Eco-Myths

Don’t believe everything you hear about the church and the environmental crisis.

Christianity Today June 1, 2001
You are at a neighborhood block party. Conversation is lagging-until somebody mentions “the environment.” Suddenly your problem is not keeping talk going, but keeping tempers under control.

Fueled by misconceptions, misinformation, and even showmanship, the environmental debate rages in the popular media. One side likes to quote Rush Limbaugh, who paints Vice President Al Gore and friends as “tree huggers”; the other charges “rape of the Earth.”

It is not very different in evangelical churches. When it comes to God’s creation, evangelicals want to have ardent convictions, though misunderstandings and myths get in the way. Is concern for the earth biblical? Should our theology shoulder the blame for the crisis? Is there nothing we can do to make a difference?

CT decided to take such questions to key evangelical thinkers and leaders. When the Evangelical Environmental Network offered to cosponsor a symposium, CT signed on. A dozen people representing an array of disciplines spent the better part of two days late last year hitting the issues head-on. Many of the symposium participants staved on to help shape “An Evangelical Declaration on the Care of r Creation.” As expected, there was plenty of vigorous and interesting discussion.

The question arose, for example, concerning whether there really is a problem. Nobel laureate Henry Kendall, professor of physics at MIT (one of the few nonevangelicals present), set the stage by reviewing quantifiable evidence. Citing studies on water resources, oceans, soil, and atmosphere, he noted that the scientific community generally agrees that all is not well.

A public-policy shaper also joined the group, putting to rest the notion that all who work for environmental causes are neopagan New Agers. Susan Drake, a former UN representative for the Environmental Protection Agency and now senior conservation adviser for the U.S. State Department, told how Christian faith guided her work in highlevel, international environmental forums.

Bunyan Bryant, from the School of Natural Resources and Environment at the University of Michigan, showed that African-Americans are particularly vulnerable to the effects of pollution. Studies show a disproportionate number of Blacks living close to hazardous waste-disposal sites.

Contributing editor Thomas Oden, concerned that “evangelicals not allow themselves to be co-opted by an agenda that is essentially politically motivated,” urged symposium participants to think through a uniquely Christian approach to the issues.

The Church is to Blame

The writers included in this CT Institute do just that. Their presentations at the symposium were particularly helpful in tackling “eco-myths.” They offer insights that are sure to keep the church’s discussion going.

MYTH 1

David N. LivingstoneIn 1967, historian Lynn White, Jr., provoked a furious controversy by suggesting Christianity was largely to blame for the world’s environmental problems. His article in Science magazine, “The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis,” argued that Christianity had to shoulder such responsibility because its theology was hostile toward the natural order. White’s article has been quoted and vigorously debated ever since. Some found in White’s analysis a justification for seeing the church as the planet’s enemy.

But White’s article must first be read in the light of his self-professed Christian faith. His father was a Presbyterian professor of Christian ethics, and White himself remained a lifelong Presbyterian and a frequent contributor to church publications.

Because his article is more often referenced than read, many have missed the subtleties of his argument. White argued that ecological problems grew directly out of the Western world’s marriage between science and technology, a marriage that gave birth to power machinery, labor-saving devices, and automation. That is the first point. However, the intellectual origins of this transformation, he said, actually predate both the Industrial Revolution of the late eighteenth century and the scientific revolution of the seventeenth.

It was the Middle Ages, he argued-and, specifically, the medieval view of “man and nature” that brought a decisive shift in attitude: people no longer thought of themselves as part of nature but as having dominion over nature. According to White, this ruthless attitude toward nature later joined forces with a new technology to wreak environmental havoc.

White ultimately traced this exploitative attitude to the triumph of Christianity over paganism-what he called “the greatest psychic revolution in the history of our culture.” Christianity, he insisted, told people that humans had a right to dominate nature, and it was therefore “the most anthropocentric religion in the world.” All this contrasted with earlier religious traditions in which every tree, spring, and stream had its own guardian spirit. By eliminating animism, he wrote, “Christianity made it possible to exploit nature in a mood of indifference.”

White’s assessment was more complex than this resume might suggest. He recognized that Western Christianity encompassed a variety of distinctive theological traditions, some of whichnotably that of Saint Francis of Assisi-were quite reverential toward the created order. Nevertheless, he explicitly insisted that, insofar as Christianity undergirded both science and technology in the West, it bore “a huge burden of guilt” for a natural world now seeing increasing degradation.

Since the appearance of White’s article, the idea of blaming Christians for the environmental crisis has attracted a wide range of committed defenders. Max Nicholson, for 14 years director-general of the Nature Conservancy in Great Britain, for instance, insisted that organized religion in general and Christianity in particular were ecologically culpable because they taught “man’s unqualified right of dominance over nature.”

Historian Arnold Toynbee found in biblical monotheism the mainsprings of “Man’s improvidence” toward the natural order. To him, the only solution was to revert to pantheism. Similarly, educator and regional planner Ian McHarg claimed that Judeo-Christian theology produced “the tacit Western posture of man versus nature” by asserting “outrageously the separateness and dominance of man over nature.”

The prosecution falters The arguments of White and his defenders have also been widely criticized, of course. There is much about their position that is questionable. In 1970, historian Lewis Moncrief expressed misgivings about looking for single causes for the environmental crisis. Instead of pinning blame for environmental recklessness on Judeo-Christian dogma, he argued for the significance of a range of cultural factors. Two were especially prominent: democratization in the wake of the French Revolution and, in the American context, the frontier experience. On the one hand, such developments led to affluence, changed production and consumption patterns, and problems of waste disposal. On the other hand, the absence of a public and private environmental morality, the inability of social institutions to adjust to the ecological crisis, and an abiding-if misplaced-faith in technology were the ultimate fruits of America’s frontier experience.

The work of Chinese-American geographer Yi-Fu Tuan throws doubts on White’s thesis in a different way. Tuan scrutinized the environmental situation in Asia and discovered that, despite its different religious traditions, practices there were every bit as destructive of the environment as in the West. Tuan clearly showed how the “official” pro-nature line in Chinese religions, for example, was actually vitiated by behavior. Deforestation and erosion, rice terracing and urbanization have all exacted an immense toll on the environment and effected a gigantic transformation of the Chinese landscape. Nor is Tuan’s an isolated judgment. Erich Isaac speaks of the destruction wrought by Arab imperial expansionists on vast tracts of the Old World and of the devastation of central Burma by Buddhists. Such are ignored, if not suppressed, among critics of the Judeo-Christian West.

From a different perspective, the Oxford historian Keith Thomas insists that the coming of private property and a money economy led to environmental exploitation and the demise of what he termed the “deification of nature.” The “disenchantment” of the world, as he put it, was less a theological achievement than an economic necessity. Alongside the Judeo-Christian emphasis on the human right to exploit nature’s bounty, he pointed out, was a distinctive doctrine of human stewardship and responsibility toward creation. This is also the thrust of philosopher Robin Attfield. The idea that everything exists to serve humanity, he emphatically insists, is not the biblical position. This led Attfield to assert that there is “much more evidence than is usually acknowledged for. … beneficent Christian attitudes to the environment and to nonhuman nature.”

God, the wise conservationist As the rise of science and technology brought about profound environmental changes, Christian clergy and scientists alike outlined strategies to moderate damage to the natural habitat.

Concerned over wasteful land practices, John Evelyn (1620-1706), a founding member of the Royal Society and a Latitudinarian churchman, published in 1662 his famous Silva, A Discourse of Forest Trees and the Propagation of Timber in His Majesty’s Dominions. Here Evelyn appealed for the institution of sound conservation practices, drew attention to agricultural encroachment on forest land, highlighted the ecological problems of unrestrained grazing, and warned of dangers from charcoal mining. His was a managerial approach to the environment, adapted to the rationalizing tendencies of the new mechanical world order. Efficiency, production, management were the watchwords of this pioneer conservationist. Precisely such arguments could also receive explicitly theological support.

Thus, John Graunt presented his Natural and Political Observations upon the Bills of Mortality of 1662-a demographic analysis-within the context of natural theology. Graunt, using comparative population ratios, directed his readers’ attention to the high incidence of pulmonary disorders from pollution in the metropolis.

The orderliness of the world machine, he argued, attested to the sovereignty and beneficence of its Grand Architect. Humans must exercise stewardship over the natural world to ensure that they did not efface or erase the marks of its Designer. Moreover, God was seen as a wise conservationist, and people, made in his image, were to act as caretakers of his world.

The stewardship principle had already been firmly established in John Calvin’s injunction: “Let him who possesses a field, so partake of its yearly fruits, that he may not suffer the ground to be injured by his negligence; but let him endeavor to hand it down to posterity as he received it. … Let everyone regard himself as the steward of God in all things which he possesses.”

Now, in the midseventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, a form of beneficent dominion surfaced in the writings of Matthew Hale and William Derham. Hale, England’s lord chief justice, wrote in 1677 that the human race was created to be God’s viceroy, and that its dominion and stewardship roles were intended to curb the fiercer animals, protect the other species, and preserve plant life. It was the task of humankind “to preserve the face of the Earth in beauty, usefulness and fruitfulness.”

Derham, a clergyman and author, believed that the Creator’s “Infinite Wisdom and Care condescends, even to the Service, and Wellbeing of the meanest, most weak, and helpless insensitive Parts of the Creation.”

The beetle’s “precious” life before God Cultural changes during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries drove people to think about their relationship to the environment even more. In response to worldwide geographical discovery, revelations about the size of the universe, and geological reports of an immensely old Earth, thinkers began more seriously to question the idea that the world existed solely for human benefit. Some argued that the human species was one more link in the chain of nature. The seeming secularism of such realizations should not blind us to the fact that it became increasingly acceptable within the Christian church to believe that all creatures were entitled to respect and civility.

Some theologians began to see that, in the Old Testament, animals were regarded as good in and of themselves-not just for their potential service to humanity. John Flavell, a late-seventeenth-century Presbyterian divine, described the horse as his “fellow creature”; Christopher Smart, the eighteenth-century religious poet, insisted that the beetle’s life was “precious in the sight of God”; the Calvinist minister and hymnwriter Augustus Montague Toplady abhorred the digging up of anthills; and John Wesley instructed parents not to let their children cause needless harm to living things-snakes, worms, toads, even flies. So powerful, indeed, was this Christian impulse toward a new sensibility that Keith Thomas comments,

[T]he intellectual origins of the campaign against unnecessary cruelty to animals. … grew out of the (minority) Christian tradition that man should take care of God’s creation. … Clerics were often ahead of lay opinion and an essential role was played by Puritans, Dissenters, Quakers, and Evangelicals.

One of the consequences of this changing sensibility was a growing sense of ecological interconnectedness. Consider the “arcadian” vision of English minister Gilbert White, whose famous Natural History of Selborne, published in 1789, recorded the natural order of the village from its bird life to seasonal change. White saw remarkable ways in which his region’s ecological diversity actually constituted a complex unity. He conceived of all this in providential terms. God had so contrived and constituted this coherent natural order that everything fitted together “economically.” Why? Because like its Creator, White insisted, “Nature is a great economist.” He found a doxological aspect to this economy: the humble earthworm’s indispensable activity in the soil bore witness to the “wisdom of God in the creation.”

