| Subscribe via RSS

Fred Phelps Is So Impotent

April 29th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in church

I haven’t posted a blog in a while. I’ve been missing it, but I’ve
also not had enough (can you imagine it?) angst to really write. And I
still don’t!

I’m really, really happy right now. I’d like to take a picture of
myself right now so that I can remember: This is what happiness looks
like!

I’ve asked for some ideas about a blog post, and they’re good ideas.
I think I’ll follow up on a couple of them. But I want to post on this right now.

Nate Phelps is the son of the infamous Fred Phelps, the awful
(pardon my french) ASSHAT pastor of the website God Hates Fags. I’m not
linking to his site. This really struck me:

Yet when my father turned his instructive fist on my
mother, I instinctively felt internal conflict.  For me, it was
intuitively wrong that a 6 foot 2, 250 pound man be allowed to beat up
a woman barely half his size.  But we dared not intervene or even
question his actions, because his behavior was sanctioned by god.

In one instance, as my father was stalking our mother at the top of
the stairs, she stumbled and started to fall.  Reaching out to catch
herself she ripped her arm out of the socket.  My father refused to let
her get medical treatment to repair the damaged muscles and tendons.
In subsequent, years when he was angry with her, he would inevitably
grab for that injured arm.  On a few occasions he managed to get hold
of it and re-injure it.

I’ve always known instinctively that Fred Phelps is a bad person.
But to hear his son tell the tale, it is even more horrific. There is
something about this mix of power, anger, and religion that kills me
the most.

I’m reading a book of essays by Edwin Friedman right now, of Family Systems fame, called The Myth of the Shiksa.
Friedman interviews Satan as the “first family therapist.” Here’s an
excerpt (the interviewer is in italics, Satan in regular font):

Very well. As I said, one of the major differences
between a God and a human being, according to Genesis, has to do with
power. A God just speaks and things come into being.

“In the beginning was the Word.”

Unfortunately, it was kind of slurred. Actually, in the beginning
was a thought. A God doesn’t have to speak. In true omnipotence, all
you have to do is think the thought, and your will becomes reality.

Sounds like the fantasy of some people I know.

Where do you think they get it from?

Transforming thought into matter is the hard part, isn’t it?

You are talking about creativity. I am trying to focus on
relationships. Haven’t you ever noticed that the worst symptoms in
families always show up in communities marked by intense will conflict?
Schizophrenia, suicide, anorexia, abuse, and many physical
deteriorations almost always show up in families where people are
trying to will one another to change. They harp, they cajole, they
seduce, they argue, they implicate, they preach, they warn, they
threaten, they remind, they guilt, they charm, they accuse, they point
out. Find me a polarized relationship and I will show you the will
conflict.

And the same would be true for institutions?

Exactly the same. Almost all forms of neurosis and psychosis come
about from the effort to will what can’t be willed. You can will going
to bed, but you can’t will sleep. You can will going to the dinner
table, but you can’t will appetite. You can will physical contact, but
you can’t will orgasm. You can will being together, but you can’t will
togetherness or symptoms or relationships or morality.

So by seducing everyone into willing, you make them deny that they are not omnipotent.

Omnipotence always leads to impotence.

So, there you have it. Fred Phelps is impotent.

May it ever be.

Tags: , ,

Holy Wednesday

April 8th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in ritual

Today is the first day of Passover in Judaism. Many Jews get together with family and friends on the first and second night of Passover for the Passover meal, called the Seder (meaning order, because there is an order to the meal). The family follows an order determined by the Haggadah, a book that has the order and commentary.

The story is told of the Hebrew people’s exodus from slavery. There are props. During the meal, wine is poured and consumed four times. Everyone tilts to the side at certain times of the meal. At my friends’, the Rabbis’, home, dinner begins about 7:00 p.m., and I usually drive out at midnight, forgoing the final prayers in lieu of safe driving and sleep.

Frankly, it’s my favorite meal of the year (not just because of the wine!). Really.

Only this year, my Jewish friends have moved away. And I find myself really missing Passover.

I’ve only celebrated Passover with my friends three times, and yet, spring, Holy Week, and my birthday month don’t seem right without it. So I can imagine what it is like for the celebrants of the Passover during Jesus’ time. Skipping it would be like skipping Thanksgiving. Can you imagine the month of November passing without Thanksgiving? It would throw the whole holiday season off! And that’s precisely what missing Passover would do.

Passover meets some intense desire inside of me for ritual and for community.

I imagine Jesus following a Haggadah, reclining as he eats, drinking his four glasses of wine, and being with his friends and family for the Passover meal in Jerusalem, the final Passover of his life. I see him altering the Haggadah a bit, to reinterpret the wine into the martyrdom of his death. I feel him absorbing the energy of the ritual and community around him.

