This is kind of a continuation of a few conversations I have
had since we left the church over a year ago. Generally, it is along
these sorts of lines: “Not all Christians are like that.” “Stop dissing the
Bride of Christ™.” “My church is great!” And, my all time [least] favorite:
“Why are you depriving your kids of the experience.”
And my response is this:
Our children are a
significant reason we are reluctant to go back.
***
Let me clarify a few things. I remain a committed Christian.
I still believe. The problem is that I really don’t see Christ in the American
church right now. And, although it pains me to say it, I find that, rather than
helping my walk with God, church was hindering it and making me miserable in
the process. Rather than giving encouragement in following Christ, I was
finding that the church was pressuring me to abandon my beliefs in favor a
political culture war.
I also am not saying that I will never go back to a church.
Never is a long time. But I am not eager to do so, and I feel that in our
current climate, doing so would require unacceptable compromises in the name of
getting along. If I do go back in the future, though, I don’t think it can ever
be to an Evangelical church. The trust is broken, and it isn’t coming back.
Also, since every time I speak out against the increasing
toxicity of American religion, those who remain in the church feel defensive,
let me say it again: no, not everyone in church is like this. There are good
people there too. But a lot of people are devoted to a political faith, and the
poison is in the water, so to speak. Also: lots and lots of good people in
Mormon tabernacles - and in mosques and Hindu temples. Just saying.
***
My wife and I have been watching the ongoing suicide of
Evangelicalism (and the American church in general) for a long time. Because we
grew up in nutty, cultic subcultures, we saw the crazy before most ordinary
churchgoers did. And we have watched, as she put it, the crazy become
mainstream. From openly anti-Civil Rights (and sexual predator) Roy Moore to
White Supremacist Steve Bannon. From viciously anti-gay Tony Perkins to deeply
racist Bryan Fischer. Ideas too, from abusive child rearing practices (see the
Pearls and the Ezzos) to Modesty Culture.
From the endless obsession with female virginity to a delusional persecution
complex. From outright rejection of science to conspiracy theories. From the
economic policies of Ayn Rand to the racial policies of Milo Yiannapolous. (Oh
yes, that’s real. I know several people from our former church - including leaders - who are big
fans.) From the Cult
of Domesticity to toxic masculinity. From gender essentialism, gender
roles, and gender hierarchy to survivalism. From virginity pledges and
rings to macho man activities. Maybe I was unaware when I was a kid, but I
don’t remember any of this being mainstream back then. Heck, even in the 1990s,
when our respective families got involved in cult groups, we were the fringe
people. Now, much of what we experienced in those far out groups is just
another day in the pew.
***
Even before we left our longtime church (which had for a
while been a haven from the craziness), we had some significant warning signs.
And since we left, a number of additional things have happened that make us
reluctant to go back. Some of these were specific to our situation, but others
are more universal. Here are just a few that stand out:
● A sermon in which misogyny and feminism were presented as
opposite evils. (The political, social, and economic equality of women is an
evil?)
● The Christmas
Wars™ becoming a focal point of our kids’ Sunday school every December.
● Frequent historical revisionism from the pulpit. This was
generally of the hagiography of the past variety, but also the “everything good was done by our theological tradition” sort.
● Frequent references to “persecution is coming” from the
pulpit.
● A seeming obsession with preaching against homosexuality -
and at a time when open white supremacy was evident from people within the
church - including leaders.
● A friend’s daughter being pressured (at a large local
church) to make a virginity pledge - and this is very, very common.
(Personally, I don’t think young teens - let alone tweens - have the capacity to enter into
contracts. This is actually the law too. I think it is inappropriate to
pressure children into making pledges they are too young to understand. Also,
why virginity but not, say, greed?)
● Swag from a political lobby group (and recognized hate group) being
distributed at church
● A leader at church pushing “be a real man” theology
● A guest preacher saying “When God comes to your door, he
will ask to speak to the man of the house” from the pulpit, with no blowback
from leadership.
