Words of Sanity About Gaza from Today’s HAARETZ

To read the entire Haaretz opinion piece, go here.

“Protesters in Gaza lobbing rocks and Molotov cocktails or cutting through the fence are far from the textbook definition of “peaceful protesters” engaging in civil disobedience.

“But neither do they present a lethal threat to 13 battalions of Israel army forces.

“Indeed, to call every teenage protester a terrorist recruited by Hamas bent on murdering Israelis flies in the face of truth. For Jared Kushner to say, in the day’s sole mention of the day’s accumulating death toll, that Gazan protestors were “part of the problem, and not part of the solution” is to fail to recognize that Gazans themselves – yes, flesh and blood humans living just over hour southwest of Tel Aviv – must be part of the solution. 

“The feeling of being forgotten and caged in is part of the reason they are protesting, most of them with full knowledge that reaching the homes of their grandparents, rusty old keys in hand, is a symbolic show rather than a realistic goal. 

“Do we really imagine this so-called “March of Return” to be an existential threat to the strongest army in the Middle East? Demonstrators might be wild with rage and even psyched up by Hamas slogans, but they’re not armed and equipped to take on Israel. 

“Are we to the point where the IDF is more worried about the optics of setting a precedent – a Gazan reaching Israeli soil – than the loss of life?

“Hamas may as well be sending young demonstrators into a firing squad. But does that mean Israel has no choice but to keep pulling the trigger?”

Ilene Prusher is a journalist, columnist and author. She teaches journalism at Florida Atlantic University. Twitter: @ileneprusher

Today’s Slaughter in Gaza May Be Followed by Even Worse Tomorrow, Please Pray That Doesn’t Happen

There appear to be no limits to either Israel’s lust for Palestinian blood or American indifference to an ally’s crimes against humanity.

A young boy overcome by tear gas.

Of course, the ongoing crime scene is Gaza.

Today alone, Israeli soldiers have killed 58 people, bringing the total death toll thus far to 107.  2,700 people, men, women and children, were seriously wounded today, bringing the total number of crippled and maimed to 12,000.

One of Monday’s victims.
Israeli civilians watch the protests and the shootings as sightseers.

Not one single Israeli soldier has been injured or killed by these unarmed protesters.  In fact, so sleight is the “threat” that for some Israeli civilians, watching Palestinians get shot inside the Gaza fence has become a leisure time activity.  Pack up a picnic box and relax for a few hours while cheering for the bravery of “the world’s most moral army.”

Please, let those figures sink in.

107 people dead. 2,700 additional human beings wounded.  Why?

Gazan town after Israeli bombing

Because they want to be treated like human beings.  They want freedom of movement; to decide for themselves where they will live; to gain an education and seek employment as they please; to carry themselves with dignity without the constant fear of being shot by an irritated Israeli sniper.

Palestinian refugees 1948

Tomorrow the massacre may become even worse.  Tuesday is Nakba Remembrance Day. May 15, 2018 will mark the 70th anniversary of the mass expulsion of Palestinians from their homes by Israeli military forces in 1948.

I have heard that there may be a plan for the protesters to throw themselves en masse against the prison fence confining them to Gaza.

I have no idea if this is true.  Norman Finkelstein reported that he was told by leaders in Gaza that it may be a possibility.

Please pray that this will not happen. Pray that the leaders of these protests will decide against that action, if they haven’t already (if it was ever a real possibility). — (And NO, the Gaza marches have NOT been organized by Hamas, nor is Hamas using them for “terrorism.” This is pure propaganda. The council of organizers for these marches has one Hamas representative, where he is outnumbered by numerous other community representatives.)

Remember that this famous fence that Israel guards so fervently is not a border crossing. It is not an internationally recognized territorial, state or national boundary.  It is a prison fence.

The people of Gaza are not a population of illegal aliens hoping to immigrate into Israel.  They are 1.8 million prisoners, confined against their will to 141 square miles of territory.  Barred from a place they once called home.

Gaza is one of the most densely populated pieces of real estate on the planet.  Israel makes life insufferable there.

Gaza is a prison.  Israel is the jailer.  The precious “fence” keeps Gazans in a cage like animals.  Who wouldn’t want out?

If you have absolutely no control over your manner of living, and you have no hope of planning for a better future because everything about your world is controlled by the indiscriminate violence of a heartless occupying power, then maybe dying as a martyr in the cause of winning freedom for the next generation is the best way, the only way, to give your life meaning.

I can understand that.

I bet you could too if you found yourself imprisoned in a place like Gaza.

Remember this when you next hear Israeli and American propagandists demonize the people of Gaza for their “failure to value life.”

A Review of James K. A. Smith’s book, Awaiting the King: Reforming Public Theology

NOTE: Jamie Smith is a friend of mine.  We were colleagues at Calvin College for many years.  He is also the fellow who gave me the nudge to write my book, I Pledge Allegiance: A Believer’s Guide to Kingdom Citizenship in 21st Century America.

