of man that's embedded in Genesis,
and I found that interesting. Your ideas, in some sense, paralleled ideas I was developing. And, of course,
or lecture series I did in the Bible, that God contends with chaos to make order, and that
man and women are made in that image. And there's a imputed
nobility to the human character that's part and parcel of the initial Genesis
story. You also make a case that, and you were beginning to develop that just
now again, that the universal translation of the Bible has had a revolutionary
worldwide effect on every culture really that it's touched and that
that effect of the book itself, not necessarily the people who transmitted the book, but sometimes
them too, that that effect was fundamentally positive that it led to an increased appreciation for
the dignity and worth and nobility of men and women alike, regardless of their economic status or background. That's absolutely right. And we are at the same wavelength at that point. But later as I kept
reading up to say books like Leviticus, I found the Bible very bold, very bold book. But
when I came into the historical books of kings and chronicles,
then I was really fed up.
Here I am an Indian young man.
I do not know enough about Indian history.
Why am I reading this Jewish book?
And as I was ready to close down the Bible once and for all,
the something amazing happened,
which was that Indian history at school level is always
telling us how good, great, glorious, wonderful our ancestors and our rulers was. This Jewish
book in Kings and Chronicles was telling me how rotten the Jewish kings were. So I realized, of course,
this is not called history. Kings didn't pay historians to write about their fathers. So this
must be religious history of the Jews, which is critical of the politicians, because in India,
the religious leaders, abramans, politicians, the Chathreas, there's always rivalry between them. So I said,
this must be religious book. So just to confirm my opinion of what the Bible is, I began
rereading these historical books. And I was amazed that the book is condemning Jewish religious leaders
to the point that God hated them. He destroyed his temple, he killed the priest,
he sent them in slavery. So I said, okay then, the Bible must be subaltern history, written
from the point of view of simple Jewish people, men and women and children, who are exploited both by religious and political leaders.
But then, as I began rereading these books, I realized, no, this book is incredible.
It is more antisemitic than anything Hitler could have written. It is saying that every Jew was an idolater, a daltral liar, cheater, deceiver, etc.
God hated the people, he destroyed his chosen people, sent them into slavery to Assyria and Babylon.
So then I said, well, this must be the point of view of the prophets, because prophets love to condemn everybody.
That's people with accused you and me of being that kind of voice.
So here, I already know that these are very boring books.
And within a period of two months, I'm looking through Samuel, Kingston Chronicles, four
to fifth time to just confirm my point of view that this is the word of prophets
But then I was amazed that the book is saying most of the prophets were false prophets the good ones were the losers
They were trying to save their nation. They couldn't save themselves
They were beaten to thrown into assistance, etc. Right. So you're making the case
that it's not easy to read those books as the expression of any given dominant group or power or
exploitative group or even viewpoint other than other than what other than an attempt to
lay out some some fundamental ethical truth. Well, it was a video in the north of Israel,
Sidonian video, who opened my eyes.
Elijah is running away from his own king.
The king says, you are a traveler of Israel.
Because of you, there is three years of famine.
He was hiding in a broke drinking water from there. The Bible says the troze were bringing his
food. The broke dried out. So he was sent to this video of Zareflat and
Elijah says, please can you bring me some water and she goes. He's been on a
long journey. His shelter. Please also bring me a water and she goes, you know, he's been on a long journey,
his shelter, please also bring me a loaf of bread. She says, now that's going too far. I have
just a little bit of flour. I'm going to make the last meal, me and my son, we eat that after
that we die. He says, no, no, no, you won't die. Make tillofal. Tell me, this hides yourself and your son.
She does.
So she invites him to stay because she realizes
that she actually had more flour than she thought.
Next morning, she still has flour and oil.
And next evening, and the third day, and the fourth day,
and she begins to feel this guy is a magician.
He's multiplying my
limited flock and
she's very pleased to have him as the house guest, but then her son becomes sick and dies.
And she's really angry at Elijah that I'm a sinner, did you as a man of God come here to judge me?
I have nothing, I have no husband, I have no jewelry. I have no pots and pans. I have no savings. No insurance. This boy was my only hope. And now he is dead because
a few. So Elijah takes the boy up, praise for him. The other ask God that my whole nation
condemns me as a traveler of Israel. Now you have brought trouble upon this woman.
Also, so the boy is resurrected. The woman, when he brings the sun back, the woman says,
now I know that you are a man of God. And the words of the Lord from your mouth mouth are true.
Now, my professors have no concept of truth. Can the words communicate
truth? The book that doesn't believe, Upanishads don't believe that human words can communicate truth.
But a widow knows that you are a man of God, the word of the Lord from your mouth is truth.
So I begin to look into these old historical books and I realized that whatever my interpretation,
the book itself is claiming to be God's Word.
Yeah, well, one of the things that you do a nice job of, I would say in contrast to maybe
post-modern perspectives in particular is to make the case that the biblical narrative is predicated on the idea that there is a
truth that words can aspire to and words can contain that truth and that human beings can possess
those words. So the words can refer to something that's real and absolute and fundamentally true
and were graced in some sense by the ability to partake in that
process, and that words have a world engendering force as well.
And so I thought that defense of the biblical perspective was extremely, is extremely, what
would you say, necessary and welcome in today's world, because as you point out, it isn't
the conclusion of modern philosophers, especially
of the more radical type, that words refer to anything at all outside of themselves, or
that words can contain anything reasonably approximating some kind of transcendent truth.
Yes, that's what I learned standing with Einstein.
Barton Russell said that with Einstein was the greatest British philosopher of the first part of the 20th century.
And his philosophy of linguistic analysis, he begins with assuming that the words have something to do with truth.
Some words can communicate truth, but by the time he's done, he has come to realize that words have nothing to do with truth, the words lead
to words and more words and more words. So after that, the Western Enlightenment philosophy
becomes anti-philosophy. It's not a pursuit of truth, but it's a pursuit of myth-making,
of myth making, story making.
But so you have existentialism, et cetera,
taking off from failure of the enlightenment
because that raises the question, where does language come from?
So if you take an atheistic position
that we were all primates in the jungles of Sudan
and Ethiopia and we were fighting with each other
over mating and food, then the language evolved
because this is my parable that an egg, a female, has her child.
They're all whole gang is resting on the trees.
So in the morning, she gets up and there is one male.
He gets up.
He's leaving.
So she asks, where are you going?
Because they don't use words.
And he says, well, yesterday I saw some very pretty females
going towards Ethiopia.
That's what I'm going.
She said, you're not going anywhere.
You stay here, look after my baby.
I'm hungry, my baby is hungry.
I'm going to eat, find some food for myself.
And the pythons here, they'll eat up my baby unless you sit and watch over my baby.
If you don't, don't break your head.
So in these fights of AIDS or primates,
fighting over food, mating rights,
the animal sounds become words, language, language
develops.
If that's the origin of language, then
the post-varding philosophies write that
words can have nothing to do with truth. This is where Upanishads and Buddhism had reached
that in order to know the truth, you have to empty your mind. In meditation, they didn't
go the way Karl Jung and Joseph Campbell went, because Buddha is already critiquing
like Socrates. He's already critiquing the myths that the religious myths that Hindus
have created or the Greeks have created, these myths are meant not to find meaning of life
and truth, these myths are meant by religious leaders to exploit the ordinary people.
So, the Buddha and Socrates has very little use for the myths, unlike Tal Yung and Joseph
Campbell, because they already know that people are enslaved by myths.
So, a lot of the New Testament is critical of stories, critical of myths,
although at the moment the Western mind has been taken over by the idea that we cannot know the truth
but we can invent stories that know the truth. So I began to realize that if there are five blind men,
there could be a six-man who is not blind. Can his speak is revelation possible?
