Alas, this bumper sticker is all too apt.
In 1927, Sigmund Freud penned his classic take-down of
religion, The Future on an Illusion. Freud
was an avowed atheist and he saw all faith as a form of infantilization, with
God playing the role of a collective father in a society that refused to grow
up. Much as a single child must symbolically slay his parents to develop his
independent identity, so too must society cast off suspicion, dogma, and myth
to take charge of its destiny. (To be fair, Freud did see some usefulness in
religion, though he thought all faith was bunk.)
I lack Freud’s certainty over such matters, but he may be
correct in ways he never anticipated insofar as organized religion goes. Several recent incidents–all related to
the enduring sexism of religion–suggest that the women of the world may unite
and abandon churches, mosques, and synagogues. If this happens, the center will
not hold. The historical record has been very clear: although men have, for
centuries, dominated the ranks of theology and leadership, women have made up
congregations in much higher numbers than men. It has been their lay work that
has sustained religious institutions, both ideologically in the sense of
proselytizing family members, and financially in the sense of raising money to
support religious infrastructure. Take women out of the equation and you will
see a generation of priests, mullahs, and rabbis preaching to empty buildings.
If you want to see an institution that’s woefully mired in
the past, take a trip to the Vatican. It’s impressive and contains priceless
art, but it has all the future promise of a mausoleum, which is what it
essentially is. (The new pope, Francis I, refuses to live in an opulent
apartment and has opted for voluntary simplicity in his quarters. Good for him,
but is it enough?) Can’t afford a trip to Rome? Take a look in your own town at
the former monuments to male vanity being desacralized and put on the market
for lack of congregations. The same thing is happening with many Protestant
churches. Why? One reason might be that the male leadership of these places
spends more time with rightwing politics and anti-abortion movements than with
pastoral care.
The recent assaults on women’s right to choose in states
such as Indiana and Texas are testament to the refusal of men to respect
women’s minds, bodies, equality, or rights. And excuse me if I think that the
Catholic Church, which is yet to take full responsibility for decades of child
molestation, simply lacks the moral authority to lecture anyone on the sanctity
of life. Many male Protestant leaders are even worse; they think communion
wafers ought to have G.O.P. elephants embossed on them. All of them wonder why
so many women have been leaving the church. And they are–at the rate of about
50,000 per year in England and even higher numbers in the United States. Women
also vote for the Democrats in much higher numbers in America. Think that might
be because a lot of them figure that supporting organized religion or the
Republican Party is akin to having unprotected sex with partners they despise?
Judaism has also struggled with sexism, as recent assaults
on women attempting to pray at Jerusalem’s Wailing Wall attests. I’ll give
Judaism credit for studying the problem to a far greater degree than
Christians, but Orthodox Judaism is still pretty bleak for women. A new
generation of female rabbis, mostly among Reform and (often inaptly named)
Conservative Jews has taken up the task of putting a more female-friendly
reading on the Torah, but this remains a work in progress and, one must face
it, the Old Testament is a deeply patriarchal work. Female Jews could hardly be
heartened by a recent lecture from a Manhattan rabbi telling them to have more
babies. Is this a problem? According to data collected by a Harris poll, just
16% of American Jews attend synagogue and nearly half doubt the existence of
God. Ouch!
It needs to be said, though, that Christian and Jewish
sexists are practically devotees of Betty Friedan in comparison to the sexist
cesspool that is modern Islam. Here’s a statement that speaks volumes: the most
articulate voice in the Muslim world in support of human rights is a
sixteen-year-old girl. That would be Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani schoolgirl
shot in the head by the Taliban for the perceived blasphemy of going to school.
She has become an advocate for women’s education and for tolerance, the latter
commodity in short supply among the male Islamists who dominate the headlines.
Are they a minority? One would hope so, but where the male Muslim voices to
counter those of the Taliban and its ilk? Why do we see young men carrying Kalashnikovs
instead of exposing terror networks? Why do Muslim men take out their anger on
Muslim women? What important male Muslim leaders speak on behalf of women in places
such as Pakistan, Afghanistan, Sudan, Palestine, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iran, or
Iraq? Moreover–as this blog pointed out months ago–the Syrian opposition to
Assad is now busy killing each other–in the name of Al Qaeda versions of Islam.
Call it a vision of a veiled Syria.
Was Freud right about the need for society to put aside
childish beliefs? I don’t know about that–it still seems to me that personal
faith can produce true beauty, astonishing acts of selflessness, and powerful
moral voices. But the loudest voices simply cannot be ones of hatred or sexism if the faiths
they represent are to remain relevant. Mao Zedong famously observed, “Women
hold up half the sky.” It wouldn’t be the world’s greatest tragedy if they put
down that burden and let the planets tumble down upon the heads of arrogant
male religious leaders.
1 comment:
"it still seems to me that personal faith can produce true beauty, astonishing acts of selflessness, and powerful moral voices."
But isn't the relevant question, would the beauty, acts of selflessness, and morality cease to exist without the superstition? Is faith in ancient religions the only source of uplifting influence, or would a more realistic understanding of the world yield similar (or even better) results?
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