Hunter and Hunted

September 25, 2009

Jason Pitzl-Waters has posted a fascinating and scary article on The Wild Hunt: Witch Hunts Are Now An International Epidemic. “According to some U.N. experts tracking the issue “at least” tens of thousands have died due to witch hunts, while millions have been beaten, abused, isolated, and turned into refugees.”

In a parallel vein, there is also: “Wave of Homophobia Sweeps the Muslim World.” over at Religion News Blog. “In Mauritania, Bangladesh, Yemen, parts of Nigeria and Sudan, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Iran convicted homosexuals can also be sentenced to death.”

Want more?

Hrafnkell Haraldsson’s updates his “Christianity as a Hate Group.”

From the website of Values Voter Summit we had such breakout sessions as:

TRUE TOLERANCE: COUNTERING THE HOMOSEXUAL AGENDA IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS – CONGRESSIONAL B
Candi Cushman–Education Analyst, Focus on the Family Action

MARRIAGE: WHY IT’S WORTH DEFENDING AND HOW REDEFINING IT THREATENS RELIGIOUS LIBERTY – DIPLOMAT ROOM
Charles Donovan, Senior Research Fellow, The Heritage Foundation; Thomas Messner, Visiting Fellow; The Heritage Foundation; Dr. Jennifer Roback Morse, Founder and President, Ruth Institute

Redefining marriage poses serious threats to the religious liberties of people who continue to believe that marriage is a relationship between a man and a woman. This understanding of marriage is an important religious belief for many Americans, but the freedom to express it will come under growing pressure as courts, public officials, and private institutions come to regard the traditional understanding of marriage as a form of irrational prejudice that should be purged from public life. This briefing will focus on policy and legal developments, as well as how to communicate the link between marriage and religious liberty.

SPEECHLESS – SILENCING THE CHRISTIANS – CONGRESSIONAL B
Casey Smith, Jr., Executive Assistant to the Chairman and President, American Family Association

Americans are at a greater risk of losing their basic freedoms today than ever before in the history of this nation. Political correctness and the voice of the liberal minority are undermining the morals and values of main-stream America. Christians are being silenced all across America: in the political debate, the public square, the schools, the workplace, and even in the sanctuary of their own churches. Through video, renowned author and commentator, Janet Parshall, takes you on a journey across the country to meet citizens who have been arrested for speaking out at a public rally, students who are being forced to attend classes that require them to recite verses from the Koran and to stage their own Jihad and activists pushing social tolerance to such an extreme that the Bible itself is being labeled “hate speech.”

THE NEW MASCULINITY – CONGRESSIONAL A
Dr. Pat Fagan, Senior Fellow and Director, Center for Family and Religion, FRC; Michael Schwartz, Chief of Staff, Senator Tom Coburn (R-Okla.); Dr. Matthew Spalding, Director, B. Kenneth Simon Center for Studies, The Heritage Foundation

Feminism has wreaked havoc on marriage, women, children and men. It is time to redress the disorder it has wrought and that must start with getting the principles and ideals for a new “masculinism” right. Such a “masculinism” will have its dovetailing counterpart in a new “feminism” for they mutually define each other and, in nature, are meant to be complementary. This panel will begin this exploration.

THUGOCRACY – FIGHTING THE VAST LEFT WING CONSPIRACY – EMPIRE ROOM
Terry Jeffrey, Editor, CNSNews.com; Michael Barone*

“Hate crime” legislation, removal of conscience protections for health care workers, the Fairness Doctrine, groups like ACORN intimidating voters and committing voter fraud, “Card Check” legislation to create a permanent majority – President Obama and the Democratic Party is doing all it can to suppress free speech that they disagree with and that threatens their plans for a “permanent majority” in power. Political pundit Michael Barone calls it a “thugocracy” and “Gangster Government,” how real is this threat and how can we fight it?

DEFUNDING PLANNED PARENTHOOD – PALLADIAN ROOM
Mark Bucher, Bucher & Palmer, LLP; Lila Rose, President, LiveAction

As many state and local governments are tightening their budgets to weather this fiscal storm, communities are taking a second look at the funding of the controversial abortion corporation Planned Parenthood. Since 1987, Planned Parenthood has taken in $3.2 billion in taxpayer funds. Planned Parenthood has used its money to support candidates who will continue this money stream and to lobby against initiatives such as parental notification laws in cases of minors seeking an abortion. Learn from people, like you, who have successfully stopped Planned Parenthood funding in their communities.

ACTIVISM AND CONSERVATISM: FIT TO A TEA (PARTY) – CABINET ROOM
Jeff Griffith, Pennsylvania Tea Party Coordinator; Amy Kremer, National Coordinator, Tea Party Patriots; Crane Durham, Host, “Nothing but the Truth”

On April 15th, hundreds of thousands of citizens gathered in more than 800 cities to voice their opposition to out of control spending at all levels of government. Organized in all 50 states by Americans from all walks of life, these “tea parties” were a true grassroots protest of irresponsible fiscal policies and intrusive government. The mainstream media could not explain the phenomenon that anyone would be fed up with Washington, D.C. now that the liberals in charge. We will tell you how it happened, why it is still happening and how you can organize your own.

