My faith is under siege today, because Google honored Cesar Chavez today instead of celebrating Easter. At least that's what I'm told.
Google
has a custom of altering the logo on its main page to mark major
holidays, significant events and anniversaries, and just because it can.
A lot of these doodles are fun, like the time it replaced the Google
logo with a functioning Pac-Man game. (My daughter still plays that.)
Others are educational, like the time Google honored M.C. Escher. Other
times, they're just odd, like the logo honoring the 150th birthday of
L.L. Zamenhof, the creator of Esperanto. (For what it's worth, I speak
the language, and just shrugged at that one.)
But heck, it's their logo, they can do whatever they want with it. Right?
Apparently
not. On Easter Sunday this year, Google honored Cesar Chavez, a labor
activist born on March 31, 1927, and not the Resurrection, and that,
apparently, was too much. Glenn Beck got all snarky at the imagined
disrespect; other Twitterfolk suggested that Google was elevating Chavez over Christ, or even found it a tremendous insult to their religion.
Come on, really?
I
fully understand that Christians on Easter may greet one another with
cries of "He is risen!" and "He is risen indeed!" But it's silly, it's
pointless, it's completely un-Christlike, to demand that everyone else
celebrate the Resurrection with us, and to take offense when a
corporation like Google, with users who are Hindu, Muslim, Buddhist,
Jewish, agnostic, atheist, Jainist, Shinto, Sikh and Wiccan as well as
Christian, does not take the time to affirm our particular set of
religious beliefs, or even to celebrate our holiday with us.
The
empty tomb on the first Easter is foundational to my faith. It is the
basis for my belief that Jesus is the Son of God, the foundation of my
hope that one day I too will rise from the dead, and for my conviction
that God's dream is for us one day to live in a world free of pain,
disease, death and infirmity, for us to walk with him as his people and
for him to walk with us as our God. I don't need a Google Doodle to
affirm my faith today, and even if Google actually savaged Christians
today with a doodle that declared "He's dead, you nitwits," my faith
would be unrattled. (Though at least in that case I could understand
being upset.)
But, in fact, Google's choice of doodles today is
one that affirms my faith, and if you're a Christian you also should
find it encouraging.
Cesar Chavez, after all, was a tireless
advocate for the rights of poor workers. Himself an American farm
worker, Chavez was a leader in the labor movement in the 1960s and also
worked for civil rights, encouraging Mexican Americans to become
registered voters involved with the political process. With Dolores
Huerta, he co-founded the National Farm Workers Association, a labor
union that worked to ensure laborers were paid well and treated with
dignity. One of the hallmarks of his activism was his strict commitment
to nonviolence.
Chavez, it should be noted, was a devout
Christian, He drew his inspiration for all these stands and for his
actions from the person, the teachings and the life of Jesus Christ.
And isn't a transformed life the best way to honor the man we believe rose from the dead?
Copyright © 2013 by David Learn. Used with permission.
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I lost my faith several years ago when the whole house of cards fell in. Now I'm wandering in this post-religious wilderness, and I'm finding a sacred beauty in the mushrooms and wildflowers that grow amid the shadowy ruins.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Friday, March 01, 2013
The 'Djesus Uncrossed' flipout
So were you offended by “Djesus Uncrossed,” Saturday Night Live's riff on Quentin Tarantino's
latest film?
I wasn't, but judging by the reaction
of the nation's culture warriors, I should have been. Once the sketch
aired last weekend, the Internet erupted with the predictable cries
of foul. Fox News ran an opinion piece by Todd Starnes
melodramatically claiming “NBC Declares War on Christians.” Michael Farris, chancellor of of Patrick Henry College called it the
“worst possible attack on the person and character of Jesus
Christ.” Seriously?
For its part, the American Family Association, in its official
statement, essentially consigned those involved with the sketch to
the flames of hell.
Something is missing amid all this
outrage: a sense of perspective.
