Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Self-Righteousness’

According to The New York Times, Illinois governor Pat Quinn signed a bill today abolishing the death penalty in his state. Illinois joins a list of 15 other states including Alaska, Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin which have also eliminated capital punishment. One of the bill’s supporters was anti-death-penalty activist Sister Helen Prejean, made famous when portrayed by Susan Sarandon in the Oscar-winning movie Dead Man Walking.

Who truly has the ethical and spiritual authority to decide if “an eye for an eye” is just punishment for a crime? How does killing someone, even when they’re guilty beyond all reasonable doubt, serve the victim, the victim’s family, and society at large?

Hopefully more states (including my own) will realize that the death penalty is moralistic and out-dated, and will pass similar abolition bills in the future.

Dead Man Walking

Read Full Post »

Would Jesus read Harry Potter? It’s hard to say.

Would He rather that some who follow Him focus their efforts on something more constructive than going to great lengths to vilify it, like living His example of charity and compassion instead? Probably.

I continue to be dumbfounded by Fundamentalist Christians who insist that Harry Potter is the harbinger of the “End Times.” It’s risen to a level of ridiculousness over the years that can only be described as comical. Especially entertaining is the Fundies’ enduring argument that “Harry Potter teaches kids Witchcraft.” J.K. Rowling’s books are literary treasures – engaging and entertaining – but the magic worked within them bears no resemblance to Witchcraft. Those that think it does, whether Neo-Pagan or Christian, are mistaking fantasy for reality. 

Like I asked in my comments on this silly post, do these people honestly have no better way to spend their time and energy than to dig for meaning in books that isn’t really there, and to vilify everything that doesn’t conform to their myopic view of reality?

Here’s another question – how many of these wing nuts have actually read the books they’re so hell-bent on condemning?

These folks would’ve LOVED living in Nazi Germany, where book burning was common practice. Or how about in modern communist China, where the government decides what people read and what they don’t?! (Guess what Fundies – the Bible is not on the approved list of literature!)

If these pious religious zealots had the power to pull it off, I’m sure they’d happily ban the Harry Potter books here in the good ol’ U.S. of A. (Thank GOD this is not the case.) But what’s so plain to me seems to completely elude them: if they actually achieved the power to censor, some other political interest – one perhaps not sympathetic to Christianity – would eventually wrest that power from them. What if this new group decided to ban their Bible? Then they’d really see their “End Times!”

Censorship is not good! If you value the freedom to read what you choose, it’s only logical to support everyone else’s choice to do the same. Why is this such a difficult concept to grasp?

Here’s a very simple solution for Fundies who find themselves embroiled in this oh-so-dire moral dilemma:

DON’T … READ … THE … BOOKS!

Read Full Post »

To believe that one has found the single spiritual truth or “correct way of being” and to then react emotionally when others don’t agree is to walk on dangerous ground.

This self-righteousness seeks and often finds our greatest weaknesses and latches on. I’ve observed its poison course through myself, others, and humanity as a whole time and again. We can see the precise areas where it festers when others hold up the spiritual mirror and show us.

Not long ago I would seek out evangelical Christian blogs simply to pick fights and poke holes in the authors’ beliefs. Was this because I was certain their beliefs were wrong, or uncertain that mine were right? Who did this exercise hurt more, me or them? It probably hurt us both. And it turns out it’s not about being “right” at all – it’s about finding your truth and living it. Part of “living it” means allowing others to find and live their truth as well, and to avoid judging them when they don’t live up to your ideal.

The truth is, it’s impossible for anyone…including you…to completely and unwaveringly live your ideal. From the most depraved criminal to the highest and most compassionate spiritual leader, every one of us is perfectly imperfect and will remain so as long as we live and breathe.

Read Full Post »