The thing is though Outrider, you don't strike me as someone who knows much about religious context. Fervent metaphors that don't make sense is more your area of expertise.
I don't think anyone 'knows' about religious context - they seem to decide fairly arbitrarily on 'context' that suits their purpose after the fact in order to justify the bits of the scripture that support what they want, and to ignore the bits that they've decided they don't. It's why you get such an enormously wide range of entirely scripturally-based opinions of what's 'true' Christianity and Islam and Judaism.
I was talking about your blind faith about religion that was outlined in your strange metaphor about hands.
I think you're carrying a figure of speech way, way further than it should have been taken... almost like you're trying to find a context that suits your purpose...
Does your faith
What 'faith' would that be, then?
...include believing that these two hands are controlled by a shared brain or are they two disembodied hands that aren't connected to each other, in which case why pick hands?
It's a common literary tool to ascribe activities to notional 'hands', because as humans that's largely how we achieve things - with our hands. In this instance it worked particularly well, because we have two hands (in the main), and there were two different examples of activity to refer to. As with any metaphor, if you try to take it further than it can reasonably go, it starts to fall over - there was never a need for a consideration of whether there was a brain involved (or eyes, or feet, or gloves, or wedding rings, or fingerprints...)
People kill in the name of words in numerous places around the world.
In the name of words? Really? Right now there's a significant number of situations where people are killing in the name of their religion - perhaps the 'word' there is god?
We could apply your metaphor to the two hands of language: Pretty words like "People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite.” is just an apparently harmless innocuous situation that allows more immediately harmful ideas to survive, such as a formal declaration of war by a nation state.
Apart from the questionable veracity of 'loves comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite' - is 'love' the opposite of 'hate', or is 'apathy'? Do people love more easily than hate, that's not my experience of life.
Of course, maybe this "two hands of language" does not form part of your particular beliefs or world view?
By Jove, I think she's got it!
You might just like to stick to the two hands of religion belief. Bit like some people finding a belief in Islam more appealing than Christianity.
A bit like thinking mustard is 'more true' than ketchup...
O.