And as I'm reading the Old Testament,
particularly the boring books of the Old Testament,
I begin to realize that the book is claiming to be God's word,
and there are empty in prophecies within kings and chronicles
that are fulfilled during the lifetime of the
period of the kings themselves. So I began to take the
concept of Revelation seriously because it
also explained the origin of language much better than the evolutionist did, how language evolved.
Okay, so you view in your book, particularly in, let's see, in the book that made your world,
you present a viewpoint that's pretty positively predisposed to science and technology and the
enlightenment, at least the early periods of the enlightenment, but you see them as inextricably
rooted in a biblical underlay.
And that as they became more and more divorced from that biblical underlay, the more postmodern deviations
from the Enlightenment pathway or from the productive Enlightenment pathway manifested themselves.
You also make the case that, while in India, for example, which I found very interesting,
that the distribution of the Bible in the native languages of the land had a revolutionary effect, and that that effect was also manifested
in a broad sense in the West against the Catholic Church and against, while everything that,
and against arbitrary political power, political and economic power.
That's great. In Scottish enlightenment, there was no atheist.
In American Enlightenment, there were no atheists.
In British and English and Enlightenment, only Thomas Hobbes was the atheist.
It was only when you come to the French Enlightenment that you have atheists.
And the end result of the French enlightenment was disaster.
Our universities were telling us, the Department of Politics, etc., were telling us that our
freedoms come from Brousseau, Walter, French revolution.
But they were also telling us that within three years of the start of the French revolution,
the revolution is themselves described their rule as a reign of terror.
And within 10 years, the whole revolution ended with the dictatorship of Napoleon Bonaparte.
So I began to realize that our professors were not, either they didn't know the truth,
that they had been deceived by American universities, the ancient political philosophy begins with Plato,
Republic. Plato, the professors are saying the democracy came from Greek
city states, but they are also telling me that Plato says the democracy is the
worst of all political systems. He hated democracy because it was a thin in democracy that killed Socrates in order to defend the midst.
So, uh, professors clearly don't know how we got democracy, etc.
So, yes, as I looked at the Enlightenment and it was of course later David Gress,
uh, his book from Plato to NATO, uh, that helped me understand why American universities had
deceived themselves in a whole century of young people believing that freedom came from Greece.
Only thing Greece ever explored this. And from the enlightenment for that matter.
Yes. But if the enlightenment is rooted in biblical ideas, I mean,
what I another thing I found
particularly interesting about your book is your insistence. And I believe this to be the case that
the idea of natural right is embedded in a biblical conception of the sovereignty of the individual
and divine worth of the individual. And I think that case is pretty clear historically in
relationship to the American Declaration of Independence. but I also think it's clear and you do a lovely job of developing this.
It's clear that the roots of that idea were essentially biblical.
The both drive both from the Old Testament and from the New Testament, particularly Genesis and the Gospels.
That's great. So going back to those very boring historical books in the Bible,
here is King Ahab, Melchizedebel.
Nehbats' neighbor, ordinary peasant, has a very good vineyard.
The king wants that vineyard. He wants to pay for it. pay for it. Never says no, I don't have the right to sell it because my forefathers built it up, it belongs to my children and
grandchildren. The king says, I'll give you double the price. Ten times the market price.
He says, sorry, I don't want to sell it, I can't sell it, it's just not mine to sell it. No, the king is sulking.
Jezebel says to him, what's wrong? He says, well, I offered 10 times the market price to
this fellow and offered to return to vineyard to him. He won't sell it to me.
So she says, what do you mean? Are you a king? My father is a king in
Siddharth. Do you know how to rule? I'll get you the land.
So she writes a letter to the village elders to have a feast, bring some scoundrels to make false
allegations, false witnesses, stone that fellow. She takes the vineyard, gives it to Elijah.
it to Elijah. He gives it to Ahab, the King. Elijah the Prophet is furious. He goes to Ahab
and he confronts him that you have broken every one of God's commandments. You have coveted your neighbor's vineyard. You have lied about him that he has blasphemed God and King. You have
killed him and God says, you shall not kill. You may be the King,
but there is a law above you, which is God's law, you shall not kill. That's the law that gives
in alien able right to life. You have been given the authority to rule in order to defend the
fundamental in alien able right to life and property and freedom, but you have violated
everything. Therefore Elijah, Jagles the King and the Queen and his prophecies turn out
to be true. This is what is going to happen that Gisophil's blood will be licked by the
dogs as what has happened to a Neboz blood. So it is as I'm reading these books, I began to realize
that this is the source of the idea of in India, we call it fundamental rights to life.
And the rule of law. And the rule of law, which is right, because the rule of law is predicated
on an idea that there's a moral order that's superordinate even to the king or the emperor.
And that's a transcendent moral order that doesn't lie in the hands of any given individual.
And it is definitely the case that in those old biblical texts, the prophetic voice,
but not always the winners, as you pointed out, but the prophetic voice that carries the main narrative
line continually insists that if those transcendent ethical
rules are violated, even by the rulers who you would think is, it's their prerogative
to set whatever rules they want, if there's no order outside of them, even the rulers
are told by the prophets that they're necessarily subordinate to those rules and that all hell
will break loose if they break them.
Yeah, this of course became very personal for me when I started this research and writing because there had been a hillstorm in 1980 which had flattened the wheat crop in 100 villages.
I began to organize release and the district magistrate sent me an order, formal order,
that your work is a legal stop it,
because there is a law in our state
that in the event of natural calamity,
you, no private parties cannot collect donations.
So I gave a formal respond,
thank you for telling me about this law,
we will obey it, we will not collect any donation,
we will give. So I gave a second order obey it. We will not collect any donation. We will give.
I get a second order that if you're not collecting any donation, how can you give?
So your work is illegal.
So stopping.
So I wrote formally that the scriptures command us to obey the magistrates.
So we will obey your order.
We will not give any relief.
But we will ask the
peasants who are hurting to pray for relief. Maybe the government itself will
grant the relief. I got a third order that your prayer meeting is illegal. Now
this was not a Christian meeting in a church. This was in Gandhi Ashram.
Gandhi in style prayer was very theistic prayer. So, Gandhi Ashlam would be watching us for
several years of what we are doing with the poor. They invited me to hold a public prayer meeting
in their premises and this registrate says this will disturb the peace and tranquility law
and order of my district. So your prayer meeting is bad. Now, am I now required,
by the Bible, to obey the magistrate, or is there a right, do I have a right to civil disobedience?
And as we began to look at the story of responsibility or responsibility for civil disobedience,
right? Yes, exactly. To be a shepherd, do I have to stand up against the wolves?
And I was finally thrown into jail.
That's where I began to take a fresh look at the New Testament.
The Jesus is doing good.
Apostles are doing good, healing, preaching, teaching about the Kingdom of God.
Why is he crucified?
Why are they being stoned?
Why are they being killed?
Why are they the trouble makers turning the world upside down?
And that's exactly the point that you made that
rulers a government has authority as the
Declaration of Independence in American Constitution says that governments are
constituted to defend and promote the laws that are given by the creator.
Every person is made in God's image and endowed by his creator with inalienable rights.