FAITH, POLITICS, AND THE INTERNET: HOW TO CONTEND FOR TRUTH IN A DIGITAL AGE
Dr. Russell Moore, Dean of Theology and Senior Vice President for Academic Administration, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary; Joe Carter, Web Editor, First Things; Hunter Baker, Author and Professor, Houston Baptist University; Jared Bridges, Director of Online Communications, FRC

The new media has given new emphasis to the age-old, often contentious relationship between faith and politics. A panel of internet activists from across the new media spectrum will discuss what it takes to have an effective voice in the political discussion online while remaining faithful to the things that matter most.

A Tourist in His Own Land

September 24, 2009

This is a response to “Vacationing with the Pagans” by Eric Miller in the September 2009 edition of Christianity Today.

Mr. Miller begins his article by describing a family outing to Virginia Beach to see a tribute band performing two hours of song by the Beatles. Bemused by the metamorphosis of the faux Fab Four from their early rock and roll beginnings to their all-out pyschedelia of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band he expresses shock at the reactions of the audience (especially his son) and concludes that:

All kinds of names have been given to this transformation. But this concert leaves me thinking one thought: We’re on vacation with the new pagans. They’re everywhere.

Everywhere? Oh, dear.

While I’m not going to discuss the point to Mr. Miller’s article, if there is one. I do take exception to his repeated misuse of the words pagan and paganism. He makes some pretty astounding generalizations which make me question: if he is on vacation, is he a tourist in his own land?

Apparently so.

Paganism: an old word with enduring resonance, and for good reason. Think of it as the state of heart and mind that has emerged as the reality of Law has come, over the past century, to seem less and less real—a long historical process that reached a kind of climax in the ’60s, when to “question authority” meant, among other things, to question the very existence of authority.

I would like to infer that Mr. Miller is referring to the decline in people deferring to a spiritual authority and not all authority in general. I am sure there are people who self-identify as Pagans who are also anarchists; I am equally sure such folk are in the minority.

Also, what is the “Law” of which Mr. Miller writes? History overflows with the conflicts of Catholics and Protestants bloodily arguing over what Christian law is/was/will be. I find it hard to believe that the readers of Christianity Today could even agree on a definition of “Law.” Mr. Miller never explains his own usage.

But the canard that non-Christians, i.e. pagans or Pagans, are somehow with authority — spiritual or otherwise — is a canard that dates back to Theodosius, if not earlier. True, Mr. Miller is writing for a Christian audience, but for contemporary Christians to have any sort of understanding of what modern Paganism is, we need something of substance.

Ready for more?

A recognizably Christian culture has given way to a new paganism. What is this?

It is the embrace of nature without Nature. It is the reverence of bios, physical life, in tandem with a dimming awareness of zoe, spiritual life. It is, in fact, the mistaking of physical life for spiritual life, with all the historically ingrained religious sensibilities rushing toward bios with a very familiar zeal.

A very familiar zeal, indeed. Where have I read about this before?

So, these “new pagans,” go to cover band concerts, recognize no authority, and have given up the spirit entirely for the flesh. It sounds more like a description of those tedious atheists who run around proselytizing naturalism.

Again, Mr. Miller is unclear. My knowledge of ancient and medieval Greek is almost non-existent. Sure, βίος can be translated as “life.” But zoe? Does he mean ζωή or zoë which also means “life?”

It gets better:

So now, for us twenty-first century pagans, being 25 is all—the most alive we’ll ever be. Men and women on both sides of that envied age try with holy fervency to attain it, whatever the cost in dollars or dignity. The hair must be cut just so (and then cut again and again—just so). The body must be kept trim, ever prepared for a 25-year-old’s feats. Old age never looked so bad. What red-blooded American male today would ever want to wake up and find himself married to a grandmother? What American woman wants to look like one?

So the “new pagans” are also youth-obsessed and vain? Hold on a minute. Isn’t it human nature to retain, if not youth, at least youthfulness? What about Pat Robertson’s deal with GNC (General Nutrition Center) for diet shakes?

He goes on:

Our too-spiritual spirituality ended up leaving us, as Christians but also as a wider populace, in considerable confusion about all things material, whether bathing suits or beer or bombs. And our disregard of the physical was bound to invite a walloping counter-embrace of it. By the 1960s, paganism was, once more, unshackled. Our creaturely identity, in all its post-Edenic glory and corruption, became impossible to box in. The body was back.

I’m sure a lot of active Pagans would be surprised to find out that their various paths were unfettered during that decade. It was a surprise to me. And, as with so many other Christian articles, the answer to every problem is “worship.”