● Our food pantry, which partnered with the local dialysis
center was for all intents and purposes eliminated by leadership without input
from those involved. It was deemed not to be a priority.
● At the same time, the establishment of a
quasi-security-force group, which changed the vibe to one less welcoming. I
cannot help but wonder if this was connected to the fact that some African
American young men had started to attend.
● Some church leaders - including ones who taught our kids -
posted stuff from openly White Supremacist jerk Milo Yiannopolous. And also
openly social darwinist stuff like “we don’t feed the poor for the same reason
we don’t feed squirrels in the national forests.”
● At a winter camp, a speaker pushing grossly sexist beliefs
about men and women, making creepy remarks about how attractive his kids were
(with them present), pushing sexist views of the marriage relationship, and
more. My kids had to be deprogrammed by a friend (who was a chaperone)
afterward, lest they think these were truly Christian beliefs.
● After said camp, the child of a friend deciding (s)he
couldn’t be a Christian anymore because (s)he couldn’t live up to the demands
the speaker said needed to be met.
● Open talk at church (not from the pulpit, but in the
hallways) in favor of building a border wall and sending the Mexicans back.
● A sermon in which the line from Numbers, “Now the man
Moses was very humble, more than any man who was on the face of the earth.” was
claimed to have been written by Moses. Say what? Even a kid can see that was
added at some point by a scribe. Likewise, St.
Jerome (who did most of the work translating the
Vulgate, back in the 4th Century CE) understood that the Torah wasn’t written
by Moses. It was just one example of the Bible-dolatry
that tried to make scripture what it isn’t.
● My wife being ignored and marginalized when she filled a
job viewed as “male” (sound tech.)
● A candidate for leader of children’s ministry spending an
interview with my wife making it clear that she didn’t care what parents
wanted, she was going to do what she wanted, particularly culture war stuff.
And lied about it afterward. Oh, and also bragging about the intact condition
of her daughter’s hymen (medically verified!) and saying it was her greatest accomplishment as a
parent. And dissing Harry Potter. And saying she didn’t see the point in having
missionaries talk to the kids. She wasn’t hired, but it was close. (We would
have left then if she had.) Oh, and she was in the same position previously at
a much larger church before that.
● A men’s retreat that feature the use of military-style
weapons as an exercise in manliness. I’m a gun owner, but that still just feels
wrong to me that weapons would be part of a spiritual retreat.But, manliness, yo.
● After we left, a leader at our former church was talking
with a friend about the local women’s march, which my wife participated in. He said,
and I am not making this up, “Some women just need to be smacked.”
● Another friend’s teens were taken aside by another church
leader, and the girl informed that she shouldn’t be leading, but should defer
to her brother, because God intended women to be submissive and take that role.
● A friend dyed her hair a lovely shade of blue, and a bunch
of people at church stopped talking to her.
● A local megachurch held a big rally in support of a local
business owner who violated California
law by refusing to serve LGBTQ people. A friend who counterprotested this was
insulted, threatened, and physically assaulted by the church members. Gaining
the right to refuse to do business with LGBTQ people seems to be an obsession
of the American church right now.
● My dad teaches a church history class at a local largish
church. He has mentioned how much effort he puts into pushing back against the
idea that Christianity is synonymous with (white) America. And trying to convince
people that “love your neighbor” applies to immigrants and refugees and poor
people and black people and so on. While I greatly admire his efforts as a
missionary to the unregenerate, the fact that he has to spend effort fighting
against ethno-nationalism in the church is a huge problem to me. That isn’t a
place I want my kids.
● A local church held an official “service of mourning”
after Obama was elected.
● In response to protests over police killings of unarmed
African Americans, several local churches have held services with “Blue lives
matter” type themes.
● A local pastor finally left the local high school board
after years of pushing toxic stuff like creationism in science class, armed
teachers, and - of course - no transgender people in the “wrong” bathrooms.
(This is in violation of state law here in California - he was advocating open defiance
of the law, just like Roy Moore.)
