Is God Really Violent?

Ξ March 30th, 2010 | → 2 Comments | ∇ Life |

 

(The following article is taken from the Huffington Post, March 30, 2010 and was written by Brian McLaren. Thanks to Kevin Beck for pointing it out)

 

Is God violent? This is one of the most important questions raised in my recent book A New Kind of Christianity: Ten Questions That Are Transforming the Faith. Although there are a few denominations or movements in Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and other religions that oppose violence as a tenet of faith, there is no question that the majority report is that God permits and even mandates violence. It’s little surprise, then, that Christians, Muslims, Jews, and others have been violent across history — and have enlisted God as a soldier (or commander-in-chief) in their cause. Faithful believers continue to struggle with how to reconcile violent and nonviolent passages in their sacred texts.

Yesterday’s news story about a so-called Christian militia highlights the need for Christians to grapple with the question of God’s violence or nonviolence. Federal agents arrested nine suspects with connections to Hutaree, an explicitly Christian anti-government group led by David Brian Stone. According to their website, the group trains its members to use weapons in preparation for a battle against the Antichrist. According to federal prosecutors, the arrests came in response to evidence that the group was planning a reconnaissance mission in a few days. The group planned to kill an officer, and then when other officers gathered for the funeral, they would kill more officers using home-made bombs. The group would then retreat for a violent standoff with government agents, which they hoped would trigger more violent uprisings against the government.

It’s strange and sad — but perhaps highly opportune for engendering needed conversation — that this story would come up during Holy Week. This is the week Christians recall that Jesus was willing to be killed, but not to kill … to be tortured, but not to torture. This is the week, according to the gospel narratives, that Jesus told Peter to put away his sword, saying, "Those who live by the sword will die by the sword" (Matthew 26:52). This is the week Jesus contrasted his kingdom in this world with the kingdoms of this world by their opposite responses to the violence question (John 18:36 ff). (The prepositions in and not of are important.) Many of us believe that Jesus embodies the image of a nonviolent God, an image intended to transcend and correct violent images. As a recent NPR story reported, such a proposal meets with strong resistance. Many Christians portray two sides to Jesus. Yes, they acknowledge, the Jesus of the gospels was nonviolent. But there’s another side to Jesus — the violent avenger with "a commitment to make someone bleed" — which reinforces rather than overturns a violent image of God. To prove their point, groups like the Hutaree militia group point to an anticipated second-coming Jesus, especially as portrayed in Revelation 19:11 ff. There, they suggest, Jesus is described with a sword, so even though he wasn’t violent in his first coming, he will be violent when he returns.

They fail to note one small detail in the text: that the sword is in Jesus’ mouth (!), not his hand. Might this not be unveiling for us a deeper truth, that the Jesus who rode into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday upon a humble donkey with tears in his eyes and with a word of peace on his lips was in fact more powerful than Caesar, Herod, Pilate, and their violent colleagues — who would ride proudly into town on chariots and white stallions, with one fist raised triumphantly in the air, and with the other holding a sword of violence? Might Revelation 19 be restating and reaffirming rather than contradicting and supplanting the Jesus of the gospels?

Those of us who believe that the nonviolent Jesus of the gospels presents a nonviolent image of God note that the term "Revelation" or "Apocalypse" means unveiling. We side with increasing numbers of biblical scholars who suggest that Revelation, as an example of Jewish apocalyptic literature, was not intended as a prognostication about the end of the world but rather as an unveiling of the real meaning behind events in the time of its original readers. The apocalyptic genre functioned more like science fiction often does in our day: creating stories about the future as commentary on the present. Here’s how I say it in A New Kind of Christianity (pp. 124-126):

 

To repeat, Revelation is not portraying Jesus returning to earth in the future, having repented of his naive gospel ways and having converted to Caesar’s "realistic" Greco-Roman methods instead. He hasn’t gotten discouraged about Caesar seeming to get the upper hand after his resurrection and on that basis concluded that it’s best to live by the sword after all (Matt. 26:52). Jesus hasn’t abandoned the way of peace (Luke 19:42) and concluded that the way of Pilate is better, mandating that the disciples should fight after all (John 18:36). He hasn’t had second thoughts about all that talk about forgiveness (Matthew 18:21-22) and concluded that on the 78th offense you should pull out your sword and hack off your offender’s head rather than turn the other cheek (Matt. 5:39).

