Zoroaster — "He who is righteous, him I shall praise, but him who is wicked, him I shall deno…"

He who is righteous, him I shall praise, but him who is wicked, him I shall denounce.
Zoroaster — Zoroaster Ancient · Founder of Zoroastrianism

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About Zoroaster (c. 1500-1000 BCE (debated))

Iranian prophet who founded Zoroastrianism, the first major religion of cosmic dualism between good (Ahura Mazda) and evil (Angra Mainyu). Closely associated with The Buddha (near-contemporary Eastern moral-cosmological revolutionary). For an intellectual contrast, see Friedrich Nietzsche, German philosopher of 'beyond good and evil' — Nietzsche appropriated Zarathustra's name for Thus Spoke Zarathustra (1883) precisely to invert the original's moral cosmology — the historical Zoroaster founded the good-versus-evil framework Nietzsche's character announces the end of.

Details

Gathas, Yasna 49.7

Date: -1000 to -600 (approximate)

General

Verification

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Found in 1 providers: grok

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Understanding this quote

What it means

The speaker commits to moral clarity: good people deserve open praise, and wrongdoers deserve open criticism. There is no neutral middle ground, no silence that protects the wicked or ignores the virtuous. In modern terms, it is a pledge to call good and evil by their real names publicly, treating ethical judgment as a personal duty rather than a private opinion kept to oneself to avoid social friction.

Relevance to Zoroaster

Zoroaster built an entire religion on this exact binary: Asha (truth, order, righteousness) against Druj (the Lie, disorder, wickedness). As a reforming priest-prophet who rejected the older polytheistic Iranian cults and their ritualistic amorality, he demanded personal ethical choice from every believer. The Gathas, his own hymns, are full of first-person declarations like this one, where he personally aligns with Ahura Mazda and names deceivers rather than tolerating them.

The era

Zoroaster lived in Bronze-Age eastern Iran, likely between 1500 and 1000 BCE, among pastoral tribes whose religion centered on blood sacrifice, warrior-gods, and intoxicant rituals led by a priestly caste. Morality was tribal and transactional, not universal. By preaching a cosmic struggle between truth and the Lie where every individual's words and deeds counted, he broke sharply from that world, and open praise and denouncement were radical acts of religious and social reform.

AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].

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