● A fellow professional musician was disinvited from the
nursing home ministry she had served in for years (with her former church) because she was
“caught” playing a professional Easter gig at another church. (Our former
church - to their credit - was much better about this sort of thing. It’s too
bad it went off the rails in other ways…)
● And that’s just the local stuff. I could also mention
Steve Bannon speaking at the Values Voter Conference. (Yeah, the guy who
recently said “They
call you racists. Wear it as a badge of honor.” That guy.)
● I could mention 80% of white evangelicals voting for Roy
Moore, despite credible accusations of child molestation against him.
● I could cite the
poll showing that a solid majority white Evangelicals believe they are more
persecuted than Muslims in our country. And more than racial minorities too.
● I could mention Jerry Falwell Jr.’s assertion that Trump
is a “dream
president for Evangelicals” and that one big reason was that he was
building a border wall and evicting immigrants.
● I could mention that Russell Moore was nearly ousted from
the SBC because he called out Trump’s racism.
● Or that the SBC was going to let a resolution condemning
the “Alt-right” (a new euphemism for old fashioned White Supremacy) die in
committee, until the most prominent African American member threatened to walk
- and leave Evangelicalism altogether. Faced with likely becoming a whites-only
denomination, they finally voted for the resolution. (Under duress, basically.)
● I could list the building of a multi-million dollar,
high-tech gun range at one of the largest Christian universities - so that
students will be prepared to fight of the inevitable Muslim invasion.
● Furthermore, in the midst of a push by the Trump
administration to follow through on his campaign promise to ethnically cleanse
America, a prominent and influential Evangelical organization decided that was
the right time to come out with a document denying the existence of
intersexuals and transgender persons, and asserting that you cannot be a “real”
Christian if you don’t uncategorically condemn departures from “traditional”
gender or sexuality. Basically a litmus test for the faith that would exclude
me and many others from being accepted.
● The current political cause of much of the American church
is over so-called “religious liberty,” meaning the rights of Christians to
punish and control those who do not observe their sexual purity rules. That
means denying employees birth control, refusing
to serve LGBTQ people and single mothers, and refusing to obey the law as
government employees.
● A trend (of which “9
Marks” is the best known example) toward the use of “church discipline” to
enforce doctrinal purity and loyalty to leadership. And, along with this, the
inclusion of beliefs about human sexuality, young earth creationism, abortion,
and other issues that are at best non-essential (and really are mostly political issues) as core beliefs from
which there can be no dissent.
● A never-ending series of sex scandals where church leaders
who molest children or commit clergy sexual abuse are protected from
prosecution, and the victims blamed.
● Ditto for domestic violence.
● 68%
of white Evangelicals say we have no obligation to take in refugees. Worse,
the polling on this has gotten worse over the last couple decades. Religion in America
is becoming more, not less racist and
xenophobic over time - in measurable ways. The trend is in the wrong direction.
● The Trump administration decides to start separating
immigrant children from their parents indefinitely in an attempt to discourage
them from seeking asylum, and this is met with deafening silence from most Evangelicals.
● Instead, they promote Franklin Graham’s political rally
tour of our state - he’s literally working to get out the vote for Republicans,
saying that “progressivism is another word for godlessness.”
●After a year of watching Trump consistently deport, harass,
defame, and antagonize immigrants; after seeing the GOP come within a couple
votes of ending healthcare for the poor and disabled; after it came out Trump
paid off a porn star -- after ALL of the crap we have seen -- white
Evangelicals approve of Trump with a 75% rating. They are by far his most
loyal fans. It is safe to say that Trump is the truest expression of the moral
values of Evangelicalism.
Basically, both before and after, there has been ample
evidence that church culture is becoming ever more political, reactionary, and
toxic. It isn’t just one church. It’s the whole system. What was once fringe
right-wing lunacy is now mainstream.
It isn’t that everyone believes these things. And there are
lots of good people in American Christianity. (Just like there are lots of
great people in Mormon tabernacles. And in mosques.) But the increasingly toxic
culture taints the experience, and makes it particularly difficult when you
have kids and don’t want them to think this kind of evil is okay.