Awaiting the King: Reforming Public Theology is the final volume in Jamie’s Cultural Liturgies trilogy, an ambitious and masterful project that takes its cue from St. Augustine, especially his work in the City of God.  The previous two volumes in this series are Desiring the Kingdom and Imagining the Kingdom, all published by Baker.

Jamie’s goal, I believe, is to call and equip Christians for a life that is created, directed and consummated by the love of God (both objectively and subjectively).  Thus, Jamie puts Augustine’s central insight at the heart of his analysis: We are what we love.  For the church, then, the love of God, our religious affections, becomes the gravitational center properly (re)ordering the Christian’s approach to all other areas of life, especially public life.

This seemingly simple thesis is unpacked throughout the Cultural Liturgies series by dissecting the many ways in which modern society, whether in politics, education, entertainment, media, advertising or what have you, attempts to shape each of us through its own powerful, repetitious, and typically implicit, liturgies of personal formation (or should we call it deformation?).

Such secular liturgies are conducted through the many public rites and rituals in which we all participate every day, whether it be filing our income taxes by April 15, standing (or kneeling) for the National Anthem in a football stadium, or shopping for the newest version of some must-have electronic gadgetry released just before Christmas.  Every person’s participation in these daily collective activities, all conceived, orchestrated and implemented by anonymous power-brokers unknown to the average person, engages us in a beggar’s banquet of cultural liturgies.

Here is one of Jamie’s more important points.  Liturgical performance, whether religious or secular, is powerfully formative.  Human beings are not simply what we think, ala Descartes, “I think, therefore I am.”  We are also, perhaps even more importantly, formed by the things we do.  And our culture shapes the majority of our activities in day-to-day life.

Thus, Jamie asks us to consider the question: as we participate in these frequent cultural liturgies, what kind of formation is happening to us?  Are we being turned into more agreeable consumers, more patriotic inductees, more subservient government supporters?  And how does this cultural formation process cohere with the Christian’s (presumed) conformity to the person of Jesus Christ?

Jamie correctly insists that every follower of Jesus must remain vigilant in assessing how these competing cultural liturgies are working implicitly, subliminally, to subvert and to replace our love of God with cultural alternatives – love of country, love of new consumer products, love of entertainment, love of sexuality, love of partisan politics, love of warfare, etc.  These alternative liturgies are constantly competing for our attention/ participation, and they will change us if we are not very, very careful.

The Church, however, is called to become an alternative society – in the world but not of it, as the old saying goes – where the love of God binds its members to liturgies of Christian worship that are conforming us more and more to the likeness of Christ. Thus, regular (trans)formation through rites and rituals of Christian worship – scripture reading, prayer, biblical teaching, confession, repentance, admonition, praise and adoration – is essential if the church hopes to stand strong as the alternative community that God calls us to be.

My brief synopsis can hardly do justice to Jamie’s more expansive analysis of the church’s role in society and the work of public theology.  I heartily recommend that you take the time to read Awaiting the King for yourself.  There is much to consider, even though I do not agree with all of Jamie’s analysis or proposed solutions.

However, I will offer a few of my thoughts on Jamie’s final, most practical chapter entitled, “Contested Liturgies: Our ‘Godfather’ Problem.”

I suspect that many of Jamie’s readers have been asking themselves (and him) about the effectiveness of his proposal, e.g. we best counteract the deforming power of secular liturgies by participating in liturgies of Christian worship.  Has Jamie overlooked the elephant in the room?  Namely, if Christian worship is the antidote to cultural conformity, then how do we explain the many examples, too numerous to count, of church-going people who behave no differently than non-church-goers who don’t know Jesus Christ from a hole in the ground?  Worse yet, how about those faithful church-goers who live criminal lifestyles or do horrible things?  People like Francis Ford Coppola’s “Godfather” who would never think of skipping out on mass yet remains untouched by the gospel of God’s grace.

Of course, a full accounting of this problem would require a treatise on the Holy Spirit, conversion, sanctification, spirituality and “the imitation of Christ,” all well beyond the scope of this one book.

However, Jamie has not ignored the elephant completely, and he illustrates the problem by exploring two case studies:  (1) the history of western colonialism and the slave trade, as well as (2) the church’s contribution to the horrific “liturgies of violence” executed in the Rwandan genocide.

Jamie offers three essential ingredients to any healthy church life intending to help people conform primarily to Christ and only secondarily, in non- compromising ways, to culture.

First, Christianity “is a teaching faith” (175). A “failure of catechesis contributes to a failure of formation” (205).  So, the Body of Christ requires continuous, Biblical education.

