Monday, April 30, 2012

I Was Young and Foolish


Once again there is a bit of a church and state scuttlebutt in Rhode Island. Just when we thought I could relax, drink my coffee milk, and sip my clear Rhode Island chowder, I see that a group in Wisconsin (the Freedom From Religion Foundation) is threatening to sue the city of Woonsocket for a veteran's memorial in front of a fire station that has a cross on it. 

I am a very proud supporter of the separation of church and state. I believe in the freedom of religion and freedom for religion. A public memorial on public grounds should not have overt religious symbols. So I agree with the Freedom From Religion Foundation… if the memorial was built today.

This memorial was constructed in 1921 to remember servicemen killed in France in World War I. That was a different time. I am not saying that it is right, but at the same time there is something to historicity that we need to take seriously. The FFRF is taking a hard core, angry, and almost vindictive approach to the place of religion in America which doesn't help. I think we should remove the phrase "under God" from the pledge and the phrase, "in God we trust" from our money but these are things that are currently being made and used. A memorial is not an active symbol.

Beyond that, our collective understanding of the clause of separation has been changing and will continue to change. Right or wrong, in the 1920's many people assumed that a cross was not an offensive symbol and did not question its placement. Today we are at a different place and believe that a cross can be offensive to many people who are not Christians. We need to be aware and have some charity towards our ancestors for what we consider "antiquated" ideas (like gender exclusivity in writing, racism, and making monuments with crosses).

Our country has had a close tie with Christianity in one way or another. I will not say that we are a Christian nation, far from it, nor are we founded on Christian principles… more enlightenment than anything. Yet the Christian church has been connected with the ebb and flow of the nation from the moment of inception. The crosses and other religious symbols on the monuments of the past are a part of our history. Our history should be offensive at times. It should irk us at times, but we cannot erase any reminder or sign of its existence.

If the FFRF wanted to have a positive approach it could look at the memorial in Woonsocket and use it as a reminder to be sure that such a symbol would not be used today.

Otherwise, leave us alone in Rhode Island. We have enough problems as it is giving people bad directions, weird drinks (cabinets?), and flagrantly misusing our "r"s.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

She's my Mother! She's my Sister! (Truth and Fact)


Every now and again someone asks me if the Bible is "true." That is such a tricky question to answer because "true" is such a vague and un-precise term. Calm down all you empiricist realist fanatics. What I mean is if something is not true that doesn't necessarily mean that it is false. Make sense?

Truth, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. I can read Greek or Roman mythology and walk away claiming that they are great stories but they aren't true. Thousands of years ago someone else would have heard (or read) these stories and said that they were, without a doubt, true. I could say that we have advanced, that we now know much more than we have in the past and are much smarter than to be duped for such silly stories of gods and humanity. Yet if I say this then I have nothing to stand upon when I claim that now we know better, now we know that there is one God (in three persons), etc., etc. Instead I would probably have to rest in a place believing that one thousand years from now we will look back on the stories of Christianity and claim that they are good stories but we now know that they are not "true."

We have some fun little arguments about truth happening today that I think raise the issue even more. There are some (billions) that believe that dinosaurs roamed the earth at one time. We have found bones, eggs, poop, and many other signs of previous dinosaur existence. There are others who argue that the bones, eggs, and poop were placed here maliciously by Satan to trick us into believing that long ago dinosaurs roamed the earth. What is true? Both and neither. Both are looking at "facts," observable evidence of something, and then deriving at a truth - Satan is a tricky S.O.B., or dinosaurs once walked all over our backyards.

There are those who will accept the idea that dinosaurs did exist, but they lived with "man"in the garden of Eden under good terms. This is a very different "truth" that is trying to bring the "truth" of the creation story of the Bible with the "truth" of the existence of dinosaurs.

There are "facts" and there are "truths." Problems arise when we conflate the two and then demand that we be right.

"The earth was created in six days, it is a fact, it says so in the Bible." - no, that is a truth

"God does not exist, there is no evidence, that is a fact." - no, that is a truth

So is the Bible "true." To me it is (although to what level and what degree and in what way is all up for grabs).

To others, it is not.

To some it is a truth that I am going to hell for suggesting such things.
I'm okay with that.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

One, Two, Three, Four, I Declare A...


This is my first post-Easter post. If that is supposed to mean something, I’m not sure what it is.

On Good Friday, while I was minding my own business in a local coffee shop, working on the sermon for Sunday, someone told me about some kind of brewhaha about a mural at a local high school. Apparently some wedding rings were painted over and that action was seen by many as an attack on Christianity. This individual then told me that Christianity is under attack in our fine country, assuming that I already knew this vital bit of information. I was as non-committal in my response as I usually try to be.

