2018: Wave
Goodbye to
Another Year in
Religion
Daniel Schultz, in Religion dispatches, Dec 20, 2018
From sexual abuse to white nationalism,
a fake rabbi, atheists behaving badly, and politicized pastries, 2018 had
little going for it on the religion front.Nobody was
this optimistic.
Note: “A religion-less 2019?” Possible? “IMPOSSIBLE!”, is the roaring shouts, instantly coming back, it looks. Of course a crowd has many heads, not one mind! I may pacify myself. Perhaps the question itself is misleading. The needle of the question is pointing to “Organized Religions”, not individual beliefs and practices.
“Recedant
vetera, nova sint omnia!”
(“Let bygones be bygones, let everything be new,”)says a Latin proverb. In 2019, what is going to be the SHAPE and SIZE of Organized Religions, is
what the question targets at. “Matham” in
Malayalam literally means, Opinion, view, individual conviction, in short freedom of
opinion, which is impossible to wipe out, nor is it right to do it.
All through 2018 we
have been constantly barraged with shouts of a “Congress-mukt Bharat” taparing
off now to a “Modi-mukth” or “Violence and cold-blooded murder-mukth Bharath”
of innocents. Understood in the last ‘murder-mukth’ sense, there can never be two
opinions. So the clarified question comes down to: “Is most of the murder in
India, caused by religious hatred, rivalries, conflicts and clashes?” This is what the question aims at, to be studied and
analaysed to find right solutions.
What about atheists?
Considering the fact
most people are religious or believers,
what about unbelievers and atheists? The curt answer is, for Communits
and atheists their belief system and conviction force them not to believe in a
living God. So they cry: “God is dead!” Of course we have to leave them free to
stay put in their conviction of no to religion. Even the most religious person
like the Pope allows them to do so.
Today we claim to
livre in a world of enlightenment, of reason and scientific proof for what we
believe and practice. That leaves little room for blind beliefs, traditional ritualistic
religious practices called superstitions. Result is the mass exodus, mostly of
the younger generation from the bonds organized religions controlled by
so-called, self-styled Godmen, Achariyas, Gurus, Mullas, Bishops in various
churches, all living in comfort zones variously
called ‘Devalokam’, Cathedral palaces of bishops etc. They claim to posses
hot-lines to God almighty as basis for the authority they wield.
Younger
Generation?
The simple folks with little
general knowledge to illiterates, the ‘Hoi Poloi’ are simply led by their nose
without questioning, due to their ignorance. But not so are the educated
younger generation, who seek rational, scientific basis for what they are asked
to think and act. Hence the sudden spurt in the number of those who label themselves as ‘NONES’,(not
believing in any religion) and have waved good
bye to all organized religions.
History is the great
teacher. Religious or political beliefs and conflicting ideologies have been
the root cause of all wars and conflicts. In the religious field crusades
of the Catholic church stand out as their monumental failure to give spiritual
and moral leadership, for which they hang their heads in utter shame even
today. That was their topmost ‘counter witness’ to their name’s-sake: Jesus Christ,
who came to bring peace on earth, “Loka Samasta Sukino Bavantu, Acche Din”, not war!
What about India today?
Unfortunately what is
happening in the land of light and spirituality, Hinduism itself which is credited with the
above cited prayer of all humane humans every where? Today the Hindutva wadies shout in unison saying, the geographical space called
“Bharat” is to be the home of those who
believe in Hinduism only and none other? In doing so, aren’t they throwing the baby with the bath water?
What is worse, their shouts are becoming louder and shriller ever since
the BJP government came into power!
In fact Hinduism, pure
and simple, is more universal than even the Catholic Church, althouth
the word ‘Ctholic’ should have meant ‘Universal’. Hinduism has room even for
atheists! Do other religions accept them as members of their own family? Think
of the irreconcilable fight going on in
Sabarimala and Ayodhya. How does it chime with the Hinduism’s prayerful
soul-cry: “Vasudaiv Kudumbakam! where all live happily as in God’s own
family! Can we find a greater contradiction between belief and practice any
where else in the world?
Find the
hidden devil
Who is the devil in
the detail? How has this “Faux pas”, this blunder, this mistake
this indiscretion, this impropriety crept into our thinking and actions? The latest is the news
splashed on TV today about a village
school in Utherkand under BJP rule where girls are forbidden to go to school on
their menstruating days, thereby forcing them to miss their class 80 days per
year, something similar to what is being imposed on Sabarimala pilgrims due to
medieval mind set, patriarchy, misogyny and superstitious religious beliefs.
And we already wrote: ‘Superstition is empty shell of religions without ‘AN ELEMENT OF TRUTH.’