Here are my concerns:
1. Incompatible moral
values. I have discovered that to a rather significant degree, I do not
share the same values as a solid majority of American Evangelicals. Not the
same political values. Not the same moral values. That’s a problem, because
that means that putting my kids in church means that they will surrounded by
people who will be undermining the values I wish to teach them. Not everyone,
obviously. But an awful lot of them...and usually the people with power.
2. Deprogramming.
One of the most exhausting things about being part of a church the last couple
of years before we left was the continual need to monitor and deprogram. Over
and over. No matter what we said to leaders. And it was getting increasingly
worse. In retrospect, we probably should have left sooner. But for a while, the
good outweighed the bad...until it didn’t. And honestly, it would be the same
pretty much anywhere else, because the political and cultural beliefs are
widespread. We are so tired of fighting this fight, and realize we are never
going to win it.
3. Recruitment into
the culture wars. This is related to the above concern. We have, over, and
over, and over, objected strenuously to the culture wars and to their being
brought into Sunday school. We have mostly gotten a pat on the head, followed
by our wishes being completely ignored. And this is the same pretty much
throughout American Christianity. As social justice causes became passe (due to
the need to justify slavery and Jim Crow), and with the founding of the
Religious Right (on a pro-segregation platform - I am going to keep saying this
until people start listening…), the political culture wars are pretty much the
only way that white middle class Christians in this country interact with those
outside the tribe. Certainly, within Evangelicalism, there will be NO escape
from this. (And that means most protestant churches in our town.)
4. Historical
Revisionism. This was also becoming an increasing concern as the kids got
older. Particularly since church leadership types tend to live in their own
intellectual bubble, getting news from Fox (or, gag, Breitbart), and seemingly
everything else from approved “christian” sources. Groupthink is a problem with
any group, but there doesn’t seem to be any openness to facts that threaten the
theological or political beliefs. In particular, the revisionism was a problem
when it came to the places that race and religion intersect. It was more
important to maintain the image of Christianity as a force for good at all
times (and the Republican party as righteous - unlike those godless commie Democrats - too) than to admit and wrestle with the dark
things in our history. And our present. The thing is, my kids aren’t stupid.
They read, they listen, and they notice lies.
5. Alternative facts
and reality. On a related note, there is a growing problem of acceptance of
“alternative facts.” As Peter Enns puts it:
Theological
needs – better, perceived theological needs – do not determine historical
truth. Evangelicals do not tolerate such self-referential logic from defenders
of other faiths, and they should not tolerate it in themselves.
And this goes for so many things. The perceived needs of
theology - and politics - bulldoze any possible consideration that might challenge those
beliefs. So if theology says we are persecuted, well then we are! And if we
have to make stuff up to prove it, we will. If we have to persecute others and
claim we are persecuted when those outside the bubble call us on it, then do
it, right? I’ve written before about the poison of Presuppositionalism
and how it creates an alternative version of reality where everyone else is by
definition wrong. BTW, I wrote the following before we left the church, and it is
spookily prescient:
“Right now, I have my doubts that
unless some fundamental changes occur, it will not remain possible for a person
to be part of Evangelicalism and still be intellectually honest or morally and
ethically decent. Such people will be increasingly purged in the name of
doctrinal purity.”
We are part of that group purged in the name of doctrinal
(and political) purity. We were forced out. There is no longer a place for
people like me in Evangelicalism. On a related note, I find that anymore, I
don’t share a common experience of reality anymore. Since I can’t believe Fox
News’ fabricated (and xenophobic) reality, I can’t really have a discussion. We
cannot agree on the basic facts of existence or how to find them.