The final words of the Seder are “Next year in Jerusalem.” That intense longing for ritual and community resonate in those words for me today. And so I say to you, “Next year in Jerusalem.”

Tags: ,

Death or Life of Jesus? Passion Sunday, 2009

April 5th, 2009 | 7 Comments | Posted in Lent, sermon

It was 13 years ago, on a mission trip to Belize, that I gave my heart to Jesus. I had maybe a year or so prior, given my life to God, but I was wishy-washy on the whole Jesus thing. I was even attending a Baptist church, but I was really in doubt about Jesus. I just never could get around the idea of Jesus’ blood being shed for me.

I listened to the metaphors in the worship services. I listened to what people said and what we sang about Jesus. I listened to the pastor pray. I saw people that I admired who were Christian. But I just couldn’t get there from that.

On our trip to Belize, we were in country, in a small town called Orange Walk Town. They called it Rambo Town, and it’s wasn’t because Sylvester Stallone had ever been there. People walking down the streets carried machetes. There was a guard at the door of the hotel, holding a very scary gun, probably an AK47. We were staying in a hotel called the D Star Victoria Hotel, which had two twin beds in a room, with a toilet that burped sulfur every half-hour, a window unit air conditioner that trickled water, at best, and didn’t work at all, at worst. The bed, if you banged on it, released something into the air (maybe it was dust?). And upon close inspection, there were bugs in the beds. The hotel was so high class, that even today, 13 years later, the hotel is advertised at $22-54 a night.

From the minute we got there, I was in complete culture shock, having never been to a developing country. Of course, I didn’t know it was culture shock, but as I look back, I realize that it was. The young women on the mission team and I spent the first sleepless night with one eye open, our heads on pillows that we had made clean by putting our own tee-shirts on them, with our socks over our hands and sleeves, and socks pulled up over our jeans, to keep the bugs out.

I woke the team leaders up at 5:00 a.m. the next morning. “You must airlift me out of here today,” I said.

My pastor looked at me, and said, “Lia, you have to give it one day. If you want to go home tomorrow, we’ll get you out of here.”

We attended a worship service that morning with a blood-and-guts pastor who preached about how everyone needed to be saved. He preached in a mix of Spanish and English, eyeing his congregants with disdain and the visitors from the United States with suspicion. He yelled. He cajoled. He cried. He was fake. I slept during his one-and-a-half-hour preaching session. And then I picked up the Bible.

And I read the words from the 6th Chapter of Matthew. I could imagine this fellow named Jesus saying this to me, and it felt so NOW, not tired, old, yucky, or anything like what the church usually said:

“And why do you worry about clothes? See how the lilies of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these… Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.”

It sounded so much like Jesus. So much like someone I would like to follow. So much like someone who understood me, understood life, and had a lot to teach me.

It sounded like the Kingdom of God. But it didn’t sound like that blood-and-guts preacher.

There are three major theories about the “work of the cross.” That’s what they call it, whatever it is that happened on the cross. One theory states that humanity’s problem is that we’re trapped and oppressed by spiritual forces beyond our control. Christ’s death is seen as a ransom that frees us from captivity. Another theory deals with the subjective need of all people to know God’s love. This says that Christ’s death on the cross demonstrates God’s love so dramatically that we should be convinced of God’s love and can share it with others. Another theory assumes our problem is God’s wrath against us, and that we are in danger of facing that wrath eternally. This theory emphasizes how Christ represents us, and substitutes for us, facing God’s wrath so that we don’t have to.

It’s that last one that makes Renee hate the first two verses of Have Thine Own Way.

And it’s that last that comes under the most criticism. Some say that the theory of the atonement is inadequate, irrelevant, individualistic, and too violent.

As we consider these theories we have to ask of three questions: What does the theory say about God? What does it say to community? And what does it say to an individual?

The theory of substitutionary atonement, that Jesus died FOR OUR SINS on the cross, fares rather poorly with these criticisms.

What does it say about God if God requires the death of God’s son in order to look with love upon the people that God created?

The American Universalist preacher Hosea Ballou wrote, in his Treatise on the Atonement,

“The belief that the great Jehovah was offended with his creatures to that degree, that nothing but the death of Christ, or the endless misery of mankind, could appease his anger, is an idea that has done more injury to the Christian religion than the writings of all its opposers, for many centuries. The error has been fatal to the life and spirit of the religion of Christ in our world; all those principles which are to be dreaded by men have been believed to exist in God…”

What does it say to our community if this theory is true? Rebecca Parker, a co-writer of Proverbs of Ashes, and, at the time a parish minister, preached:

“Do we really believe that God is appeased by cruelty, and wants nothing more than our obedience? It becomes imperative that we ask this questions when we examine how theology sanctions human cruelty.

