Rules are for twonks. I’m not just making this up, the Bible says so… kind of: Knowing this, that the law is not made for a righteous man, but for the lawless… – I Timothy 1:9. I suggest you get your copy of The Case for God: What Religion Really Means by Karen Armstrong and liberate your mind.

It seems to me that most rules get made because some bozo screwed up. “No coffee in the reception area!” Guess how that rule came about. So now we all have to live at a standard that the gorilla from the 3rd floor can manage without trashing the furniture.

In the UK I can’t carry a knife. Why? Because some knuckle-draggers can’t resist stabbing people. So the law treats us all like maniacs who can’t be trusted with sharp objects.

Now, I know we need laws. And I’m blurring the distinction between a law and a rule. Major laws, like those against murder and violent attacks are fine. But the problem with the incessant rule-making of our condescending rulers is that they consistently miss the mark because they aim at easy targets. It’s easier to stop me carrying a pocket knife than to stop the utter scum who gets his kicks from slashing anyone who looks at him. Enforce the laws he is already breaking! But politicians prefer to make more laws. How could that improve the lowest depths of human nature?

The government now wants us all to carry ID cards. They tell us it’ll help counter all sorts of societal ills like terrorism and fraud. No it won’t. First the IT system will fail, then the project budget will explode, then the terrorists will attack anyway (only they’ll have nice shiny ID cards when they do), and the fraudsters will counterfeit the cards. Yet more rules made because of scum, that will not make them one bit less scummy.

Rules are for other people. Rule makers are notorious for ignoring the rules. I feel this point is so obvious it doesn’t even need documentation. Rules are used by those in authority to wield power over the masses. Government ministers set the state school curriculum, then send their kids to private schools.

Did you ever see the film, “The Cider House Rules”? Michael Caine’s character runs a remote orphanage with complete contempt for the rules made by people who rarely visit and have no concept of what it takes to run the place.

Rules don’t inspire me. Rules can never bring out the best in people because they treat people like they are stupid. If you treat people as stupid, that’s what you get.

Greatness requires breaking rules. Who do you really respect in human history? Think about it…
Gandhi? – You don’t protest like that!
Martin Luther King? – You can’t say that!
The Apollo Program personnel? – You can’t go there!
They broke rules of convention, received wisdom, and even the law.

What about great fictional characters – think of books or films. How exciting would they be if the hero played it by the book. That tells me that we aspire to be above the rules. We instinctively know that being a goody-two-shoes, dotting every ‘i’ and crossing every ‘t’ is boring and only a shadow of all we can be.

What about Jesus? He healed on the Sabbath, ate with the publicans and sinners. He broke enough rules to get himself executed. He also summed up hundreds of Old Testament laws in two commandments – Love God and love your neighbour. That’s what I’m talking about. He knew that if you want to inspire people, you’ve got to trust them to figure something out for themselves.

The hundreds of laws in the Old Testament kept a check on society, but they were not enough. People are not improved by the imposing of restrictions from outside. Something has to spark on the inside. When people love God and love their neighbour, they don’t need petty rule-makers, they need freedom.

I recommend you get your copy of 36 Arguments for the Existence of God by Rebecca Goldstein.  The book illustrates how on the street and in the corridors of power, religion is surging all over the world. From Russia to Turkey to India, nations that swore off faith in the last century, or even tried to stamp it out, are now run by avowedly religious leaders, and the destabilising effects of religion can be seen far from Iraq or the ruins of the World Trade Centre. Formerly secular conflicts like the one in Palestine have taken on an overtly religious cast, and religion plays a role in civil wars from Sri Lanka to Sudan. Along the tenth parallel, from West Africa to the Philippines, religious fervour and political unrest are reinforcing each other.

Since the Enlightenment, intellectuals have assumed that modernization would kill religion, and that religious America is an oddity. God Is Back argues that religion and modernity can thrive together, and that the American way of religion is becoming the norm. Many things helped spark the global religious revival in the twenty-first century, including the failure of communism and the rise of globalisation; it is now being fuelled above all by market competition and a customer-driven approach to salvation. These are the qualities which have characterized America since the Founders separated church and state, creating a free market in religion defined by entrepreneurship, choice, and personal revelation, and as market forces reshape the world, the tools and ideals of American evangelism are now spreading everywhere.

The global rise of faith will have a dramatic and far- reaching impact on our century. God Is Back shines a bright light on this hidden world of faith, from exorcisms in São Paulo to religious skirmishing in Nigeria, to harassed Muslims in India and vibrant house churches in China (where there are already more Christians than Communist Party members). If you want to understand the politics of this century, you cannot afford to ignore God, whether you believe in Him or not.