6. Hostility toward
science. This isn’t just about evolution - although it is about that. It is
about human sexuality. It is about environmental conservation (proof positive
that American Evangelicals largely get their ethics from Fox News, not from a
consistent Christian ethic or the historical teachings of the church.) It is
about social science. It is about the very existence of absolute truth that can
be discovered. (Sorry. Evangelicals do NOT believe in absolute truth. They
believe in absolute authority, which
is a very different thing. A belief in absolute truth means that you change
your opinions as you get better information. A belief in absolute authority
means that you believe what your accepted authorities - and that includes leadership's
preferred interpretation of scripture - say, in the very teeth of the
evidence.) It is the same problem with perceived theological (and political)
needs - they trump (pun intended) reality. Every time. I have real concerns
about this when it comes to my kids. I am working to give them a solid
grounding in science and math. I loved science as a kid, and I can say that one
of my major struggles with faith as a young adult was due to finding out just
how much the church lied to me about science. It was a tough pill to swallow. I
don’t want my kids to grow up with the same problem.
7. Marginalization of
women. Even within progressive denominations, church is a male-dominated
affair. (Yeah, not all, but the overwhelming majority.) And within
Evangelicalism, keeping women out of leadership is now a core doctrine, and has
become an increasing obsession. Before we left, I did what I could to give
women a platform within our worship teams. But, as the church culture changed,
it seemed that there was a push to relegate women to the “pink collar”
positions. I already mentioned one of my wife’s experiences. I grew
increasingly concerned that church was the one place my daughters (and my wife)
would be systematically excluded from the leadership positions that actually
had decision-making power. Church was the one place they were viewed as “less
than” men. This is rather a contradiction to the witness of the early church,
where women were a majority, and respected
as leaders. I know there are exceptions, but they are rather few.
8. Worrisomely bad
response to sexual predators. It is bad enough that American Christians
overwhelmingly voted for a serial sexual predator (Trump) and credibly accused
child molester (Roy Moore.) But they continue
to defend those two predatory men. Likewise, in my own experience and as
demonstrated by a number of high-profile cases, if a sexual predator is a male
church leader, he will be protected, the victims slandered and marginalized,
and justice
will not be done. As fellow OBCL
alumnus Rachael Denhollander said, “Church is one of the least safe places to
acknowledge abuse because the way it is counseled is, more often than not,
damaging to the victim. There is an abhorrent lack of knowledge for the damage
and devastation that sexual assault brings.” She is absolutely right, and,
unsurprisingly, SGM (who engaged in a serious coverup of abuse), is now trying
to destroy her reputation. One advantage we had at our former church in this
area is that they did have a good policy - and also, we knew the people who
would be leaders of our kids for years before our kids got to that age. With a
new church, we would be placing them with strangers, essentially, and given
what we have been through, I am not really comfortable with that.
9. A pathological lack
of empathy. This was the most horrifying part about the last couple of
years. If you can’t find common ground on logic and reason, can’t agree on the
basic facts of reality, how do you have a discussion? Once upon a time, like
when I was a kid, you could at least start with empathy. But now, empathy for
those outside the tribe has pretty much disappeared from American Christianity,
replaced by social darwinism and tribalism. I don’t want my kids in that kind
of environment. One the one hand, I don’t want them to become heartless and
ruthless. On the other, I know that because they are compassionate and
empathetic people, they will suffer. And as soon as they fail to conform, they
will be torn to pieces in the name of God. (Just ask Russell Moore. Or Rachel
Held Evans. Or Jen Hatmaker. Or John Pavlovitz. Or...the list goes on and on
and on. You are useful to American Christianity only as long as you further the
party line. Fail to do so, and you will be ruthlessly destroyed and disowned.)
10. It’s just
politics. It has become more and more apparent that Christianity in America is
mostly a thin veneer of religion over what is essentially a political movement.
(Or movements.) Theology may trump reality - but politics always trumps
theology. Party comes before the teachings of Christ - or even basic human
decency. I can predict what at least 80% of Evangelicals believe about pretty
much any political issue. Not by consulting scripture, Christ’s words, or the
historical teachings of the church. Nope. All I need to do is check with Fox
News. And it’s not just Evangelicals. I can likewise predict the beliefs of
most “progressive” Christians by doing the reverse. (It’s not as uniform with
progressives as for conservative Christians, but it’s still pretty striking.)