Similarly providentialist, though decidedly more rationalist, was the contribution of the Swedish botanist Linnaeus (1707-78), arguably the greatest natural historian of the Enlightenment. To Linnaeus, the classification of life was nothing less than a tool for uncovering the very order of God’s creation. Linnaeus even saw himself as a second Adam, the namer extraordinaire. Divine design lay at the heart of the Linnaean project. And nowhere is this more clearly evident than in an essay he penned in 1749 on “The Oeconomy of Nature” in which he readily detected the hand of God in nature’s order. Because God was the Supreme Economist and Divine Housekeeper, the study of nature’s economy could, at once, confute atheism, justify the social order, and help humans see their creaturely position as continuous with, yet separate from, nature.

Where blame is due To the extent that the church has failed to take concern for the environment seriously, it must accept its share of the blame. We must not substitute irritation at Christianity’s critics for serious self-criticism. But that need not keep us from reappropriating insights from Christian tradition that have been lost or suppressed. We need to cull our heritage for intellectual and spiritual resources to meet today’s environmental problems.

I have concentrated on voices within the modern Western Christian tradition. There are many earlier voices as well, such as Francis of Assisi. Committed to a life of poverty and a gospel of repentance, Francis treated all living and inanimate objects as brothers and sisters and thereby insisted on the importance of communion with nature. Some believe Francis came close to heresy in his tendency to humanize the nonhuman world and have turned to other sources.

Sixth-century monastic leader Benedict is one of those. He emphasized stewardship, insisting on integrating scholarly work with manual labor. In this he represents an early wise-use approach to the natural order. Benedict drew on ethical resources embedded even earlier in the patristic period. The commentary on the six days of Creation in the hexaemeron of Basil the Great (c. 329-79), for instance, displays a profound interest in nature. His intent, like that of his contemporary Ambrose (c. 339-79), was to illustrate the wisdom of the Creator from the balance and harmony of nature, and to insist on the partnership between God and humankind in improving the earth. Similarly, in the fourth century, Chrysostom believed that animals should be shown “great kindness and gentleness for many reasons, but, above all, because they are of the same origin as ourselves.”

All these need to be heard. It is the conceptual and practical testimony of figures like these that prompted Attfield to conclude, “Belief in man’s stewardship is far more ancient and has been far more constant among Christians” than the assaults of critics would suggest.

Attending to these hidden riches within the Christian heritage can do more than clear our name. They might well provide the impetus for changing worldwide environmental behavior. The scholar and theologian can and should take a vital role in addressing the current situation-and leading the church forward.

David N. Livingstone is a professor in the School of Geosciences at the Queen’s University of Belfast. He is the author of Darwin’s Forgotten Defenders (Eerdmans) and The Geographical Tradition (Blackwell).

MYTH 2

It’s Not Biblical to be Green

Calvin B. DeWittI am amazed to hear Christians sometimes say that biblical faith has little in common with the environmental cause. Even worse, some evangelicals fear that teaching people to enjoy and respect creation will turn them into pantheists.

My experience has been very different. For over 50 years I have been inspired and awed by God’s creation. From keeping a painted turtle in a tank at age three to caring for a backyard zoo during my youth, I gained deep appreciation for God’s creatures. Because I attended a Christian school, heard two sermons every Sunday, and had parents who not only tolerated the creatures under my care but brought me up in the way I should go, there was never any question where the natural abundance around me came from. All creatures were God’s-his masterpieces. They were the ones about which we sang each Sunday, “Praise God, all creatures here below!”

As a youth I savored Article II of the Reformed tradition’s Belgic Confession. In answering “By What Means Is God Made Known to Us?” the first part affirms, “by the creation, preservation, and government of the universe; which is before our eyes as a most elegant book, wherein all creatures, great and small, are as so many characters leading us to see clearly the invisible things of God.”

This theme of how creation tells of God’s glory and love is echoed throughout Scripture: God lovingly provides the rains and cyclings of water, provides food for creatures, fills people’s hearts with joy, and satisfies the earth (Ps. 104:10-18; Acts 14:17). It is through this manifest love and wisdom that creation declares God’s glory and proclaims the work of the Creator’s hands (Ps. 19:1). Creation gives clear evidence of God’s eternal power and divinity, leaving everyone without excuse before God (Rom. 1:20).

But today we often acknowledge God as Creator without grasping what it means to be part of creation. We have alienated ourselves from the natural processes. We abuse God’s creation without realizing that we thereby grieve God.

Of God’s magnificent provisions in creation, I want to identify seven. These provisions, many of which are celebrated in Psalm 104, point to the beauty and integrity of what God has made. Through the ages they have led to wonder and respect for the Creator and creation. They also magnify the seriousness of our era’s sometimes reckless disregard of our Father’s world.

Seven provisions of creation 1. Earth’s energy exchange with the Sun. Our star, the Sun, pours out immense energy in all directions, heating anything in the path of its rays. A tiny part of the Sun’s energy is intercepted by our planet. This energizes everything on Earth-all life, ocean currents, the winds, and storms.

The thin layer of gases that envelops this planet has a very important function here. This layer contains water vapor and carbon dioxide and other “greenhouse gases” that trap energy and delay some of its return to space. Earth becomes warm-but not too warm.

The provision of these greenhouse gases-in just the right amounts-makes Earth warm enough to support the wondrous fabric of life we call the biosphere. It works very much like the glass of a greenhouse that lets sunlight in, but makes it difficult for the heat to get out. We experience this “greenhouse effect” on the sunny side of our houses and in our cars when parked in sunlight.

The Sun’s energy also contains lethal ultraviolet radiation. This can break up chemical bonds that hold together molecules and thus disrupt and destroy living tissues. Of special concern is the breaking up of DNA, the genetic blueprint of living things. Doing so can kill microscopic creatures and induce cancer in larger ones.

But here we find another remarkable provision of the Creator. For in the gaseous envelope of Earth-high in the atmosphere-we find a gas that absorbs ultraviolet light: ozone. This forms the “ozone layer” or “ozone shield.” Not much ozone is present; although it spans a layer several miles deep, if you collected it at 32 degrees Fahrenheit at sea level around the Earth, it would measure only about one-eighth inch thick. Yet that is enough to prevent most of the Sun’s ultraviolet radiation from penetrating our atmosphere. If the biblical psalmist had known of this provision by the Creator, perhaps we would have had this verse in one of the Psalms:

The creatures that dwell in the shelter of God’s providence rest in the shadow of the Almighty. God covers his earth with a protective shield; God guards the life he has made to inhabit Earth.

2. Soil and land building. Many of us know from gardening that soil can be made more productive through tilling and composting. This process also takes place unaided by human cultivation. Climate, rainfall, and soil organisms work together to make soils richer and more supportive of life. This entails a remarkable variety of cycles: the carbon cycle, water cycle, nitrogen cycle, and so on. This symphony of processes enables even bare rock eventually to support a rich fabric of living things. What a remarkable provision! It nurtures the fruitfulness of creation.

But this soil building teaches patience. It may take a century to produce an eighth-inch of topsoil. In this way the land is nurtured, refreshed, and renewed.

3. Cycling, recycling, and ecosystems. Recycling is not a recent invention. The whole creation uses and reuses substances contained in soil, water, and air. Carbon dioxide breathed out by us-and raccoons, lizards, and gnats-enters the atmosphere later to be taken up as the carbon-based raw material from which to make the carbon-based stuff of life. This is in turn transferred to the animals and microscopic life that depend upon it for food. And soon these consuming creatures return the carbon back to the atmosphere through breathing, or by their own death and decay.

Water, too, is recycled. Taken up by animals, it is released through breathing, sweating, and ridding of wastes-finding its way into the atmosphere, or through sewage-treatment plants back to rivers and streams. Taken up by the roots of plants, some is pumped up through the bundles of tubing in the roots, stems, and leaves of plants and back to the atmosphere. That moisture joins water evaporated from lakes, streams, and other surfaces and forms rain and snow that again water the face of Earth.

Thinking of such provision, the psalmist wrote,

He makes springs pour water into the ravines; it flows between the mountains. They give water to all the beasts of the field; the wild donkeys quench their thirst. … He waters the mountains from his upper chambers; the earth is satisfied by the fruit of his work. (Ps. 104:10-13; all Scripture quotations from the NIV)

4. Water purification. Some water percolates through the soil to the ground water below and supplies the springs that feed wetlands, lakes, and ravines; we call this percolation. In many watertreatment plants in our cities, water is purified by having it percolate through beds of sand. In similar fashion, water that percolates through soil or rock is filtered, but usually over much greater distances. The result: by the time we pull up water to our homes by our wells, it usually is fit to drink.

This is more remarkable than it may at first seem. Water is often called “the universal solvent,” meaning that it dissolves practically anything. How then could water ever be purified? Should it not always be contaminated with dissolved materials from everything through which it passes? Because of creation’s natural distillers, filters, and extractors, the answer is no. There is remarkable provision in creation for the production of pure water.

5. Fruitfulness and abundant life. Of the known flowering plants alone, there are 250,000 speciesorchids, grasses, daisies, maples, sedges. And each of these interrelates with water, soil, air, and other organisms, forming the interwoven threads of the household of life we call the biosphere. When I was in ninth grade, I recall learning that there were 1 million different species of living creatures. In graduate school, I learned that it was 5 million, and today we believe it is somewhere between 5 million and 40 million. This biodiversity is so great that we have just begun to name the creatures. This is just the kind of provision you would expect from a remarkably creative Genius. “The earth is full of your creatures,” said the psalmist. “There is the sea, vast and spacious, teeming with creatures beyond number” (Ps. 104:24-25).

6. Global circulations of water and air. Because of its 23.5-degree tilt, our Earth gets unequally heated from season to season. Both seasonal and daily differences cause differentials in Earth’s temperatures. This, in turn, produces temperature gradients that drive the flow of water and air from place to place.

Atmospheric and oceanic circulations are vital provisions for maintaining life. Carbon dioxide produced by animal and plant respiration and oxygen produced by photosynthesis are released to air and water. Carbon dioxide is moved around so that it comes into contact with plants that reincorporate it. And oxygen, produced by photosynthesis of plants, is similarly circulated by air and water currents. Global circulations provide the “breath” of life on a planetary scale.

7. Human ability to learn from creation. Human beings are endowed by God with minds that integrate what creation teaches us. Through observation and experiment, we are able to revise our models of the world to represent reality better. Our mental models are further nurtured and refined by the cultures we grow up in. This capability is essential for meaningful human life.

Seven degradations Human beings can mute and diminish God’s testimony in creation. We have the ability, in the words of Revelation 11:18, to “destroy the earth. Nearly every day now, we learn about new destructions of land and creatures. While some reports are dramatized and overstated, professional technical literature again and again describes new and increasing instances of environmental degradation. What I present here as “seven degradations” draws upon scholarly literature accepted by the scientific community. That means I have not gotten my information from government or university reports, newspapers, opinion polls, television, talk shows, or popular articles. Practically every one of these degradations is a destruction of one of God’s provisions for creation.

