IN TWO MINDS:
The Anatomy of a Christian Hate Letter
Letter Two:
Webmaster's note: This is a series that should be read in sequence to be understood.
It is strongly suggested that you begin with the introduction first!
this letter was written by Valerie Tarico
Dear
Brian,
Your
experience, I’m afraid, is
familiar to many former
believers.
Even
though I have researched some of
the worst of Christian history,
the Evangelical child in me
continues to marvel at things
that are said in defense of the
God of Love and Truth.
After all, I believed
in the fruit of the Spirit.
I believed
in Jesus who told us to turn the
other cheek.
So, I was shocked when I
first read profanity and threats
of personal violence against the
stewards of exChristian.net,
losingmyreligion.com, and even
the Ontario Center For Religious
Tolerance (religioustolerance.org)!
Somehow,
even though 20 years had passed
since I could last call myself
born-again, a part of me still
believed that Christians were
better than ordinary people.
It was only when I caught
myself and stepped into my adult
psychologist mind that I
remembered:
we all
are ordinary
people—Hindus, Buddhists,
Muslims, Christians, and
non-theists alike.
Being
ordinary means that we all have
a tendency to become aggressive
when we feel threatened, and
that is what I believe is going
on here.
In your brother’s
email, he interprets your prior
letter as a threat—you are
trying to provoke a “hate
fest.”
He then moves against you
with sarcasm, distancing, and a
posture of psychological and
spiritual superiority.
Why
is your deconversion and that of
so many others threatening?
Why does even the concept
of religious tolerance threaten
fundamentalist Christians?
Why would anonymous
followers of Jesus, incredibly,
make death threats against
former Christians who speak out?
The
primary reason is that
Christianity is brittle.
You and I both spent
years of our lives seeking to
understand the will of God.
But sometimes even when people
are working very hard to keep
the edifice of belief in place,
it crumbles. That is
because it doesn’t correspond
very well to what we know about
ourselves and the world around
us.
At the time Christian
doctrines were emerging, they
were basically consistent with
the prevailing world view –
one that included hereditary
dynasties, animal and human
sacrifices, magic, and
supernatural beings like winged
messengers and desert djinns
(demons) who meddled in human
affairs.
They were also consistent
with humanity’s level of moral
development.
But now we know better,
and that makes faith more
fragile.
Once little cracks allow
light to fall on the
contradictions, we see that they
are legion.
So the whole thing
depends on not letting those
first little cracks start.
The
structure of Christianity has
evolved to protect itself
against these threats.
For one thing, it makes exclusive
truth claims.
It doesn’t take the
risk of assuming that other
spiritual traditions offer
complementary insights.
Fundamentalists teach
that “tolerance” is a code
word for being indifferent to
right and wrong.
It is a slippery slope, a
tool of Satan.
Another protective
strategy is that Christianity
seeks to isolate
believers from nonbelievers.
“be not unequally
yoked.”
Even settings like public
schools are described as havens
of secular indoctrination.
Another
protective mechanism is that it sneers
at the accumulation of knowledge
and wisdom. “Thinking
themselves wise they become
fools.” Christians are taught
to mistrust and ignore their own
rational capacity when it leads
them into disagreement with
Christian dogmas.
Fundamentalist
Christianity is based on belief
in belief, which means that
doubt, our best guardian of
truth seeking, must be relabeled
as a sin or vice.
In addition, because of
how our brains are wired,
Christianity taps some of our deepest
most yearned-for emotions:
love, peace, forgiveness,
absolution, spiritual healing
and transcendent joy.
Humans can and do
experience these feelings in
many contexts, but Christian
practices trigger them, and then
Christian beliefs offer an
interpretive framework that says
“You get it here, and you
won’t get it anywhere else.”
Finally, all of this is
given existential
proportions, meaning that
people are taught (and then feel
desperately) that this is
all a matter of highest
urgency—protecting these
beliefs literally feels like a
matter of life and death.
Your
brother is merely responding as
any of us do when our very
existence feels threatened.
The fight/flight response
gets triggered.
He experienced a sabre-toothed
tiger outside the cave, and he
responded in the way that has
helped to guarantee the survival
of our species:
he bared his (verbal)
fangs and used his adrenalin
rush to roll a rock across the
opening.
The problem lies not in
your brother.
Or rather, I might say,
it is in him but not of him.
He is caught by a belief
system that activates his
healthy defensive structure for
its own preservation.
Having left the faith,
you and I both know that we lost
neither our joy nor our moral
core.
We are as capable of love
and generosity as before.
He would be fine on the
outside – still himself with
many of the very same strengths
and weakness that bless and
curse him now.
But your brother, in the
throes of faith cannot know
this.
Valerie
Want to review another letter in this series? Just click the link below.
Introduction Letter Letter 1 Letter 3 Letter 4 Letter 5 Letter 6
Brian's note: Valerie has written in greater detail about this and other rare subject matter in her book. Please visit the following links!
The Dark Side: How Evangelical Teachings Corrupt Love and Truth
Valerie Tarico Jan. 2008 All rights reserved.