Proving God by Consensus
By Robert Levin
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A few decades ago I was awakened at seven o’clock one Sunday morning by the persistent droning of my downstairs door buzzer. I was living then in a back apartment on the top floor of an East Village walk-up that was without an intercom or the capacity to buzz visitors inside. This circumstance made it necessary for me to descend five flights of stairs to personally open the frosted-glass front door and to see who it was.
In this instance it was two Jehovah’s Witnesses.
At the time I bore no animus toward people who presented themselves as fervently religious. Though I deemed them delusional, I respected both their right to their delusion and their need of it. The proselytizers I encountered were more likely to draw pity from me than to provoke my ire.
So if I had good reason to be put out by the inconvenience they’d caused me, an inconvenience compounded by the ungodly hour they’d picked to pay a call, my reaction to the elderly and finely attired black couple with soft Georgia accents who greeted me—he with a bible in one hand and a straw hat in the other; she wearing a hat bedecked with white and yellow flowers—wasn’t in the least bit hostile. In fact, while I made it clear that I had no use for the message they were delivering, I was as courteous as I could be. I didn’t want to tamper with their fantasy or hurt their feelings and when I closed the door on them it was very gently.
But that was a while back, before religion assumed the weight and influence that it has in our cultural and political affairs and before I understood just where the so-called “True Believers” are coming from.
We tend to allow that, unhinged as we may judge them to be, evangelicals, in their efforts to make converts or to bring “more religion” into the culture, are doing the work of a God they feel with genuine confidence to be real. Some of us might even imagine that they care about our salvation. But this isn’t what’s happening. Dealing with their fear of death, a fear exacerbated by 9/11 and the destruction of the myth of American invincibility, and wanting desperately for a God and the potential for eternal life implicit in the concept of God to exist, the real mission of these people isn’t to share a revelation but to validate beliefs they’re not sure of by securing the agreement of others. To prove the existence of God to THEMSELVES by achieving a universal consensus on the matter (the only way to achieve something like certainty about anything) is the true aspiration of the religious right.
And I mightily resent the manifold ways in which their ambition to, for starters, make a theocracy of America—a more than adequate means of certifying their beliefs—is already poisoning the lives of the rest of us.
I’m speaking, of course, of their interference with a woman’s freedom to end a pregnancy and of homosexuals ability to marry one another. I’m also talking about the brakes they managed to apply to government sponsored stem-cell research and the role they played in obliging us to endure a George W. Bush for a second term (let alone what his presidency has left in its wake) because he professed to share their faith in Jesus Christ. And I’m referring as well to what turned out to be a politically pivotal quantity of Tea Party candidates that they were instrumental in electing to Congress.
And, again, none of this has been, at bottom, to the purpose of spreading a vision (which could maybe have claimed some level of legitimacy), but rather to, in their own minds, ratify by numbers, law or custom, the presence of a deity.
Since there remains a sufficient population of heathens to challenge their beliefs and to keep their uncertainty alive, reaching their unspoken goal will only become more urgent for the evangelicals. They will get louder and more insistent. And their successes will be more pernicious. Is a President Rick Perry completely out of the question?
I should say that having a few issues of my own with the prospect of death, and quite capable myself of distorting reality in order to live in the world with a semblance of equilibrium, I can, even under the present conditions, experience some empathy for the Christian right’s agenda. (And I can also appreciate the necessity and durability of religion itself. I’m always taken aback when people whose minds I admire predict that human beings will one day “outgrow” the need for religion, as if it were merely a stage in our evolution. Like the biologists who are looking for a religion gene, they miss the point. For as long as death is a precondition of life, a need for some kind of invented deity, with a plan for mankind—and a collection of rules and practices which, if scrupulously followed, offer the promise of an afterlife—is going to prevail for a large percentage of humanity.)
But while I’m not insensitive to the evangelicals’ cause that doesn’t make its increasing encroachment on the lives of the secular any more acceptable to me. I repeat: IS A PRESIDENT RICK PERRY OUT OF THE QUESTION? No. If there was once a time when we could indulge the folks of the Christian right at no substantial cost to ourselves, that’s not the case any longer. Their quest to conscript us into their immortality project has gotten too much out of hand and leaves no room for such generosity. At this point there’s little choice but to do battle with them; to fight and resist their actions at every turn. The consequences for those of us who live for this life rather than the next one have become too dire to let them slide.
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While I sympathise with much
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"I have tried to correct...
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While I'm at it I might as
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nice one- oh sorry- God all
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A few years ago I was
David Maidment
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Well, Christians have been
Well, Christians have been more active in addressing the poverty issue in Africa. As for poverty in America, the liberals just don't really let religion in. The government has taken over the concern for the poor. Bill Clinton stripped down the welfare program. There are various programs for the poor and if you research them, you can get quite a bit of help. You must also realize that the welfare system was created by Christians so that single women could stay at home instead of working until they got married. I really don't see why everyone needs cable television, but that's the corporations that pushed that agenda. The poor in America aren't really all that poor compared to other countries. There's a lot of prejudice towards the poor. Many of them work hard and are humans just like us. If you read, Johnathan Kozol's "Amazing Grace," there is the story of Anthony and his love for Alexander Pushkin because Pushkin was part-black. What may kill the poor are assholes like Donald Trump and others who keep on building and building closer to the poor neighborhoods and driving up all the costs. Christians are also very concerned about the sex-trafficking industry which is a human rights issue... I'm a Neoconservative so I can tolerate abortion and a few other liberal issues. But it seems to me that you are scapegoating Christians for a lot of issues they have no control over. We live in an age when most things are economically determined. It's the politicians and the corporate powerhouses that have the most power now. Google, Apple, WalMart, Wall-Street, etc... these are the people who rule the world. Christianity is a marginalized religion now. There are only 30 million Evangelicals... and there are many different types of Christians who do not share the same views, It's not like the Catholic Church in which the Pope is the final authority on scripture. Yes, yes, the War on Iraq... the evangelicals and the Neoconservatives may have lead that, but Hilary Clinton was also for the war, Alan Dershwitz, who's a civil libertarian, was also for the War. I'm sure most of the Oil Companies were also for the War. But ultimately, I think it was Donald Rumsfeld who was FOR THE WAR and then DENIES ANY RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE WAR AND BLAMES EVERYONE ELSE. I agree with you, War is not a good solution to problems. War is the cause of RACISM. Alll the worst racials ephithets come out of a war, and from WAR, men are made into heros and the native women buy into it and there you have interracial marriages in which the woman sooner or later becomes totally disillusioned of the male hero and becomes a FEMINIST? But if we have a charismatic, Fascist leader with a nuclear bomb, WE HAVE TO GO TO WAR.
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I wanted to stop reading
I wanted to stop reading after paragraph one, but found myself enthralled by this piece. It made me think of myself and my own beliefs. I stopped preaching about that years ago. Now I simply try to help others as my conscience comands me and if others notice and ask why, then so be it.
I am fast approaching an age where most of my days are behind me and of course I think about the future. Was I stung by 9/11? Did I cry at natural disasters and ask "why?" no, not always. This piece made me think and realise just how egocentric I can be and the daily battle I must fight with myself.
Thought provoking.
Thank you for a great read and many other thoughts
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