A few weeks ago in the first Sunday of Lent I challenged our congregation to fast from the fruits of privilege. One minor act on my part has been to ride the bus as often as possible. As a country-boy the bus has always been a source of fascination for me and this spiritual exercise paid dividends this last week as my experience ended comprising about half the sermon.
Category: christology
Jesus was sinful
Can we not interpret the baptism of Jesus as a necessary act of repentance from the power inherent to his share in positions of structural authority (male, healthy, intelligent, etc.). It is by those powers individuals are able to move and shift along with culture as it continues to position itself in safety and security (by the exclusion and exploitation of others). Was this not a sin that needed repenting of so that he would live only as a child of God, grounded in an identity of love and acceptance so that he could live as such with his neighbour? Isn’t true repentance (of sin) the greatest testimony of his sinlessness? Just asking.
Debating whether or not I care
I recently crossed paths with someone heavily involved in an atheists group at the local university. This person was not of the ‘sort’ I expected. In any event the encounter spurred me to do a little snooping around on the internet for local atheist blogs and see what was happening. In the process I ran into The Winnipeg Skeptics. One of the contributors has his own blog Startled Disbelief. I started reading various posts and before long I chimed in with a few comments. Now I have to say I appreciate Gem Newman’s tone at Startled Disbelief and so was quite open to hearing his positions. After my initial comment Gem directed me to an earlier post which outlined in broader terms his position as a skeptic. We had a decent little exchange going before I realized that the arc of the conversation was quickly moving into territory I simply had no interest in pursuing.
If you are interested in the full conversation see the last link (I did quite appreciate his overall presentation). In any event there was one aspect to the conversation that continued to trouble me. Gem constantly pushed the notion that skepticism was somehow non-political. Skepticism is simply a method of critically examining claims (as he puts it). I didn’t think anyone believed in a neutral mode of scientific inquiry anymore. Gem went on to say that skepticism does not “provide a personal moral framework” and also that “atheism says nothing about politics, economics, or even belief in the supernatural.” He claimed I was confusing the politics of particular atheists with the politics of atheism (I had earlier proposed that atheism was actually a much more robust approach than skepticism . . . for him atheism is a one-off subject). Gem claims that he is “a skeptical, liberal, humanistic atheist.” I suppose it is this combination that clarifies his politics. However, he continues to maintain a broader skeptical orientation in saying, “I think that everything should be open to question. All conclusions are provisional.” How is this not political? How will that not continue to deny participation to decisive and potentially life-threatening postures that need to be taken in response to abusive powers?
Now so far as theology goes I would agree that a skeptical atheism comes much closer to biblical faith than many other contemporary theologies do in its rigor for idol-smashing. However, biblical faith is a decidedly declared position. That is, biblical faith will always ultimately undermine earthly authorities which abuse power. This is Christology (as well as good Old Testament theology). So I put it to Gem saying that I am much more interested in the proposition ‘love everything’ as opposed to his tagline ‘question everything’. Love maintains a critical posture (because of its love for others) but always orientates the person towards a constructive and engaged posture. This is where things started coming off the rails in my mind. Here Gem began ‘applying’ his method. His defense of and basis for skepticism was simply the apparently self-evident role of the Enlightenment as “proven to have held up.” This is exactly my criticism he does not address. The Enlightenment does not hold up because it offered nothing socially or politically substantive to engage the West. I am then accused of a ‘false dichotomy’ in my opposition of love-or-question everything. Though, I should add that love under Gem’s definition is some sort of fond cuddling. When I advanced my view of love (as something restorative) I was accused of having a definition that “seems vague, misleading, needlessly complex, and in some cases probably guilty of equivocation.” Oh man, I guess Gem has the definition down for love.
It is at this point at the end of the conversation that Gem offers the strange example of giving lectures to teachers on how to teach mathematics. In this example it would not interest him to consider how to integrate the possibility that some children are unable to learn due to unstable life circumstances. That sort of clinched it. I suspect he would say that indeed would care about it but he also says that he has “neither the skills nor the inclination to be a counsellor, and the fact that some of them may need counselling does not make teaching mathematics any less important.” Who the hell would argue from that example that mathematics are not important? Yes, fine we are all able and limited in various capacities but to consider one aspect of education as ‘pedagogically pure’ regardless of circumstance seems unhelpful.
Why am I recounting this? I guess I wanted to process it for myself. Christian and skeptical/atheistic apologetics are pretty big these days. I thought it might be a good exercise to understand why I don’t care. What this has clarified for me is the reality that by and large these expressions (on both sides of the fences, as I have encountered them) have a drastically insufficient or at least dis-integrated view of politics as though they can go about their business because they are a-political. Its not my responsibility for what others do with the sacred truth I discover. In any event it seems more like bullshit than before.
Born Not of a Husband’s Will
This Sunday I will be preaching John 1:1-18 . . . well were could I possibly go with that? I took the opportunity to begin with the only joke I can remember which which is Zizek’s Lacanian joke about the man who believed he was a grain.
A man had been seeing a psychiatrist for some time. The problem it seems was that he kept believing he was a grain of seed. He and the psychiatrist worked on this issue for some time. They made slow progress until one day both he and the psychiatrist were sure that the problem solved. The man no longer believed he was a grain of seed. The two shook hands and parted encouraged by what was possible. The man left the office onto the street and a few seconds later returned in fear and panic. Obviously concerned the psychiatrist asked what was wrong. The man said that there was a chicken standing right outside the office door. The psychiatrist responded, “Remember you are not a grain of seed.” The man replied, “I know that, but how I can be sure the chicken does?”
From here I moved to what seemed like the obvious parallel.