Wednesday, November 01, 2023

God Bless America?

WARNING! This is going to be about religion… So if that makes you uneasy feel free to skip this post.

I don’t often write about my own faith. I tend to subscribe to the advice of the late Waite Phillips who once said he’d “rather see a sermon than hear one any day.” Faith is something that should always be seen more than heard. So I find myself watching the loud exhortations by the new Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, proclaiming his version of Christianity with a increasing feeling of frustration and yes, dismay.

It is tempting in times like these when a national political figure waves their religion around like a cape at bull fight; to reference Jesus’ own words on this sort of thing. How in Matthew Chapter 6 Jesus makes it very clear the “See how holy I am!” crowd have missed the entire point of the practice of faith. Or how in Luke, Chapter 18 Jesus tells the story of how people who claim how their faith makes them better than someone else, are anything but.

Yet I am reminded about a common question that politicians often get asked, especially at events like the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), where a common query to would-be Presidents of the United States, is; “What is your favorite bible verse?”

When conservative radio host Bob Lonsberry asked Donald Trump that question in 2016, the resulting word salad was…. Impressive.


"Well, I think many. I mean when we get into the Bible, I think many, so many. And some people, look, an eye for an eye, you can almost say that. That's not a particularly nice thing. But you know, if you look at what's happening to our country, I mean, when you see what's going on with our country, how people are taking advantage of us, and how they scoff at us and laugh at us. And they laugh at our face, and they're taking our jobs, they're taking our money, they're taking the health of our country. And we have to be very firm and have to be very strong. And we can learn a lot from the Bible, that I can tell you."

Um…. Okay.   Wow.

The new Speaker of the House in his own podcast in 2022, framed his Christian faith in terms of a battle that needed to be waged. Saying that God wanted more aggression and less turning of the other cheek. "Obviously, this is an increasingly hostile culture," Johnson told the audience. "We all know that. We need to understand why that is, and we need to commit to do our part to confront it. The kingdom of God allows aggression."


He then referenced Scripture from Matthew 11:12, which according to a more recent translation, states: "From the days of John the Baptist until now, the kingdom of heaven has been forcefully advancing, and forceful men lay hold of it."

Johnson sees his elevation to the office of Speaker as part of some divine battle plan. A Christian nationalist blueprint for an America where reproductive rights, birth control, divorce, LGBT people, and all separation of (his) church and the state is done away with.

Also, according to Speaker Johnson, God wants everybody to have guns. Lots and lots of guns. Telling Sean Hannity in 2016 that God is big supporter of the Second Amendment. And he is not alone in that belief. A 2021 survey found that “among Whites who said America should be a Christian nation, more than 4 in 10 named the right to keep and bear arms as the most important right. Not freedom of speech. Not even freedom of religion, but gun rights.”

The concept of “Christian Nationalism” has had a resurgence of popularity on the political and cultural right these days. The belief that the United States is or should be a Christian Nation first and foremost and the secular idea of any kind of separation of (Christian) church and state is the work of the Devil.

A conservative friend of mine recently asked me what my favorite bible verse was. I was tempted to pull out something ridiculous from the book of Numbers just to see his reaction, but instead I answered honestly. Proverbs 3:6

I’ll save you the effort of googling it. It reads:
“In all your ways acknowledge God, and God will make your paths straight.”

My friend was really surprised by this, responding that it was an odd choice for a Gay man. Saying “that verse sounds like an endorsement of conversion therapy!” Clearly thinking “make your path straight” could refer to becoming heterosexual. I laughed and said if he was going to take every word in the bible literally, then he was clearly going to hell for eating shellfish and wearing cotton blend.

For me, one of the core tenants of my Christian faith has always been “Emanuel” or God with Us. The idea that we do not walk alone through life. But if we listen for God, we will find God. Not in the Mike Pence “God told me to run for President “way, but in the sense of knowing the right thing to do when it matters most.