And it isn’t so much the beliefs themselves as the fact that the beliefs seem
to change in lock step with the change in the platforms of the parties - not
with any meaningful change in the official theology. The last thing I want for
my children is for them to have politics and religion inseparable in their
minds. As it is, I am suffering loss of my church connection because I was
unable and unwilling to change my morality to fit better with the
racist/xenophobic/social darwinist direction the Republican party has chosen. I
don’t want my children to see me sell my soul. (Heck, I don’t want to watch
myself do it either.) Right now, I feel that political loyalty is the price of admission to the
church club. It’s not one I am willing to pay.
11. I will never be
accepted. Not really. If there has been one theme in my life experiences
with church, it is that here in America,
everyone is a resource. A source of money or labor or credibility. We don’t
love people for who they are. In the church context, that means that you are
only valuable for what you give. And only valuable as long as you further the
agenda. Increasingly, certain beliefs - particularly in the areas of human
sexuality and gender roles - have become a litmus test for full acceptance. Many churches say
“all are welcome,” but this is mostly bullshit. You are welcome as long as you
agree to change. You are welcome as long as you shut up when you disagree. You
are welcome as long as you don’t rock the boat. Shut up, write that check, and
give us your free labor. And when you are no longer lock-step with us, don’t
let the door hit you on the way out. Right now, for a variety of reasons (which
I may blog about in the future), I cannot in good conscience subscribe to the
doctrinal statements of most churches. Particularly in this town. Because of
this, I know I will never be truly welcome.
12. You will know a
tree by its fruit. This to me is the ultimate deal-breaker. When I look at
the Church, I see an institution which is decades behind the larger culture in
recognizing the basic human rights of non-white, non-male persons. I see an
institution which makes people less compassionate. The fruit I see is most
certainly not what I want to see in my own life, or in the lives of my
children. And let me be blunt: in 2016, white Evangelicals voted in a larger
percentage for Donald Trump (running openly on a KKK platform) than for any
presidential candidate in history. Actions speak louder than words. Actions
indicate values more than theological statements. I have come to believe, like Chris
Ladd, that the election of Trump was no anomaly. Trump is the truest
expression of the moral character of the Evangelical Church in America.
I refuse to identify myself with that kind of “moral
character.” I won’t place my children in that moral environment. Period.
***
Hey, want to change my mind? What I am looking for is kind
of an old-fashioned Christian concept:
Repentance.
There are several components to this, as any good
Evangelical kid can tell you.
1. A realization that
one has sinned. I am still waiting for the vast majority of Evangelicals to
wake up and say, “Oh my god! What have we done?”
2. A change
in behavior. This would mean doing the opposite of what they have been
doing. No more voting for racists. No more Ayn Rand economics. No more
pathological lack of empathy.
3. Making amends.
Without this one, it is just words. You all have caused tremendous damage to vulnerable
people. (The poor, refugees, immigrants, minorities, LGBTQ people, women,
children.) Time to attempt to repair that damage. Until I see that, it will be
obvious that there is no repentance.
Until there is repentance, I’m done.
***
One of the facets of organized religion that can be great is
the community. This is one thing I really do miss. But the thing is, I missed
it before we left. Things changed. I have been thinking about it over the last
year or so, and I think that the core issue is that fellowship requires being
able to be real and open. If you have to hide who you are in order to maintain
relationships, it isn’t fellowship at all.
I understand disagreement. And I understand avoiding
politics, like we often do at family gatherings to preserve the peace. The
problem comes when politics becomes so inseparable from religion that you can’t
even talk about religion anymore. At church. If you can’t talk about religion
at church, well, what the heck is it even about anymore?
For all intents and purposes, I could not talk about
religion at church, because to talk about how the teachings of Christ compel us
to love our neighbor was, by definition, political. It would, after all, indict
the embrace of the politics of hatred and viciousness toward those outside the
tribe which is now a core belief of Evangelicalism.
So, it isn’t really realistic to expect community and
fellowship at church right now. The trust is gone, the illusion of common
values is gone. Rather than being a source of connection, our (allegedly)
common religion is a source of alienation.
***
Why not join a progressive church?
