Med Hum Interest Group

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Amen and Amen

Today, for the first time in about 30 years, I talked to a "Professional Christian" (i.e., pastors a church for a living) about my experience in an evangelical church and felt neither judged or proselytized. He seemed genuinely curious about how I interpreted things like faith healing and speaking in tongues then, and how I think about them now, and about the continued disgust I have with organized religion and the continued respect and wonder I have for the teachings of Jesus. It was a really wonderful conversation.

One thing that always spoke to me about Born Again Christianity was the idea that you did not need a pastor or priest or pope to tell you what to think about God. You read the Bible, and you thought about it, and you had a direct relationship. That said, it always seemed like the church never the less had some really hard line ideas about the right and wrong conclusions to reach, which is where the friction was for me.

I feel the message of Christ can be found in many places - in other religions, in other belief systems, in human interactions. It's all over the place, if you have eyes to see it. I feel like the New Testament helped me see it, and other people get to these Universal Truths through other religions or life practices.  I don't think you're going to Hell if you don't accept Christ as your savior. I think you're in for a terrible time (at least on Earth, if not beyond) if you don't get to those "Universal Truths" somehow - but I chafe against the idea that there is One Right Way.

The other thing about the church was that I took what I thought Christ was trying to say very seriously (because it seemed like you were supposed to - we're talking about going to Hell, right?)  and I tried very hard to meet the challenge of finding the way of peace, turning the other cheek and embracing people on the fringe of "polite society." And maybe this is adolescent of me, but no one ever seemed to notice that in the church I went to. I was trying to do what I thought were the most important things but it turned out there was a lot of other stuff that was more important to the church. The people who were held up as examples for the congregation were the rich, the beautiful, the powerful - but never, ever it seemed - the ones who were honestly engaged in the god damned struggle. (Pun intended).  The church preached to me that I was going to hell unless I was a Christian, but seemed to flaunt the opposite of the teachings I read about in the Bible on a regular basis.  Something was very wrong.

I will never forget the time in high school when I saw one of the teens at my church verbally and physically intimidate one of my favorite teachers in the hallway of my high school. I was shocked at the language she used towards her and the way she yelled and called the teacher a bitch, and lunged towards her. They were having a dispute about a failing grade, I gathered. Shortly after I turned the corner, she walked away, but she saw me and I saw her. That Sunday, the pastor was praying and speaking in tongues, and he said that Christ had spoken to him and told him to recognize the young people of God in the church, and he brought that very same teen girl (the daughter of one of the deacons) up to the front of the church and put a sash that said "Christian Teen" around her.  She smiled and the congregation praised God.

I think the hypocrisy of that moment was probably it, for me. I believe that Christ speaks to people, but probably not the ones who brag about it. And I think he says stuff to me all the time - not as a voice in my head, but just sort of stuff that's there for me to see and hear if I have the eyes to see it and the ears to hear it that day. Edgar Cayce, a famous American mystic, once said that an angel had revealed to him the meaning of life, which was to do whatever you needed to do to become a worthwhile companion to God. That has always made a ton of sense to me and I think I do try to do that by finding ways to appreciate what's in front of me (and fail a lot, but that seems to be how it works).

It wasn't until today that I was reminded, in talking to Wes, that that ethos I've adopted as an adult actually is very connected to what I started out to do when I was a teenager sitting in a room of people whom the Spirit Had Moved wondering if it was really the Holy Spirit who had stopped by or rather a form of the mass hysteria I'd read about in my abnormal psych book.

Have I actually been a rather religious person all along? Wes says I'll have to tell him, because I'm the only one who knows.

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