Second, every local pastor must become an ethnographer and a political theologian.  That is, someone who can (a) interpret the competing cultural liturgies working to reshape and deform God’s people, and then (b) can prescribe the Biblical evaluation and divinely preferred alternatives that equip disciples to “cultivate their heavenly citizenship” here and now. Breaking Christianity’s bondage to nationalism and capitalism will be essential to this task as congregations grow in God-honoring worship (174).

Third, worship will never become purely instrumental.  “To show up to worship is tantamount to an admission of failure” (207).  I like that sentence. Authentic worship liturgies are always theocentric. We adore our Creator and our Savior, first and foremost, because they deserve our honor, praise and service.  The fact that we are also transformed through our worship is only gravy.  Awesome gravy, but gravy all the same.

By in large, I agree wholeheartedly with Jamie’s diagnosis of where and how the liturgical/discipleship rubber must meet the cultural road.  I would prefer, however, that Jamie’s first two points were elaborated more specifically with a laser-beam focus on Jesus as our Paradigm.  This, after all, is the consistent New Testament answer to these questions of competing liturgies:  follow Jesus, keep your eyes on Jesus, imitate Jesus, imitate me insofar as I imitate Jesus.  This is why the eternal Son became the historical Nazarene.

Detailing the necessity of this task, of being Jesus-focused, is the reason I wrote my new book, I Pledge Allegiance: A Believer’s Guide to Kingdom Citizenship in 21st Century America (Eerdmans, 2018).  I dedicate a chapter each to the dangerous cultural liturgies of nationalism and capitalism, for instance.

Granted, Jamie does elaborate his observation that Christianity is a teaching faith by noting the importance of “imitatio Christi.”  He also employs the model of Jesus-as-mulatto developed by Brian Bantum in Redeeming Mulatto: A Theology of Race and Christian Hybridity (Baylor 2010).  In my view, however, this is a serious misstep on Jamie’s part, but I don’t have space here to elaborate my disagreements with Bantum’s mulatto Christology.

It is simply more Biblical, faithful and practically translatable to imitate and to obey the Jesus of the Gospels, to teach what he taught, to model our lives after his, to learn to read our surrounding cultural, political liturgies as Jesus read his, and to embrace suffering for righteousness sake as the measuring rod for our conformity to his image.

Is there a sufficient number of well-equipped ethnographer-political-theologian pastors available in North America to lead God’s people adequately in this task of liturgical discernment and appropriation?  No, not by a long shot.  And I doubt there ever will be.

Many radio preachers think they are fulfilling this role, but generally they are playing in a multi-million dollar kiddie pool while God’s people are drowning in a turbulent sea of militaristic, nationalistic, capitalistic whirl pools.

But then I remember Jesus’ parable of the sower (Mark 4:1-20) and his (apparent) expectation that only a minority of those who make a start at faith will see it through to the end.  I recall Jesus’ description of his “narrow gate” and “restricted road” which only “a few” will ever find (Mathew 7:13-14).  I think of John’s stories of the large crowds of “disciples” who abandoned Jesus because his teaching was “too hard” for them (John 6:66).

Perhaps, when the time is right, God’s people will find just as many faithful, Jesus-following, ethnographer-political-theologian pastors as they need, because the number of faithful, Jesus-following, liturgically-discerning and deformity-resisting lovers of Jesus is fewer than we imagine.

Collaborator Christianity, Yesterday and Today

Fox News recently interviewed Robert Jeffress, one of president Trump’s spiritual advisors, about his upcoming prayer at Monday’s opening of the new American embassy in Jerusalem. Pastor Jeffress was as giddy as a school girl who had just been asked out on her first date.

Listen to the interview below:

As a dyed-in-the-wool Dispensationalist, he naturally piled a heavy load of theological freight onto America’s endorsement of Jerusalem as the unified capital of Israel.  First, this is evidence of God’s providential hand in history.  Second, it confirms that Israel’s creation in the 1948-49 war was God’s own doing.  Third, it establishes that, for the past 3,000 years, Jerusalem has always been Israel’s capital city.  Fourth, it also “blows apart the myth that the Jews stole this land from the Palestinians 70 years ago.”

Anyone who understands the basics of logical argument, or is capable of simple clear-headedness, will easily see through the foolishness (not to mention the immorality) of Jeffress’s claims.  They are a tangle of irrational statements called non sequiturs and petitio principii – which are just fancy ways of saying that Jeffress isn’t talking sense.  (Where in the world did he get his doctorate?)

Either his conclusions have no relationship to the preceding argument (non sequiturs) or he simply assumes the truth of what he says and repeats it as an “obvious” conclusion (petitio principii).  Clearly, such muddle-headedness doesn’t bother Donald Trump or Jeffress’s congregation in Dallas, Texas.

Massacre of Palestinians at Deir Yassin by Israeli forces

There is, however, a more important issue that disturbs me a great deal.  It is the blatant immorality embedded in statement #4 above.  That is, I am deeply offended by Jeffress’s pompous, ignorant dismissal of Palestinian suffering over the past 70 years.