In
Utherkand village shool, if the
teachers, the parents and the educated leaders of the place have failed
to run the school according to civilized rules, who should have set things
right, if not the government of the State? If they fail to act, is it not
because they too are possibly prisoners and blind believers in
superstitious religious practioners? Being
such they were first forced to deny
gender justice to women, who make up half of humanity, as is happening in
Sabarimala! What a shameful, cruel injustice done to India’s girl children in
Utherkand!
Vasudeiva
Kudumbakam or Hindutva?
When
are we Indians going to join the enlightened comity of nations? In the next
century? Not in any case, as long as the promoters of Hindutva rools the roost. Do we need more
plausible arguments to prove that Organized Religions should DIE at the
earliest, not God, religiosity or spirituality. Wether one believes in God or
not, “Manava seva is
Madhava seva.”
As the ideal Son of Man has said: “When you have done
to these little ones of mine – the poor, the needy, the afflicted and
marginalized -- you have done to me.”
That
Organizerd Religion alone, is most disorganized,
detestable and worse than paganism, which
fails to
help you to see God in the person with a begging bawl in front of you and fails to worship him/her
in the heart of your hearts! The least, a true religion should prompt
you and me to do is to befriend such a person FIRST
with your BODY language,
a smile, not a frown on your face; and SECOND
with kind and soothing brotherly/sisterly words gently spoken, not SHOUTS. That
alone is: VASUDEIVA
KUDUMBAKAM!
james kottoor,
editor ccv.
Please read below article ‘Goodby to
2018 of Organized Religions!
Late in December, a dark and solemn
quiet falls across the land, as journalists finally begin to reckon with the
fact that they’re completely out of gas, and the only thing standing between
them a blissful-if-impoverished holiday rest is that one last deadline.
Then, quicker
than Rudolph making excuses for his day drinking, they leap to that most
desperate of ploys: the year-end wrapup.
Religion
Dispatches may be immune to this sort of thing, but sadly, I’m not. Therefore,
stand by for a link-heavy, in-no-particular-order look back at the year that
was. Oh, and how it was!
Billy Graham died in 2018. So did James Cone (a blow to black theology), Eugene Peterson and Aretha Franklin. If you don’t
know why the last of those is a religion story, you need to go find her
album Amazing Grace and put it on your playlist. Now, please.
As a matter of fact, this
whole religion thing? Dead, according to 2018. Young people around the world are disaffiliating from religious faith. Surprisingly
or perhaps not, American youngs are leaving evangelical Christianity more quickly than other Christian brands,
perhaps because of its full-throated embrace of conservative
politics. The trend has been
good for at least one segment of the religious ecology, though. The
Ex-vangelical movement, in part led by Religion Dispatches contributor Christopher Stroop, has been receiving media attention,
including a profile in a CBS news documentary.
The trend was also a godsend (if you will) for one
other group. That would be people offering really, really bad hot takes on
religion being resurrected as politics. Emma Green published an article in
the Atlantic that at least had the dignity to be somewhat
better than its title: “Politics as the New Religion for Progressive Democrats.” But Andrew Sullivan’s essay
arguing that American Christianity has been replaced by political tribalism is possibly the most obtuse
thing he’s ever written—and that’s saying something.
Neither of these takes is willing to struggle with the
possibility that there might be good reasons to walk away from the church, even
setting aside politics and terrible chili suppers. For example, it was a banner
year for stories about clerical sex abuse, what with one cardinal convicted of crimes against children and
another revealed to be a predator of young men. Then came the release of
a grand jury report from Pennsylvania demonstrating the Catholic
hierarchy’s sometimes criminal efforts to sweep bad news under the
rug. Then came a follow-up federal investigation, the resignation of Archbishop Donald Wuerl for his part in the cover-up,
and the mass resignation of
Chilean bishops for the same thing. It was enough to lead Catholic theologian
Mary Hunt to wonder whether the entire structure of the church needed to be
replaced with something more lay-driven.
The usual malarkey about the rolling abuse crisis
being a “gay problem” was rolled out, as were the too-little-too-late
promises to shore up reporting. All of this has taken a toll on Pope Francis’ image in the United States, and led the curia’s shadier
opportunists to try to support him with a knife to the back in the form of a
much-hyped report breathlessly declaring Francis’ complicity
in the McCarrick case. (The report was mostly about misplaced memos.) But
hey, Francis canonized Oscar Romero, so the year’s not a total waste.
But readers should not come away with the impression
that sexual abuse was limited to the Catholic church. Bill Hybels, founder of the pioneering Willow Creek megachurch,
was forced out after his pattern of skeevy manipulation and general gross lack
of boundaries came to light. Ditto Paige Patterson of the Southern Baptist Convention, thrown out
of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary for bullying rape victims and
being a general disaster on sexual issues. Andy Savage, pastor of Highpoint Church in Memphis, fared a
little better. He got a standing ovation from his congregation after confessing
to sleeping with a 17-year-old member of his youth group when he was 22.
