Frank
Schaeffer
Former
president Jimmy Carter went on
the record to point out that he
believes that racism is at the
heart of the great deal of the
extreme animosity being leveled
at President Obama (NBC
News September 15). Carter
identified himself as a
Southerner with an insider's
understanding. There's
something he didn't mention
however: the special culpability
of his own religion --
Evangelical Christianity -- for
the anti-Obama hyperventilating
and furious reaction to our
first black president. And that
reaction has less to do with
race and more to do with the
ugliest side of religion.
The fact is that if you're going
to blame one group above all
others for the willful ignorance
and continuing ugliness of the
response to President Obama the
best candidate would be the
evangelical/fundamentalist
community. The angry part
of the South Carter spoke of is
racist because it's dominated by
a certain type of
"Christian" culture.
Since Carter is also an
evangelical Christian (as well
as a Southerner) he would have
done well to use his evangelical
insider status to point to not
just racism but to scream bloody
murder about a bigger problem
today: the hijacking of
Christianity as the source of
the hate and anger directed
against all things
"other" by a vocal
(and health care lobby-organized
and funded) angry minority
of voters who are poisoning the
American body.
American Christianity Is
At The Heart Of Our Worst
Problems
Are the New Atheists leading us
to enlightenment? The problem
with the recent New Atheist
attacks on Christianity is that
they mirror the hostility of the
evangelical/fundamentalist
subculture toward the secular
society that it so disdains.
The real answer to the question;
"Can Christianity be saved
from the Christians?" is
not going to be found coming
from people like Dawkins,
Hitchens and Harris et al.
Instead that answer may be found
in the life and work of
Christians such as former
president Jimmy Carter,
President Obama, the late
writer John Updike, and other
public figures from Desmond Tutu
to Nelson Mandela who's faith
can be taken seriously because
of the moral authority given
them by their achievements
outside the realm of theology.
The people running around
calling Obama is
"Hitler", the
so-called "birthers"
and all the rest can't be
understood outside of the
context of the hermetically
sealed world-hating gated
community known as Evangelical
Christianity. As a former
Evangelical and son of an
Evangelical Religious Right
leader, let me share a little of
the insider perspective that I
wish Carter had brought to the
subject.
What Defines American
Evangelicals These Days?
The key to understanding the
Evangelicals is to understand
the popularity of the Left
Behind series of books
about the "return of
Christ" (and the whole host
of other End Times
"ministries" from the
ever weirder
Jack-the-Rapture-is-coming!-Van-Impe
to the smoother but no less
bizarre pages of Christianity
Today magazine). This isn't
some new or sudden interest in
prophecy, but evidence of the
deepening inferiority complex
suffered by the
evangelical/fundamentalist
community.
Left Behind
The words "left
behind" are ironically what
the books are about, but not in
the way their authors intended.
The evangelical/fundamentalists,
from their crudest egocentric
celebrities to their
"intellectuals"
touring college campuses trying
to make evangelicalism
respectable, have indeed been
left behind by modernity. They
won't change their literalistic
anti-science, anti-education,
anti-everything superstitions,
so now they nurse a deep
grievance against "the
world."
This has led to a profound fear
of the "other."
Jenkins and LaHaye (the Left
Behind authors) provide the
ultimate revenge fantasy for the
culturally left behind against
the "elite." The Left
Behind franchise holds
out hope for the
self-disenfranchised that at
last soon everyone will know
"we" were right and
"they" were wrong.
They'll know because Spaceship
Jesus will come back and whisk
"us" away, leaving
everyone else to ponder just how
very lost they are because they
refused to say the words,
"I accept Jesus as my
personal savior" and join
our side while there was still
time!
The bestselling status of the Left
Behind novels proves
that, not unlike Islamist
terrorists who behead their
enemies, many evangelical/
fundamentalist readers relish
the prospect of God doing lots
of messy killing for them as
they watch in comfort from on
high. They want revenge on all
people not like them--forever.
Generations Of
Indoctrination
We are several generations into
the progeny of leaders such as
James Dobson and his radio show
Focus On The Family. These
offspring extol the virtues of
corporal punishment, patriarchy,
applying biblical law to public
governance and so forth.