1. Land conversion and habitat destruction. Since 1850, people have converted 2.2 billion acres of natural lands to human use. This compares with Earth’s total of 16 billion acres that have some kind of vegetation and current world crop land of 3.6 billion acres. This conversion of land goes by different names: deforestation (forests), drainage or “reclamation” (wetlands), irrigation (arid and semiarid ecosystems), and opening (grasslands and prairies). The greatest conversion under way is tropical deforestation, which removes about 25 million acres of primary forest each year-an area the size of Indiana. The immensity of this destruction illustrates our new power to alter the face of Earth. In the tropics, we do it to make cheap plywood, bathroom tissue, hamburger meat, and orange juice, among other things, but it destroys the long-term sustainability of soils, forest creatures, and resident people.

2. Species extinction. More than three species of plants and animals are extinguished daily. If there are indeed 40 million species, then the rate may be several times higher.

3. Land degradation. What once was tall-grass prairie we now call the Corn Belt; here we grow the corn that feeds hogs, cattle, and us. In much of this prairie, two bushels of topsoil are lost for every bushel of corn produced. Pesticides and herbicides made it possible to plant corn, or any crop, year after year on the same land. Crop rotation-from corn to soy beans to alfalfa hay to pastures-has been abandoned.

4. Resource conversion and wastes and hazards production. Some 70,000 chemicals have been created by our ingenuity. Unlike chemicals made by organisms and the earth, some cannot be absorbed back into the environment. Among them are many specifically designed to destroy life: biocides, pesticides, herbicides, avicides, and fungicides.

5. Global toxification. Of the thousands of chemical substances we have created, hundreds have been discharged or have leaked into the atmosphere, rivers, and ground water. This happens through “disposal” and from vehicles, chemical agriculture, homes, and industry. Some join global circulations; DDT has shown up in Antarctic penguins, and biocides appear in a remote lake on Lake Superior’s Isle Royale. Cancer has become pervasive in some herring gull populations.

6. Alteration of planetary exchange. Earth’s exchange of energy with the Sun and outer space is fundamental to the planet’s circulations of air and water. But burning and exposing carbon-containing materials to oxygen brings rising concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide, allowing less heat to escape to outer space, thereby enhancing the greenhouse effect. This creates global warming.

Adding to the effects of increasing carbon dioxide are other greenhouse gases, such as chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) refrigerants in our air conditioners and refrigerators. Melting snow caps, receding glaciers, and a slowly rising sea level demonstrate that Earth’s temperature has been rising very slowly over the centuries. There has been some debate on the degree to which this is happening, but that it is happening seems clear. And this rise likely will accelerate, with consequences not only for Earth’s temperature but also for the distribution of temperature across the planet, with consequent changes in patterns of rainfall and drought, and even-ironically-lower temperatures in some places in the world. CFCs operate not only as greenhouse gases. They also destroy ozone in Earth’s protective ozone layer.

7. Human and cultural degradation. One of the most severe reductions of creation’s richness concerns cultures that have lived peaceably on the land for centuries. In the tropics, cultures living cooperatively with the forest are being wiped off the land by coercion, killing, and legal procedures that deprive them of traditional lands. Their rich heritage of unwritten knowledge is being lost. Names of otherwise undescribed forest creatures are forgotten; so are uses of the wide array of tropical species for human food, fiber, and medicine.

A place for evangelicals? Six centuries before Christ, Jeremiah described the undoing of creation: “I looked at the earth, and it was formless and empty; and at the heavens, and their light was gone … I looked, and the fruitful land was a desert; all its towns lay in ruins before the Lord, before his fierce anger” (Jer. 4:23-26). Neglecting to do God’s will in the world is not new, and its environmental consequences have been known for more than two thousand years (Jer. 5:22-23, 31; 8:7).

The evangelical community has been slow to get involved in environmental issues. But it is not too late. In the early 1970s there were few evangelicals involved in world hunger. Today some of the best relief operations are done by these deliberative evangelicals. They did not just start handing out food. They got the best minds together, collected the scriptural material, and carefully planned.

That needs to happen again. Our environmental situation presents a significant opportunity. To be evangelical means to proclaim the good news. Part of our proclamation is that the environment is God’s creation. If we do not make God the Creator part of the good news, we are crippling our faith and witness. We will lose sight of what the Belgic Confession called “a most elegant book” wherein all creatures help us-and othersto see the invisible God.

Calvin B. DeWitt is an environmental scientist with the Institute for Environmental Studies at the University o f Wisconsin-Madison and director of the Au Sable Institute of Environmental Studies, a Christian center for the integration of biblical teaching and environmental science for college students, professors, and churches. He is the author of Earth-wise (CRC) and the general editor of The Environment and the Christian (Baker)

MYTH 3

There is Nothing Christians Can Do

Loren WilkinsonHeadlines trumpet news of environmental crises, with some experts claiming apocalyptic scenarios where we will either burn or freeze within a generation. Another vociferous group claims just the opposite: there is no real ecological problem, only hysterical environmentalists. Despite their divergent messages, both groups offer Christians the same temptation: to think there is nothing we can do to help the situation.

But this is simply not true. There are many strategies Christians can and should pursue to help care for creation.

One of the earliest evangelical books on the environment-Francis Schaeffer’s Pollution and the Death of Man-made one of the wisest observations: Christian households and churches need to be “pilot plants” of the new creation. There the world can see, acted out in individual lives and in communities, the healing of creation that only comes from being in fellowship with God in Christ. Eugene Peterson’s rendering of Philippians 2:15 suggests the difference we can make: “Go into the world uncorrupted, a breath of fresh air in this squalid and polluted society. Provide people with a glimpse of good living and of the living God.”

What does “good living and the living God” mean when it comes to creation? What can we do? Here are some suggestions, organized in everwidening spheres of influence:

Individual action First, we become aware. We learn how God cares and provides for us through creation. That means, for example, knowing where our food, water, and energy come from and where our waste products go. (There is no “away” in God’s creation.) What farms produced the food in our last meal? How were the plants grown? How far was it transported to get to our table? To what former wetland is our garbage hauled? Into what bay or river are our toilets flushed (and after what degree of processing)? What forests were pulped to produce our paper? These questions are not intended to reduce us to guilty inaction, but to make us know that it is through God’s creation that we live.

We also need to practice the principles of “reduce, reuse, recycle”-not out of environmentalist legalism but in conscious delight of being God’s free, redeemed, and responsible stewards:

We reduce, for example, because, though creation is for our use, it has worth far beyond the use we make of it. The more we learn the impact of our choices on creation, the more likely we are to learn to be content with less.

We reuse because God did not make a throwaway world. So repair the shoes or toaster to give them new or longer life. If we must bring things home in packaging, we ought to consider the second life the packages might have. And we ought to be willing to pay more for things that have a longer life.

And we recycle because God does. “To the place the streams come from, there they return again,” says Psalm 104. Increasingly, however, we have built a civilization whose residues-plastics, tires, Styrofoam—do not fit into the created cycles. So when we must discard what we have used, we need to recycle.

To these three R’s, Christians have good reason to add two more:

We resist. Our culture often defines our value in terms of how much we consume. We need to resist this consumerism that is fed by advertising and television. Perhaps a television set is one thing we should not repair when it breaks. In few other areas can we better demonstrate “good living” and our allegiance to “the living God” than by refusing to be shaped by our consumerist culture.

But that negative choice opens up a glorious, positive one: We rejoice. The more we learn about God’s provisions for the earth, the more wonderful it seems. Isaiah’s words should describe our experience of creation: “You will go out in joy and be led forth in peace; the mountains and the hills will burst into song before you, and all the trees of the field will clap their hands” (Isa. 55:12; all Scripture quotations from the NIV).

Community efforts We should get in the habit of using the theological term creation instead of the more secular environment or nature. The bedrock of our action is that we are creatures, responsible to God our Creator for our use of his gifts in creation. A congregation that speaks only of “the environment” may well come to feel that its wastebaskets full of plasticfoam cups on Sunday morning offend only some politically correct fad.

We also need to broaden our understanding of the word stewardship. Inside the church, the term is restricted almost entirely to matters of money. But increasingly, it is being used outside the church to speak of our care of creation. The word opens a door to witness, for it invites the question, “To whom is the steward responsible?”

If the church is to be a model of “good living and the living God,” we also need to be aware of what our buildings and practices convey about God and the genuinely good life. All the principles of caring for creation that we practice as individuals-reducing, reusing, recycling, resisting, and rejoicing-should be evident in our corporate life as well. To recycle (or avoid) the Sunday flood of paper, to make our church buildings and parking lots available to wider use-these make for good stewardship. Ultimately, to a pagan world beginning to glimpse something of God through creation, these acts function as pre-evangelism.

Church members should also consider reducing their impact on creation through sharing. Many things that we own-from lawn mowers to vacation homes-could well be shared.

Finally, churches should resist an increasing tendency to leave God’s creative acts out of worship. Much new worship music exalts God in his majesty, but speaks very little of what he has done and made. New music in the church would be enriched if it were to follow the pattern of an old carol: “Joy to the world! the Lord is come; / let earth receive her King; / Let every heart prepare him room, / And heaven and nature sing.” That’s good theology, and good worship.

Public witness Christians have recently begun to be more aware of their need to be politically active. We need to extend that activity to policies that influence our care of creation. It is important to shape the way our governments and economies work. We need to bring the full meaning of words like creation and stewardship into the public arena. Here are four principles for wider involvement.

• Many of the most important political decisions related to the care of creation are influenced greatly by opinions of local people. Zoning hearings to increase the density of an area, or to allow roads, industry, or power plants, invite public participation. It is important to use such forums in order to save our communities, and to do so publicly in the name of God the Creator.

• Just as we have (rightly) evaluated candidates for office on their records on such issues as abortion and attitude toward the family, we need to evaluate also their attitudes toward creation.

• A major problem in our civilization is the barrier between cities and the agriculture that supports them. (The average food item in North America is transported more than 800 miles.) This leads to ever-larger farms and ever-fewer opportunities for stewardship and contact with the creation that supports us. To remind people of their vital connection to the land, we therefore need to encourage urban gardens, farmers’ markets, and local, small-scale agriculture-and to point out (as Paul did to the pagans in Acts 14:17) that it is God who “has shown kindness by giving you rain from heavens, and crops in their seasons, and provides you with plenty of food, and fills your hearts with joy.”

• Some of the most eloquent and effective voices for the care of creation come from environmental groups in which there is no Christian presence (and often an implicitly anti-Christian bias). Christians should consider participating in such groups, both because their agenda-caring for creation-should be a Christian’s agenda, and because these organizations desperately need a Christian witness. The environmental movement is an ethic looking for a religion, and it is no surprise that many people in it have turned to native and pagan religions when no Christian voice speaks with and to them.

Loren Wilkinson is the coauthor, with his wife, Mary Ruth Wilkinson, of Caring for Creation in Your Own Backyard (Servant). He teaches at Regent College in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Copyright © 2001 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere

Outside magazine profiled Christian environmentalism past, present, and future, and suggested that religious activists will be extremely important in the Bush administration.

A Christian Century editorial said society can either tell God “we’re in charge of sea level from here on out, or we can throttle back and learn to live a little differently.”