That may eventually be in the future. Or maybe not. I don’t
know at this point. I’m not ready to date again after a bad breakup. But never
is a very long time. Ten years ago, I would not have predicted I would be where
I am either. So the future is, as Tom Petty sang, “wide open.”
I am to a degree hampered by geography. Bakersfield is a schizophrenic town. We have
a good legal community, vibrant arts and music, and a growing educated class.
But we also have poverty, high teen pregnancy rates, low average education, and
a lot of people who love Truck Nutz and
Confederate Battle Flags and AR-15s. And we have a VERY conservative and highly
political church scene. A local pastor who was on the High School board of
trustees stirred up controversy for over a decade with things such as trying to
get “In God We Trust” in every classroom, eventually resigning in protest over
the board agreeing to follow state law on transgender bathroom use. I already
mentioned the LGBTQ discrimination issue. It’s a tough town for Christians who aren't Republicans - which means Trump now.
After we left, I spent some time with another former member
of our church, who left after a rather passionate anti-gay sermon. (They have a
gay son.) They too haven’t found a home. It’s not hard to see why. In a
metropolitan area with half a million people, and a few hundred churches, I
could count on one hand easily the number of Protestant churches that aren’t
fundie, political, or both. And one of those is the Unitarian church. The rest
are all pretty small. And no offense meant to the likely lovely people who go
there, but they are overwhelmingly old and white. I realize this is a problem
facing churches all over (and Evangelicalism is most definitely NOT immune to
this trend.) But the idea that we can magically find some fellowship for our
kids isn’t really true. There’s no great option here.
Related to that is that progressive churches also tend to be
filled with people a lot like me: white, educated, professional class - just older and long time Democrats. You
know, I like people like me. But religion should cut across demographic lines.
Right now, it doesn’t, and I am very much feeling like religion in America is just
politics by another name. I suspect that once it becomes clear I don’t toe the
Democrat platform, I will be viewed with suspicion.
Another concern for me too is that progressive churches (at
least in this town) have taken kind of a non-confrontational stance, which
means they have been largely absent from public discourse. The counterweight to
the hate and bigotry has come, not from religious, but from secular sources. It
feels kind of like the churches that were quietly uncomfortable with slavery,
but too fearful to actually risk pushing back.
A more personal issue for me (and other Evangelical ex-pats)
is that a big denominational switch means learning an entirely new religious
language and ritual. I don’t want to sound whiny here, but ritual is important
to us humans, religious or not. And part of what holds us together in the hard
times is the muscle memory of our observances. It isn’t that I can’t worship God in a new way, or that
the form itself is that terribly important. It’s that part of the sense of
belonging that comes with being part of a community is sharing a common - and
familiar - ritual. To make a complete switch after 40 years is hard enough for
anyone. For someone like me, who spent 30 of those years actively creating a
part of those rituals (particularly music, but more than that - I was an
active, participatory church member all my life), it is particularly
disorienting. It is hard to feel so much of an outsider, and everything reminds
me of the loss of something that was very important to me - a vital part of me,
really. I was pretty decent at both CCM and traditional hymns, and I’m proud of
the work and passion I brought to it. Alas, I doubt that will ever be part of
my life again. After being stabbed in the back on the way out, I am extremely
reluctant to take a visible role in a church again, even if I go back. It is
like losing a limb. And then watching others run and play and not being able to
be one of them. Not really. So I grieve. I didn’t choose this. I didn’t want
this. But I am no longer welcome where I was, and I am unable and unwilling to
sell my soul to fit in again.
***
Please read my comment policy. For this post, if you quote
your favorite proof-text, or just want to lecture me, I will delete your
comment. And no, not really interested in hearing how great your church is. I’m
glad you found a place you fit.
