Necessary Falling Apart
Friday, July 8, 2016
Most religion is highly
"legitimating religion." It is used for social control and public
order both by the powers that be and by people who want to be in control. This
limited use of religion has allowed much of Christian history to participate in
a toxic and unjust environment--just as long as we have "a personal
relationship with Jesus." This will not work anymore; in fact, it never
did.
The American Bishops, paraphrasing
many recent Papal statements, said that "social justice is an integral
part of evangelization, a constitutive dimension of preaching the Gospel, and
an essential part of the Church's mission." [1] Social critique is not an
add-on, an option, a choice, or a unique vocation for a few. If Jesus is indeed
"the Savior of the world" (John 4:42), we must not, we cannot,
continue to think of salvation as merely a private matter. We are wasting our
time trying to convert individuals without also challenging corporate sin and
institutionalized evil. Otherwise, we send momentarily changed people back into
the world; now they think they are godly, but they are the opposite of godly,
and the disguise is perfect. As Jesus says, "the last state of the house
is worse than the first" (Matthew 12:45).
It has taken Christians a long time to
be able to see the Gospel in a fully historic, social, and political context;
although this is clearly God's concern, starting with the Book of Exodus. Truly
transformed people change the world; while fundamentally unchanged people soon
conform to the world (see Romans 12:2). Culture will win out every time, if it
is not also critiqued. Politicians normally prefer an unaware and superficial
populace.
Dorothy Day put it even more strongly:
"Our problems stem from our acceptance of this filthy, rotten
system." [2] As long as we unquestioningly buy into the egoic system,
where the roots of our narcissism often lie hidden, we're going to have
problems. If we think we can say our private prayers and still genuflect before
the self-perpetuating, unjust systems of this world, our conversion will not go
very deep or last very long. There is no one more radical than a real person of
prayer because they are not beholden to any ideology or economic system; their
identity and motivation is found only in God, not in the pay-offs of
"mammon." Both church and state are threatened by true mystics. Such
enlightened people can't be bought off or manipulated, because their rewards
are always elsewhere.
Most of us need to have the status quo
shaken now and then, leaving us off balance and askew, feeling alienated for a
while from our usual unquestioned loyalties. In this uncomfortable space, we
can finally recognize the much larger kingdom of God. Many churches don't seem
to understand this, even flying the national flag in the sanctuary. After
authentic conversion, our old "country" no longer holds any ultimate
position. We can't worship it as we were once trained to do.
References:
[1] U.S.
bishops, Communities of Salt and Light, as quoted http://www.usccb.org/beliefs-and-teachings/how-we-teach/new-evangelization/new-evangelization-social-justice.cfm.
[2] Dorothy Day,
as quoted by Michael O. Garvey in the Foreword, On Pilgrimage (William
B. Eerdmans Publishing Company: 1999), xi.
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