Hearing God speak to us not as a booming voice out of parted clouds but in opportunities we find in our path.
 That verse in proverbs has always been for me, an invitation to be open to opportunities to live my faith, rather than just talk about it.

I remember the bedtime prayer I would say a child. Many of you may have said the same or a similar one. There are multiple variations on it. We said the 1932 Grace Bridges version:

Now I lay me down to sleep,
I pray my lord my soul to keep,
In the morning when I awake
Help me the path of love to take.

I have always found the difference from the New England Primer version, the “if I should die before I wake” version to be significant. The path of love wasn’t some celestial escalator to a gated heavenly community in the sky. But rather the choices and opportunities that I would face that next day.   
The path of love is the “straight path” Proverbs 3:6 invites us to be open to.

And to be clear, it’s an UPHILL path. Unlike the opposite. The path of pointing fingers at others, the path of “lets build a wall to keep THOSE people out”, the path of some voices mattering more than others because of the color of faces they come out of, or how they vote, or because they don’t come from people who loudly pray as they kneel on the House Floor for the CSPAN Cameras. 

That path is easy. Because that path leads downward.

And like most downward paths, when you start on it, gravity kicks in and helps propel you faster. The more people you can claim are less than, or are less ‘favored’ by your version of God the faster that downhill journey goes. The path of hate, the path of exclusion the idea that the Grace of God is a zero-sum proposition. America is God’s favored Nation so clearly other nations aren’t. That path is very easy.

The path of love is about the work of the Kingdom of God, here and now. Not about building a wall and hiding behind it waiting for Blond-haired, blue-eyed Caucasian Jesus to magically beam you up and all the people you don’t like are ‘left behind’. 

It is being open to things as simple and as complex, as looking for God in the people and situations we encounter every day. You will find work to do if you follow that "path made straight'. You will find people who are very different from you, w
ho think different, act different and live differently.

Yet being open to a path made straight, can lead to lots of other things. Even to finding a sense of purpose. In the Lutheran liturgy in the service of Baptism there is wonderful moment when the congregation speaks words of welcome to the newly baptized:

"We welcome you into the lord's family, we receive you as fellow members of the body of Christ, children of the same heavenly father, and workers with us in the kingdom of God.”

What has always resonated for me in those words, is the idea that the  Kingdom of God is not, some distant Asgardian realm with glowing sidewalks and flying chariots. But is the here and now, with work to do. The path of love is an uphill one. Accepting that invitation in Proverbs 3 to be open to letting God make paths straight, is to accept that we need to do the work of the kingdom of God here, today.

We often hear religious figures talk about “Sharing the Good news” I have always defined that as trying to live a life were others “see a sermon” rather than hear it. Mike Johnson defines sharing the good news as telling people he disagrees with that God loves them less because of where they were born, who they love or how they vote.
 

I like how Luther defined Evangelism as one beggar telling another beggar where to find bread. Its not about having all the answers it’s about helping others look for them along with us.  

Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson and I have very different ideas about what “evangelism” is. For him it’s about who and what he needs to oppose. For me it’s always been about what is it that I need to try to do today, to move just a little father up that path made straight,  the path of love.

One my favorite versions of the Easter story is found in John’s gospel. Where after finding the tomb empty Mary Magdalene lingers looking for clues as to where the assumed grave robbers have taken Jesus’ body. Then encountering Jesus, she doesn’t recognize him, until Jesus says her name. It is upon hearing Jesus call her by her name, she recognizes the risen Christ and is given instructions to take back to the disciples, she is given work to do. A path made straight.

In the weeks and months ahead, there is going to be a lot of noise. People like Mike Johnson will loudly proclaim they speak for God. That God has a preferred choice in the 2024 election, and people who don’t agree with that choice are enemies that God wants destroyed. I hope that in the year ahead we can listen for our name to be called. That we look for that uphill path and the work to be done here and now.

If America IS God’s country, shouldn’t we try harder to act like it instead of just saying so?