“Saturday Night Live” hasn't stayed
on the air the past 40 years for its biblical scholarship. It is a
variety show built around short comedy sketches. Comedy works on its
ability to surprise us, and the strength of its surprise often lies
in the unexpected juxtaposition of unrelated ideas, especially if the
link breaks a taboo.
That is why we laugh at a faux
commercial for edible Pampers.
This is why it was funny to listen to a Eddie Murphy and a reggae band sing about killing white people, at an American Legion fund-raiser. The images are too bizarre, too contradictory, too
exaggerated. They make no sense. So we laugh.
In the case of “Djesus Uncrossed,”
the writers at Saturday Night Live link the excessive and gratuitous
violence of Quentin Tarantino's movies – “Django Unchained” and
“Inglourious Basterds” specifically – to the figure of Jesus.
The joke requires viewers the recognize the jarring disconnect
between the violence of “Djesus Uncrossed” and the essential
pacifism of Jesus in the gospels.
Quentin Tarantino's movies routinely
make a spectacle of violence. Compare that to Jesus, who went
peacefully when he was arrested, rebuked his disciples when they
raised arms, and told his followers “Do not resist an evil person.”
Pairing Jesus with Tarantino's love of violence isn't blasphemous;
it's humorous. It works because we know that Jesus isn't the kind to
cut someone's head in half.
Put simply: The joke would fail if the
writers didn't count on us to respect Jesus as a peaceful man.
Where's the blasphemy in that?
Is the issue that Saturday Night Live
used the likeness of Jesus in a manner that doesn't match the
preapproved evangelical manner? That's a narrow attitude to take.
Christianity has provided the framework for Western thought for
nearly 1,700 years. In America its influence predates the founding of
the Republic.
With that sort of legacy, it's only
natural to use the language and the symbols of Christianity to
communicate and to critique Western thought, civilization and art.
Is the issue that Saturday Night Live
portrayed Jesus specifically in a violent manner? Perhaps it is. Either way, I think we have
deeper problems than “Djesus Uncrossed.”
Years ago, some people complained that
Jesus too often was being portrayed in popular culture as a hippie sort of flower child,
powerless and weak, the sort of guy who gets sand kicked in his face
at the beach. The Jesus pushed by the Right has the opposite problem.
The Right too often has used Jesus to stoke up people's anger, to
justify invading Iraq and other Muslim countries, to marginalize gays
and lesbians, and even to deny women access to contraceptives. This
Jesus is no milquetoast; he's the guy who's going to kick sand in your face at the beach.
The difference is that Saturday Night
Live portrayed the vengeful Jesus as a joke, while the Right is
completely serious about theirs. Who's committing blasphemy now?
Starnes asks rhetorically why Saturday
Night Live never pokes fun at Judaism – I guess he never saw“Harry
Hanukkah Saves Christmas” – and never tells jokes about Islam.
I'd wager it's not because they're afraid of offending Muslim
viewers, nor because they hold a special regard for Islam, as much as
that it's rude to pick on the little guy.
Because the truth is, in America at
least, Islam remains a minority religion, with only about 2.6 million adherents in a nation of 300 million people. For all the complaints of
the Religious Right that Christianity in America is under siege,
Christianity remains the dominant narrative of our culture. Christmas
is a federal holiday, not Eid al-Fitr. Everyone in America knows what
Easter celebrates; I doubt you'll find one Christian in 10 who knows
what Shavuot is, or what its relationship is to the Day of Pentecost.
The Religious Right loves to play the
persecution card. The message it has been hammering for years is
pretty simple: Be afraid. There's a war on Christianity, and we're
losing. Liberals are attacking God. Our culture, our heritage, our
legacy, are all under attack.
Faith should lead us to reach out to other people and to forge connections with them. If the most it inspires someone to do, is to tell you to be afraid, do yourself a favor.
Faith should lead us to reach out to other people and to forge connections with them. If the most it inspires someone to do, is to tell you to be afraid, do yourself a favor.
Tune them out. Their attitude is the
most offensive thing of all.
Copyright © 2013 by David Learn. Used with permission. All rights reserved.Tweet
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