You give up a biblical framework that the rights come from God. His command you shall not kill, that is so pretended at least, highly educated
officer, he called me to his home. I said in his living in his lawn, in an easy chair
for one and a half hours, he's been an hour telling me that if you don't cancel that
primary, I will personally kill you. I don't need to arrest you, I need no warning, I will
not reduce you before a judge. I'll
come to your home. Take you from your home. Take you into the jungle. Shoot you. Throw your
body there. The hyenas will eat you. Are you going to cancel their pregnancy? So, I said to him
of course that I have to consult my wife if she's okay being a widow. And then I'll consider
your request. I realized I wasn't taking him seriously,
which I wasn't, because I didn't believe
that a highly educated,
gasseted officer of the government of India
who has taken an oath to uphold the Constitution of India,
will have such utter disregard for my inalienable right
to life to pray.
So when I was in jail, that's when I began to take a fresh look at why is an apostle Paul
turning the Roman world upside down? That's what he's accused of. why is Jesus being crucified? And what does the cross have to do with transformation
of Europe from being a very intolerant, brutal society
to a civilized, a tolerant society?
Yeah, well, I, you know, I talked to my audiences
across the United States and say, well, it seems obvious to me, which doesn't mean it's true that
societies that societies that are desirable are
Free societies and free societies are predicated on rule of law the law independent of the and
law, the law independent of the and transcendent in relationship to the rulers, and on a conception of man that gives every individual an intrinsic dignity that basically has a religious substructure,
and that to the degree that we are citizens of those lands, and we believe in the principles
by which they operate, then we're bound to accept that view
because without accepting that view,
the whole system makes no sense.
Like the foundation stone is pulled out from underneath it.
And that's quite the conundrum,
you know, that there's a biblical vision underpinning
the states that are the most productive.
Now, the radical types, the leftists in particular,
say, well, the reason that the West is wealthy and free is because it was built on the backs of
the poor and in the West and also in the third world. But one of the reasons I found your book so
interesting is that you're not so fond of that viewpoint. You look at India, for example, and as far as I could tell, you believe that the distribution
of the biblical narrative in India has clearly been a net positive.
And so maybe you could outline a little bit of Indian history because I think people would
find that very interesting.
The British came in.
India was fragmented into hundreds of cities or states, small states,
ruled over in many cases by Muslims. That was the scene when the British arrived,
and the British had their problems, but the introduction of the biblical narrative into India
in your estimation had a positively transformative effect, much like it had in Western Europe.
positively transformative effect, much like it had in Western Europe. That's true. Thank you. You're doing wonderful job in arguing the case that you just outlined.
And I hope that many people in the West and in the East will listen to you because we
don't believe it anymore. Now it's the thing, but it's also partly, it's because we're
so damn ignorant, eh? I mean, I was struck by reading
and reading your book, how much I didn't know. You know, for example, this is very embarrassing
to relate. I didn't realize I knew India was fragmented before it was unified into a modern nation
state, but I didn't know it was fragmented and fundamentally ruled in many cases by the Muslim
Empire that I just didn't know that. And that's pathetic that I didn't know that. And I also, your book also helped me understand.
See, in the West now, we tend to think
of the entire Christian tradition
as oppressive in the Catholic sense.
And I'm not criticizing the Catholics by the way.
Sure.
That it was a monopolytic belief system that was fundamentally oppressive.
Now, your book helped me understand to what degree that oppression, if it existed, was
a remnant of the Roman Empire and the Empire of World View, and that it was the introduction
of the Bible and its distribution in all the vernaculars that actually blew the remaining empire part of Christianity
into fragments and then in a very positive way. And that's analogous, as I said, to the effect of
the Christian or the biblical narrative on India, which, yep, so please go ahead, that's the Indian story. That's true. In the year 1000 is when from Afghanistan through Khyberpaz,
Khyberpaz, Mahmoud Ghazni, an invader began to invade India and attack.
So between 1000 and 1031, he came about 1617 times, looting primarily temples, religious temples,
because that's where the wealth was.
The kings will store the wealth in the temples
and he would loot the temple.
There was a very small, a hyper pass,
only one place from where invaders could come from
of Galistan and Per Perishya etc.
India could have built a small wall of India.
We didn't need a great wall of India to keep the invaders out.
But the Indian rulers never built this small wall to the point that almost 200 years
later, 1191, Muhammad Gauri comes from Afghanistan all the way to Delhi,
almost a thousand kilometers, and he fights with the Hindu king of Delhi, he loses, goes back,
1192 he comes back, defeat Spritwira Chhan, kills him, and Delhi is taken over by Muslims in 1192.
So what has weakened the Hindu kingdoms from 1190 to 1190,
almost 200 years, is a religious ritual called the horse sacrifice.
Aswamadeya, Hindu kings are sending a horse and behind the horse are
few hundred young men. They're going into a village, either village becomes their property and
begins to pay tribute to their king or they have to fight a war. So at that time Delhi is small, a bigger kingdom is connoged.
The two Hindu kings are sons of real sisters, so they are first cousins.
One of the kings of connogees, he starts his ashyamedia, horse sacrifice.
But his brother, who is smaller kingdom, but more competent ruler, he refuses to accept the sovereignty of his cousin.
So hatred develops between two cousins who are governing two important kingdoms in North India.
So after in 1192 when the Muslim invader has been defeated by the king of Delhi, the king of
Hanod, Jajan, he invites the Muslim invader to please come back, kill my brother. And that's how
Delhi is taken over by Muslims. And then Muslims different dynasties, different kinds of Muslims rule India until it ruled Delhi until 1858.
So how much and how much to what degree were they ruling over the rest of what was India as well at during that period of time?
It was expanding and contracting the Mughal Empire for about 200 years. So was the most expensive, but so the British had begun to come
during the Mogul Empire, but only to trade with permission, the French in the
Dundes. And what was the consequence of the Mogul Empire? Well, in relationship to
the to the typical Indian's life and to the structure of the state. They build the Taj Mahal, but they didn't build wheelbarrows for the laborers who were
carrying bricks and stones.
So you build pyramids, you build Taj Mahal, you build palaces, this is the whole middle
ages, but you don't care for the wheelbarrows.
So even today women are carrying bricks and stones and mud and
cement on their head as they are building forest story. Oh, because you don't care for
the poor. So India was weakened by what a religious ritual, as you may be, which was supposed
to make a king very strong. So kings did become strong, nation became weak and divided,
which allowed Muslim rulers and then French and British
and others to come and take over.
So India for a thousand years, almost 800-900 years
was slave.
Now there were pockets of Hindu kingdoms,
but some of those Hindu kingdoms were worse,
even compared to the Muslim ruler, like southern yet, a travel corps.
Right, and these all these rulers, Hindu and Muslim alike, existed in a completely exploitative
relationship, in relationship to their subjects. There was no conception of individual worth, as you point out,
there was no conception that the life of a slave
let alone a female slave, let's say, or even a female period for that matter had any real intrinsic value.
That unfurstantly is correct. Let me give you a very shameful example of what this means.
So in South India, in what is not
trevendrum, trevendur, no lower caste woman was allowed to cover her top. If she
covered her top, she has to pray breast tax, which depends on the size of her breast. Now even the upper caste women in
Travenkoor, this is Kerala, South India, they when they go into the temple they
have to remove their upper cloth because you're honoring the priests you have
to be bare-chested. On the street, if someone from noble family royalty is passing
through on the street, the uppercast women have to take their cloth off and throw petals, flower petals.
This is Hindu India, while the British are ruling in India. So these parts of history are suppressed because they are
shampoos and obviously they are shampoos that there is more slavery in the Hindu kingdom of
Traven code in South India than in the Muslim kingdom in the North. So this is partly because of
caste system. So the horse sacrifice is one thing that had weakened India.
Caste system had weakened India because if the kings are exploiting my wealth and putting
that wealth in gold and silver and diamonds in the temples, when an invader comes and
attacks the king, why should I sacrifice my life?