America’s Roman Catholic bishops have called for immediate action to find solutions to global climate change saying that fighting it is a moral duty. A Boston Globe editorial looked at global warming’s spiritual cost.

Christian Environmentalism associations include Christian Environmental Council (an offshoot of the Evangelical Environmental Network), the Interfaith Council for Environmental Stewardship, Evangelicals for Social Action and Green Cross.

For more articles, see Yahoo’s full coverage areas on environment news.

Earlier Christianity Today articles on environmentalism include:

Religious Leaders Rebuke Bush Administration Over Kyoto Protocol | Officials from the National Council of Churches, Presbyterian Church (USA), United Methodist Church, Disciples of Christ, and African Methodist Episcopal Church say U.S. must limit greenhouse gas emissions. (April 6, 2001)

Unholy Harvest? | Evangelicals join protests against genetically modified “frankenfoods.” (May 9, 2000)

U.S. Churches Join Global Warming Debate (Oct. 5, 1998)

God’s Green Acres | How Calvin DeWitt is helping Dunn, Wisconsin, reflect the glory of God’s good creation. (June 15, 1998)

Greening of the Gospel? | Evangelical environmentalists press to add creation care to the church’s mission. (Nov. 11, 1996)

Evangelical Environmentalism Comes of Age (Nov. 11, 1996)

Why We Love the Earth

“Our belief in a Creator, not crisis scenarios, drives our environmental concerns.”

Christianity Today June 1, 2001
Recently, a poll conducted by the authors of Environmental Values in American Culture (MIT Press), revealed some surprising news: Most Americans agree with the statement “Because God created the world, it’s wrong to abuse it.”

It is safe to say that the environment has not been prominent on the evangelical agenda. We may privately acknowledge the need to be better stewards of our natural resources, but we generally stay away from groups and organizations working on environmental issues because we suspect they are either too “liberal,” “New Age,” or both. Indeed, some groups clearly have New Age ties, and political liberals seem to have cornered the environmental market. But if this poll accurately reflects the philosophical underpinnings of most Americans regarding care of the planet, our fears may have been unwarranted. Rank-and-file Americans want to take better care of the earth for the same reason we do: God made it.

Happily, more evangelicals are being motivated more by obedience to God’s Word than by fears spread by environmental extremists. The recent formation of the Christian Society of the Green Cross is a case in point. The society’s quarterly, Green Cross, “seeks to help Christians become good stewards of creation” and promotes biblical thinking about ecological issues.

For years, World Vision International has built environmental stewardship into its development ministry. Working in Ethiopia’s Ansokia Valley, ravaged by famine, World Vision helped local residents plant millions of trees for food and fuel and to stabilize the soil, and pioneered the use of drought-resistant crops. Now the valley is green and exports food to other regions.

Michigan’s AuSable Institute, begun by a small group of Christian biologists, is another example of a practical “theology of ecology.” Through its publications, seminars, and conferences, the institute has done cutting-edge work in Christian environmental concern for over a decade.

More recently, some Christian colleges have hired environmentally conscious administrators to help with energy conservation. Christian publishers are increasingly using recycled and environmentally safe paper and are recycling wastes.

Still, these examples are more the exception than the rule. Many evangelicals, especially in the United States, seem to feel that ecology is of no deep concern to God. The physical world is of little value compared to the human soul. Some ask: “Shouldn’t we just stick to saving souls?”

In a word, no. The question is not the motives or politics of others who are concerned about the environment, but where biblically informed and Jesus-motivated compassion leads us. We ought to do a better job of caring for the environment because “the Earth is the Lord’s, and everything in it.” Nothing in the New Testament suggests that the biblical concern for creation was canceled by the coming of Christ. Quite the opposite. In the risen Jesus Christ we see the first fruits of a renewed creation. So we seek God’s help in being earth-keepers today. Christians ought to be the most active and effective environmentalists in America. Here are some suggestions to begin that work:

  • Teach our children a biblical perspective on the environment. This means avoiding both extremes: purely secular environmentalism, or overspiritualizing that undercuts good stewardship.
  • Become informed on environmental issues. A number of books and other publications by Christian writers and scientists are now available.
  • Take care of our property. Christian churches and organizations are major holders of real estate, most of it untaxed. These pieces of the environment should be demonstration plots for our concern for God’s world.
  • Recycle. Here is where good ecology and good economics meet. If patriotic Christians during World War II could recycle tin cans and tires for the war effort, certainly Jesus’ disciples today can recycle our abundance of consumer trash, demonstrating a kingdom patriotism.

Here is something to celebrate: the goodness of God’s creation, a growing public support for earthcare, and evangelicals who are leading the way in the stewardship of the garden God has given us. Doesn’t it make you want to roll up your sleeves and do more?

This article originally appeared in the May 15, 1995, issue of Christianity Today. At the time, Howard A. Snyder was Heisel Professor of Evangelization and Church Renewal at United Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio. He is now Professor of History and Theology of Mission at Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Kentucky.

Copyright © 2001 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere

Outside magazine profiled Christian environmentalism past, present, and future, and suggested that religious activists will be extremely important in the Bush administration.

A Christian Century editorial said society can either tell God “we’re in charge of sea level from here on out, or we can throttle back and learn to live a little differently.”

America’s Roman Catholic bishops have called for immediate action to find solutions to global climate change saying that fighting it is a moral duty. A Boston Globe editorial looked at global warming’s spiritual cost.

Christian Environmentalism associations include Christian Environmental Council (an offshoot of the Evangelical Environmental Network), the Interfaith Council for Environmental Stewardship, Evangelicals for Social Action and Green Cross.

For more articles, see Yahoo’s full coverage areas on environment news.

Earlier Christianity Today articles on environmentalism include:

Religious Leaders Rebuke Bush Administration Over Kyoto Protocol | Officials from the National Council of Churches, Presbyterian Church (USA), United Methodist Church, Disciples of Christ, and African Methodist Episcopal Church say U.S. must limit greenhouse gas emissions. (April 6, 2001)

Unholy Harvest? | Evangelicals join protests against genetically modified “frankenfoods.” (May 9, 2000)

U.S. Churches Join Global Warming Debate (Oct. 5, 1998)

God’s Green Acres | How Calvin DeWitt is helping Dunn, Wisconsin, reflect the glory of God’s good creation. (June 15, 1998)

Greening of the Gospel? | Evangelical environmentalists press to add creation care to the church’s mission. (Nov. 11, 1996)

Evangelical Environmentalism Comes of Age (Nov. 11, 1996)

The Anglican Mission in America Grows—and So Do Anglican Leaders’ Criticisms of It

The Orlando Sentinel gets the facts on the arrest of Crosswalk.com’s CEO.

Christianity Today June 1, 2001
The yodel heard round the world As the Anglican clergy proceeded down the aisle at Colorado Community Church in the Denver suburb of Englewood, Gerry Schnackenberg let fly an echoing yodel. “The crowd roared” in response, reports The Rocky Mountain News. Apparently Schnackenberg yodeled because it’s one of the things he’s known for. But a yodel is also a cry of excitement that apparently began as a way for the Swiss to communicate over great distances (some believe it initially served a military purpose). How appropriate, then, that the yodelling at Colorado Community Church initiated the consecration of four more bishops in the Anglican Mission in America (AMiA)—an effort by archbishops from Rwanda and Southeast Asia to offer American Anglicans an option to a liberalizing Episcopal Church.

“We have no intention of forming a new church,” Archbishop Datuk Yong Ping Chung of Malaysia said after the consecrations. “There must be unity, but unity without compromising the truth of the scriptures.”

But even though the AMiA leaders see the action as preserving unity rather than risking it, some members see great importance in the move. “I think this moment is akin to the Reformation—if not greater,” Shirley Morris, a deacon from Pittsburgh, tells The Rocky Mountain News. “This marks a profound return to the biblical faith, which is what the Reformation was all about.”

The consecrations of these four bishops seems in some ways to be even more contentious than the original two that launched the AMiA. Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey, leader of the Anglican Communion worldwide, wrote a particularly strong letter to Datuk Yong Ping Chung and the Rwandan archbishop, Emmanuel Kolini, urging them to stop. “What you propose to do is in blatant disregard of our Anglican ecclesiology,” he wrote. “Are you and your Province aware that action of this kind takes you perilously close to creating a new group of churches at odds with the See of Canterbury and the rest of the Communion?

But one of the AMiA’s original bishops, Chuck Murphy, found Carey’s warnings indicative of the Anglican church’s problem:

The present Archbishop of Canterbury was able to remain in full communion with the retired Archbishop of Scotland, the Most Rev. Richard Holloway, who states publicly that he no longer believes Jesus was the Son of God. He was able to remain in full communion with Bishop John Spong, who declared publicly that he no longer even believed in any personal God. Yet the present occupant of the See of Canterbury apparently finds that he cannot recognize or be in communion with bishops who would publicly step over institutional boundaries. This is sad.

But now is not the time to keep fighting those battles with the Episcopal Church or Anglican Communion, Murphy says, nor those over homosexuality, abortion, and divorce. “We aren’t looking in a rearview mirror,” he tells The Denver Post. “We don’t want to keep on debating.” (More on the ordinations is available from The Washington Times, Los Angeles Times, UPI, The Denver Post, and The Rocky Mountain News. But for a Weblog that rarely misses a beat when covering this story, check out Classical Anglican Net News, which also offers the service’s sermon, photos, and commentary.)

More on the arrest of Crosswalk’s CEO Last week, Weblog wondered if the arrest of Crosswalk.com CEO Scott Fehrenbacher had anything to do with the sale of the rights to his $400 eValueator software and his subsequent creation of a free, Web-based service that essentially did the same thing. According to The Orlando Sentinel, that’s basically the story. Fehrenbacher “is accused of cheating three Orlando-area investors out of about $180,000 in the deal,” the paper reports, and is charged with two counts of scheming to defraud and one count of exploitation of the elderly. He is out on $12,500 bond and faces arraignment on July 6. A few questions remain, however. Why, if the charges focus on Fehrenbacher’s creation of competition at Crosswalk.com, does Crosswalk’s SEC statement say “the allegations … do not involve Crosswalk.com”? Second, why is Fehrenbacher facing criminal charges? If he violated his noncompete clause, why aren’t the investors simply taking him to civil court? Weblog will keep you posted.

Copyright © 2001 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere

See our past Weblog updates:

June 26 | 25

June 22 | 20 | 19 | 18

June 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11

June 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4

June 1 | May 31 | 30

May 18 | 17 | 16 | 15 | 14

May 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7

May 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | April 30

April 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23

“Speed, Greed, and other Animal Behaviors”

“What Christian and mainstream critics are saying about Dr. Dolittle 2, The Fast and the Furious, Sexy Beast, The Anniversary Party, and other cinematic options.”

Christianity Today June 1, 2001
Last weekend provided evidence that audiences have a need for speed and a fondness for talking animals with bad flatulence. Hollywood sure knows how to give the public what it wants. Those who care about what audiences need are not having a good summer. And those who write reviews in hopes of counseling moviegoers toward excellence, well, they’re left scratching their heads, baffled by the box office.