He hasn’t given up on that "love your enemies" stuff (Matthew 5:44) and judged it naive and foolish after all (1 Cor. 1:25), concluding instead that God’s strength is made manifest not in weakness but in crushing domination (2 Cor. 12:9). He hasn’t had a change of heart, concluding that the weapons he needs are physical after all (2 Cor. 10:3-4), which would mean that the way to glory isn’t actually by dying on a cross (Phil. 2:8-9) but rather by nailing others on it.

He hasn’t sold the humble donkey (Luke 19:30-35) on eBay and purchased chariots, warhorses, tanks, land mines, and B-1s instead (Zech. 9:9-10) … He hasn’t decided that the message of the cross is a little too foolish after all (1 Cor. 1:18) or that Christ killing his foes is way more exciting than that lame, absurd, "hippie" gospel of "Christ crucified" (1 Cor. 2:2).

He hasn’t decided that … nobody can be expected to worship a king they can beat up (Matt. 27:27) … Jesus matters precisely because he provides us a living alternative to the confining [violent] narrative in which our world and our religions live, move, and have their being too much of the time.

Revelation celebrates not the love of power, but the power of love. It denies, with all due audacity, that God’s anointed liberator is the Divine Terminator, threatening revenge for all who refuse to honor him, growling, "I’ll be back!" It asserts, instead, that God’s anointed liberator is the one we beat up, who promises mercy to those who strike him, whispering, "Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing" (Luke 23:34).

 

One would think that after 2,000 years of theological reflection — during which uncounted gallons of ink have been spilled to debate thousands of religious controversies — the question of the violence of God would have attracted more attention. Perhaps now is finally the time.

Brian McLaren, a former pastor, is the author of a dozen books, most recently A New Kind of Christianity: Ten Questions That Are Transforming the Faith (HarperOne). He blogs at brianmclaren.net.

 

The Lament of a Believer in Exile

Ξ March 24th, 2010 | → 5 Comments | ∇ Life |

Ah, Jesus

Where have you gone?

When did we lose you?

Was it when we became so certain that we possessed you

That we persecuted Jews, excommunicated doubters,

Burned heretics, and used violence and war to achieve conversion?

Was it when our first-century images,

 Collided with expanding knowledge?

Or when Biblical scholars informed us that the Bible does not 

Really support what we once believed?

Was it when we watched your followers distorting people with guilt, 

Fear, bigotry, intolerance, and anger?

Was it when we noticed that many who called you Lord

And read their Bibles regularly

Also practiced slavery, defended segregation, approved lynching, 

Abused children, diminished women, 

And hated homosexuals?

Was it when we finally realized that the Jesus who promised 

Abundant life could not be the source of self-hatred, or

One who encourages us to grovel in life-destroying penitence?

Was it when it dawned on us that serving you would require

The surrender of those security-building prejudices

That masquerade as our sweet sicknesses?

We still yearn for you Jesus, but we no longer know where 

To seek your presence.

Do we look for you in those churches that practice certainty?

Or are you hiding in those churches that so fear controversy

That they make "unity" a god, and stand for so little

That they die of boredom?

Can you ever be found in those churches that have 

Rejected the powerless and the marginalized, 

The lepers and Samaritans of our day, 

Those you called our brothers and sisters?

Or must we now look for you outside eccesiastical settings,

Where love and kindness expect no reward, 

Where questions are viewed as the deepest expressions of trust?

Is it even possible, Jesus, that we Christians are the villains

Who killed you?