Eventually, though, he resigned, citing a new understanding of his victim’s
perspective; which is to say, that she was in fact the victim in this case, not
him. It was also revealed that the 2016 Clinton campaign fired its
evangelical “faith guru” Burns Strider for sexual harassment of at
least two other staffers.
Evangelicals fared only a little better than the
Catholic hierarchs in their response. There was a half-assed, single-day
conference at Wheaton College, followed by a basic lack of
reflection on the theology and sexual ideology that produced these problems in the first place.
Before nonbelievers get too judgy about all of this,
though, it should be noted that atheists had their own #MeToo moments this
year. David Silverman of American Atheists was fired
after being accused of sexual assault; prominent atheist Lawrence Krauss was accused of sexual harassment; and, as Caroline Matas detailed here on RD, New Atheist leaders like Sam Harris and Richard
Dawkins supported Men’s Rights activists.
Still, when it comes to bad news, not much comes close
to the evangelical world, which consistently finds plenty of squick to go
around, even without the sexual abuse. John Allen Chau, a missionary and graduate of Oral
Roberts University, tried to evangelize a previously uncontacted and
notoriously hostile tribe in the Sentinelese Islands, and was murdered for his
efforts. Jeff Sessions tried to defend the grand
guignol cruelty of the Trump administration’s immigration policy as part of
God’s plan, sparking a questionable effort
to impose church discipline on him.
Mike Pence did the generally creepy Mike Pence thing at the Southern Baptist
Convention’s annual meeting, albeit it with some reservations on the part of
the audience. President Trump, never one to be overshadowed, prayed next
to Paula White at a closed-door White House dinner with
evangelical leaders and huffed and puffed
about challenges to his authoritycoming in the fall elections. Turns
out he was right about the impending disaster at the polls, just not the
violent overthrow part. Ah, well. Trump will always have the undying adoration
of Robert Jeffress, who stands in a long line of American preachers
willing to prop up authoritarianism.
Which points us to the worst sin of the white 2018
evangelical community: forming the white nationalist
base of the Trump movement, albeit one that is shrinking fast as
its elders die out and youth abandon it. Not even a PR blitz before
the fall elections, nor the myth of swing white
evangelical women voters, could save the movement from being identified for
what it is: Trump’s biggest,
meanest cheering section, the people who have historically always been ready
to bravely blame somebody else for the problems of life in
these United States.
Given
conservative evangelical support for—and by “support for” we mean “control
over”—the Trump administration, it should come as no surprise that on the
subject of religious liberties, the story has been one step forward, two steps
back … then another two, and give me three more just for good measure.
First, the good news: A poll this December shows
that nonreligious
candidates get more support from votersthan they have in a long time,
beginning to reverse a discriminatory trend in American politics. Other good
news? Satanists organized
a rally for religious freedom.
Oh, dear.
That’s not a lot of good news, is it?
No, it is not. Well, the Supreme Court did rule that
an anti-gay breakaway
church had to return a cool $500 million to the Episcopal Church in
South Carolina. But it also ruled that wedding cake bakers could
discriminate against gay couples (or at least escape prosecution for it) if the state hurt
their feelings. No, seriously, we wish we were kidding about this, and
unfortunately, lower courts were just as bad.
That would
be miserable enough, but the court also held that the Trump administration
could ban immigration
from certain countries essentially because the president feels the need
to nail the White House windows shut lest ISIS terrorists or other brown people
break in while he’s asleep. “The United States is exclusively shaped by and for
white Christians” is about right.
By far the darkest religion story of the year,
however, was an anti-Semite’s shooting rampage at the Tree of Life synagogue in
Pittsburgh, the deadliest such attack in American history. It was an act of
violence deeply rooted in America’s gun idolatry, one that was not so much the past
come back to haunt the nation as a reflection of the
present danger egged on by a bigot-in-chief willing to embrace
anti-Semitic slurs and conspiracy theories. It was made worse by that same
administration calling on a pretend rabbi to pray for the victims and by
a clueless evangelical establishment toying with the idea that supersessionism maybe wasn’t so bad after all.
If there was
any ray of light in this dark year—anything that could give you faith in
humanity, if not God—it was the response of the community to the Tree of Life
violence, an interfaith prayer service held in Mr. Roger’s church, preceded by a quiet, reflective
protest informing the bigot-in-chief that he was not welcome to share Squirrel
Hill’s grief. More generally, there was the rise of the Never Again movement,
led by survivors of a mass school shooting in Parkland, Florida, who
offered hope that things might, even for a minute, be different. If we at Religion Dispatches have
any wishes for the coming year, it’s that their efforts and the blood of the
victims not be wasted. Be better, 2019, be best!
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