It’s difficult for anyone to see the violence perpetrated by ISIS and its various off-shoots and not be appalled and horrified. Enslavement, murder, people being burned alive, beheadings, mass rape and murder of women and children – this is the stuff of Blade Runner crossed with Mad Max.
Our
minds reach for an explanation, the why
of this atrocity. And the why is
important; we need to understand what has created this force for evil. And I
use the word evil deliberately – it
is a moral word, and its use is a moral judgment.
The
evil reality that is ISIS has it roots in religion, and it is that reality that
secular governments in the United States and Europe are missing. They can
understand political and economic realities; they can claim a lack of economic
opportunity as a major contributing cause for the attraction of ISIS. What that
doesn’t explain is why so many of ISIS’s adherents and supporters come from the
middle and upper classes – people who have ample access to economic opportunity.
Our
government and the writers of our newspaper editorial pages wouldn’t consider
asking, but it is those crazy right-wing fundamentalist Christians who likely
better understand what motivates ISIS. ISIS is messianic religion without the
loving, sacrificial Messiah.
What
the news media called the culture wars in the United States – Christians versus
secularists or however else you might describe it – have long been over. The
Christians lost. My own understanding tells me that the Christians lost because
we confused speaking out in the public square – bearing witness – with
political control of the public square. We aligned ourselves with one political
party because the other was, well, embracing what we simply couldn’t accept.
And we accomplished – not much. We were certainly used – our votes were crucial
– but we were quickly abandoned. Read the late David Kuo’s Tempting Faith: An Inside Story of Political
Seduction.
The
public square was never ours to control.
What
was missed by so many – observers and opponents alike – was that the so-called
Christian Right actually wasn’t
trying to impose its views on American society. What it was trying to do was
resist the relentless secularization of American society. It seemed, and often
still seems, that the goal of progressives and secularists is nothing less than
the complete eradication of any and all religion, and especially Christianity,
from American soil. It was this sense that something important was being lost,
and not only something Christian, that fueled so much of what poured out of
churches and into the voting booths.
The
roots of the culture wars go back centuries, say George Yancey and David Williamson
in So Many
Christians, Do Few Lions: Is There Christianophobia in the United States? While they point to the philosophes of the
Enlightenment and then the triumph of the scientific revolution in the 19th
century (including Darwin), the roots are actually much older than that, going
back to the infancy of Christianity. Read the early church fathers. You will
discover that the culture wars are some 2,000 years old.
The
fact is that Christianity always has been the counterpoint. Christians pay
their taxes but they will not bow the knee to the emperor. Of course, that
should also mean they’re not supposed to bow their knee to any political party,
either. And the U.S. Constitution is not equivalent to the Bible.
Born
during our modern culture wars was what Yancey and Williamson call
Christianophobia. Like the work colleague I mentioned last week, who genuinely
feared that “those Christians” would stuff their religion down her throat, this
is not a belief held by a only a tiny number of people. A large swath of our
cultural elites actually believes this. Who they are and what they say will be
covered here next week, as I continue the discussion of So Many Christians, So Few Lions.
Photograph by David Lally via Public
Domain Pictures: Torn-Out
Hearts Memorial, Krakow, Poland. Used with permission.
Glynn,
ReplyDeleteThank you for this discussion. I'm too (naive? optimistic? foolish?) to wrap my brain around the magnitude and significance of this situation.
I'm looking forward to the next installment.
Ditto. Thanks for bringing a bit more light to the awful situation.
ReplyDeleteGraeme Wood in The Atlantic recently compared ISIS to a movement like that of David Koresh or Jim Jones, but with millions of followers instead of a few hundred: http://www.theatlantic.com/features/archive/2015/02/what-isis-really-wants/384980/
ReplyDelete