Why should I fight and defend my kingdom? Because I have no stake in this kingdom. You are treating
me as untouchable. And this is what is happening in India today, every day, that the Lord passed people
who are trying to recover their dignity, that the Hindu religious system has made me
lower than animals. Jesus Christ is making me a human being, a child of God. You won't allow me
to interview temple. Jesus is making me a priest of the most high God. So if they want to convert,
this persecution happening every day in India and the Supreme...
Okay, so now you also made the case that in the caste system, for example, I thought this was
very interesting and quite damning from a modern perspective or maybe from a biblical perspective,
not so much a modern, that there was no sense in the Hindu caste structure that the poor and downtrodden and let's say the untouchables
were to be revered or served or regarded as intrinsically noble, partly because the doctrine
of karma was predicated on the assumption, a, that they deserved their suffering had earned
it in some cosmic sense and b, that if you did even attempt to alleviate their suffering,
all you did,
all you were doing cosmically was prolonging it because the suffering that they had garnered
as a consequence of karma was deserved and was going to be played out no matter who
interfered with it.
And so there wasn't just an absence of care, let's say, in some sense for the downtrodden
and the outcast, but there was an insistence that they deserved their position
and that anything that might be done to help them
would actually be counterproductive.
Now, have I got that right?
Yes, except I'll take a little farther,
that is that inequality is self-evident truth,
including in America,
that men and women are equal, was never self-evident
to Americans.
Whites and Black slaves are equal, was never self-evident to Jefferson's and Washington's
and the American founding fathers.
Equality is not a self-evident truth.
Inequality is self-evident.
Yeah, quite the contrary, right?
You could say that equality is so non-self-evident
that it would take divine fear to make it a reality. Exactly. So yeah, I know that's a powerful
argument. And Jefferson knew that, therefore, in the Declaration of Independence, he wrote,
we hold these truths to be sacred that all men are created. Well, it was Benjamin Franklin who put pressure on him and he was trying to please Thomas
Paine, the deist, the rationalist, that we can't say that these truth is revealed to us
by sacred writings.
So we say, we hold these truth to be self-evident.
Well, I think it might be fair to say that those truths are self-evident. Well, I think it was, it might be fair to say that those truths are self-evident
in a culture that's absolutely saturated by Protestant biblical presumptions. That's true.
But they're not self-evident otherwise. Yeah, they were not self-evident 500 years ago when
Martin Luther discovered priests to the kingship of Paul and believers. Because at that time,
if a Christian went to the church in Germany, every Christian only got the bread symbol of Christ's body,
not the wine, the symbol of blood.
The blood was only for the priests.
So the division between priests and lady resulted in war.
Because if all men are created equal,
if every child of God is supposed to
sub-gun as is priest, manages kingdom as a king, then this was a revolution, a theological
revolution.
Yes, and it was resisted.
That was part of the reason I suppose that the translation of the Bible was resisted
by so many people in the hierarchical church,
because people knew they knew full well that if the actual words were distributed widely,
that that would create a bottom-up revolution as people realized they're fundamental,
not only their equality, but more than that, their equality before God and their fundamental worth,
and their capability of having a relationship with truth.
And there is maybe no more revolutionary doctrine than that.
It hit him for me how revolutionary the book is and even in Western history.
That's absolutely true.
So that doctrine of human equality, the first thing it does in Germany, 1524, 1525, is the peasants war. I'll come back to that.
Before that, before Luther translates the Bible into German, you have Wittliffe in Oxford,
who is translating the Bible into English, along with his friends. This is before printing existed,
before Gutenberg. And it wasn't wasn't Wakelift killed for his trouble?
Was he burned?
Fortunately not.
After he had been put it, his bones were dug out.
Oh, yes.
His bones were burned and the ashes were scattered.
But Ketan died in the spot of this time.
There were two pubes for a while.
There were three pubes fighting with each other.
Each of them wanted British support.
And the Riklif had become a hero in Britain because of his taxation.
So the British was a poor people.
So he escaped that duped.
But they got tindle, I believe.
Yeah, tindle was crookly.
Yes, tindle was crookly.
But tindle is 150 or so years after
Hitler. So that's even that's interesting even that, that the resistance to the translation
lasted multiple centuries. It wasn't a flash in the pan. It was an extremely dangerous act to
translate the Bible into a vernacular language. And you want to ask yourself why you're absolutely right because it was
Bishop Arun deil, the Archbishop of Tentabry who banned Vickliffe's Bible and prohibited that no one
is allowed to translate the Bible into English without permission. So Tintail spent a whole year knocking at the doors of three bishops trying to get permission
to translate the Bible into English.
All three of them refused.
So he became a refugee, which was also illegal leaving London out permission.
He left England, went to Wittenberg, under Luther, began to translate the Bible,
the New Testament, then he came to Belgium, that's where he printed it, to smuggle it into England.
So anyone who was found 100 years earlier with a page of Wittler's Bible and copied,
he could be part of that state
because the church has been translation of the Bible.
So the Bible was an exclusive revolutionary.
Okay, so let's go back to India then.
So now you have the Muslim ruling India
and you have the Hindu gods or the Hindu kings
ruling India and it's a caste structured society.
And there's no shortage of oppression.
And there's no real development at the individual level.
And the British start a mercantile relationship.
And then the biblical corpus
enters the Indian landscape through the operation
fundamentally of the British,
but of missionaries, not the mercantilists, per se.
Although a fair number of the Christian,
influenced British politicians,
were all already pushing favorably
for India's independent development several hundred years ago,
way before it actually happened.
Yes.
Now, a few missionaries from Europe
had come to South India
before the British missionary movement got going. And they had begun to translate
the Bible into some of the South Indian languages, etc. But this was small private initiative.
The missionary movement per se got started only in 1793 when William Carey, a cobbler in England,
he was a Baptist, so he was not allowed to go into Oxford at Cambridge. These were Anglican universities. So he taught himself while
working as a cobbler, Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Geography, Politics, Mission, Navi History, etc.
And he wrote a small book, inquiring whether the contemporary church is under an obligation to go and evangelize
the world, disciple or nations, or was that a command even only for the first generation
of apostles. So his book and inquiry into obligation of the Christians to disciple our nations. It's a very long title. That's what begins the modern literary movement.
But ironically, 1793 when his book is published,
is the year when the British parliament banned,
mysteries from going to India.
So, is India, British East India Company is governing Bengal, which includes Bangladesh, Assam, etc.
That's a large part of Eastern India.
But, the missionaries are not allowed, because evangelical movement is already creating
problems for Africa, a British rule in Africa, because British companies are bringing
African slaves in British ships, selling them in Caribbean and South America, North America,
and even genital conscience, which believes that all human beings are equal, therefore slavery
is a moral. They are creating problems, and it is the members of House of Lordeningman who have taken these companies.
They don't want missionaries to go.
We're having a good time in Africa and India.
We're making a lot of money.
We don't want morality injected into business.
Right, but it does get injected.
Wilbur Force manages it unbelievably well. And you know, one of the things that I've really
been struck by lately is this postmodern
and radical leftists insistence that exploitation is wrong.
Think, well, why do you think exploitation is wrong?
You have to buy the doctrine of the
inalienable rights of the individual and the natural rights
of the individual and the divine worth of the individual before slavery is wrong, and you
don't buy any of that.
But if you do buy it, you end up like Wilbur Force, and you put yourself on the line to
cost England a tremendous fortune over a multiple decades
to eradicate slavery around the world because of its moral inappropriateness, because of
the sacred nature of each individual.
That's absolutely right.
