It sounds like the stump speech a conservative, Tea Party
type might give on campaign trail. It would certainly be based upon the kind of
“scripture” the “civic Jesus” we have created might bless. It rants and rails
about high taxes, lazy people taking our hard earned money through unfair
taxes, militant Muslims, drug addiction, redistribution, global warming, and
too much tolerance of other cultures.
But, it isn’t a campaign speech or civic Jesus scriptures.
It claims to be the rant of a “76 year old and tired” or an “83 year old and
tired” Bill Cosby. It first appeared on the internet in September 2011
(according to Urban Legends) when Cosby was 74, not 76 or 83 and he has
repeatedly said he had nothing to do with it. Yet, as recently as this past
week, I saw it posted on Facebook by people who claim to worship a God who is,
in His own Son’s words, “Truth.”
Any of us and probably all of us at some point in life, have
been victimized by falling for something that isn’t true. The local weekly
newspaper in my county recently had a front page story about a so-called
Christian investment advisor who had swindled millions from otherwise trusting
believers. Sunday’s AJC had a big
story about how Georgia seems to be at the center of the universe when it comes
to swindlers and investments – Christian or otherwise. There’s no telling how
much money is in the hands of some internet pirate claiming to be the heir of a
Nigerian estate who needs help getting millions (some of which can be mine)
into the United States if only I give him my account number and PIN.
But those things, as horrible as they are, pale in
comparison to the bad rap the body of Christ gets in our culture when people
who claim to follow Jesus post vitriol on the internet, claiming it to be from
a respected cultural icon, when one simple Google search would have made it
clear that it wasn’t. And, quite frankly, even if it was Bill Cosby who said
that – it still sounds foreign to the vocabulary of the Jesus revealed in
Scripture – who may be the great unknown Person among many believers.
Perhaps it is the result of some sort of reaction formation
issue in life, where we rant and rail about the things that frighten us or the
things that we are afraid might be true of us. I’m certainly no psychologist,
but I’m pretty confident that has to be a part of the answer as to why people
put stuff up that not only is clearly not true, but even if it were, clearly
not reflective of the kind of life Jesus lived.
But it might also be a somewhat latent form of racism, where
we finally have found an African-American cultural icon saying what all the
conservatives have been saying for years. Somehow in getting Bill Cosby to say
the nasty stuff we’ve been saying – it makes it ok. I don’t know what the
psychological term for that might be, but do know that the spiritual vocabulary
to describe it would be embarrassing and the stuff from which confession should
be born.
I agree the world in general – and our Western culture in
particular – is in a mess. The salty language of my saintly grandfather that
contained the phrase “hell in a hand basket” comes to mind when I look at the
daily paper. And, more than ever, I believe that the only fix to the mess is
Jesus. If we believers don’t find a way to get our culture to listen to the
Jesus story – there is no fix.
But if the only image of believers that pagans have is the
kind of religious, pseud-Christian crap* that gets posted on Facebook so often,
I wonder if they will ever listen.
*I realize “crap” is not the politest of terms, but note
that Paul used it in Philippians 3:8 and in the spirit of “if it’s good enough
for Paul . . .” I chose to use it! In case you're in need of an edgy Greek word to use in moments of frustration - it's skubalon in English.
1 comment:
Amen and amen. I had to say many of these same things yesterday to a friend of mine and Jenn's who is a theologian. If the theologians aren't self-aware enough to avoid posting inflammatory links and articles in the name of evangelism, then who can we count on?
Here's a link to the article that he posted: http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2013/02/7871/
Word of warning though, the author's tone is very hateful and ungracious.
I spoke out against it because I am tired of the truly important moral questions in the Church being treated as us versus them, finger pointing. I am also weary of how we seemingly cannot help but conflate our love for Jesus with our political rhetoric in a way that makes our reaching out sound like stabbing in the dark.
Thanks for this post, as always.
Cheers,
BKC
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