This simply cannot be the global norm!
On September 19, 2012, Harvard professor Karen King dropped
a bombshell that is sure to reverberate throughout the West. She held in her
hands a scrap of 4th century Egyptian papyrus that quotes Jesus
mentioning his wife! If authenticated, King’s revelation undermines more than
two centuries of Roman Catholic teaching and the very rationale for the
celibacy of priests.
King’s announcement was greeted with rioting. Angry mobs
streamed out of the Vatican and clashed with Italian police. Forty people died
before the Italian military forced the surging mob back within the confines of
the Vatican. In Cambridge, Massachusetts, an estimated 5,000 Irish-American
Catholics forced their way onto the grounds of Harvard University. The mob,
marching behind a crucifix-emblazoned banner, toppled the statue of James
Harvard as they shouted “Mendacium!” (“A
lie!”), a direct slam at Harvard’s motto: “Veritas” (truth). Three Harvard
professors were pulled form their classrooms and were beheaded as the crowd chanted,
“Jesus is Lord!” Worldwide at least 17 other nations saw protests and a
reported 115 people have been killed.
You don’t remember hearing about this? Of course not. It
never happened. The only thing that’s true in the above two paragraphs is that
Professor King did, indeed, unveil a scrap of papyrus in which Jesus mentions a
wife. (She also said that she’s working with teams of experts to make certain
it’s not a forgery.) So why did I write this? To contrast it to the ridiculous
(and childish) reaction currently occurring in Muslim lands in reaction to, of
all things, a YouTube video.
In case you’ve tuned out the news, some jerk in California
calling himself Sam Bacile—yeah, I know, where you find a jerk in
California?—made a cheap movie in which Mohammed is depicted as a randy ladies’
man and a charlatan. Offensive and needlessly provocative? Of course it is, and
you don’t have to be a Political Correctness freak to condemn his actions. But a
better reaction is simply to ignore Bacile and allow him to obtain the
obscurity he so richly deserves. Instead, Muslims across the globe have stormed
U.S. embassies, burned flags, attacked citizens, and have killed at least 30
people. Congratulations! The disgusting and inexcusable carnage aside, the
major accomplishments of such actions have been to send thousands of people to
YouTube to watch the repulsive video, transform Bacile from an idiot into a
civil libertarian, cast Islam in a more negative light than Bacile could have
ever done, and encourage copycat parody, such as that found in the French journal
Charlie Hebdo, in which Mohammed
appears as a naked letch. The reaction to the French cartoons? Why more rioting
of course.
Let’s be blunt about the problem here. Muslims must stop
allowing fanatics to define them. This sounds clichéd, but it’s true: I know
numerous Muslims and they are sweet, loving, devout people. I’d much rather
spend time with them and have them as neighbors than the Bible-thumping zealots
who attend a nearby church. A lot of people associate riots and murder with all
Muslims. That’s very sad and it’s akin to associating all Christians with the
bloodthirsty murderers who gun down doctors who perform abortions. But the
cartoonist calling himself Luz who drew the French lampoons has a point when he
notes that the only time there have
been protests over the magazine’s content have been the three times he parodied
Islam. He also has a point when he says, “I live under French law. I don’t live
under Koranic law. I’m not the one going into the streets with stones and Kalashnikovs.”
I’ve never seen this French magazine, so maybe Luz is a jerk
also, but he’s not wrong about his defense. Here’s the deal—we live in the
Global Village. That means the world is a marketplace of ideas as well as
goods, including the concept of free expression (even if means freedom to be a
jerk). If Muslims wish to live in the modern world, they must purge themselves
of those who would cast them back to the 10th century and throw a
veil over the rest of the planet. Every religion contains zealots, fools, and
those who spread hatred and call it God’s will. What civilized nations do is prosecute such people; they don’t revere
them as leaders, prophets, or martyrs. Civilized nations also tolerate everyone’s beliefs. Sort of like what
Mohammed said when he told Muslims to respect all “the peoples of the book
(Scripture)” and specifically mentioned Jews, Christians, and Sabians!
Muslims have been slandered. Some of it is self-induced; Muslims
cannot expect respect when they blaspheme the traditions of others. Remember
the Afghan Taliban blowing up the Buddhas of Bamiyan in 2001? Remember the
beheading of Daniel Pearl? (A person “of the book.”) How many Muslims nations
demand Palestinian statehood? Compare that list to the number that recognizes
Israel’s right to exist. Remember the killing of two US soldiers because of a rumor (false as it turned out) that
soldiers willfully destroyed Korans? This must stop and Muslims must take the lead in wiping out those who
cast Islam in a murderous light.
If one wishes to live in the Global Village, one must put up
with (and learn to ignore) jerks–not because we wish to, but because it’s
simply too dangerous to impose any one variety of orthodoxy. So some fool burns
a Koran or a Bible. So what? Does this in any way diminish the power of God? Many
Americans view the nation’s flag as a sacred symbol. What if, every time
protestors in some far-off land desecrated an American flag, the United States
sent waves of bombers and Marines to lay waste to the offending nation? Can you
say “Armageddon?”
Muslims have a right to be angry when someone disrespects
their core beliefs. But civilized people do not resolve their problems with Kalashnikovs.
They do, as millions of Christians have done in the wake of the Jesus
revelation—they return to those core beliefs for solace. Muslim nations must learn
to accommodate difference, even boorish behavior, or they will find themselves persona non grata in the Global Village.
The veil of isolation will descend, not from the hands of extremists, but from the
Villagers who will ignore them.
2 comments:
i don't think Jesus' supposedly unmarried condition was the model for priestly celibacy, as Catholic priests weren't required to be (and were most certainly not!) celibate for hundreds of years after Jesus' death, and really not until the 1500s. It had a LOT more to do with money than sex (doesn't everything?) The church didn't want priests to have heirs, so their wealth would revert to the church. Jesus (if he even existed) was almost necessarily married, as a 33-year-old unmarried rabbi would have been unheard of 2000 years ago (or even today!)
My understanding is that *Roman* Christianity was celibate from the beg, in part b/c it took cues from Paul and the Epistles more than the Gospels (which were up for debate). But lots of Eastern Christian priests (Asia Minor, North Africa)married and Celtic lands Christians often went a step further and even allowed married female priests on occasion. But your larger point on land is well taken.
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