Hot from the Oven

Audiences obviously get something out of watching Eddie Murphy react to talking animals that pass gas, because here he is again with Doctor Dolittle 2. The U.S. Catholic Conference says Doctor Dolittle 2 “offers a rehash of the same sassy wisecracks between Murphy and the critters in a drawn-out, sometimes sweet but often rude sequel.” This time, Dolittle gets back to nature, setting up camp in a forest where he intends to introduce Archie, a circus bear, to Ava, an endangered wild bear. If he can only help them help themselves—that is, if the sparks of love will fly—then the woods will be protected from the wicked, encroaching developers.

Encroaching bad reviews—from the mainstream and the religious press—didn’t phase most filmgoing families; the $25 million the film brought in over the weekend practically guarantees we’ll be seeing more of this stuff. Murphy, whose fans grumble that his best work seems to be a thing of the past, manages to be more popular than ever.

The prevalence of sex-related humor throughout the film prevented its acceptance with critics in the religious media. Preview warns that the subject of “mating” may be inappropriate as the central thread of a children’s movie, and also joins the collective critical sigh over the typically crude humor. “But,” Preview’s critic concludes, “Doctor Dolittle also realizes that communication with family is as important as talking to the animals.” “I took my 15-year-old son and his friend to get an honest critical reaction from the demographics who will see this movie,” writes Holly McClure at The Dove Foundation, “and I was surprised to hear they both liked it a lot.” However, she adds, “I’m glad I took younger ‘critics’ with me because they were able to enjoy this movie from a lighthearted, younger perspective that (in this instance) I didn’t have. I only laughed a couple of times and overall I thought it was silly, slow and overloaded with way too many animal jokes about passing gas, urinating and mating.”

Movieguide‘s critic saw the movie take a wrong turn when it abandoned the romance plot for a hackneyed confrontation about environmentalism. “The trouble is the audience cared about the former, which took up most of the movie, not the latter,” says the reviewer. “Therefore, kids stopped laughing and critics started mumbling that the movie was way too long. Running out of story and unaccustomed to character development, the movie tried to hold the audience by increasing the bathroom humor and lightweight sexual references, which made the later half of the movie just plain dirty.” Focus on the Family‘s Bob Smithouser writes, “Viewers who hate to feel manipulated by filmmakers’ social agendas will loathe Dr. Dolittle 2 for wearing its environmentalism on its sleeve. While it effectively drives the story, it still feels preachy.” Still, Smithouser found some things to like: “The script isn’t spectacular but it has a good heart, as well as a gaggle of hit-and-miss gags and pop culture nods that had me laughing from my gut more than once. Long-time Eddie Murphy fans will find him domesticated and censored here (a pleasant change), much closer to Bill Cosby than Axel Foley.”

* * *

Let’s all hope the dangerous Road Warrior-style racing of The Fast and the Furious doesn’t inspire young viewers to try this kind of thing. Actor Vin Diesel, who “arrived” as a soldier in Saving Private Ryan, was the voice of The Iron Giant, and played a dangerous criminal in Pitch Black, is back as a tough-talking gang leader who hijacks cars and participates in high-speed illegal racing on the streets of Los Angeles after dark. Paul Walker plays an undercover cop who infiltrates the racing gang and finds himself accelerating into trouble, partly because he’s falling in love with the leader’s sister (Jordana Brewster). Director Rob Cohen, who directed Dragonheart and The Skulls, is surprising many critics with his skillful choreography of some thrilling action sequences. But when it comes to a meaningful story, most agree that the film is running on fumes.

“Cohen’s formula race and chase scenes alternate with constant macho posturing for a dull but noisy tale of justice ignored,” says the U.S. Catholic Conference. Preview cautions, “While the dialogue includes a lot of obscenities … one area of concern is the glamorization of the dangerous and illegal street racing. Young drivers may find it hard to resist imitating the high-energy racing scenes. Along with gasoline and nitrogen, this racing story is also fueled by images of alcohol use and abuse, implied promiscuous sex and questioning loyalties.” Movieguide‘s critic agrees: “Despite some minor redemptive elements, The Fast and the Furious condones, if not glamorizes, reckless, dangerous driving and casual premarital sexuality. Although slickly photographed, it also has an over-complicated, formulaic, sometimes hokey script. Furthermore, Paul Walker’s acting fails to match Vin Diesel’s intensity.”

Despite thinking the movie is a “vapid experience,” Michael Elliott of Movie Parables believes the film is review-proof, and this weekend’s gross (an uncannily appropriate term) of more than $40 million proved he’s absolutely right. “It doesn’t matter that the story is lame or that the dialogue is cheesier than a wheel of gouda. The Fast and the Furious will bring in its millions faster than its souped-up cars can race down Manhattan’s streets.” Elliott argues that the film’s characters are shown to be victims of a sort of idolatry in the way they treat their flashy cars.

“Well, it’s not the worst movie I ever saw,” says Crosswalk‘s Phil Boatwright. “In fact it’s difficult not to get caught up in the splendidly photographed racing sequences.” He goes on to berate the film’s caustic soundtrack and its “cliché-ridden storyline, which has all the profundity of a Tidy Bowl commercial.” His biggest objection is the film’s “moral ambiguity. We find ourselves rooting for the baddies. … It is the members of the establishment who seem to be the real outlaws.”

SPOILER WARNING!Focus on the Family‘s Steven Issac calls it “A veritable Point Break clone [that] replaces surfing with racing and bank heists with truck-jacking.” Issac finds some signs of meaningfulness in the way the team members watch out for each other, and for family. But he also sees dangerous moral relativism at work in the film’s finale: “The Fast and the Furious subscribes to a new, more relativistic sensibility in which the cop lets the crook go in the end because he can’t bear to cage such a beautifully wild creature. In other words, he feels sorry for him. Despite how outraged some folks get about the inadequacies of our justice system, that’s an abominable message to throw at teens. If it’s okay to be the ‘bad guy’ if you’re a nice guy, then we should just throw all the annoying people in jail and be done with it. [This] marks a radical shift in our cultural conscience.”

Still Cooking

Meanwhile, Disney’s Atlantis and DreamWorks’ Shrek continued to draw families to the theatre, and Angelina Jolie’s Tomb Raider continued to lure in adolescent boys and admiring young women. At The Film Forum, Jeff Diaz caught up with the videogame-based flick, which we covered here in more detail last week. Diaz writes, “This really did nothing to push me further on my spiritual journey, except maybe to reiterate that ‘A fool and his money are soon parted.'”

At Hollywood Jesus, David Bruce now offers a generously in-depth look at the symbolism of the popular musical Moulin Rouge. (We covered reviews of this film a few weeks back.) “There is no surprise ending,” writes Bruce. “We have seen this familiar story before in other incarnations. And yet, this film tells this story in a such a way that we feel it is being told for the very first time. On a deeper level this story is about the needless divorce between Christian spirituality and natural sensuality. It is about how the worldly system exploits God-given sexuality for greed and money. It is about overcoming sexual shame and dehumanizing behavior, while enjoying human love and sexuality as it was intended by God.” Personally speaking, Moulin Rouge is my favorite film of the year so far, for its relentless imagination, its energy, and its insistence on the superiority of committed, wholehearted, selfless love over the carnal appetites of possessive and lustful “love.” Bruce’s examination of the movie’s use of color deepened my appreciation for director Baz Luhrmann’s achievement.

Side Dishes

You won’t find a more striking title all year long. And yet, why Jonathan Glazer’s film is called Sexy Beast is open to debate. I suspect that the criminals lurking in every dark corner of this film like to think of themselves as “sexy” and “beastly.” They walk with predatory arrogance, they watch unflinchingly as bullets are delivered like exclamation points at the end of macho declarations, they lounge around in their kitsch clothes and they banter about innovations in the fight against receding hairlines. In the end, you’ll be convinced about “beast,” but “sexy”? Trust me—this is not a movie that wants to convince you criminals are cool. There’s not a teen male icon in sight. These are middle-aged buffoons pushing each other around, using guns so they don’t have to use their fists. An action scene could probably send any one of them into cardiac arrest.

Amy Taubin at The Village Voice argues that the title refers to its hero, a large gangster with a slowly softening heart, named Gary Gal Dove. Played with depth and sensitivity by Ray Winstone, “Gal” is charming in his easygoing enjoyment of his tacky “villa” in Spain, which looks like a cookie-cutter gangster home from southern California with its swimming pool and kitschy deco. “Gal is sexy,” Taubin explains, “not because he’s gorgeous or powerful or narcissistic (if narcissism weren’t sexy, Tom Cruise would never be a movie star), but because he lives as beasts do, tuned to his immediate sensory experience of the world. He has animal magnetism.”

Gal’s criminal past is coming back to haunt him, rumbling like a boulder broken loose and tumbling down the hill toward his home. That boulder is Don Logan, a small but savage messenger come to lure Gal back in for—yes, the crime genre’s greatest cliché—one last job. What Don Logan wants, Don Logan gets, Gal’s friends remind him. But Gal, feeling principled and protective in the presence of the woman he loves (an ex-porn star who is also trying to live a better life), decides to dig in his heels and refuse the job. He and everyone else present knows he may as well have signed his own death sentence.

At The International Film Journal, Kevin Lally writes, “Anyone with any doubts about the range of Oscar winner Ben Kingsley should look no further than Sexy Beast, the ultra-stylish new British crime film that showcases a ferociously menacing performance by the man who once embodied that paragon of pacifism, Gandhi.” Entertainment Weekly‘s Owen Glieberman writes, “Winstone … lets you see the fear that most gangster movies gloss over. … By the end, we realize that crime may pay, but those who make their pact with the BadFellas pay more.” Salon‘s Andrew O’Hehir calls the film “both electrified and haunted, a nightmare set in paradise, a lurid dream state in which strange things happen underground and underwater.” And he claims that it “belongs alongside Amores Perros and Memento on a shortlist of 2001’s most exciting revelations, all of them movies that push the crime genre in adventurous new directions.”

I too was quite impressed by the way Winstone and Kingsley held the audience’s attention, even with the stylish widescreen camerawork and the shifty criminal characters on the edges of the frame. Winstone has one of those faces that is half tough guy, half softie; he might be John Goodman’s quiet younger brother. He is exactly what Logan calls him in a venomous sneer—a loveable oaf. Kingsley’s performance as Logan is truly chilling; he’s vicious enough to take on any of the pit bulls in Amores Perros. Like a predator, his eyes are shifty, cold and calculating. It’s almost funny—he’s so much smaller than those he antagonizes, and yet they jump when he talks. They know what he can do, and they know his connections. The movie’s best special effect is Kingsley’s bald cranium, which in close-up reveals crevasses, furrows, and a curve around the ear that suggests he might have crawled out of the sea a thousand years ago. When Gal says “No” to Logan’s offer, Logan immediately contradicts him, barking fitfully like a dog, “Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! YES!” And when Logan doesn’t like something, it’s “No! No! No-no-no-no-NO!” You know the confrontation’s coming. This is the angel of death in the guise of a summer houseguest, and everybody knows that fire will eventually shoot out of his eyes and he’ll blow the house down. But also impressively fearsome is Teddy, the crime lord with the grin of death, portrayed by Ian McShane. McShane is as unsettling in his silences as Kingsley is in his profanity-laden tirades. These three performances elevate the film above most crime dramas.