On the way out I asked the individual where he or she would be going for Easter worship. This person told me, “Oh, I don’t go to church. I think it is more important to believe than it is to follow rules.”

Whaaaa!

First, I do not think there is a well-organized war against Christianity in our country. We do see examples of people over-reacting and examples of people being insensitive, but there is not an orchestrated push to eradicate Christianity from every mind and heart of Jesus lovin’ folks in our nation. What we do see is an exaggerated interpretation of events forced to fit a certain narrative that suggests that Christianity is under attack.

Second, I would argue that Christianity is at risk in our country (and in the world). It is not from some nefarious group plotting and planning to take churches down one by one, but is due to those who claim to be Christians. When someone gets up in arms about the “war against Christianity,” but does not even attend church on a regular basis, then something is wrong. I’m not suggesting that church attendance makes one a good Christian, but it does give some credence to one’s desire and sincerity to be a Christian. We need a community to pray with us, to hold us accountable, and to walk with us in our faith.

I did not ask this individual which version of the Gospel he or she would be turning to for the resurrection story; I did not want to assume that there would be regular Bible reading by this individual. I did not ask this individual about his or her prayer life, again I did not think it would bear much fruit.

Christianity is plagued by a lot of half-a**ed Christians and that is what is bringing churches down. I know I will catch some flack for this – some may think I am suggesting that there is a certain level of expectation one should have of oneself to be a “good” Christian. What I am suggesting is that people should have the desire and to act on that desire to be a “good” Christian. We are all in different places. We all live out our faith in different ways. The desire pushes us to avoid complacency with our faith, and to think that it is ok to sit on our duff, and say that we are good Christians.

Lay off the war on Christianity stuff, especially all you who don’t even practice Christianity (note, “practice” is an active word). Don’t get pious and judge people’s actions, but rather encourage their desire. For in our desire there is much fruit for our faith.

Now I’m going to declare war on those who declare that there is a war on Christianity. Ha!

Tuesday, April 03, 2012

Temperance and Truth


I received some very interesting information in the mail yesterday from the Women's Temperance Union. That's right, the Women's Temperance Union, the very group that your great-grandmother or your spinster great aunt belonged to fueling the fire for her anti-drinking, righteous, attitude.

Fun group that I thought was long gone. Well as it turns out the group is still alive and kinda active. They have great material for a church group of 1958, so they are a little behind the times.

One particular pamphlet listed the 22 national benefits of Prohibition as compiled by E. Deets Pickett (Associate Editor, American Prohibition Yearbook). Here are some - the italics are my comments:

1. Wife beating and lack of family support decreased 82% - doubtful
2. Drunkenness was down 55.3% - maybe in churches
3. Assault was down 53.1% - was this before the St. Valentines Day Massacre?
4. Vagrancy decreased 52.85% - really?
5. Disorderly conduct decreased 51.5% - how do you measure that?
6. Many correctional institutions were closed - how many, what is the percentage?
7. Crime throughout the nation, excluding Chicago, was down 38% - guess you didn't check out Rhode Island, Boston, Philadelphia, New York, etc., etc.
8. Crime in Chicago was DOWN 25% - did you not read the above fact?
9. Families were better clothed - have you seen the outfits people wore back then?
10. Attendance at church and school improved. - Probably because they wanted the wine from the Lord's Supper

and on and on

I'm not trying to mock the idea of temperance. There are people who struggle with alcoholism and there are families who suffer because of its abuse. What irks me is this flagrant throwing around of numbers and playing them off as facts. Percentages are given, lists are made, and we are then supposed to accept them as irrefutable facts. Deets was someone who wrote during the push for Prohibition and afterwards, so he is not a neutral party. His numbers are biased (if they are based in reality).

This continues today. So many are vying for "truth" and do it with concocted facts. One of the "facts" that I love is when Christians say the crucification and resurrected must have happened because it is in the Bible and the Bible is true. That's a fact.

Wait, what?

There is a difference between truths and facts. 

Truths are statements of meaning, convictions that speak to values and ideals shared by a community.

Facts are supposed to be things that are observable and empirical.

Truths can vary, but what about facts?

What I have noticed is that facts have adopted a functionality of convenience. We believe what we want to believe and discount what we want to discount.

Then what happens to truth? If facts become subjective then truth becomes so relative to each community that any shared discourse seems unattainable.

I need a drink.