What might seem to be surprising to many of us is that Christianity has fostered any of these cultural developments. So......the Judeo-Christian culture has established the rule of law, codified respect for human rights and conceived constitutional democracy. It has engendered development of science and technology, as well as economic creativity and innovation.
Question for Debate: Does Christianity justifiably get credit for the rule of law, democracy, human rights and science?
Doing a little bit of research, I've found that the answer is not really. The rule of law, and democracy, as examples, predate Christianity and were first developed by Greek philosophers like Plato. The ideal of human rights postdates Christianity by many centuries and emerged in the philosophy of John Locke. Finally, science predates Christianity by thousands of years with the development of agriculture, astronomy, and mathematics.
If anything, Christianity as an apocalyptic sect has acted as an impediment to these cultural developments. Who needs the rule of law, human rights, and democracy when an all-powerful dictator is ready to put an end to the world as we know it? Such a tyrant cares little for voting or who has rights when he makes all the decisions. And what good is science when this god's magic can circumvent at any time what we expect from nature?