Sexy Beast is unique in that it has compassion for its criminals without glamorizing their behavior. The violence is mostly verbal (and mostly delivered by Kingsley), and there’s remarkably little in the way of gunplay. It doesn’t flaunt its power over the audience with shock value. In fact, when the criminals get tough, they look and sound rather ridiculous. Logan’s swearing comes so fast and jumbled that you have no idea if he was trying to say something or merely letting off steam. For all of its familiar territory, Sexy Beast shows that there are still plenty of interesting characters in the crime genre. Most crime stories, from Cain and Abel to Macbeth, from Bonnie and Clyde to Pulp Fiction, exist to show us that crime doesn’t pay. But Sexy Beast has more to say than that, like how a step toward love can make life worth living, no matter what price is on your head, no matter what past is coming back to haunt you. In fact, grace may even sometimes grant you a pardon from inevitable ruin.

Other critics in the religious media are not enthusiastic. “Despite a rich layer of meaning in its story, Sexy Beast ultimately fails to do much with it,” says Movieguide. “Though at times it is a very stylish movie, it is also frequently foul and lacks redemptive or uplifting elements to counteract the brutal, immoral world it depicts.”

* * *

The Anniversary Party portrays a complicated collision of misguided lives in Hollywood. Sally (Jennifer Jason Leigh), a starlet passing her prime, and her husband, an acclaimed novelist and soon-to-be director, throw a party to celebrate their marriage even as it teeters on the brink of disaster. The friends (and enemies) at the party are not much help, bringing their own tangles of depression, anger, dishonesty, and selfishness through the door. Everyone is groping for something that will bring peace, or at least a short spell of blissful denial and escapism. One is a new mother, who seems completely out of place at a Hollywood party now that she has a child to care for back home; she’s become addicted to pregnancy-related drugs merely to calm her nerves as the awesome responsibility of motherhood becomes clear to her. Another (John C. Reilly) is a movie director who can’t sit still at the party, so he disappears into a back room to watch the dailies of his new film and berate himself for his own mediocrity. The uptight neighbors show up at the party, and it takes only moments before they are arguing about whose dog keeps the neighborhood awake at night.

Over the course of the evening, the uptight will loosen up with the help of the drug Ecstasy. In fact, the movie doesn’t condescend to remind us of the obvious dangers of the drug. Instead, the drug does something far more dangerous; it erases inhibitions and all sense of appropriateness, so that they start telling each other the truth for a change. Once the truth is set free, all manner of emotional damage is done, and no one will ever be the same.

Preview‘s critic writes that the film’s digital video presentation makes it feel like a home movie, “but the average home was never like this. While Leigh and Cumming may be striving to reflect real-life Hollywood couples, it’s still an unreal lifestyle to the average viewer.” Movie Parables‘ Michael Elliott writes, “The Anniversary Party is far from talentless. The cast is quite accomplished and certainly no one has damaged their career by their work in this film. The project just smacks of self-indulgence. While it can be argued that the film gives us a rare inside look at how the ‘image-makers’ live, the movie fails to involve us or really let us into the lives of these characters. Thus when the histrionics begin (and continue), we simply aren’t compelled to care enough to follow them down their angst-ridden path of self-discovery.”

I’d have to disagree. Sure, these lifestyles are out of reach for the average viewer. And the movie does pack too many characters into too small a space. But I found it compelling to see how, even without a good example among them, without one single person that might minister to their real needs, they all are brought to see something of the light merely by seeing the devastation that they have wrought. All manner of wealth and creature comforts have failed to help these characters in coping with life. If anything, the money, the luxuries, and the drugs have only served to further separate them from each other. Is there any hope for them? Are there any glimmers of real love left in their hearts? While this party is definitely not a pleasant experience, it was fascinating to search for the hearts under the layers of makeup, denial, disguise, excuses, fantasies, and ego. You just might catch fragments of the Answer. The one complete family at the party—played by the real-life family of Kevin Kline, Phoebe Cates, and their children—exhibit tenderness toward one another, in spite of their flaws and blind spots. This tenderness and balance seems missing from the other partygoers. Sometimes you have to lose love, or witness it in the lives of others, before you can recognize the absence of it in your own heart.

Going Back for Seconds

These days, Film Forum depends on its readers for relief from the slim pickings at the cineplex. Are there any movies that have been worth more than one viewing, stories that have challenged or inspired you?

In Sandy Pollard’s experience, yes. She wrote to tell me about a personal crisis in her own life, and how she found healing in part due to Steven Spielberg’s film The Color Purple.

Involved in an unhealthy and damaging relationship, Pollard felt trapped. “I saw no way out of my situation. I felt as though God had abandoned me at times, leaving me to trudge on in hopelessness. I lost view of the big picture.

As I watched Celie’s story play out over the years in that wonderful film, and realized that God was indeed at work in her life, and in the lives of others, I began to hope that my situation would someday change. As Celie poured her heart out to God in her letters to him, he did indeed answer her prayers . …not in her timing, but in his. He turned Earth upside down to insure that her children would be protected, by, of all people, the person that Celie loved the most, their Aunt. He eventually returned the children to their mother . …and all of the characters in the movie experienced redemption; through bitter providence, but redemption nonetheless. I have raised my three children as a single mother. But God began to work in my heart, and like Celie, I experienced transforming redemption because of the circumstances I had experienced. Looking back, I can see the hand of God, moving heaven and Earth to protect my children and me, until we could experience the grace and forgiveness that he wanted us to know. My children and I have all become believers, I have grandchildren who are precious, and we spend our lives happily pursuing the God that pursued us for so long.

Looking at the big picture of Celie’s life in that film was one of the biggest motivators in an otherwise dark time for me. I will always be grateful to Alice Walker for having the courage to write of redemption and to Steven Spielberg for so beautifully transferring the story to film.

Writing from Kaohsiung, Taiwan, Scott Grandi has another recommendation for readers. He writes about Roland Joffe’s The Mission, which stars Jeremy Irons as a Jesuit priest and Robert DeNiro as a troubled soldier who has different ideas about how God’s work gets done. “The Mission challenges you from the first scene—a priest tied to a cross sent over the falls—to the last. The scene where the former conquistador is climbing the falls dragging his old armor, and has it cut off, is one of the finest pictures of grace I have seen in a movie.”

Copyright © 2001 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere

See earlier Film Forum postings for these other movies in the box-office top ten: Atlantis: The Lost Empire, Shrek, Swordfish, Pearl Harbor, Evolution, and The Animal.

The Talents Aren’t Just a Parable Any More

Religious investing is on the rise—but so are religious investment frauds

Christianity Today June 1, 2001
Ethical and unethical religious investing It’s little wonder that Christian mutual fund company Timothy Partners Ltd. and a few Orlando-area investors are upset with Crosswalk.com CEO Scott Fehrenbacher for allegedly undercutting their software that helps religious investors screen their investments. Religious investing is reportedly surging in popularity right now, and now’s the time when such software could really come in handy. In the last six months, no fewer than a dozen religious indexes and mutual funds have been launched, reports the New York Post. Only five were introduced in the six months before that. The surge is apparently part of a larger trend in socially responsible investing, which reportedly accounts for $1 out of every $8 “under professional money management” in the U.S. But not all religious investing indices are alike: some Roman Catholics have been surprised to find that some Walt Disney Co. among the “top 30 holdings” in Carlisle Social Investment’s Catholic U.S. Market Index while General Electric is excluded for environmental reasons. Not that it matters for most Catholics; the New York Post doesn’t mention that Carlisle requires a $1 million minimum, limiting it to dioceses, religious orders, Catholic institutions, and a few very wealthy individuals. Regular mutual funds aren’t expected from the company for about three years. Newsday, however, does dutifully report such limitations in its article of religious investing—both articles appeared on Sunday.

For the most part, Newsday notes, the U.S. religious funds and indices are very small. But in Australia, one faith-based group is a major player in the stock market. The Salvation Army has a total investment portfolio of $300 million (US$153 million) in the national stock market, reports The Australian. With its other assets, it’s worth far more than $1 billion. “We don’t exist to hoard money, we exist to deliver services,” Lieutenant-Colonel Brian Hood tells the paper. “Money is put aside into investments to make sure it is well utilized until it needs to be drawn down.” In any case, such funds make it a major player in several large Australian companies.

But religious investing isn’t all safe, reminds the Chicago Tribune: “Prosecutors and securities regulators say investment fraud schemes, especially those doing business in the name of the Lord, are growing rapidly, stealing larger sums of money every year. Investment frauds that reach investors through religious rhetoric or their churches are stealing more than $1 billion a year, most of it from the elderly.” The newspaper focuses special attention on former Baptist pastor Michael Richmond, who recently pleaded guilty to 17 counts of wire fraud. Prosecutors say he bilked 170 investors (40 percent of whom were over 70) out of $8.5 million. (See our Money & Business area for recent Christianity Today coverage of these issues, including investment fraud schemes.)

Go, Crusaders, go Last year, Wheaton College’s decision to retire its 73-year-old Crusader mascot won headlines around the country. Now a Catholic high school in San Juan Capistrano, California, is following suit, but their Crusader mascot hasn’t been around as long—the school hasn’t even opened yet. Board members came up with the name, but school boosters, behind the $70 million Junipero Serra High School suggested the mascot committee go back to the drawing board.

Copyright © 2001 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

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June 27 | 26 | 25

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June 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4

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“Charitable Choice Makes It Out of Committee, But Is It Too Compromised?”

“The continuing missionary work of the kidnapped Burnhams, Dylan joins the company of angels and archangels, and many other stories from news sources around the world”

Christianity Today June 1, 2001
Is this the same charitable choice? The good news is that charitable choice legislation allowing religious organizations to compete for federal social service funds has made it out of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee by a vote of 20 to 5. The bad news is that the legislation isn’t nearly what was promised. Weblog hasn’t heard from John DiIulio, director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, nor from deputy director Don Eberly, but it seems to Weblog that in large measure, the heart has been ripped out of President Bush’s faith-based initiative.

The amended legislation, which is also being debated in the House Ways and Means Committee, now requires that any program receiving federal funds must carefully distinguish its social services from its religious components, including religious instruction, prayer, worship, or evangelism. And it must allow anyone who wants to opt out of such religious activities to do so.

That means that Teen Challenge and other organizations that integrate religion throughout their work won’t be eligible for federal funds. (Although it seems like they’ve been excluded from any discussion of direct grants ever since DiIulio’s famous speech to the National Association of Evangelicals. But even then, DiIulio and others were at least talking about substituting direct grants in such cases with vouchers, which seems to have dropped off the table completely.) Wasn’t allowing such groups to compete for funding one of the basic points of the faith-based initiative? Weren’t drug counseling programs permeated with the yeast of biblical teachings touted as more effective than secular alternatives just a few months ago? Didn’t Eberly just tell reporters, “These are the groups where we want to say, ‘We’re not going to change your character; that’s what makes you effective'”? Weblog supposes the Feds are still saying they won’t change the groups’ character—but they can’t receive federal funds, either. And we’re right back where we started.

