When God Stops Fighting: How Religious Violence Ends

Mark Juergensmeyer image

By Kennedi Macklin and Kate Eubanks

On February 8, 2024, the Boniuk Institute's Reading Religion Salon welcomed nearly 40 members of the Rice campus community to a special open salon session to discuss religious violence, both past and present, with Mark Juergensmeyer, a sociologist of religion and author of When God Stops Fighting: How Religious Violence Ends.

Eduard van der Merwe
Eduard van der Merwe

During an informative interview led by Boniuk Institute scholar Eduard van der Merwe, Juergensmeyer shared his perspective on how religious conflicts start and end, and offered comments on religious violence related to the current Israel-Hammas conflict in Gaza. Juergensmeyer suggested that religious conflicts come to an end when both sides maintain a balance of equal power and are able to understand the opposing side's worldview. Religious violence fades when participants lose faith in leadership, there is a fracture in the structure of the organization, or alternate opportunities are realized, often through compromise or the conveying of hope for social, political, and economic opportunities. When asked about how to maintain peace after religious conflicts end, Juergensmeyer said that sustaining peace is difficult, as people will always have fanatical ideas; however, there are ways that these ideas can be transformed and lived with.

Following the interview, van der Merwe led a discussion of When God Stops Fighting, in which salon attendees commented on some of the strategies, stories, and resolutions outlined in the book. One highlight from this discussion was how the idea of "cosmic war" makes it difficult to distinguish between innocent and non-innocent individuals, thus leading to an inability to see war casualties or even humans. The robust discussion provided ample opportunity for salon scholars and Rice community guests to voice questions and consider various viewpoints about religious violence and its end, especially in regard to current international conflicts.

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