People use to disagree over interpretations of facts. Now
people have different facts. People create their own “alternative facts” that
confirm their beliefs. Evidence be damned. It doesn’t matter what really
happened. All that matters is what we believe happened. Truth is in the mind of
the beholder.
I can’t help but think of Pontius Pilate interrogating
Jesus. Jesus said to him, “For this reason I was born and have come into the
world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my
voice.” Pilate responded, “What is truth?” I imagine Pilate throwing up his
hands in exasperation as he said those words. It sounds strangely modern or - to
be more precise - post-modern.
As a young evangelical in the 1970’s and 80’s I used to warn
my parishioners of the dangers of a society drifting into relativism. People
talked about what is “true for me” and “true for you.” I predicted that without
any common standard of truth, society would fall apart. My prophecy
has come true … so to speak.
The scientific method used to be accepted as a discipline to
arrive at facts. Now we live in an age of science denial. Doctors used to be
respected. Now they are suspected … of trying to kill us and our children with
vaccines and masks. Journalists used to be viewed as independent investigators who
uncovered truth. Now journalists are vilified as propagandists spreading lies.
We live in a post-truth era. People no longer even search
for truth. They think it is a lost cause. If we found it, no one would believe
it anyway. So why even try? How would people even know if they found it? Disinformation
and misinformation are so rampant that people can no longer distinguish fact
from fantasy. They have not been trained how to reason, so they will believe
anything. Even the concept of “fact” seems quaint. There is only “us versus
them.” Information is ammunition.
For me as a pastor this attitude is particularly troubling
within Christianity. I went to the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in
Kentucky back when Baptists were in the mainstream of biblical and theological
scholarship. Science was considered a gift of God. History was seen as the
arena of God. To deny science or history was to deny God. The gold standard for
biblical studies in my seminary was the historical critical method. My professors
sought to recover actual historical events from beneath the layers of literary traditions
in the Bible.
Then the fundamentalists took over the denomination and the
seminary. Historical science was abandoned in favor of doctrinal purity. The
Bible was announced to be inerrant in all matters, including history and
science. The universe was created in six days six thousand years ago. Adam and
Eve were declared to be real persons. The Garden of Eden was a real place,
complete with a real talking snake. Noah’s Flood really happened. Methuselah lived to be 969 years old. The sun
stood still for nearly a day in order to give Joshua time to take revenge on
the Amorites. Sarah gave birth at age 90.
To think otherwise is the devil’s lie, they say. That is why
Southern Baptists and other evangelicals have embraced post-truth politics so
readily. They have lived in fantasyland for a hundred years, since fundamentalism
was formed in response to modernism in the 1920’s.
In the name of God they have fought against historical and
scientific truth. They have insisted on interpreting biblical stories literally
and rejected any historical and scientific evidence to the contrary. They have
fought against evolution. They have championed creationism, intelligent design,
prayer and Bible reading in schools. They are very used to distrusting
scientists and historians.
They have built temples to their literalism, such as the
Creation Museum and Noah’s Ark in Kentucky. They have led the way in creating
their own set of “facts.” Anything that does not conform to their worldview is
nonfactual. They have constructed an alternate reality, complete with Christian
schools and home schooling curriculum to perpetuate it.
These anti-science, anti-history Christians were ripe for the picking by the conspiracy theorists, anti-vaxxers and political operatives who
recruited them. It is one thing to have an evangelical subculture as an
alternative to mainstream culture. It is another thing to try to remake American
culture in that image. Yet that is what
is happening today. Democracy is of no value to those who see theocracy as
God’s perfect will for planet earth. Like God in the Book of Revelation, they
are willing to burn down the house to bring it about.
No longer is the old hymn “Onward Christian Soldiers” just a
metaphor. Now Christian culture warriors buy semi-automatic weapons, wear camo,
and form militias in the name of Jesus. Among the conspiracists who stormed the
Capitol on January 6 were evangelicals, who waved flags that proclaimed "Jesus
is my Savior, Trump is my President," "Jesus saves," and
"Jesus 2020."
After seizing the Capitol building they offered a prayer to Jesus from the podium of the Senate chamber, “Jesus Christ, we invoke your name!” All the people responded “Amen!” These are the new Christian Crusaders. As a Christian shaped by Enlightenment and democratic values, this feels like a return to the Dark Ages. God help us all.
Voltaire warned us some 250 years ago, didn't he. Nothing much has changed. Christians who have been commanded to believe absurdities are easily persuaded to commit atrocities in His name. R.Hilman, aka Abbababba.
ReplyDeleteI am an Agnostic who loves to read your Blog. If more representatives of religion were open minded and truth seeking like you, religion would not be losing followers like it is these days. I believe the Younger Generation is our great hope. They seem to be seeking spiritual answers. To me they seem to see the mistakes we older ones have been making. To me they seem more accepting of others with differences from themselves. Once when discussing Racist prejudice with my daughter, she said, "Oh Dad. No one cares about that stuff any more!" I was so heartened by all the white faces in the BLM marches. I think she may be correct! The Younger Generation is my hope.I may not see it but I refuse to accept that they will not create a better future for all. Hapi
ReplyDeleteYour daughter is right, methinks. We, the enlightened, Vietnam generation pretty much got it all wrong, didn't we.
DeleteYou always seem to put into words what I'm thinking and feeling. And you back up the thoughts with experience, observation & wisdom while remaining open minded. Thank you!
ReplyDelete