Palestinian refugees fleeing to Jordan, 1948

Jeffress’s attitude – in fact, the common-place attitude of all American Christian Zionists – is an example of what I call Collaborator Christianity.

Collaborator Christianity talks the talk of Christian faith, but its attention has moved away from Jesus to be refocused onto the idolatrous image of nationalistic patriotism.  Collaborator Christianity rewrites the good news of Jesus Christ in order to elevate a gospel of ethnic exceptionalism where God’s hand is best seen in the victorious elevation of a master race, class, or people group.

Christian history is copiously smeared with ugly, “I-can’t-believe-it” eras of Collaborator Christianity. For only a few examples, think of:

The Crusades when popes and bishops blessed Christian armies in their hellacious mission to slaughter Muslims (and any Jews who got in their way).

Circa 1520, The Spanish Inquisition at work on suspected Protestants and insincere Christians in a torture chamber. All their gruesome work was carried out in the name of Christianity; note the altar and officiating monks on the right. (Photo by Three Lions/Getty Images)

The Inquisition when church officials tortured innocent men and women with sublimely obscene creativity and then executed them simply because they had expressed themselves in ways that fell outside of the cultural norms.

Depiction of Spanish atrocities committed in the conquest of Cuba in Las Casas’s “Brevisima relación de la destrucción de las Indias”.

The Conquistadors when Spanish galleons, loaded with soldiers, horses, weapons and priests, landed in the new world searching for riches, territorial expansion made more palatable by its pretense of missionary work.  Typically, the “men of God” were more than happy to help enslave the natives or to bless the impending genocide should the subhuman pagans prove uncooperative.

The German Christian Church which eagerly applauded Adolf Hitler as God’s anointed leader, sent to restore the fortunes of a German empire, ready, willing and able to fulfill its mission as God’s chosen nation.

Western Christian Zionism which sees God’s own hand in Israel’s brutal, war-time creation of nearly 750,000 Palestinian refugees in 1948-49 and 1967.  Christian Zionism typically assumes that Israel can do no wrong, while Palestinians remain genetically predisposed to terrorism.

Christian Zionists contribute tens of millions of dollars to Israel, funding immigration, new (illegal) settlements and other forms of expansionism (for examples see here, here, here and here).  Whereas, the Palestinian Christian church is ignored or slandered as historically unorthodox.

As Palestinians, the Christian population suffers the same injustices as their Muslim neighbors, oppressed by the same military occupation. Yet, the average evangelical tourist finds more excitement in visiting an Israeli synagogue than in searching out and worshiping with Palestinian brothers and sisters in Christ.

Over the past six weeks, somewhere between 40 to 60 unarmed protesters have been shot and killed in Gaza, while 4,000 to 6,000 have been seriously injured (most due to Israeli gun fire) in the weekly Land Day marches. There has not been a single, serious injury, much less a fatality, on the Israeli side of the fence!

Yet, Robert Jeffress (and others like him) has the audacity publicly to betray the Lord Jesus – the Lord who told us to love our enemies and to situate ourselves among the poor and the refugees – by ignoring the vast levels of Palestinian suffering created by his beloved nation, Israel, while enjoying lavish, sumptuous diplomatic dinner parties at Jerusalem’s new American embassy.

We are surrounded on all sides by outrageous demonstrations of Collaborator Christianity.  Tragically, twenty-first century America is not unique.  The human penchant for depravity, both within and without the church, is never ending, and it knows no historic, national, religious, cultural or ethnic boundaries.

Brothers and sisters —

Remember the Crusades.

Remember the Inquisition.

Remember the German Christian Church.

Remember American evangelicalism’s ignorant indifference to Palestinian suffering as their pastors bow and scrape, offering sacrifices of money and adulation before the idols of Israeli political Zionism.

A Twitter Storm for my Friend Munther Amira on Nakba Day

Last March I wrote about my Palestinian friend, Munther Amira.  Munther is a social worker who lives near Bethlehem. He had just been arrested for protesting the way Israeli soldiers regularly arrest, abuse and imprison Palestinian children.

For important information documenting these widespread abuses, please check out the Defense for Children International/Palestine website as well as the work of an Israeli human rights organization called B’TSELEM, The Israeli Information Center on Human Rights in the Occupied Territory.

Change.org has launched a petition and a Twitter campaign on Munther’s behalf.  The campaign is scheduled for May 15, known as Nakba Day to the Palestinian people.  The Nakba, Arabic for The Catastrophe, is the Palestinian designation for the ethnic cleansing of Palestine that was put into effect by Israeli military forces in 1948-49.

It is illegal for Palestinians to commemorate this day in Israel.

Munther’s arrest and imprisonment also demonstrate that there is no such thing as freedom of speech in the Occupied Territories.  It is also against the law (apparently) to protest Israel’s imprisonment of minors in military prisons.

