Wednesday, November 16, 2005

The Right Reverend John Shelby Spong rebukes "Crazy Pat"

This is an answer from John Shelby Spong in response to an inquiry about Pat Robertson's warning to the residents of Dover, PA that they had abandoned God.

Dear Christina,

Pat Robertson has said so many silly and ridiculous things that I wonder why anyone would pay much attention to him on any subject.

He warned Orlando, Florida, that God would send a hurricane to destroy them when Orlando's decision makers added "sexual orientation" to that city's civil rights ordinance making it illegal for an employer to discriminate against a person because of race, ethnicity, gender, creed or "sexual orientation." He suggested that Hollywood would be the victim of an earthquake because that is where Ellen Degeneres works. With Jerry Falwell he agreed that the 9/11 disaster was brought upon this nation as God's judgment for harboring "feminists, abortionists, homosexuals and the American Civil Liberties Union." He suggested that the CIA should assassinate the duly elected President of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez. He has said that the feminist movement is about those women who want to "leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft and become lesbians." The tirade of absurdities goes on and on.

This country treasures the precious gift of free speech and Pat Robertson can obviously say any foolish and ignorant thing he wishes. When he pretends to speak in the name of God, however, I think his fellow believers have a right, indeed a necessity, to speak a word of judgment on his behavior since his words slander the Christian definition of God as Love, given to us first by the author of the First Epistle of John, and even more important, lived out by Jesus, who called us even to love our enemies.

I want to make only two points about this issue. First, I wonder who, other than Pat himself, designated Pat Robertson to be God's spokesperson? How dare Pat assume that the God revealed in the Jesus I serve is filled with all of Pat's peculiar prejudices. Why does he not understand that God is God and Pat Robertson is not? Why does he not see that when he tells the world with an unashamed certainty what God thinks and what God will do, he is only revealing what he thinks and what he would do if he had God's power? Pat needs to understand that he is acting out the very meaning of idolatry. He has confused God with himself.

Second, someone needs to inform Pat Robertson that the idea of God sitting on a throne above the clouds manipulating the weather in order to punish sinners is so primitive and so naïve that it is staggering to the educated imagination. It is bad enough that his mind cannot embrace the thought of Charles Darwin from the 19th century, but Pat has yet to embrace the thought of Copernicus from the 16th century or Galileo from the 17th century.

No educated person today believes that the earth is the center of the universe and that God lives above the sky, playing with low-pressure systems and planning revenge on those who are not believers in Intelligent Design. Indeed why would anyone be drawn to the demonic deity who emerges in Pat's thinking and teaching?

It is surely not a God of Love who punishes New Orleans' poorest citizens with a hurricane that New Orleans' wealthiest citizens could and did manage to escape at least with their lives, because they had cars. Did God kill the poor in New Orleans in order to send a message to New Orleans's prostitutes and those who create its raucous nightlife? Is that a rational concept? Did God cause two tectonic plates to collide under the Indian Ocean because there were some 350,000 evil people, with fully one-third of them children, whom God desired to kill in a tsunami wave? Is that how God communicates divine displeasure? Is that a God worthy of worship? Were the 3000 who died in the World Trade Center on 9/11 or the 2100 members of our Armed Forces who have thus far died in Iraq during this war somehow worthy of this ultimate punishment either because of their own evil or because God sacrificed them to send a message to someone else?

Those ideas are so ludicrous as to be laughable, except for the fact that for anyone to suggest such incredible things is still painfully hurtful to those who are the victims of both natural and human disasters to say nothing of their surviving loved ones. I, as a Christian, am embarrassed by the public face that Pat Robertson puts on the religious tradition to which my life is dedicated.

I have known the Robertson family for a long time. His father was the Democratic Senator in my state of Virginia from 1946, when he was first appointed to succeed Senator Carter Glass who had died in office. He was re-elected by the people of Virginia in 1948, 1954, and 1960. In the Democratic Primary in 1966 he was defeated in a very close vote by my first cousin William Belser Spong, Jr., who went on to fill that seat in the United States Senate.

Pat is a 1955 graduate of the Law School at Yale University and received a Master in Divinity degree from New York Theological Seminary in1959. He cannot possibly be as dumb as he sounds in his wild and thoughtless utterances. If ignorance is not his excuse, then one has to wonder what motivates him. In academic theological circles he is treated as a buffoon. No one takes his thoughts seriously. It is a pity that some people do actually believe the things he says, but they are far fewer than he imagines. It is an even greater pity that the news media think that his continued utterances are worthy of any public attention at all.

- John Shelby Spong


This is my brand of Christianity. It's the Christianity of reasoned and intellectually curios minds. God blessed us with an intellect and it insults him when we abandon it.

-The Oklahoma Hippy

1 comment:

  1. I also dont think Pat Buchanon is God. I would also agree that storm damage and loss of human life that could have easily been avoided by preparation and an aided evacuation is most likely not a punishment from God. Like Rev. Shelby said the brunt of it was suffered by the poor and not by those who are responsible for New Orlean's night life.
    However concerning the concept that :
    "the idea of God sitting on a throne above the clouds manipulating the weather in order to punish sinners is so primitive and so naïve that it is staggering to the educated imagination..."
    and
    "No educated person today believes that the earth is the center of the universe and that God lives above the sky, playing with low-pressure systems and planning revenge on those who are not believers in Intelligent Design."

    Putting the debate of intelligent design aside the concept that God punishes sinners is a concrete concept in the Judeo Christian belief. The fact that there is forgiveness and atonement for sins does not negate the other- mercy does not always rule out the concept of punishment.
    For instance, the Judeo Christian God that goes by the names of Yahweh/Elohim/Jehovah and eventually Jesus has punished populations of people with what was recorded or thought of as natural disasters during the times of:
    Noah- a flood
    Abraham- 'fire' which destroyed two citys
    Moses- weather related plagues
    Elisah- the witholding of rain
    Even in the new testament it is recorded that Jesus, the prince of peace and bestower of mercy, full of the wrath of God smites the world with a series of plagues and the like as written by John in the book of revelations and also discussed in the later books of the New Testament.
    Throughout the Old Testament individuals, many of them prophets or those associated with them, were given leprosy as a punishment from God. In the New Testament two individuals named Ananias and Sapphira, both Christians, are struck dead by God for their dishonesty in the presensce of St. Peter. Does this mean that anyone who has a disease or suffers through a natural disaster is cursed by God? By no means. We know from a the book of Job that sometimes great calamity comes upon people, including diseases, who have done nothing wrong. And I dont disagree with Rev. Shelby regarding the infinite love/wisdom/and mercy of our Lord or his disaproval of Buchanon's statments. My disagreement lies with the concept that God never punishes people or that it is an archaic/ignorant notion that God is in control of our Earth's weather. Jesus calmed a storm on the sea of Gailiee. Whether or not you choose to interpret the scriptures references literally or not the message is still clear that God can do whatever He wants and He sometimes uses bad experiences to make points or teach us things. Even Jesus, the manifestation of God's love and mercy, is refered to in the scriptures as the Lamb of God and also the Lion of Judah. I think that means that there is a dual aspect of God; full of love and mercy but also as the scriptures teach full of wrath at times. We see that mirrored in our own justice system, no one would take an earthly judge very seriously if he had no authority or will to ever punish criminals, the same goes for our heavenly judge as well. That being said I'm not agreeing with Buchanon that Katrina was God punishing Louisiana or L.A. is doomed because of Ellen, I'm just saying God is God and he uses a variety of mediums to communicate to us.

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