It’s the week after Passover and Easter—that, and the
political debate over gay marriage, makes it prime time to devote blog space to
the sorry state of organized religion in America. Today’s topic: The kidnapping
of Christianity by hypocrites, snake-oil salesmen, Pharisees, and Jihadists for
Jesus. There are thousands of devout folks in the hinterlands trying hard to
live their lives according to their understanding of holy writ, but the public
face of Christianity is one of intolerance, bigotry, and right-wing howler
monkeys. It is dominated by those quick to quote Scripture, but always
selectively, out of context, and devoid of any demonstrable understanding of
its deeper message.
First, a story that very few people know: I once entertained
thoughts of becoming a theologian. In my feckless youth (Is there any other
kind?), I was involved with a youth ministry. It was the 1970s, the tail end of
the Jesus Freaks movement, and my experience was mostly a combination of hanging
out with lots of semi-hip folks, and trying to help high school kids with
problems ranging from loneliness to substance abuse. I became fascinated with
religion and belief structures. In college I majored in medieval history, and read
Augustine, Anselm, and the Scholastics (with a special affinity for Aquinas).
Outside of class, I studied philosophy and theology from a very famous
theologian—both at a study center near Pittsburgh, and as a correspondence
student (on cassette tapes back then). When evangelicals ring my doorbell and
ask if I’ve read the Bible, I can truthfully reply, “Yes—the whole way through.
Several times.” But these experiences did not make me a man of the cloth; they
left me deeply suspicious of all organized religion.
My first crisis of faith was that I didn’t want to be a
minister. I wanted to study religion to
have a deeper understanding of it, not try to convert others to things I questioned. I found out that there
hadn’t been all that many jobs for a “theologian” since the 17th
century, and jobs in the field had been declining since the 14th.
Most current theologians were connected with specific churches and I couldn’t
see that happening for me. Catholicism? Not if I had to swallow papal
infallibility. Calvinism struck me as too austere and I couldn’t reconcile
predestination with Calvary. Other forms of Protestantism were overly focused
on hollow rituals, and non-aligned evangelicalism appeared, for the most part,
controlled by hucksters and crazies. Plus, as I said, I wanted to grapple with
ideas and doctrines to determine which ones resonated with me.
This led me to my second crisis: I learned enough to realize
that those saying they know the Word of God are self-deceived. When the howlers
say that their beliefs are correct, I ask, based on what? The Bible is often wielded
as if it was a thorny club rather than what I see it to be: meditations on how to live a moral life.
The only way one can view the Bible as an absolute guide to anything is see it
as the literal Word of God. Good luck
with that. It’s child’s play to dismantle such thinking without studying—as I
once did—textual criticism to do so. Problems abound, beginning in Genesis,
which mentions just three offspring of Adam and Eve: Abel, Cain, and Seth—all
males. Patriarchal Hebrews often ignored women in succession lines, but
humankind’s third generation, for literalists, can only come through incestuous
relations between Eve and her sons, or those sons with unnamed sisters. Does
this mean that the Bible condones incest? How does the third generation
reconcile with the condemnation of that custom in Leviticus 18:6?
These days I ponder why Christians are so hot to condemn
homosexuality. There’s the story of Sodom and Gomorrah (Genesis 19:1-11 and
Judges 19:16-30) and several other rather oblique passages, but just seven
references in total, and just three in the New Testament—the one Christians are
supposed to follow–all of which
largely rehash Leviticus. The same NT passages (I Corinthians 6:9-11, Romans
1:26-27, I Timothy 1:9-11] also all have nasty things to say about fornicators,
idolaters, liars, thieves, drunks, “revelers” (ahem!), and other sinful folks. The
Bible isn’t comfortable with homosexuality, but the NT uses terms such as
degrading, unnatural, shameful, disobedient, unholy, and sinful–not unlawful.
Most of the prohibitions refer to men, so I suppose casual lesbianism is a
little naughty, but okay. It’s interesting that gay sex was not forbidden by
the Ten Commandments, nor was it among the Catholic Church’s seven “deadly”
sins, which were drawn up by theologians of far keener minds than those of
today’s evangelical moralists. Nowhere does the Bible say, “The holy shall
lobby thy governments to discriminate and legislate against sodomites and shall
take up the cudgel of piety to bash them physically and metaphorically.”
I wonder why Christians selectively mine OT books such as
Leviticus. I don’t see them performing the rituals outlined in that book. I hear
no hue and cry when Americans commit other forbidden acts. Ever do any of the
following: eat rabbit, pork, or shellfish (Lev. 10]; fail to make a
menstruating wife or daughter live in a separate camp for seven days (Lev. 15);
or loan or borrow money with added interest rates (Lev. 25]? You too have
violated a “commandment” [Lev. 27]. And I’d say, from Leviticus 25, that if you
are a capitalist, God condemns your chosen lifestyle! (Or were you born that
way and can’t help it?) The Bible rags on homosexuals seven times; it condemns
the charging of interest sixteen
times.
Don’t get me started on Christians that shout “an eye for an
eye and a tooth for a tooth,” which the Bible cribbed from Hammurabi’s Code,
and which Jesus mentions only to say that the faithful must reject it. It’s
part of the Sermon on the Mount where Jesus tells followers not to resist evildoers, but to “turn
the other cheek” to he who strikes you and to offer your coat to he that seeks
to take your shirt! It also says that those who lust should cast out their right
eye, which makes me wonder why there aren’t more one-eyed preachers given the
propensity of today’s evangelicals to get caught with their pants down! Too
many modern Christians are akin to the minutiae-oriented Pharisees condemned in
Scripture for insisting upon the letter of the law and misunderstanding its
spirit.
These are among the reasons why I call myself a (mildly)
spiritual humanist, not a Christian. I want no part of smug fools who take what
they want from religious texts, leave the rest, and label the culling “truth.”
I don’t wish to associate with bigots quick to find fault with others while
calling their own shortcomings “righteousness.” And I utterly reject the call
to crusade from moralists who quote things they do not understand and implore
the masses to chase perdition falsely packaged as paradise. I have too many
doubts to tell others what to do. Doubt, Augustine of
Hippo, reminds us is the beginning of faith. Note that he said “faith,” not
certainty.
1 comment:
I never wanted to be a professional theologian, but with my snazzy Liberty U degree I accidentally paid for the minor.
"These days I ponder why Christians are so hot to condemn homosexuality." You should actually wonder why Christians condemn anyone considering Jesus penchant to hang around fornicators, tax cheats and political rebels.
I spent a lot of time wishing Christians would "stay out" of politics. I think I was wrong. I honestly believe Christians fight for the wrong policies. Specific societal issues are addressed by Jesus that the American Christian has simply ignored. That they happen to line up with modern political platforms is coincidental. Possible examples include: caring for the poor and disadvantaged, reformative penal system, peace among nations, the worth and rights of every individual. These and more of Jesus's principals are ideals that are built into how politics does business. We HAVE to figure out how to keep a social safety net, we HAVE to punish/reform criminals.
So Christians in America, I believe have missed the boat in the 20th century, well the latter half (Niebuhr brothers and MLKJr aside), in becoming the grassroots movement for Jesus principles. Thats the hard way, the difficult path. Christians do not want to be THAT kind of city on a hill, they want to be city HALL on the hill.
Legislating morality is the easy way out. Jesus (allegedly) claimed to be the King of the Jews, but did not seek a throne to rule from. If his example is to be followed, I would agree, Christians should "stay out of" politics. Or in other words, not legislate from the Bible in a secular world. But you can bet I will vote to care for the least of these and equality for all.
Summary: Christians should be democrats, but they are not.
Post a Comment