That if a woman is an animal and I can buy a cow, keep it cow in lock and chain and sell it cow.
Why can't I buy girls?
Keep them locked and sell them.
Is a girl different than an animal?
Does she have...
Yeah, and if power is the only force that is real and the only force that's credible,
then obviously you can buy and sell if you have
the power to do it.
You can only not do that in some fundamental sense if there's a transcendent order, let's
say, that abuse each individual with fundamental worth.
The inalienable right to liberty that a woman cannot be kept in cage because she is made
in God's image who is free. Yeah, so this...
Well, I mean, think about that practically too, you know.
So, I think, imagine it this way.
So, the reason that you have the right to liberty is so that you, let's say, you have the
right to conscience and you have the right to conscience so that you can make appropriate
ethical decisions.
And states depend on ethical individuals to make appropriate ethical decisions to keep
the states from crumbling, which is basically the stories that go throughout the Old Testament
is that when all the individuals who make up a state become enslaved or become so corrupt
that they no longer make appropriate decisions, the entire state is doomed and everybody collapses
into slavery.
And so you have your freedom, you have your liberty not so that you can do whatever you want,
but so that you can exercise your conscience in relationship to your, well, let's say, divine calling.
That's absolutely right. The idea of conscience is foundational to whole of Western political philosophy.
That the reality is that in human body there is no organ called conscience.
Conscience is an aspect of human soul, the spiritual dimension of a human being, where
my conscience judges me, that you are lying, that you're shoplifting, you're a thief,
you're a liar, you're a sinner. So conscience is the image of God in me, which can be corrupted,
but can be reformed. So this, this is of course the fundamental source of liberty when of 1521,
source of liberty when of 1521-22, Martin Luther is standing in the diet of Warnos, the emperor has called for Luther to be tried because the Roman Empire cannot be divided
when the Turks are attacking it, he wants unity, so he wants Luther to explain himself and he says,
okay, these are your books, yes sir, and these says, okay, these are your books, yes sir.
And these are the books of the church fathers, yes sir.
Your books contradict the books that the church fathers have written for a long time, yes
are they do.
So will you recant?
He's not given an opportunity to defend himself, because you have found a ricting where the
church fathers have said, you should recant.
Otherwise, you are a heretic.
That means that any Christian can kill you and will go to heaven.
So Luther takes 24 hours, and that happened just two, three weeks ago,
with 500th anniversary of the Diet of Worms, when Luther spends a whole night in prayer, that, do I reckon save my life?
Or do I remain true to my conscience?
So he makes that classic statement that, it's not safe, it's not right to go against one's
conscience.
I will reckon, I'm not being proud and arrogant. I will regret if you
convinced me from scriptures and claim reason. If not, I'm sorry I can't repent. So help me
God. Here I stand. Here I stand. So help me God. No. That doctrine of conscience comes from Paul uses the word repeatedly in his epistles such as Timothy and Titus that this is
true religion not all the rituals not all the sacriaments but to keep your heart clean pure right
It's the profitee voice within essential. Yes, so that then is debated and
So that then is debated and Milton, John Milton, the Puritan poet uses it in his argument for Arya Pagetika in Arya Pagetika when he argues for liberty.
To even if I'm wrong, I should have the freedom to express my false ideas.
You should counter my false ideas with arguments and evidence, not by the sword.
Yeah, that's part of the refinement of conscience, you could say that.
Yes.
So then at that time, including Oliver Trump will reign, long parliament,
appoints Westminster Assembly, Assembly of 70's Sotheologians who write Westminster Confession,
chapter 20 is the chapter on conscience. The parliament accepts Westminster Confession
as the summary of biblical Christianity, and it was true that the conscience enters the
And it was true that the conscience enters the political philosophy of the West. The root of it was back in 1528 lecture, Sermon, that...
And how does that parallel Wilberforce's emergence as an anti-slavery campaigner?
He comes to three and radius later. But the background of this Martin Luther sermon,
which John Locke quotes in his letter concerning toleration,
which, Madison, James Madison,
when introducing Pillow, Frights in America,
he quotes Martin Luther's sermon.
It's called on two kingdoms.
There are two kingdoms, Kingdom of Christ, which is coming to this world and the Kingdom of Man.
The Emperor and the Church, the Pope, have authority over me in some areas.
But the Church doesn't own my soul.
Emperor doesn't own my soul.
If I have accepted Jesus as my Lord,
its God's Kingdom has come into my heart. Christ
is my Lord. He's the king of kings. He's the ruler of the kings of the earth. Therefore,
my heart belongs to Jesus and the government has no business in interfering with my conscience
with my soul. Okay, so now these ideas come into India, and you talked about the missionary distribution
in the vernacular, and one of the things you do quite nicely, I thought, in the book
that made your world, is detail out the effects on the language and the culture of the societies
in which, to which the Bible was, what would you say, where the, to the languages in the societies that were provided with
or offered a translation of the Bible, because it meant a codification of the language,
and often the transformation of what was only a spoken language into a written language,
to the demarcation of the language as a consequence,
to the possibility of a written civilization and then also to the possibility of that
society now developing its own literature
Literary vernacular as an offshoot of the of the biblical corpus
Very interesting development of the word a as a consequence of the translation efforts because they often gets
as a consequence of the translation efforts, because they often get pilloried in the West, right? Because the missionaries are seen as part of this oppressive Western colonial
movement that they radical types who criticize it don't differentiate, right? They just assume it's
a unipolar oppressive mechanism that's orchestrated from the top down and purely exploitive.
orchestrated from the top down and purely exploitive. Absolutely. So Wilbur Force is a central figure in this. Three things flow out of this 20-year battle on behalf of India. One is permitting
mysteries to go as educators because all the education was a department of the church. It didn't become a department
of the state until much later. So at that time, every teacher has a reverent, you know,
a university teacher's, etc. Bishop is the chancellor of the universities. So Bill
Gofffurt is, he fought for 20 years that it's not enough to send only soldiers and traders to India.
We must, God could not have the belief in providence that history is not a mindless
series of accidents.
There is God-repetitive cycle.
Yes.
There is Providence guiding history.
God, call the Abraham Isaac and Jacob.
You follow me.
I will bless you.
I will bless all the nations through you.
So blessing India was part of God's plan.
He could not possibly have given India
to British East and their company to be exploited,
but to be blessed.
Therefore, we must send missionaries to educate India
so that they can govern themselves.
So the text 20 years, he loses.
Okay, so let's not gloss over that too quickly.
So what we have here is in the midst of structure that could have turned into a permanent
empire.
We have a movement within that empire itself that draws on its own conscience to reveal to itself that
any continued history of exploitation regardless of how profitable is immoral. Now that happens with the slave trade
and it happens in the case of well much of the British Empire, but particularly in India. So they're working against their own financial
interest in many in many ways.
And certainly the case with the war against the slave trade.
Absolutely.
And so that's very weird, right?
We want to remark on just how strange that is.
That's unheard of.
Well, let me illustrate that Africa point first.
British ships are going to Africa.
Britain is industrial country.
It has producing a lot of things. It's taking them selling going to Africa. Britain is industrial country. It has producing a lot of things.
It's taking them selling them in Africa.
Africa is not producing anything at that point.
So the ships have to go empty to the Caribbean or the America.
There's a limit to how many monkeys and zebras you can take.
So they begin to take slaves, which are needed in the Caribbean,
in the tea plantations and other plantations. So you
take the slaves and then they're making sugar and you're bringing
sugar back to Europe. So this triangle of trade, if the ships
are going empty from Africa to the Americas, then the shipping business in Africa.
