We can invoke God's name
for the worst of reasons.
It's not a new thing. In
the New Testament, you read about lots of folks who claimed to be speaking for
God. "Watch out for false prophets," Jesus tells his disciples in
Matthew. "They come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are
ferocious wolves." Throughout history, people have done some pretty
horrific things in God's name—atrocities that have turned people away from God
altogether. It's like a variation on that old Bon Jovi song. Sometimes we give
God a bad name.
I was thinking about this
a little after I left The Purge: Anarchy,
a R-rated horror-thriller that shows just how badly God's name can be abused.
In the movie, the Purge
is an annual abandonment to society’s darkest urges—a 12-hour period in which
most crime (including and especially murder) is legalized. The Purge is pushed
as a societal good (the crime rate has plummeted since its introduction) and a
patriotic duty. And most critically here, it's also seen as something sacred.
In the first movie, a
dying man is kissed on the forehead by his murderer, almost like a priest would
kiss a confessor. "Your soul has been cleansed," he says. Participants
even seem to pray together: "Blessed be the Purge," they say.
In The Purge: Anarchy, that sense of the Purge being a divine rite
only grows. Killers sometimes sport religious symbols: One has a cross marked
on his forehead. Another wears a mask with the word "God" scrawled on
it. A woman roams the roof of a building, looking for people to gun down for
the grievous sin of, I guess, walking down the street. Hollering into a
megaphone, she talks about how often God in the Bible brings torment down on
His creation: floods and famine and all manner of terrible things. The woman
says she's simply doing God's holy work: She's a "one-woman mother---ing
plague," worthy of a spot at God's left hand.
It seems like the
filmmakers are critiquing how religion can be misused, and they may be swinging
a few punches at the Religious Right here: The country's "New Founding
Fathers" manipulate both the language of patriotism and religion for their
own ends, as some believe happens today.
Now on one hand, I'd
argue that faith is inherently politically active. Both church and state, after
all, are built on a sense of shared morality and values. Religion can't help
but enter into the conversation.
But the movie does hint
at a real danger of religious activism: Nothing kills dialogue as quickly as to
declare that "God wills" something. As soon as someone stands on
those two words, the conversation has nowhere left to go.
Now, I do believe that
God does want us to do certain things. I believe that our lives are, on some
level, a learning exercise—where we're educated all the time about how to align
ourselves more closely with God's will. When I had kids in the house, most of
our household rules aligned with what I believed was the will of God—what to
value, how to act and how to treat people. Even most of our secular laws are
predicated on the idea of a broadly accepted sense of what's "right"
and "wrong," which to me at least partly presupposes a greater power that
defines what "right" and "wrong" are.
But I do think we've got
to be really careful when we throw around that phrase.
It's like this: Say
you've got a friend who loves, I dunno, eggplants. "I think eggplants are
God's favorite vegetable," he might say. Or, "I'd imagine that, every
day in heaven, we'll be eating eggplants." Now, I'm none too fond of
eggplants. And if I was talking with this someone, I'd argue that eggplants
were really just a joke of God's—a not-so-subtle spoof on the otherwise sublime
world of veggies. I'd declare that, if God wanted us to eat eggplant, he would
not have colored it purple. To which he might respond that purple is the color
of royalty, and on it would go.
But if this friend said,
seriously, that it's God's will that
we all eat eggplants—that it's a sin if we don't
eat them—we find ourselves in a very different conversation. Suddenly, my distaste
of eggplants becomes a moral failing. My dislike of the vegetable puts me, in
the view of my friend, in opposition to the Almighty. And by extension, I'm in
opposition to my friend. We're on the verge of a holy war over eggplants.
Some true-to-life holy wars
have been started over issues just about as consequential.
When you declare
something to be God's will, you draw up sides. Either you're on God's side or you're
not. Well-meaning people who want to be on God's side may be drawn into something
that might not be God's will at all. Others might turn their backs on God: If
that really is God's will, I want no part of it, they might say. And when you
tie the words "God's will" with the words "the Purge,"
you've got yourself a real problem.
When Jesus talked about
false prophets, He told us that we would know them by their fruits.
"Grapes are not gathered from thorn bushes nor figs from thistles, are
they?" He said.
The Purge seems like a
no-brainer: That's a thistle all the way. As an activist in The Purge: Anarchy argues, it's pretty clear killing innocent people isn't
something that God would condone. "We no longer worship at the altar of Christ, of Mohammed,
of Yahweh," he says, covering his bases. "We worship at the altar of
Smith & Wesson." It's also, I think, easier to see God's will after
the fact, and through the lens of history.
But sometimes in the moment,
before the figs and thistles have a chance to grow, it can be more difficult.
I'm a skeptical person by
nature, and I think whenever someone says they speak for God or know
definitively what He wants or wills, I find myself going into heightened alert
status. And I try to weigh what they say is “God's will” with what I know and
have been taught about God: His love for us. His desire to see us all drawn
closer to Him. I believe that God wills us to always hone our character, to be
more the people He designed us to be. But, at least in how we saw in Jesus, He
does so with kindness and grace and love.
It’d be nice if it was
always as easy to see the fruits of a false prophet, as we see in The Purge.
But it’s not always so simple.
what does Yahweh mean
ReplyDeletethat is the name of God, The one true GOD in Heaven, our Creator
ReplyDeleteyou good information. Here we discuss sharing information with one another.
ReplyDeleteCara Menormalkan Tekanan Darah Tinggi
Cara Menyembuhkan Gagal Ginjal