Millions of evangelicals have
been raised in homes where
they've been isolated from the
wider culture, home schooled
and/or sent to "Christian
schools" where they have
been indoctrinated to believe
that the Federal Government is
the enemy of all true believers,
that the "End" is
near, that secular society is
their enemy as is art, learning
and culture.
They now form a Fifth Column of
the deliberately intellectually
disenfranchised. They know they
are out of the loop and hate the
rest of us for their own
self-imposed isolation. I'm
afraid they will soon turn to
violence.
Here Are The
Alternatives To Change the
Theologically-Induced Hate
Landscape:
A) all sane Americans must
become atheists or agnostics,
or...
B) those of us who are
Christians must rescue
Christianity from the willfully
ignorant evangelicals and
fundamentalists.
I favor the second alternative.
First, having been raised in an
evangelical/fundamentalist home
I've long since moved beyond my
background when it comes to my
politics and my theology. That
proves something; people can
change their minds! I did.
But I believe more strongly than
ever that we human beings are
spiritual beings with or without
the permission of those who take
a purely rationalist approach to
human existence. The
better -- and I think only
realistic option -- is to regard
religion as an evolving process
of human consciousness and work
to reform rather than eliminate
it
In my soon-to-be published book Patience
With God: Faith For People Who
Don't Like Religion (Or Atheism) I
have very deliberately started a
radical conversation through
which I hope many of us can
carve out a position that
embraces religion while
absolutely rejecting the type of
insanity that has become
synonymous with the word
"Christian" in
contemporary America.
Two
"Threads" In Religion
As I argue in my new book the
choice between the absolutist
secular fundamentalism of the
New Atheism and the
authoritarianism of James
Dobson's-type of
"Christianity" is no
choice at all. The better
alternative is to understand
that there are two main threads
running all through almost all
religions including
Christianity:
1) an
open, inclusive and questioning
thread
and...
2) a closed and exclusionary
thread.
The more open thread is not some
modern phenomenon developed by
"liberal thinking." As
I explain in Patience With God
this "thread" can be
found in the earliest
Christianity and Judaism.
If you look around and see
good results from Christianity,
say from the invention of modern
hospitals, which have their
roots in religious groups or the
music of JS Bach, you're looking
at the fruits of the best of the
open tradition and thread.
When you see a group of scared
racist white people like Joe
Wilson in Washington DC
screaming "liar" or
"Obama is a socialist"
or "Obama wasn't born in
America" you're seeing the
madness of the other thread:
fundamentalism that wants
absolute certainty about
everything, and forces its
followers to live in a narrower
and narrower field of existence.
Conclusion
Christianity is worth saving
from the Christians for two
reasons. First, because as
moral and spiritual beings
religion should feed our souls
rather then strip out our
humanity. Second, because
whether we like it or not,
religion is here to stay. Better
to shape it rather than to
simply denounce it.
I may be an idealist but I
believe that if others will step
forward and add to what I have
tried to begin with my new book
together we can give good
answers to both the extremes of
the New Atheists and to the hate
of the Evangelical
fundamentalists. Join me to
build a better vision. We might
actually be able to change the
conversation in America about
religion.
Is that important? Yes, like it
or not religion will not go
away. It motivates the worst in
the American psyche and some of
the best too. It is Joe Wilson's
religion of hate but it also
motivated Martin Luther King Jr.
Perhaps a generation from now
the image of a typical Christian
won't be a hate-monger like
James Dobson but rather a lover
of peace such as Bishop Desmond
Tutu, or a literary giant like
John Updike, and yes, a
President Obama.
The only real answer to the
hijacking of Christianity by the
Religious Right, the longevity
of religion-based racism, and
the backward and inward looking
movement we now call
"American
Christianity" is not to
talk everyone out a having faith
but rather to fight for the
humane and ancient thread found
within the Christian tradition.
Blaming everything on race is
too easy.
If you get the chance to read
Patience With God please let me
know what you think of it. I'm
asking one big question in the
book: Can Christianity be
rescued from the Christians? You
tell me.
posted
by
Brian
Worley January 21,
2010
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