This all strikes me as disingenuous. The brief bio (“life!”) of Mr. Miller describes him as an associate professor of history at Geneva College. One would hope that a faculty chair at a liberal arts college in Beaver Falls, PA would have a better grasp on the history of the emergence of Christianity from Classical religions, and also be aware of the contemporary usage of pagan and paganism to know that these words are loaded with different meanings than the ones assigned to them in this rambling article. “New pagans” sounds a lot like the phrase “Neo-Pagan” that has been in use since the 19th century.

One would also hope that Mr. Miller represents ancient and modern people who follow non-Abrahamic faiths as something other than authority-forsaking, body-obsessed teenyboppers at a concert that was a reenactment of history rather than an actual part of history.

I have some pagan friends who recently attended a U2 concert. Although not a Christian band, its members have often expressed a deep influence and appreciation for their Christian upbringing and its ethos.

Did they feel like tourists? No. They had fun.

Jediism

September 3, 2009

A young man, strangely dressed, entered the café where the writers congregate to drink coffee, nibble on pastries, and get on with the serious business of not writing.

The only table left was inconveniently located between the bathrooms and an old woman. So, he sat down, whipped out his brand new laptop, fired it up and commenced creating an act of literature. He stared at the blank screen, waiting for the words to pour forth into his text editor.

Several minutes passed, and all he could think about was how often the habitués of this café had to pee. Then he realized that almost all of them took the time to nod, if not chat with the old woman. Most referred to her as “grandmother.”

He looked away from his screen and saw that the old woman was busy writing letters using parchment, quills tipped eith copper nibs, and a tiny silver pot of ink. He leaned over and studied her patience with filling the nib, then scratching tight, but expansive, letterforms in a gossipy fashion that only the elderly can pull off.

“My dear, would you like me to read this out loud to you?” She asked.

“Oh, I’m sorry. I was just noticing how all of these people seem to know you. I was just curious as to who you are and what you were writing.”

She smiled. “I’m just an old woman. And I’m writing to another old woman in Bethesda, Maryland who belonged to the same coven I did back in college.”

“But everyone seems to know you.”

“Oh, they’re just being polite.”

Subconciously realizing that an interesting conversation was less mentally taxing than creating an act of literature, he turned away from his lap top and began to spill his guts…

“I wish people would take me so seriously.”

“People don’t?”

“No. You see, I am a Jedi.”

The old woman’s bushy eyebrows raised a fraction, but she said nothing.

“And, everyone here thinks I and my friends are a joke. Even when I go out dressed like this.”

“I thought you were in the SCA.”

“See!” Warming up now, he said, “My beliefs are just as important as anyone else’s. My fellow Jedi and I were even mentioned in the Washington Post! I cam here to write all about it.”

“Yes, my friend Martha, the one to whom I am writing, sent me that clipping. Fascinating.”

“We came in tenth on Facebook! So why do I get no respect?”

“Well, I expect, most of us just think of social networking sites are supposed to be for fun. I remember that article was pretty vague… I tell you, what, why not tell me what it is that you believe. Being able to explain yourself may be all the respect you need.”

So the young man told her about the Force. He described how it binds us, flows through us, keeps us all together. He extolled the virtues of the Jedi code. All the while, the old woman nodded, asked the occassional question, and kept her china blue eyes focused on him.

When he stopped for air, the old woman asked, “now, do you feel better?”

“Yes, thank you for listening to me.” It was then that the young man realized his lack of manners. “Here I’ve been doing all of this talking. What about you, grandmother, if I may call you that. What do you believe?”

Scoffing, she said, “No one is interested in an old woman pottering in her garden, with her simple rituals to her Lady and her Lord. I have no spaceships and no lightscimitars, er, lightsword-thingies…”

“Lightsabers.”

“Exactly. I’ll tell you what… may I?” She gestured with a liver-spotted hand at his laptop. He nodded his consent. She turned it around and began double-clicking and typing in a thrice.

Pointing at his internet browser window, she said, “Why not start here on the Wild Hunt. It’s an blog post on that article from the Post. You’ll find a lot of links about the problems we Pagans face, even here in the Pagan City, about not being counted on censuses. How the courts don’t take Pagan faiths seriously. All kinds of things… I’m sure you can identify with a lot of these issues. Especially when your spirituality is treated like an internet joke.  Now, I’d love to stay and chat, but I’m meeting with my publisher in half an hour. O, the cover art for my latest book is hideous. Simply hideous.”

She packed up her quills, her parchments, her ink bottle and began the leaving behavior. “You can follow me on Twitter.” She handed him a slip of paper with her contact information. “Good luck with your writing!”

The young man stared at a dozen tabs she had opened up on his browser. While everyone was calling out, “Travel well, grandmother!” “Bright blessings, grandmother!” He had still written nothing.