Yeah, and slavery can get a towhole because it's way outside on the fringes of the commercial
activity and invisible, at least, to begin with, in some sense.
And if your ships are not allowed to take slaves, the Spanish will, the Portuguese will,
so you might as well. So when Will be forced to fight
against slave trade, he is hurting the Britain's economic interest. And everybody knows that. And
that's why it takes a whole lifetime. I've read calculations that the British spent more fighting
the slave trade than they gained economically from supporting slavery to begin with by quite a large margin?
I don't know if that's true. That's true. That's what Adolf Smith had already argued in
his book, The Wealth of the Nations, was published 1776, the same year as American Independence,
and he argues that free work that is much more productive and profiting
up than a slave. So that was true, except that that was an academic theory. In reality, the shipping
company needs to take something from Africa to America's to make the navigation work. So in the end whether the slaves are more productive
or
is an economic debate. So this is why Wilco forces a troublemaker. He never goes to India,
but he is important for a volition of sati widow birding as well. But he has two main
assistants, Zachary McColley, is his right hand man against his fight against slavery.
Charles Grant is Wilberforce's right hand man. Charles Grant actually becomes a member of
Parliament and becomes the director of East India
Company.
He is well-beforsed, right hand man, again about how to reform India, beginning with how to
reform the British misrule in India, because he has personally seen that East India Company
in governing India is a gang of public robbers.
Lord McColley, son of Zachary McColley,
he's the one who called his,
in their company's rule for the first 50 years
as a gang of public robbers, rule of an evil chaining.
Because the soldiers and traders who had come to India,
they were basically refrapped for British society.
Like the conquistadors in the New World.
Correct.
So they were looting.
Did God give India to us so that we might loot India?
This was the conscience troubling Charles Brown.
And he wrote the book in 1793,
at the request of Gilbefors,
it was not published in 1993, it was hand copied,
they had copies in those days, this was for the members of parliament because the charter
of Eastern Deer Company, they had the monopoly, so the charter had to be renewed every 20 years
and this was written to influence the renewal of the charter and to insert a missionary class.
So from 1793 onwards, Grant begins to play a very important role on the builder forces,
the political face of that movement.
So they have fought for education and the parliament finally in 18,000, yeah they granted a hundred thousand pounds or they
forced the distribution of a hundred thousand pounds. A hundred thousand rupees which was
really sorry a hundred thousand rupees equal of the pound more or less that from its profit, East India company must spend 100,000 rupees for public
education so that we begin to train Indians to govern India.
Now, this, right again, a revolutionary, an unbelievably revolutionary concept.
It's unprecedented.
It's anti-Aempire new extreme. And Lord McColley, who argued and finally won the
debate in Parliament in 1833, he says exactly what you're saying, that this has never happened,
but this would be our good greatest glory, not that we are ruling over illiterate people,
not that we are ruling over illiterate people, but that we found people living in darkness
incapable of governing themselves,
and we are so ruled over them
that they became capable of ruling themselves.
Okay, now, so let's take that apart a bit
because, you know, the radical types again
are going to insist that England,
or that Britain imposed English as a language on
on India, and that that the fundamental, again, the fundamental orientation was exploitative. But
one of the things that you point out quite clearly is that the missionary types in particular
driven by their biblical presuppositions did everything they could to translate the Bible itself
into the local vernaculars into every language
that anybody has spoke. And that's part of that general missionary evangelizing proclivity.
I went to the Museum of the Bible in Washington. They have a really, it's a great museum, by the way.
They have a very interesting room there that contains virtually every one copy of a Bible translated into almost all the languages
that the Bible has been translated into.
And there is a variety of empty shelves, although a small proportion, that are devoted
to the next decades.
I think they figured the Bible will be translated into virtually every living language within
40 years from now,
something like that. And so those biblical translators had tremendous respect for the local
vernaculars. They transformed them into written languages, which was no small feat,
and they enabled all of those people to start to learn to read and to think for themselves.
That's how it looks. And it's likewise the case that in Europe, the monasteries were the central focus of what
became partly industrial production and also institutes of higher education. So this idea that the
the biblical world was opposed to education and to enlightenment in general. That's fault. That's just false. It's
backwards. Absolutely true. Everyone agreed. Whether Christians or non-Christians, politicians,
everyone agreed that if India had to be re-, vernacular had to be developed. Because that is
what happened in Europe. Letten was language of learning
language of course, but with the Reformation, German and
French and English and Spanish and Portuguese, every
language began to be developed. And so because that's what the principle of human equality meant that just reached to be taken to heaven but reached to become
king because the Lamb of God shed his blood so that slaves of Satan are transformed into sons of God
serving their father managing his affairs, doing his will in their life and making sure that
God's will is being done or not. So everyone becomes a king and therefore, the truth of God,
what is God's will? I can't do God's will, if I don't know God, if I don't know his will.
So everyone has to be educated in his own mother tongue. This is what begins, this is the thrust of the entire
Vishary enterprise, British and non-British in India. But the question is, what exactly
will develop Indian vernaculars? No pundits, no Imam had any interest in any of Indian languages at that time. India had three classical languages.
Sanskrit was the language of Brahmins, but only of males. Arabic was the language of the mosque of Imam.
And the only language that the Quran could be attributed in at that time.
And Persian.
So Mughal Ambar, Huma'u, had made Persian the official court language of India in order
to keep the non-Persian speaking Muslims away from the throne.
So the Persian was a sophisticated language, but in India it was used as a language
of discrimination just as Sanskrit was used as a language of discrimination against women and
against lower caste. So no Hindu Muslim scholar had any interest in any of Indian languages.
interest in any opinion languages, the current national language Hindi didn't exist or though didn't exist. There were dialects that
these visionaries began to transform. First was Hindustani.
Well, right, that we should concentrate on that too, because
people don't really understand this. You know, when I went to
Switzerland in 1982, there were still places in the backwards in Switzerland
where the people at the top of the mountain spoke a language so different from the people
at the bottom that they couldn't understand each other.
And so the rule of thumb for languages isn't, well, the language is basically comprehensible
by everyone, but there are various accents.
The rule is that there's an unbelievable multitude of dialects such that people in one village
can't understand the people in the next village.
And so then the European missionaries come in and start to codify and unite these languages
and also to give them their written expression.
First of all, developing an alphabet often. Correct.
So the question that really occupied was that once should use this money to teach Sanskrit Arabic
and Persian.
So there was already Sanskrit college in Banaras funded by East India Company and Calcutta
Madrasa, teaching Arabic funded by East India Company.
But others began to say, look, if somebody masters all the Sanskrit literature and all the
Arabic literature, he or she is not going to be able to give to in vernacular knowledge of science,
knowledge of economics, knowledge of technology of law of justice.
Right. These productive fields, which you also, whose development, you also traced
in large part to the monastic tradition.
Yes. So that's why it was the Anglicist argued
that we can't educate everybody with the limited money
that I have.
We have.
Therefore, let's teach English.
So there will be a group of Indians, small group of Indians,
who are able to read English literature and take the knowledge from
England, give it into Bengali, give it into Gujarati and Hindi. So, English language was
brought to India to empower Indian vernaculous. Now, we have many high caste Hindus.
Did you suppose that there's a single university in the West
that actually teaches that fact?
Well, a friend of mine took these ideas which you have read
and wrote a PhD thesis which was submitted to the University
of Nakhbor.
Five Brahmins were appointed to study his thesis
before giving him a PhD.
They took five years to investigate his thesis
because he was showing that every single modern Indian vernacular language is creation of
vital translators. After five years, they gave him a PhD and they wrote in their recommendation
later that when his book is published, it should be a required reading in all the departments
of linguistics that every single modern-in-language is a creation of Bible translators.
