"Waste no more time arguing about what a decent man should be. Be one." - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations
I was reminded of that quote when I read Richard Beck's absolutely illuminating essay, The Bait and Switch of Contemporary Christianity. Beck uses the phenomenon known as the "church lunch crowd," describing it as "the most well-dressed, entitled, dismissive, haughty and cheap collection of Christians ever seen on the face of the earth."
Beck's core argument is simple: modern Christianity has this program called "working on my relationship to God" that is a substitute for Jesus's program on Earth: love one another. Be a decent human being. "Work on your relationship with God by being an exemplary human being." Rather than be a decent human being, you can pat yourself on the back for your Christian adherence to the program: "Go to church," "Read the bible," "Argue with evolutionists," "Home-school your kids," "Don't read Harry Potter," and many, many more!
Beck is a Christian (although certainly a liberal, even radical one-- he became a Universalist a while back, convinced that, in the end, everyone gets into heaven, it's only a matter of time), so he knows of what he speaks. But I know Jews, Muslims, and even Buddhists who also regularly "work on their relationship with God/Allah/whatever" but who cling nonetheless to a retributional, coercive, cruel and unrelenting view of their responsibility as a member of their tribe.
The nice thing about atheism is there's no such program to latch on to. If you're an asshole, you get to take full responsibility.
I was reminded of that quote when I read Richard Beck's absolutely illuminating essay, The Bait and Switch of Contemporary Christianity. Beck uses the phenomenon known as the "church lunch crowd," describing it as "the most well-dressed, entitled, dismissive, haughty and cheap collection of Christians ever seen on the face of the earth."
Beck's core argument is simple: modern Christianity has this program called "working on my relationship to God" that is a substitute for Jesus's program on Earth: love one another. Be a decent human being. "Work on your relationship with God by being an exemplary human being." Rather than be a decent human being, you can pat yourself on the back for your Christian adherence to the program: "Go to church," "Read the bible," "Argue with evolutionists," "Home-school your kids," "Don't read Harry Potter," and many, many more!
Beck is a Christian (although certainly a liberal, even radical one-- he became a Universalist a while back, convinced that, in the end, everyone gets into heaven, it's only a matter of time), so he knows of what he speaks. But I know Jews, Muslims, and even Buddhists who also regularly "work on their relationship with God/Allah/whatever" but who cling nonetheless to a retributional, coercive, cruel and unrelenting view of their responsibility as a member of their tribe.
The nice thing about atheism is there's no such program to latch on to. If you're an asshole, you get to take full responsibility.
no subject
Date: 2012-02-09 06:29 am (UTC)You can take the religious part out and insert any other kind of excuse, and it's all about the same.
You own it, or you don't.