Smothering you underneath literal Bibles, dated creeds,

Irrelevant doctrines, and dying structures?

If these things are the source of your disappearance, Jesus, 

Will you then reemerge if these things are removed?

Will that bring resurrection?

Or were you, as some now suggest, never more than an illusion?

By burying and distorting you were we simply 

Protecting ourselves from having to face that realization?

I still seek to possess what I believe you are, Jesus:

Access to and embodiment of the Source of Life,

The Source of Love, The Ground of Being, 

A doorway into the mystery of holiness.

It is through that doorway that I desire to walk.

Will you meet me there? Will you challenge me,

Guide me, confront me, reveal your truth to me & in me?

Finally, at the end of this journey, Jesus,

Will you embrace me inside the ultimate reality

That I call God in whom I live & move & have my being? 

 

~If you don’t know the author of this poem and wish to, please leave a comment.

 

My Quest

Ξ March 23rd, 2010 | → 1 Comments | ∇ Life |

Sometimes I have called it "my journey". Sometimes I have called it "my quest". Today it is "my quest", a moral quest.  The spiritual quest I am on has led me to question long-accepted beliefs. That’s OK. I do find it interesting that the moral side of my quest recently traced its way through the Bible. That may sound a little strange. I mean with my background, with my indoctrination, it probably should not be unusual at all. But, after leaving the security of the institution and searching other spiritual traditions other than Christianity or Judaism, I discovered something very interesting. Many of them share quite a lot of the same ideas. Very Cool! As I venture farther and farther from my own base of spirituality, I find more and more that is common to humanity and not just particular to one segment or group. My moral quest today has led me back to the Bible, the Old Testament to be exact. This great, dare I say, truth comes from the Prophet Micah, and I paraphrase: "act justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with the spirit of truth and love."

As to where I stand today, I find no contradiction in this.

 

“How could so many believers be wrong?”

Ξ March 18th, 2010 | → 5 Comments | ∇ Life |

Some day soon I expect one of my friends, a devout believer, who knows about my belief changes in the last five years, to ask me the eventual question, "How can millions of people over a span of two thousand years be wrong?" (and you be right)

Sounds reasonable, but the question really isn’t for me; he will be arguing that all those other believers are evidence for the "truth" of his own faith. They are not!

History readily shows us, over and over, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that millions of people can be quite wrong. Wrong beliefs about causes of disease and healing, about how the moon, sun, and stars work, about the intelligence or even humanity of tribes other than our own , and last but not least, about the supernatural: these are our shared human heritage. If today’s traditional Christian beliefs are correct, then millions of Hindus, and Buddhists are wrong. If the Hindus are right, the Christians and Budddhists are wrong. Anyway you look at it, millions of human beings who share elaborate systems of belief, share FALSE beliefs.

In spite of this, within any given cultural and historical context, most people agree on widely held "truths". Other people’s belief systems seem silly to us while ours seems so intuitive and obvious. How many times have you laughed when you hear a story about someone of a different culture and belief expressing his or her beliefs. Maybe we don’t do so openly or maybe we do. Other people’s beliefs are often funny to us, or curious, or quaint. To us, the peculiar beliefs of other cultures are so obviously "untrue" that we teach our children about many of them not worrying that they could possibly believe such things. We lose that sense of humor about other people’s beliefs only when they are plausible enough or powerful enough to threaten our own beliefs.

The human ability to laugh at the "mistaken" views of others while we blithely embrace our own would be astounding if it weren’t so common-place. Researchers in Psychology, Anthropology, Logic, and Artificial Intelligence, tell us this: Belief in anything, is powerful. It not only changes how we behave, it changes what we perceive: what information gets through our mental filters, how we interpret it, and what we retain in memory. It changes our emotions and our instinctual reactions to other people and the world around us.

I read something very interesting concerning our brains:

The brain is like a good lawyer: given any set of interests to defend, it sets about convincing the world of their moral and logical worth, regardless of whether they in fact have any of either. Like a lawyer, the human brain wants victory, not truth; and, like a lawyer, it is sometimes more admirable for skill than virtue.