“If God is imagined as a fatherly torturer, earthly parents are also justified, perhaps even required, to teach through violence. Children are instructed to understand their submission to pain as a form of love. Behind closed doors, in our own community , spouses and children are battered by abusers who justify their actions as necessary, loving discipline. ‘I only hit her because I love her.’ ‘I’m doing this for your own good.’ The child or the spouse who believes that obedience is what God wants may put up with physical or sexual abuse in an effort to be a good Christian.”

And what does it say to individuals? Rebecca Parker writes about a visit from a neighbor of the church.

“I haven’t talked to anyone about this for a while,” she began, her smile fading, and sadness deepening in her eyes. “But I’m worried for my kids now. The problem is my husband. He beats me sometimes. Mostly, he is a good man. But sometimes he becomes very angry and he hits me. He knocks me down. One time he broke my arm and I had to go to the hospital. But I didn’t tell them how my arm go broken.”

I nodded. She took a deep breath and went on. “I went to my priest twenty years ago. I’ve been trying to follow his advice. The priest said I should rejoice in my sufferings because they bring me closer to Jesus. He said, ‘Jesus suffered because he loved us.’ He said, ‘If you love Jesus, accept the beatings and bear them gladly, as Jesus bore the cross.’ I’ve tried, but I’m not sure anymore. My husband is turning on the kids now. Tell me, is what the priest told me true?”

Parker continues:

“In the stillness of that moment, I could see in Lucia’s eyes that she knew the answer to her question, just as I did. If I answered Lucia’s question truthfully, I would have to rethink my theology.”

Jesus’ death on the cross was a horrible, terrible event. And death, as you all know, is about separation, not joining or merging. Friedrich Nietzsche, in Anti-Christ, wrote a piece directed to the apostles. Nietzsche’s point is that the death of Jesus on the cross was so horrible that the apostles had to invest some sort of meaning into it so that they could bear the pain of the loss of Jesus, especially in the way that they did. He wrote:

And now an absurd problem arose: ‘How could God have allowed that to happen?’ To this, the disturbed reason of the little community found a terrifyingly absurd answer: God gave his Son for the forgiveness of sins, as a sacrifice. All at once the gospel was done for! The guilt sacrifice, and this in its most repulsive, most barbaric form, the sacrifice of the guiltless for the sins of the guilty! What ghastly paganism! — For Jesus had abolished the very concept of “guilt” — he had denied any separation between God and man, he lived this unity of God and man as his “good news”… And not as a special privilege!

Because death is separation, not joining, as the disciples would have had you believe.

April 4th was the 41st anniversary of the death of Martin Luther King, Jr. Do we celebrate his death? Or do we celebrate his life? Have we added meaning to his death by believing that it makes us, somehow, closer to God? Do we see MLK as a sacrifice for us? For all time? No. We celebrate his life. It is his life that moves us forward in fighting injustice. It is his life that spurs us to higher action. It is his life that brings us into the conversation to do better.

As it is with the Christ. It is Jesus’ life that spurs us to love God. It is his words that draw us in. It is the way he related with one another that moves us to worship God. Because, no doubt, Jesus was filled with God. He shows us how to be with God.

But he doesn’t lock us into adding meaning to his death. His death on the cross, just as with Martin Luther King, Jr. was a terrible injustice. And it was the price a person pays for standing against the powers that be.

Stephen Mitchell, in The Gospel According to Jesus sums up Jesus’ life and death by quoting the Lao-tzu:

The Master gives himself up
to whatever the moment brings.
He knows that he is going to die,
and he has nothing left to hold on to:
no illusions in his mind,
no resistances in his body.
He doesn’t think about his actions;
they flow from the core of his being.
He holds nothing back from life;
therefore he is ready for death,
As a man is ready for sleep
after a good day’s work.

Let us allow Jesus’ death to be what it is. A crying shame. A huge injustice. A reflection of his life.

Let us follow that life.

Tags: , ,

More Shower Writing and Staying Tuned

April 1st, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in sermon

I don’t know if it makes any sense, but here’s more of the writing. I can’t imagine that it makes much sense to you, since I don’t understand it.

I had a lovely evening tonight with a friend from church. I so wanted to explain all of Sunday’s sermon to her, because our conversation went to the same places that the sermon is going. But I just stayed quiet.

It’s like saying, “Stay tuned.”

Tags: ,