This is Not the Gospel
A bit ecumenical for my taste, but, if you are a christian, this is how you love others in line with the gospel. |
“This is not the Gospel.” That’s my usual response to atrocity. So, especially, when I see the news this morning (Friday) that 49 have been confirmed dead in New Zealand due to a right wing “Christian” terrorist, I just sit there shaking my head, without words to express my sadness. This would be the second time in recent memory that a white supremacist in a country of traditionally non-violent people carried out a shooting, motivated by race and hatred of immigrants. (In 2011 Anders Breivik killed 77 people, mostly children, to “protect” Norway from liberalizing and compromising the ethnic makeup of the country. These children were attending a liberal sponsored summer camp at the time for those volunteering with left leaning political organizations.)
The mark my faith makes on my books usually is
Tolkien-esque—making subtle allusions in the interest of telling a story with a
worldview in the background, not at the fore. In my stories, drawing from
Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway, I
decided—rather arbitrarily—that in order for a character to live, one must die.
That is true of Spirit of Orn and Tall Men and Other Tales. I bring this
up because the sordid past of the Catholic Church and Protestant sects, have on
display a wide array of atrocities, some more recent than others. And while
someone may have a “membership” to a particular strain of Christendom, I often
steer clear of specific denominations because they function more or less as
arbitrary categories and not demarcations for actual “saving-faith” in the resurrection
of Jesus.
It’s frustrating both personally and existentially to see
these things happen. I find it difficult to believe that anyone could read the
New Testament and draw from it the conclusions of the NZ and Norway shooters.
The only thing I can imagine, the only thing that could possibly explain this,
is the fundamental desire to augment the practices of 1st century
Christianity to fit our current cultural climates. And, make no mistake, there
is not truly “right answer.” Christian ethics professors would say that
something like Just War
Theory is far more “reasonable” than the Crusades of the Middle Ages, which
were motivated by misinterpretations of the Revelation of St. John and the need
to consolidate the papacy’s political dominance as a nation-state. (Far
different, one could say, from the Eastern Orthodox Churches that remained
subservient to the governments in power.) But Just War theory is a pragmatic
attempt to justify killing others in war, who at the end of the day are just
other pawns being moved forward by heads of state.
It’s further frustrating when other communities observe
these actions made by lone gunmen and equate those actions with modern
Christian Orthopraxy. But I could say the same thing about Christian
expressions of republicans, Southern Baptists, and people that don’t let me
drink beer at homegroup (our weekly Christian gatherings affiliated with my
church). These previous examples demonstrate a linear curve of de-escalating prejudice,
which is observable in any community, be it Muslim or comic book fans. So, at
the end of the day, the things that define us are tempered by our own conscience
and reason.
As I said before, there is no definitive answer, or absolute
definition of orthopraxy. The only absolute in this world is the absolute—of course, to myself, this
is Jesus. And when people raise up a tertiary cause to become what, in their
minds, is absolute, the only resulting path is destruction. Jesus’ actions, the
reality of who he was, and is, culminate in the gospel that I believe. The same
gospel that prohibits prejudice, slander, and xenophobia. That is why I am not
without hope, because what happened in NZ isn’t the gospel.