Please, read the full petition at Change.org and speak up for Munther on May 15th.

I have excerpted the announcement below, complete with suggested tweets.

“It would be great if as many people as possible could join us in expressing solidarity with Munther by tweeting using #FreeMuntherAmira #FreePalestine #Nakba70 . Please share this information widely too, and let’s make this twitter storm as big as possible.

“Here are some suggestions for tweets that you could use, or you might want to compose your own, but do include the hashtags.

“Greetings to Munther Amira from [your country]. We stand alongside you in your continuing campaign for freedom and justice #FreeMuntherAmira #FreePalestine #Nakba70

“Greetings to Munther Amira from social workers in [your country]. We stand alongside you in your continuing campaign for freedom and justice #FreeMuntherAmira #FreePalestine #Nakba70

“Solidarity with fellow social worker, Munther Amira, thank you for standing up for the rights of Palestinian children and for being a shining example to us all #FreeMuntherAmira #Nakba70

“We stand in solidarity with Munther Amira & all Palestinian refugees on #Nakba70 and recognise the UN Declaration of Human Rights “Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country” #FreeMuntherAmira #FreePalestine #Nakba70

“Freedom and justice for Munther Amira, Ahed Tamimi and all Palestinian children in Israeli military detention #FreeMuntherAmira #FreePalestine #Nakba70

Diane Ravitch on the Lunacy of Education Reform by Billionaires

Diane Ravitch is probably the most knowledgeable historian of education in the country.  I follow her blog daily.

Among her many accomplishments, Ms. Ravitch served in the first Bush administration and was an early advocate for the standardized testing that blights our public schools today.

But, unlike so many, Ravitch is a true scholar who is willing to admit her mistakes.  Today she is one of the most avid and effective critics of US education policy, including the disastrous appointment of Betsy DeVos as Secretary of Education.

For anyone interested or concerned about public education and its steady destruction in this country, I recommend Ms. Ravitch’s two most recent  books,  Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools and The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education.

I am a product of public schools.  I am also a former college professor with first-hand experience in the bureaucratic control imposed by the federal government with its irrational insistence on management targets, treating the classroom as if it were just another production line, easily improved by more measurement, more standardized tests, more outcome assessments and  “evidence-based methods.”

But NOTHING mad me crazier than the blanket assumption that all responsibility for student performance lay ENTIRELY with the teacher.

Today, Ravitch provides this excerpt from an analysis by one of her friends at the blog Curmudgucation.

“A few nuggets of Peter-Greene-Wisdom:

Here are the areas they believe “require more exploration”

Evidence-based solutions for writing instruction, including mastery of the “spectrum of skills encompassing narrative, descriptive, expository and/or persuasive writing models,” a “spectrum” that I’ll argue endlessly is not an actual thing, but is a fake construct created as a crutch for folks who don’t know how to teach or assess writing.

New proficiency metrics. Can we have “consistent measures of student progress and proficiency”? I’m saying “probably not.” “Can we use technology to support new, valid, efficient, and reliable writing performance measures that are helpful for writing coaching?” No, we can’t.

Educator tools and support. Gates-Zuck correctly notes that “effective” writing instruction requires time and resources, so the hope here is, I don’t know– the invention of a time machine? Hiring administrative assistants for all teachers? Of course not– they want to create “tools” aka more technology trying to accomplish what it’s not very good at accomplishing.

Always looking for ways to get better. Kind of like every decent teacher on the planet. I swear– so much of this rich amateur hour baloney could be helped by having these guys shadow an actual teacher all day every day for a full year. At the very least, it would save these endless versions of “I imagine we could move things more easily if we used round discs attached to an axel. I call it… The Wheeble!”

They want your ideas about “Measuring and Improving Executive Function,” which Peter says should creep you out. It creeps me out!

This is personalized [sic] learning at its worst– a kind of Big Brother on Steroids attempt to take over the minds, hearts, and lives of children for God-knows-what nefarious schemes. Only two things make me feel just the slightest bit better about this.

First of all, I’m not sure that Gates-Zuck are evil mad scientist types, cackling wickedly in their darkened laboratory. I’m more inclined to see them as feckless-but-rich-and-powerful computer nerds, who still believe that education is just an engineering problem that can be solved by properly designed sufficiently powered software. They’re technocrats who think a bigger, better machine is the best way to fix human beings.

Second of all– well, wait a minute. The two guys who have bombarded education with enough money to make a small island and who do not have a single clear-cut success to point to– these guys think they’ve got it figured out this time? They have never yet figured out how to better educate the full range of ordinary students (nor ever figured out what “better educate” means) now think they can unlock the formula for better educating students with larger challenges?