The legislation had already required that secular alternatives be available in any community where there was a federally funded faith-based organization. So if First Baptist Church had a soup kitchen that incorporated prayer before the meal, a secular soup kitchen had to be available down the street. So why take the extra step of requiring First Baptist Church to distinguish between feeding the body and feeding the soul? It’s one thing to tell an organization it has to spend federal money on bread, not Bibles; it’s quite another to tell it how much of the Bible it can quote if it accepts government funds.

House Republicans stanched an amendment requiring federally funded religious organizations to hire workers of all religions. But while belief is protected, the current bill says religious practices can’t be weighed in hiring decisions. (Gender and race can’t be considered, either.) Even Democrats are wondering what this legislation does that’s not currently allowed by law.

In fact, the current bill may actually limit—not expand—the options open to faith-based organizations. The Supreme Court’s recent decision in Good News Club v. Milford Central School is only the latest ruling against viewpoint discrimination: if you open the door to some private organizations, you have to open it up to religious ones as well. The Good News Club wasn’t told to distinguish between teaching about religion and actively evangelizing for it. Like after-school clubs, charitable choice is about fairness.

If religious conservatives have been skittish about charitable choice until now (at the time of Weblog’s writing, CT’s poll on charitable choice was only barely running in favor of the faith-based initiative), expect naysayers to grow in numbers and volume. Marvin Olasky, one of the original architects behind Bush’s faith-based initiative, is already launching an attack. “This new dispensation,” he writes in the latest issue of World, “may make the world safer for theological liberals, but it tells theological conservatives, ‘Get lost.’ … What’s needed above all is for President Bush to make the case for compassionate conservatism by showing America what groups like Teen Challenge do and why it’s unfair and unwise to discriminate against them.”

More on Bush’s faith-based initiative (news):

More on the faith-based initiative (opinion):

  • Compromise or compassion? | Frankly, I’m amazed at the number of Christians who’ve raised questions about President Bush’s plan for faith-based solutions. (Charles Colson, Breakpoint)
  • Where faith gets the job done | John Street has made Philadelphia the foremost laboratory for what President Bush calls “faith-based initiatives” (George Will, The Washington Post)
  • Serving America: What role for religious faith? | As the Bush administration seeks to harness the energy of faith in an expanded social-service effort, it will be important that the line between soul work and social work be clearly defined (Editorial, Star Tribune, Minneapolis)
  • Faith-based reparations? | The last thing the black community needs is another government handout, laced with paternalism and religion, in the form of “secular” good works undertaken by religious entities (Michael Myers, The New York Post)
  • Godphobes and the faithful | Given all the lamentation against suffering and deprivation that we hear in the public discourse, surely it is better to try this new approach than simply to reject it and let the suffering around us suffer more. (R. Emmett Tyrrell Jr., syndicated columnist)
  • Afraid for the church-state wall? Have faith | Bush revives his initiative to get faith-based organizations into the social-services mix. The plan’s enemies are its best defense (Frank Pellegrini, Time)
  • Bush’s charity plan hasn’t got a prayer | The President means well when he encourages corporate support for faith-based groups, but religion and business just don’t mix (Richard S. Dunham, Business Week)

Abducted missionaries still ministering Back home in Kansas City, friends and family are gathering to support the children of Martin and Gracia Burnham, the New Tribes missionaries taken hostage by Abu Sayyaf rebels in the Philippines. But, reports The Orlando Sentinel, the Burnhams are still working as missionaries—it’s just that their mission field has changed. “Filipinos who have escaped or been released by Muslim extremists say the Burnhams … are leading daily prayers and keeping fellow hostages sane by talking about things such as Gracia Burnham’s recipe for apple pie,” reports Pedro Ruz Gutierrez, who’s doing an amazing job at covering the abduction. The Burnhams, Gutierrez writes, “have emerged as a strong force helping their fellow hostages cope with the crisis” despite malaria and, in the case of Martin, shrapnel wounds. But they’ve also become a bargaining chip for the rebels, who say they may execute the missionaries to destabilize the country’s government. “If we chop off the heads of people like Mr. Burnham, the Americans would intervene, and so would the Arabs and [Osama] bin Laden’s groups. What will happen then to the Philippines?” Sabaya told the Associated Press. “This problem would never end. Actually, many more of these [attacks] could happen.”

In the beginning was the Word—then they changed it to W Perhaps the company is trying to associate itself more with the President of the United States. Fifty-year-old Word Publishing is changing its name to W Publishing Group. Actually, the company is making the move to “reflect a greater diversification in its publishing program.” That is to say, it’s now dealing with more than just words. A very clever campaign advertising the change illustrates the point. Amid Chuck Swindoll saying, “Word won’t be getting any more grace from me,” and Ravi Zacharias saying, “Publish with Word? That’s illogical,” other authors praise the company for expanding beyond the printed page. Max Lucado (“I’m no longer inspired by Word”) notes that He Chose the Nails went from a book to “an industry-wide evangelism initiative, with gift books, curriculum and music.” Frank Peretti (“The idea of staying with Word gives me chills”) notes how, with The Wounded Spirit, Word found “ways to reach more people with spin-offs like a youth curriculum and video.” With the Christian Booksellers Association meeting next week, expect some disgruntled writer to use the name change to again lament how unimportant books seem to be to the Christian book world.

You angel, you If that statue of St. Michael that sits on top of Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim, Norway, looks familiar but misplaced, it’s because the model is more often seen strumming a guitar than blowing an apocalyptic trumpet. Sculptor Kristofer Leirdal has admitted to the Norwegian daily newspaper Adressavisen that it’s an image of Bob Dylan, “a representative of American opposition to the Vietnam war.” Well, apparently we know where Leirdal stands on the whole “Is Dylan Saved?” question.

Pat Robertson, oil baron:

Church and state:

Ten Commandments:

Persecution:

Alleged persecution:

Life ethics:

Homosexuality:

Sexual ethics:

  • Prayer tackles sex on autobahn | Churches, concerned that new rest-area sex shops will lead motorists into temptation, are fighting back by opening chapels where weary drivers can pray or seek silence and solace. (The Daily Telegraph, London)
  • Racy clothes catalog rankles some | Critics from conservative Christians to liberal feminists call Abercrombie & Fitch’s latest catalog soft porn, and now they’ve joined forces to boycott the trendy, youth-oriented retailer (Associated Press)

War on porn:

  • Louisiana video-store chain on trial for renting sex tapes | Prosecutors argue movies violate standards of most residents in New Orleans area, but defense contends standards have relaxed since state obscenity law was drafted. (Associated Press)
  • Tanzania’s anti-porn drive | President Benjamin Mkapa’s pledge to combat pornography went down well at the opening ceremony of the Christian Council of Tanzania’s general meeting. (BBC)

Family:

Battles for the soul of the Anglican Church:

Ecumenism:

  • Love the sinner, hate the sin | The Denver Catholic Archdiocese wisely withdrew its financial support from Colorado’s Council of Churches after the council welcomed into its membership the Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches, a predominantly gay denomination. (Ellen Makkai, The Denver Post)

Catholicism:

  • Losing faith in the clergy | We Catholics are people of great faith, but it is asking too much for us to believe that the church has taken abuse claims “very seriously” (Rod Dreher, New York Post)
  • What’s a good Catholic to do? | One can’t help but wonder if the Catholic Church has been taken over by sociological researchers conducting a massive experiment on faith. They seem to be testing how far good Catholics can be pushed before they run screaming into the nearest Unitarian service. (Joan Ryan, San Francisco Chronicle)
  • Reuniting Latinos with Catholicism | Parishioners go door-to-door to win back those who left church (Los Angeles Times)

LA Weekly on the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God:

  • Demons on Broadway | Miracles. Exorcism. Catholic-bashing. Going for broke in the Universal Church. (LA Weekly)
  • See the light | Ex-church members struggle to reclaim happiness and financial health (LA Weekly)
  • The rebel preacher | Boiling over with hatred for Bishop Macedo (LA Weekly)

Church life:

  • Compaq Center lease bid up for vote | Lakewood Church’s offer in millions (Houston Chronicle)
  • Priest gives church-turned-cinema scathing review | For five years, the Rev. Leonid Tkachuk has battled to restore St. Clement’s to the small but stalwart parish of Roman Catholics in this overwhelmingly Orthodox city in the southern Crimea region of Ukraine. (USA Today)
  • Church fight tests new law | The focus of a local county zoning dispute has shifted away from the typical traffic and environmental impact studies toward a new federal law about land use and the right to worship (The Orlando Sentinel)
  • Cathedral removes Buddhist-influenced artwork | Artists’ work incorporated baptistry of New York’s Cathedral of St. John the Divine (The New York Times)
  • Milwaukee churchgoers challenge change | A project to renovate a 150-year-old cathedral by moving the altar and installing a pipe organ has pitted Catholic against Catholic in a dispute that has gone all the way to the Vatican (Associated Press)
  • Beaver-Butler Presbytery to rework statement of its faith | Church that ignited a national movement in March when it adopted its own statement of Christian faith, has withdrawn that statement in order to craft a new one (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

Pastoral life:

  • These days, too few heed the call | The shortage of priests and nuns is hurting schools and hospitals too (The Economist)
  • The Vicar of Wobbly | A vicar is setting up home on his leaking church roof – if he can overcome his fear of heights. (Lincolnshire Evening Post)
  • Black pastor reveals shift of attitude in Birmingham | United Methodist Church officials in Alabama picked the Rev. Charles Lee as the ideal pastor for integrating a predominantly white church (The New York Times)
  • Holy cow! Pastor is mugged twice | By the same man, in a four hour span, no less (New York Post)
  • Tom Jones disciples flock to pop pastor | Pastor Jack Stahl is so convinced of Jones’ inspirational powers that Stahl even dresses like the Welsh singer for his services at the Progressive Universal Life Church in Sacramento. (New York Post)
  • Vicar plans record 36-hour sermon | The rules are strict – no repetition, no reading, no gibberish and no pause of more than 10 seconds. Every eight hours a 15 minute break is allowed. (The Guardian, London)
  • Also: Vicar fights to keep his job with longest sermon | Record may focus local attention on Church of England financial changes, marathoner hopes (The Guardian, London)

Church history:

C.S. Lewis’s Narnia:

  • Narnia under vandal siege | Vandalising the churches, bulldozing the temples, only proves the philistinism of the perpetrators. In the end, the real story goes on forever. (Tom Morton, The Scotsman)
  • The lion, the witch, and the nonsense | Squeezing the Christianity out of “Christian culture” leads to absurdities (Bill Murchison)

Popular culture:

  • Christians in dialogue | Can popular music ever be a conduit for Christian values? (Mark Joseph & Nancy Pearcey, National Review Online)
  • God’s advertorials | Given that Australians have an insatiable appetite for American sitcoms and dramas, it should come as no surprise that we also import their religious television (Chris Middendorp, The Age, Melbourne)
  • Holy Land must render unto Caesar | Biblical-based theme park will have to pay property taxes just like any other tourist attraction despite its theme and ownership by a religious organization (The Orlando Sentinel)

Polling belief:

Science and health:

  • Seeing faith through science | An astronomer and minister looks to biology, physics and other fields in an effort to prove the Bible’s truth. He draws fire from scientists and fundamentalists alike (Los Angeles Times)
  • Drugs, scalpel … and faith? | Doctors are noticing the power of prayer (U.S. News & World Report)
  • Looking for God at Berkeley | A provocative theory called “intelligent design” claims evolution is hogwash. But it’s not the usual religious zealots leading this latest attack on Darwin. It’s scientists and professors at Cal. (San Francisco Weekly)

Other stories of interest:

  • Religion 101 (The short course) | A review of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to the Life of Christ (Los Angeles Times)
  • Bible to speak in native tongues | The religion accused of wreaking havoc on native Canadians by very nearly destroying aboriginal culture, language and spirituality, is now helping to pump new life into native languages through translations of the Old and New Testaments (The National Post)
  • New president resigns from evangelicals | Supporters of NAE head Kevin Mannoia believed evangelicals needed an influential national voice to lead a “movement.” But others say that was a miscalculation, since traditionally the leader had been a quiet manager who consulted everybody. (The Washington Times)

Copyright © 2001 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

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Truth’s Intrepid Ambassador

“The architect of the Great Books, Mortimer Adler, moved beyond big ideas to the mysteries of faith.”