Now this is something to think about!

 

 

Co-creator with God

Ξ March 17th, 2010 | → 0 Comments | ∇ Life |

I am a co-creator, with the Source, of my life; everyday of my life. I choose what to make of my day. Whatever comes my way, I choose how I react to it. I choose to take the negative and make it positive. Or I choose to wallow in self-pity when things happen I don’t like. Everything that passes my way gives me the chance to react positively to life. I have had the opportunity lately to test my co-creativity and my choices about it. I love life!………all of it. I choose life. I choose to make it a positive experience each day.

Want your day to be a better one….Ok, then BE it.

 

From a Hymn

Ξ March 15th, 2010 | → 2 Comments | ∇ Life |

There is a fountain filled with blood,

drawn from Emmanuel’s veins.

And sinners plunged beneath that flood

lose all their guilty stains…………..

~William Cowper

 

I remember well singing this song in church many, many times. As a young kid, I also remember how it made me cringe to really picture it. I didn’t understand. As an adult, I must say the effect had not lessened much at all.

Now………It is disturbing for me to see it or hear it. The doctrine of blood atonement, for me, lessens the influence and effect of the life of the man called Jesus.

 

Further Conundrums Part 3

Ξ March 11th, 2010 | → 7 Comments | ∇ Life |

What exactly were Adam and Eve thinking when they ate the fruit, given that they had neither experienced or witnessed spiritual death or physical death? If they did fully understand the consequences, does it make sense that they would take the fruit?

Why would God give them a prohibition they didn’t understand?

Why didn’t they die as God promised as soon as they ate the fruit? (spiritual death, physical death)

Why would an omniscient God put the tree there in the first place, knowing Adam & Eve were headed for sin and damnation?

Why did God have to sentence them to hard labor as if spiritual death, the natural consequence, was not enough of a punishment?

And what about that snake? If the serpent was actually Satan, a fallen angel, then why were all serpents punished rather than Satan himself?

Why not start with a new breeding pair rather than getting the human race off to an immediate bad start?

These are good questions if you believe the Bible to be the inerrant "Word of God". 

How would you answer these conundrums? 

 

Augustine on Curiousity

Ξ March 7th, 2010 | → 5 Comments | ∇ Life |

 

There is another form of temptation, even more fraught with danger. This is the disease of curiosity… It is this which drives us to try and discover the secrets of nature, those secrets which are beyond our understanding, which can avail us nothing and which man should not wish to learn.

REALLY!

 

Mr. Deity & the Identity Crisis

Ξ March 3rd, 2010 | → 2 Comments | ∇ Life |

~Thanks to Eruesso for pointing me to this great video.

 

 

Interesting Conundrums from the Bible, Part 2

Ξ March 3rd, 2010 | → 0 Comments | ∇ Life |

~ continued from Part 1

  • God created sea creatures, birds, and land animals before man (Gen 1)
  • The birds and land animals were created after Adam, as possible companions for him (Gen 2)

 

  • All humans not on the ark were killed by the flood (Gen 7:21
  • There were giant humans after the flood as before the flood (Num 13:33)

 

  • To show his faith, Abraham offered up his only begotten son Isaac as a sacrifice (Heb 11:17)
  • Abraham had a first born son, Ishmael (Gen 16:15)

 

  • A flood covers the Earth with water more than 20 feet above the highest mountain. (Gen 7:19-20) This would require rainfall at the rate of 8,460" per day for 40 days and nights to cover the planet in an ocean five miles deep (enough to bury Mt. Everest under 20 feet of water).

 

  • Human linguistic diversity resulted from a wrathful miracle (The Tower of Babel story) (Gen 11:1, 7-9). Ironically, in the previous chapter of Genesis, people are divided into nations, everyone "according to his language". (Gen 10:5)

~There are lots more…..but you get the idea.

 

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