***
Update June 5, 2018: I can't believe I forgot to link this song. In Southern culture (so Michael Stipe says), the phrase "Losing my religion" isn't a crisis of faith. It's when you are at the end of your rope and can't be polite anymore. This is actually a great description of where I am at and have been for the last two years or so. Maybe three. I'm still a Christian, and I am more inspired by the teachings and example of Jesus Christ than ever before. It is THAT which has led to my break with the organized church. And I'm tired of being polite and pretending that American Evangelicalism in particular is anything less than the polar opposite of Christ. It is, so to speak, anti-christ in pretty nearly every measurable way.
Take it away, R.E.M.
***
Update June 5, 2018: I can't believe I forgot to link this song. In Southern culture (so Michael Stipe says), the phrase "Losing my religion" isn't a crisis of faith. It's when you are at the end of your rope and can't be polite anymore. This is actually a great description of where I am at and have been for the last two years or so. Maybe three. I'm still a Christian, and I am more inspired by the teachings and example of Jesus Christ than ever before. It is THAT which has led to my break with the organized church. And I'm tired of being polite and pretending that American Evangelicalism in particular is anything less than the polar opposite of Christ. It is, so to speak, anti-christ in pretty nearly every measurable way.
Take it away, R.E.M.
Hey, much love and support from the wilds of Idaho. You and Amanda are doing great, and you're not alone.
ReplyDeleteI hung on every word written in this blog. You speak for me, and for all of us who call BS on every toxic message spewing forth from the Evangelical pulpit. I do not miss going to church. I'm finally free to be the me our Creator meant me to be.
ReplyDeleteOne thing I've always admired about your posts is how thoughfully you seek out counterarguments and address them. So I won't tell you how great my church is. I hope you find a new spiritual home. And I hope you keep writing about it.
ReplyDelete(((((Swanson Family)))))
ReplyDeleteAn I am in the position of no longer believing in a deity that is paying attention to humanity, being appalled by the concept of substitutionary atonement, believing not at all in Heaven or Hell -- yet still being deeply, profoundly offended by the ugliness being perpetrated in Jesus' name. I cannot tell you why it bothers me so much, in the absence of a belief in the underlying theology, but it does.
I so feel your pain. I get it. I had the opportunity to restart in a new town and a new church (actually my old church, as I was raised Episcopalian). I had to move 3000 miles across the country to find my spiritual home, and that was a privilege that most don’t have. I pray that you and your family find others that you can share Jesus with, probably without the trappings of church. I suspect that you and yours will be more likely to find Jesus in the eyes of the outcast. Blessings.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your post. My son has very little church experience for all the same reasons. Thank you for sharing yours in detail.
ReplyDeleteAfter some years away from almost all fellowship, we've been checking out some local churches here in the Bay Area. It's been an interesting experience. We're currently visiting a small, humble Methodist church that reminds me a lot of the small Evangelical church I attended during high school, & which became my sending church during my missionary years...except this church is active in local social justice, especially supporting local muslims, & is minority white, & I mean I can count the white people, including us, on one hand. Also, I am fully accepted there as a queer person. It is still so, so hard to get up on a Sunday & go there. But if my partner & I are going to build authentic community, then we have to start meeting other followers of Christ, & I can tell that I let it go to long. I read this post recently, & it speaks to my long-term hopes for what church will look like to our family. Not trying to tell you what to do, lol, just thought you'd find Samantha Field's take on patriarchy insightful: http://samanthapfield.com/2018/05/07/smashing-the-church-patriarchy/
Blessings, and I sincerely hope you find that community.
DeleteI so appreciate how you thoroughly explain your side and give equal attention to counter arguments (ok, what Nemo said). My husband and I just moved our family to a decidedly rural southern area. On the one hand, I see it as an opportunity to love those I don’t identify with (baptist), although I don’t know how much contact we’ll have with a congregation on a weekly basis. When the church Facebook page includes a comic of someone asking Jesus, “what do you think about immigration?”, and Jesus’ reply is “remember, heaven has a wall, a gate, and a vetting system”-I can tell I won’t set foot there. I want to guard against self-righteousness and yet here we are smack in the middle of political, Righteous Right religion. It is discouraging and frustrating. My best to your family; I admire your and your wife’s thoughtful parenting and pray we can do the same.
ReplyDelete