This is like going to a circus and the announcer hollers that Evel Von Wheeble is going to jump his motorcycle over fifty buses, and you get very excited until you read the program and see that Von Wheeble previously attempted to jump over ten, twenty and twenty-five buses– and he failed every time.”

Mental Illness and Torture in American Jails

Yesterday I finished reading Bryan Stevenson’s brilliant book, Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption. I highly recommend this book to everyone I meet.

As I read about the many poor, abused victims of America’s broken justice system in Just Mercy, I was reminded of stories told to me by one of my dearest friends.  Let’s call him John.  John is a convicted felon, now out on parole.

If I introduced John to you, you would quickly come to know one of the kindest, gentlest men you would ever meet. A tall, gentle giant with a ready smile, John would give you the shirt off his back if you asked for it.

Yet, somewhere in his early to mid-twenties, John’s brain began to malfunction with the defective neural-circuitry of the illness now called bi-polar disorder.

Trying to relax in a large public lobby, John was working hard to ignore the loud, commanding voices that only he seemed to hear.  Speaking with ominous authority, the voices kept shouting that it was up to him to eliminate the evil demons preparing to murder everyone around him.  Only he could see them.  Only he knew who they were.  If he didn’t act now, the innocent victims’ blood would be on his hands.

So, John screwed up enough courage to attack the demons himself.

By the time local police officers had tackled John and restrained him, face-down in handcuffs on the lobby floor, two men were seriously injured.  John had attacked and beaten them, as the voices had told him to.

John was arrested and jailed in one of America’s southeastern states.  He is not white.  He was sent to a psychiatric facility for treatment, but John’s  public defender apparently didn’t know how to argue a defense based on mental illness.

John was convicted and sent to the county jail to await sentencing.  He  would wait for seven years.  Seven years – before he was ever sentenced! – while his family scrimped and saved to find enough money for a decent attorney and another trial.

In the meantime, John endured the some of the most brutal, inhumane treatment I have ever heard about.

John’s small cell had two metal benches set against opposite walls. On his first day, two of John’s jailers introduced him to the benefits of having two benches, rather than one, by making him lay across them face down.  With his face and shoulders on one bench and his feet laying on the other, the jailers sat on John’s back while beating his shoulders, legs and thighs with their clubs.

I remember the tears in John’s eyes as he told me about this introduction to his new “home.”

As John shrieked with pain, screaming that his back was breaking, the jailers would periodically show pity by standing up, relieving what I can only imagine as unbearable stress along John’s spine.

But they weren’t finished.

John was forced to stay in that vulnerable position as the guards continued beating him with their billy clubs.  They pounded the flesh and muscle up and down his shoulders, arms, back, thighs, calves and feet.  During it all, he wept, begging them to stop, crying out for mercy.

But they didn’t show mercy.

This was only the first of John’s many beatings.  Beatings, as well as other physical and psychological abuses, that became a regular part of life in the county jail.  The guards seemed to invest what little creativity they had into devising new ways to inflict pain on other human beings.

Finally, after seven long years of effort, John’s family had gathered enough money to hire their first lawyer.  When a new, more competent judge heard this story about my friend waiting seven years for the completion of his trial, he set a hearing date immediately.  For the first time, the court learned about John’s bi-polar disorder.  The doctors who treated him at the state psychiatric facility were finally able to testify about John’s mental condition, and how it remained undiagnosed and untreated at the time of the attacks.

Thankfully, John was released from jail with time served and very restrictive conditions for his parole.  He is now raising a beautiful family with his wife, takes his daily medication and has not had a single run-in with the police.

To the best of John’s knowledge, no one at the jail was ever punished for the ways they had tortured my friend.

No one took his complaints seriously. They all kept their jobs and continued to abuse other prisoners whenever they felt like it, which was most of the time.

Byran Stevenson writes:

“America’s prisons have become warehouses for the mentally ill…the internment of hundreds of thousands of poor and mentally ill people has been a driving force in achieving our record levels of imprisonment…

 “Today, over 50 percent of prison and jail inmates in the United States have a diagnosed mental illness, a rate nearly five times greater than that of the general adult population. Nearly one in five prison and jail inmates has a serious mental illness. In fact, there are more than three times the number of seriously mentally ill individuals in jail or prison than in hospitals; in some states that number is ten times.  And prison is a terrible place for someone with mental illness or a neurological disorder…” (186, 188).

When will a genuine “pro-life” movement arise in this country?  A movement that values and defends the lives of the living as much as the unborn?  Every Christian pledges to follow and obey a poor, homeless, tortured savior; a savior who was said to be mentally ill by his family, arrested on trumped up charges, jailed by corrupt officials, beaten and executed by an occupying military power.

When will we see a truly Christian pro-life movement that works to defend all life, no matter how old, regardless of race or circumstances, no matter the type of death being threatened.

When?