And that's absolutely unbelievable.
And I just can't imagine that being accepted without a tremendous amount of resistance
anywhere in the West.
His book is called Let There Be India.
It's a big book.
The shorter version is still in print, the bigger version, we have to reprint.
But you're absolutely right.
Right now, there are about 100 dialects in India, which are being transformed into literary languages.
Right.
My missionaries who are risking their, these are Indian missionaries who are going into
remote areas, tribal areas, hill, hills, sacrificing everything in order to transform these
people because a civilization can only grow as far as their language will take
that. A Stone Age tribe doesn't have, you can't teach signs to them, you can't teach business law
to them because their dialect doesn't have the vocabulary, the grammar, the structure to make these
books available. So a Bible translation.
What do you think of arguments that might point out that the counter argument might be,
well, why should we assume that the benefits of say Western civilization or biblical civilization
for that matter should be imposed on these people. Why can't we let them just pursue their own
development? Why should we assume that there's anything superior about biblical civilization in
relationship to Stone Age life? Yes, that's a valid question. My wife and I wrote a book on William Kerry, the father of modern India, who was the main figure behind this
Bible translation and publications for the first 40 years of the modern India. Now, he was also
the man who fought against widow burning. He saw a widow's in burnt alive. He fought.
You also have an interesting story in your book about a girl that was starved to death
by her parents.
Actually, yes, but I actually, I also began a fight against revival of video burning in 1987.
It 18 year old video was burned alive.
That's when I began to discover these builders of modern and. Right, as part of an equally valid alternate cultural tradition.
Yes, but the point I was making was that a lady speaking in Harvard University
was showed our book on William Kerry to her audience. And she said that here is a gentleman, a cobbler, turned
linguist, the father of modern India, who helped abolish widow Pernick. And an American
Caucasian white woman doing PhD in Harvard, she got mad at the speaker, what right did this white Englishman have to say that parting videos
alive is bad?
Well, that's a good, that's exactly the question we asked earlier about slavery.
If you don't buy the doctrine that women have permanent and divinely valuable souls, and the kind of kingship in principle that you describe,
then there's nothing stopping you from doing that except the arbitrary facts of
chance and society. You have to have a view of the individual as made in the image of God and equal before the law in consequence before
you can say that that's self-evidently wrong. That's how it looks to me. Exactly. So here is Harvard
University teaching a PhD scholar that all cultures are equally valid. If a culture burns the widow alive, that's valid. It should be respected. And what if they
gas the Jews? How's that for valid? For what if they kill six million Ukrainians? Not okay, too?
About the Jews, they have very strong presence in Hollywood. So,
Hollywood would be afraid of taking on Hollywood. There are some boundaries, arbitrary boundaries, but the Jews
and the Jews. Right, but it isn't much of a leap from widow burning to the Holocaust furnaces.
It's just a matter of scale. Exactly. So when we first had discovered in fantasy in India, you just allude into it, this little girl Sheila, 18-month-old,
being starved to death.
But I tell that story, tell that story, that's a very interesting story.
Well, we had Ruth and I, my wife Ruth and I had just moved into a village in the middle
of nowhere, in Chathapur district,
Madhya Pradesh. And I was writing my first book, The World of
Gurus, which was later then published by the biggest publisher in
Asia, Vikas. And it became a textbook in many universities,
including Cambridge, so in study of contemporary Hinduism was using my book. So
that's what makes me an Indian philosopher who studied Hinduism written a book.
So I was writing. We had no table in chair. We had put a small wood into the wall and
I was sitting on a stool and writing. My wife said on the other
side of the bed, my English was very poor, but she had had English education. She was editing and
typing my manuscript. When I didn't have enough work for her, she would pick up her bicycle and
go into the village, door to door to find out how many kids were there, how many were going to school, what can we do for
those who were not studying etc. So she ran into a 10 year old girl, Lalta, and asked her,
how many brothers and sisters do you have? Lalta said three, maybe four. So Ruth was curious,
do you have four or do you have three? She said, well three three fourth is almost dead. Can I come and see the fourth? So Lalta took
a roof. In the middle of this is one bedroom hut with hatched roof, no light. Light is sunlight is
just coming through the roof. And here's this 18 month old girl in the middle of the room,
in the middle of the room, on a string caught with no mattress or anything under it,
unable to cry. Flies are lower in her because, past is oozing out of everyone, including her head. Ruth began to cry. What's wrong with her? The mother's smile. Oh, she doesn't
eat anything. Whatever we give her, she moments. So have you taken her to the hospital? How can we take her to the hospital? We don't have any money.
Really? I'll give you the money. You take her to the hospital. No, no, no, I can't with the hospital, I can manage the city. Well, take your husband.
My husband, who will look after the cows, the field, Rutsa, really? I'll give you the money to hire a laborer to look after you
feel for one day, you go with your husband.
Okay, I'll also come with you.
She said, to get rid of Ruth, she said, okay, I'll talk to my husband when he comes in
the evening.
So Ruth came back, started urging me, you go and talk to the husband, I've done my job.
I went back, they had decided they're not going to the hospital.
Why?
We don't have any money.
But my wife told you she'll give the money.
Oh, we don't want to get into debt.
No, this is not a debt, this is a gift.
I'll write, give it in writing.
Well, we don't have the time.
Well, my wife told you the shield pay for a laborer.
Then they got angry at me.
Why are you bothered?
And I couldn't understand that.
That's a good question.
That's a good question.
I couldn't understand.
The only rational explanation as far as I'm concerned was that they really want to build
the baby.
Is that possible?
I didn't believe that.
wanted to kill the baby. Is that possible? I didn't believe that. But I decided to use that
to mobilize public opinion. That are you killing this girl? Why are you so heartless? Why don't you take a knife stab her? Why are you prolonging her misery? They were about more angry at me. I found no support in the village because I didn't know at that time that female in
fantasies was a common practice.
Everybody did it if you had a second or third daughter.
So I decided to pretend that I'm angry, erased my voice, that look if you don't take this
child to the hospital tomorrow, I'm bringing the police here that you are murdering this baby. So one elderly man
said to them that look, you better listen to this guy, he's crazy, he might actually bring the
police and in that case, you will have to pay for the hospital expense. Right now they are offering
to pay taken. So the girl went long story which I
discussed in the chapter. Twice the process was repeated, she spent two, three weeks in the hospital,
came to her home, recovered, the mother will come and fight and Ruth would say, of course we want
you to bring up your child, we will pay for the milk, you raise your daughter, but the second time within
two days the child was dead. I was convinced that the parents had killed her, Ruth didn't
believe that it was possible for a parent to kill their child. Until we saw a tree for other
kids being killed by their parents, because one woman came, she saw all of this struggle,
she had just had twins, she wanted us to take the weaker and the darker kid and we had just had
our own baby and Ruth said no, I'll give you the money, I can't take responsibility for a second child
and next day the child was dead. So we saw instances like that and they
realized that it is not self-evident to these people that every child has an
inalienable right to life. That's our world view and it's not just they're
not that people they're doing what everybody else does. A second daughter is a liability.
One daughter is enough to look after the siblings to cook to clean.
Yeah, well, one whether they're bad or not is not the issue. In some real fundamental sense,
the issue is whether or not that is bad. And it's multi-dimensional reality. And you can be a
relativist and you can say, well, you know, those are the breaks given the socioeconomic conditions. But then you have to say, well,
then it's okay for people to kill their daughters. It's like, well, maybe that's not okay,
like seriously. And that's a strange case, because you have to come down on one side of the other.