A Good Sojourners Article about the History of School Prayer

Here is an excerpt from a good article entitled “Why School Prayer is so Divisive” in Sojourners magazine.  The author, Frank Ravitch, discusses the history of mandated prayer in our public schools.  It is well worth reading:

“In the 1840s and throughout much of the 19th century, school prayer and Bible reading were used in an attempt to discriminate against Catholics and other religious groups.

“There are examples of Catholic students being whipped and harassed and priests being tarred and feathered and ridden on rails, which involved parading someone around on a wooden rail. Catholics were even killed when they refused to participate in prayer and Bible reading in the common schools.

Much of this violence was about more than just prayer. A lot of it was fostered by resistance to Irish immigration, anti-Catholicism, and perceived job competition. Yet, school prayer and Bible reading issues often served as significant fuel for this anti-immigrant fire.

“During the 19th and early 20th centuries, school prayer was challenged in court by some citizens affected by it for violating state constitutions. These early cases often found that state-mandated school prayer violated the constitution of the state in question. One of these landmark cases, decided in 1872, is “Board of Education of Cincinnati v. Minor.”

“In that case, Judge Alphonzo Taft, former President William Howard Taft’s father and an Ohio Superior Court judge, upheld a school policy prohibiting school prayer and Bible reading in the already religiously diverse Cincinnati public schools.

It was the unanimous opinion of the Ohio Supreme Court upholding Judge Taft’s decision, which made a strong argument for separation of church and state. Justice John Welch, writing for the court, noted:

“When Christianity asks the aid of government beyond mere impartial protection, it denies itself. Its laws are divine, and not human. Its essential interests lie beyond the reach and range of human governments. United with government, religion never rises above the merest superstition; united with religion, government never rises above the merest despotism; and all history shows us that the more widely and completely they are separated, the better it is for both.”

“Interestingly, some of the religious groups that support school prayer today opposed it only 40 years ago, often for the same reasons suggested by Justice Welch. Some Southern Baptists and evangelicals, for example, viewed public school prayer as an affront to God.”

Palestinians Suffer Every Single Day Under Israeli Occupation

  • As often as we can afford it, Terry and I travel to Israel/Palestine in order to live with friends in the Aida refugee camp, located on the outskirts of Bethlehem.  Our main focus involves volunteer work in a local, Palestinian community center.  I have also done educational research when I was teaching at Calvin College.  We always try to document and participate in some of the local protests against the Israeli military occupation of Palestinian communities.

In the summer of 2014, our stay coincided with the tragic kidnapping and murder of three Israel, Jewish teenagers.  We witnessed some of the effects of Operation Brother’s Keeper, the Israeli military response to the kidnappings, an exercise in massive, indiscriminate collective punishment throughout the West Bank.

I gave this talk, complete with illustrative Power Point slides and video, at Calvin College in February, 2015.  The MC introduces me at the 5:48 minute mark. I begin to speak at 9:15.

I hope that, if you haven’t already, you will take the time to listen and then, perhaps, pray for the plight of the Palestinian people.

Sorry, I Don’t Need Government Sanction for My Prayer Life

The loss of special privilege is not persecution.

Let me say it again: The loss of special privilege is not persecution.

Furthermore, the loss of religious privilege is neither religious persecution nor an infringement of religious liberty.  Rather, it is an honoring of the American ideal that no religion will receive special government patronage.

Unfortunately, this failure of basic logic is a major source for confusion and poor political posturing among the conservative block of America Christianity.

It also is symptomatic of the way in which too many Christian leaders hunger for dominance over our public life, believe that they know what’s best for everyone, and don’t really trust the Holy Spirit’s ability to hold his own on a level playing field.

All of these political, spiritual, and logical shenanigans were on full-blown, gory display in the Rose Garden on Thursday when president Trump read his Proclamation on the National Day of Prayer and then signed his Executive Order on the Establishment of a White House Faith and Opportunity Initiative.

According to the Religious News Service, Trump’s executive order “aims to give faith groups a stronger voice within the federal government and serve as a watchdog for government overreach on religious liberty issues.” 

What’s wrong with that? Well, a number of things:

First, let’s recall that we have traveled this road several times before, and it has never turned out well.  Required reading for all of today’s faith-based enthusiasts should be David Kuo’s book, Tempting Faith: An Inside Story of Political Seduction.  Kuo was the Deputy Director of the Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives under President George W. Bush.  He offers a moving confession of political seduction and “a heartfelt plea for a Christian reexamination of political and spiritual priorities.”

Washington D. C. has not changed, and I very much doubt if anyone in the Rose Garden last Thursday either remembers David Kuo or has read his book of confessions.

Furthermore, the current crop of evangelical advisers — the “court evangelicals,” as Professor John Fea aptly labels them — appear even more eager than their predecessors (if that were possible) to sell their ever-lovin’ souls for that much coveted “access” to the devil’s own hallowed halls of power.