Either it's okay, or it isn't. Those are the only options. So imagine there is no law that you shall not kill your child.
Then it is culture.
Everybody does it.
Why shouldn't I?
Does the culture decide whether killing an unwanted girl
is right or wrong?
Well, the Duraburg decision was that the culture
doesn't get to decide.
So, right, fundamentally, that was the Nuremberg decision.
But the Americans had the dominant power at that time to overrule the fascist argument,
the fascist's rent.
But the thing is, if you dispense with it, you have to dispense with the Nuremberg judgment.
And then what the Germans did in World War
2 was just a matter of culture. Like these ideas, they have some pretty, I know you know this, I'm not
telling you this, obviously you know it, but lots of people don't know it. Okay, so we're going to run
out of time and I don't want that, but I would like to, so I'd like to close this properly, and I would
like, in all likelihood, to talk to you again, especially about your newer projects, your work on Islam, for example, I think that would be a great discussion.
But let's go back to the effect, the effect of the biblical revolution in India. Maybe
you could just flesh that out for people. And I know that's a terribly complicated thing
to do.
No, no, we can do the simple things from where we began. So this one is available, dialects are being turned into
languages so that every child has an opportunity to study, which it had never happened that the son
of a shepherd will learn to read right-do mathematics, son of a fisherman, a carpenter. This has never happened. So the nation
begins to rise up. Mughal are ruling Delhi for 250 years. They haven't built one hospital
for women in Delhi. The first hospital in Delhi is St. Stephen's hospital, which was born because of a 16-year-old English girl,
the Silla. She comes because her brother had been killed in 1857, revolt. She comes to bless
those who had killed her brother. And she sits by the river king Yamuna in Daryaganshin, Delhi and with its chest of medicines,
begin to give free medicines to women who have no one.
So here you have the modal empire for 250 years in Delhi, has not built one hospital for women in India, for their own women in Delhi,
when a 16-year-old girl comes and because Jesus said, go and preach the Kingdom of God and
heal the sick. So that compassion which the uppercast Indians just cannot understand because they don't have that compassion.
They are using medicine to make money.
There are exceptions, but by and large, the medicine has become a great driven business.
It's not a ministry of compassion which it used to be. So, agriculture. Indian agriculture is transformed.
William Carey himself, in 1820, he establishes the first agri-horticultural society in Calcutta.
No such society exists anywhere. He's not copying anything from England. He's realizing, because Charles Grant has written in 1793,
the pathetic state of agriculture in India.
So beginning with William Kerry,
all the builders of dams and irrigation canals, Sam Higanbatam.
I was professor in Sam Higanbatam University.
It was an institute when the book was published.
Now it's a university, Professor in Samhigan-Badam University, it was an institute when the book was published,
now it's a university, Samhigan-Badam University of Agriculture Technologies and Sciences.
Finally, Naurvan Burlock, the father of brain revolution in the entire transformation of
Indian agriculture, is a fruit of the Bible because this is what Isaiah has prophesied that
in the last days, the mountain of the Lord will be lifted up. Nations will flock to study God's law.
They will beat their swords into plough shares, their spears into pruning hooks, the instruments of agriculture and horticulture, because the Bible sees the curse upon
the ground, that ground will grow thorns and pistols, you will have to eat of the sweat of your brown.
The sin is not something that just takes your soul to hell,
that just takes your soul to hell. Still a result in curse upon the land,
agricultural productive.
And yeah, and destructive toil,
which you said, right,
within one of the things you pointed out was that
although there was tremendous respect,
so there's the sin-like aspect of toil,
but there's tremendous respect in the biblical corpus
for the idea of productive work, as opposed to pointless toil and the
multiplication of work for the enobo-ment of people. Yes, I have that very important
chapter on the rise of technology. When you refer to the wealth of Europe
came from colonial exploitation, nonsense, which is talked about,
the countries such as Switzerland which never colonized anyone, Finland, which never colonized anyone.
It was itself a colony of Sweden, but several hundred years, and then for Russia, of several hundred years.
These nations are blossom because of the and transformation, including the work,
work ethic, etc. So this is what the Bible brings to India. Although as the universities have removed
the Bible, Indians don't know their own history.
It's very impressive.
Yeah, well, welcome to the club.
Yeah, it's very embarrassing for a Hindu historian
to admit that it is simple 16 year old girl
who is just obeying Christ in compassion
that leads to the foundation of the first important,
first hospital in Delhi, etc.
But the entire transformation of agriculture, medicine, education, the transformation of languages that we have talked about.
And then eventually the political transformation and the amountcipation of India. Free press, legal system, we have 400,000 years of history and prehistory, not a single civilization
has given us a concept of rule of law, equality before law, justice for all, creation of civil services, which is called a steel frame of India. It was sons of the
pastors, of poor pastors in England. They sent their sons to India to build the Indian
civil services in the police force.
Right. Well, that's part of that. That's part of that strange notion too, that that's
biblical, I think, in its essence, that to lead is in the
truest sense to serve.
And yes, to lead is in the truest sense to serve those who need to be served most.
And that that's the highest possible ethical calling, which is a very strange, that's certainly not a brawman doctrine.
The doctrine there, the doctrine in any society that has an explicit or implicit caste system,
and that's pretty much any society, I would say, that's virtually any society perhaps
that doesn't have a biblical orientation, is that why in the world would you serve subordinates?
That's completely beyond comprehension. All that does is demean you.
Yes.
It's a transformation of leadership. Our first Prime Minister used to say that I'm Prime Minister,
which means that I'm the first servant Prime Minister, Minister is a servant. Now, I heard him when I was only 13 years old,
and I knew that he is saying that modern India had a political revolution
where kings began to lose their power,
servants began to increase their power.
The first servant became the most important office.
So this revolution began the night before good Friday.
When the King of Kings, the Lord of Lords got up
from the dining table, put on the King of Kings, the Lord of Lords, got up from the dining table,
put on the robe of the servant, took a basin of water, started washing the feet of his
disciples, and he said that the new kingdom that I have brought is different from the kingdoms
of this world.
Their rulers lured it over them, but amongst you whoever wants to be the greatest will become
the servant.
So this political revolution came into India, but we are losing it.
Political office now means the right to loot.
Education now means a university degree is a license to loot.
That's why our nations are are asked to wrap it up as they are because the all the senior officers
bankers police officers they're highly educated people but
University degree simply means the license to root if
Education is not a transformation of character of making you servant that you are being this privilege to serve your people, be a good neighbor.
Right. Look, I think that's a good place to stop. You know, that's a nice ending. Obviously,
we can talk for hours, and I would like to talk to you again, as I said, particularly about your
new work, but I appreciate this very much. I just reiterate for those who are listening, the book, I would say that is perhaps central to
the discussion we had today is called, is entitled, The Book that Made Your World. It was published
by Thomas Nelson in 2011. It's a tour de Forrest, I would say, conceptually and historically,
I would say conceptually and historically, conceptually because it brings to light in a very interesting way. And in the non-Western way, which is also extremely interesting, the truly
revolutionary nature of the distribution of the biblical writings. It's hard to overstate
their revolutionary significance. And then in terms of breadth and depth, while there's a wealth of
historical information that is encapsulated in the book, and it's written in a lovely style,
it was very straightforward read, despite its dense layering of information. And so I much
appreciated it and appreciate your conversation with me today. And I hope everybody who's listening found it thought-provoking and useful and valuable.
So, thank you so much. So, thank you again. Sure. Are you bad? Yeah, you're really good to talk to
you and thanks for your books a lot. Thank you for what you're doing. you