Get ready to watch history repeat itself and the Christian church be publicly shamed again and again.

Second, if you have read Trump’s Proclamation, or if you listened to his speech, I hope you noticed that it had as much to do with Jesus Christ, the gospel message, or the kingdom of God as a tea-teetotaler at an Irish wake.

There was absolutely nothing particularly Christian about any of the glad-handing, obsequious antics going on at that pompous affair.  A sure sign of things to come.

In fact, it was a full-out, no-holds-barred display of America’s false gospel of civil religion, pure and simple.  Followers of Jesus Christ have no business signing on to such spiritual quackery, much less “praising the Lord” and polluting the Body of Christ with its deceitful promises. (I unpack all of this anti-Christian messaging in my new book, I Pledge Allegiance: A Believer’s Guide to Kingdom Citizenship in 21st Century America).

Of course, I recognize that the best way to safeguard any religious expression in America is to protect all religious expression in America.  So such Executive Orders must be generic.  I enthusiastically applaud religious freedom for everyone — including those who choose not to believe — in our country.

But that is not my problem.  My objection is two-fold.

First, I believe that evangelical lament about religious persecution is a Trojan Horse being used to promote their agenda of evangelical superiority and control over  public policy (more on this in a future post).

Second, as a Christian, and an evangelical one at that, I believe that the public embrace — which is a public endorsement! — of civil religion is a form of idolatry.  It is a betrayal of the good news of Jesus Christ.

As an American, I applaud the reaffirmation of religious liberty for all religious groups in this country.

But, as a citizen of God’s kingdom, I have no interest in confirming others in the validity of their prayers to a deity other than the heavenly Father of our crucified, resurrected and ascended Lord Jesus.

THIS is what followers of Jesus Christ ought to care about most deeply!

Neither Trump’s Proclamation nor his Executive Order will provide a diddly-damn’s worth of influence towards advancing the kingdom of God in this world.

So why are “Christian” leaders applauding presidential edicts sanctioning policies and actions that could deceive the very people who may actually be  searching for the answers that only Jesus Christ can provide?

Power and privilege.  It is all about the acquisition of power and privilege.

Finally, we return to where I started — the disentangling of religious privilege and the perceived threat of religious persecution.

Christian radio and television have managed to brainwash many evangelicals into thinking that if Christianity is not sitting at the head of a government table, then their religious freedom will be violated.  (Read my earlier post on this subject).

For instance, take the long-standing debate about prayer in our public schools.  Evangelicals have long insisted that, unless there is a specific law sanctioning their prayers in public schools, then they are experiencing oppression at the hands of government.

We might call this the cry-baby approach to religious liberty in America.

I grew up in public schools, and no one ever stopped me from praying inside the building whenever I chose to. In fact, I have never needed a law specifically sanctioning my approach to personal spirituality anywhere in public. (My children also attended school in a nation with mandatory religious instruction.  I had to deprogram them after each indoctrination session).

But, then, religious freedom is not really the point of the prayer debate.

The real point is that evangelicals want a bigger piece of the public policy pie, which they will use to wield greater power over what is acceptable and unacceptable in public discourse.

President Donald Trump, surrounded my members of the clergy, signed the Executive Order on Promoting Free Speech and Religious Liberty, in the Rose Garden of the White House, On Thursday, May 4, 2017. (Photo by Cheriss May/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

I fear that this is the motivation behind a portion of Trump’s Executive Order which says its purpose is “to reduce…burdens on the exercise of religious convictions and legislative, regulatory, and other barriers to the full and active engagement of faith-based and community organizations in Government-funded or Government-conducted activities and programs.”

In other words, the point, in

CHICAGO, IL – JUNE 30: Sister Caroline attends a rally with other supporters of religious freedom to praise the Supreme Court’s decision in the Hobby Lobby, contraception coverage requirement case on June 30, 2014 in Chicago. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

part, is to make it easier for future Hobbie Lobby-type companies to force their employees into abiding by the employer’s religious convictions.  In the case of Hobby Lobby, it was to deny female employees the sort of health care coverage that would pay for their choice of contraception, despite the fact that these employees are not necessarily Roman Catholic.

Folks, it is all about power and privilege.  Power and Privilege.

Other illustrations could be listed, but this one must suffice.  (I also suspect that this new Executive Order is another feature of the long-term Republican strategy to dismantle the New Deal by starving public programs like Social Security, Medicare, affordable public housing, and more.  But that argument must wait for another day).

Honestly, I felt a bit depressed last Thursday after watching men and women who should have known better, so-called Christian leaders accountable to the Church, scurrying around the Rose Garden like a gaggle of glad-handing geese gobbling up the stale crumbs of white bread thrown to them by the White House.

There is an old saying (that I just made up) which goes — when the monks come calling be sure to hide the wine.

Well, look out public policy!  The Religious Right is coming. And they ain’t necessarily working for you.