Christianity Today June 1, 2001
Philosopher and editor Mortimer J. Adler died Thursday night at the age of 98. As we noted in the following article—which first appeared in the November 19, 1990 issue of Christianity Today—many people are aware of his work on the Great Books of the Western World, and a few know of his important work editing the Encyclopaedia Britannica, but his Christian faith was not well known.

You would not usually expect a renowned, twentieth-century philosopher to be a friend of orthodox Christianity. Yet one keeps running into people—committed Christians, deep thinkers all—who have nothing but respect for Mortimer Adler, the author, teacher, philosopher, and intellectual giant who is best known, perhaps, for his work with the Great Books series of the classics of Western culture. They listen to his lectures (on education and philosophy, mostly), they read his books (over 25 to date), and they generally give the impression they would give their eye teeth to speak with the man. Apparently there are some things about his work that attract the righteous.

But Mortimer Adler’s entry in Who’s Who in America gives little hint that he is a believer. A philosopher educated at that hotbed of naturalism, Columbia University, and a longtime professor at the University of Chicago—no, there is no clue there.

How about his résumé? He left the university in 1942 to start the Institute for Philosophical Research in Chicago, a position that enabled him to give editorial direction to the fifteenth edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica and develop, edit, write, promote (you name it) the Great Books of the Western World, on the surface a collection of classics, but in reality an attempt to revolutionize American education. No. These are signs of extraordinary energy and scholarship, perhaps, but certainly not Christian apologetics.

Adler’s office and headquarters on Ontario Street, a half-block off Michigan Avenue’s “Magnificent Mile” on Chicago’s Near North side, has the unmistakable feel of a college philosophy department. Old books on philosophers and logic line the walls. Not far away are shelf after shelf of new books: several sets of the Great Books, and whole rows of multiple copies of Adler-authored books—heady titles like Reforming Education, Six Great Ideas, Ten Philosophical Mistakes, The Paideia Proposal. There are dust jackets for his newest books, including his most recent, Truth in Religion: The Plurality of Religions and the Unity of Truth. There are also celebrity photographs (Adler with TV commentator Bill Moyers, another with Pope Paul VI), and awards, medals, and certificates of appreciation.

“I’ve known I would be a philosopher ever since one of my professors at Columbia, F. J. E. Woodbridge, gave me a copy of Aristotle’s Metaphysics in 1931,” says Adler. “I read it, and was hooked.”

Behind his desk is a 15-foot-long credenza with hundreds of open files, future books in progress: “I’ve talked my publisher [Macmillan] into letting me do two books a year from now on. I’m 88 and I still have much to do.”

Adler has never been known to be shy about saying things. Friends might call him loquacious; opponents might say cantankerous. He himself would probably settle for disputatious. He believes in rational argumentation in its best, logical sense.

It is when Mortimer Adler talks about the debates and the controversies and the battles he has spent his life fighting that his voice rises above octogenarian tiredness, and we get clues to the fundamentals of his thought.

On scientists: “Scientists have exceeded their bounds. They are theologically naive. But that doesn’t seem to stop them from talking about beginnings and endings. The beginning wasn’t a Big Bang and the end won’t be a Final Freeze. But don’t try telling a scientist that.

“The Hubble telescope isn’t going to tell us anything new about the metaphysical world, but that doesn’t stop Stephen Hawking from pretending [in A Brief History o f Time] that he can. Scientists barge in where angels fear to tread.”

On the language philosophers (the school of linguistic philosophy developed by Ludwig Wittgenstein earlier this century and dominant in the universities): “Minor annoyances. I love metaphysics. But the language philosophers want to be scientists, not metaphysicians.”

On the mood of the country: “Anti-intellectual.”

On academics: “Hopeless.”

For all his life, Adler has written, taught, and lectured on a central, classical truth: There is one, absolute unity of truth, and the philosopher’s job is to discover and define it so the good life can be known to all. Now, when Adler sees scientists, scholars, and even the man-on-the-street claim that truth is merely relative, that all individuals shop for it themselves and create their own recipe, with a pinch of culture, a dash of ethnicity, and a smidgen of serendipity, Adler sees red.

Perhaps it is just this foundational presupposition—the conviction that a single truth exists—that has attracted orthodox Christians to him.

Yet, in his years of swashbuckling swagger through Columbia, Chicago, educational reform, and popular philosophical publishing, Adler has never aligned himself with, fought for, or even talked like he belonged to, Christianity.

Where does he stand, then, on the Christian faith?

It is Sunday morning at Grace Episcopal Church, just a block from historic Dearborn Station on Chicago’s Near South side. This three-by-four-block area knew the bustle and joy of creative enterprise early in this century when Printers’ Row, Chicago’s prestigious publishing empire, flourished. When the big printing plants went south, however, the area fell to semislum status. Now it is being reborn under yuppie influence.

It is still a balkanized neighborhood—a half-block walk in any direction can take you from the land of gourmet-food stores and hair salons to low-income housing, and another half-block has you back to $300,000 condos and upscale bookstores.

Grace Church ministers to the patrons of all these communities, and on this morning, Mortimer Adler is guest preacher.

“Six years ago they asked me to preach, and I said yes,” he explains. Once a year, every year, he ministers to this mixedrace, mixed-class, mixed-everything congregation of about 40.

Adler looks less imposing in church than he does in his office. At the office, he is a lion in his den, bellowing midinterview to his administrative assistant of 28 years, Marlys Allen, to bring him a copy of the Syntopicon, the introductory volume he wrote to the Great Books, distilling the 102 key ideas of Western intellectual history. In his office he sits large behind his desk, master of his domain.

In church, by contrast, he walks to the podium with a tentative, 88-year-old shuffle, he looks his 5’2″ height, and he selectively participates in the Anglican liturgy, not willing to attempt even the slow cadence of the hymns.

The minute Adler finally gets to the pulpit and begins a 30minute homily, the disparity between office and church disappears altogether.

The sermon is remarkable. How many sermons have you heard recently that began with a quote from the secondcentury Latin apologist Tertullian? Adler’s does.

“I believe because it is absurd,” Adler quotes and quickly shows how Augustine and Aquinas both second Tertullian’s credo.

Adler then himself ascribes to the credo: “Articles of faith are beyond proof. But they are not beyond disproof. We have a logical, consistent faith. In fact, I believe Christianity is the only logical, consistent faith in the world. But there are elements to it that can only be described as mystery.”

We read the Nicene Creed together, and Adler glosses on the three main mysteries of the Christian tradition: the Trinity, the Incarnation, and the Resurrection.

“Your faith and my faith must include these three mysteries. They are difficult to understand. They are not unintelligible—God understands them. But for us there is an element of mystery.

“I’m not always sure whether I’m making that judgment as a philosopher or a Christian believer.”

But Adler’s credo concludes: “The greatest error anyone can make is to think they can fully understand these three mysteries. It makes a mockery of faith.”

After decades of fighting battles in secular academic settings by the rules of logic and philosophy, Adler has added some theological arrows to his quiver.

One is the sovereignty of God: “In the beginning, the scientists forgot about God. Now when they realize he must be there, they’re trying to remake him in their own image.”

Another is the truth of Christianity: “A property of true religion is to be evangelical. When I hear the term evangelical, I don’t think about TV preachers—I think about the mission. Christianity is the only world religion that is evangelical in the sense of sharing good news with others. Islam converts by force; Buddhism, without the benefit of a theology; Hinduism doesn’t even try.”

With these additional insights, Mortimer Adler faces the future with hope: “I’m pessimistic about the future in the short run. We won’t get over relativism in 10 or even 20 years. But in the long run, by the middle of next century, I’m convinced we can get philosophy and education back on track.”

One suspects that such a prospect will be helped along by Adler’s persuasive efforts.

Mortimer Adler usually makes it clear to interviewers—either explicitly or indirectly—that he will not talk about his own faith. In so doing, he probably shows more sense than most celebrity Christians. He refuses to wear his faith like a badge.

But one wonders if this restriction is really necessary. These days, so many of his books, conversations, and lectures invariably lead to absolute truth and God. The mystery of why Mortimer Adler is into the mystery of Christian theology is really no mystery at all. In 1984 he became a Christian.

“My chief reason for choosing Christianity was because the mysteries were incomprehensible. What’s the point of revelation if we could figure it out ourselves? If it were wholly comprehensible then it would be just another philosophy.”

Call him a Christian, then.

But if you should get carried away and ask this wonderful old man to tell you the story of his conversion, he may arise, and mumbling something about another appointment, pick up and leave. He is still a professional philosopher, and has work to do—and arguments to win.

This article originally appeared in the November 19, 1990 issue of Christianity Today. At the time, Terry Muck was associate professor of comparative religion at Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary. He is now professor of missions and world religions at Asbury Theological Seminary. Muck is also former executive editor of Christianity Today. He was assisted in interviewing Adler by R.C. Sproul, chairman of Ligonier Ministries.

Copyright © 2001 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere

The New York Times, Chicago Tribune, and Associated Press have obituaries of Adler.

The Radical Academy Web site has a listing of Adler’s books, his thoughts on various topics, reader-submitted Adler anecdotes and Adler’s list of what every person needs in life.

Adler’s Center for the Study of the Great Ideas has information on programs, its missions and a topical index of Adler’s works.

Endangered History

The National Trust’s list of imperiled places gives unnoticed gems a chance to shine

Christianity Today June 1, 2001
When I visited England with my family a few years ago, I thought, No wonder European students know history so much better than Americans—they’re surrounded by it every day! I might learn about the Norman Conquest in a world history survey, but British schoolchildren could see physical evidence of it on field trips or in their own backyards. And while I always thought it was cool that C.S. Lewis’s wardrobe stood in the Wheaton College library, but I got a better sense of the man when I stood in his favorite pub in Oxford. Places educate.

Though no buildings in the United States pack in as many centuries’ worth of history as even non-landmarks across the Atlantic, lots of American structures have valuable stories to tell. But many of these buildings might soon be muted by neglect or destruction. That’s why the National Trust for Historic Preservation this week issued its thirteenth annual listing of America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places.

The first thing I noticed on the list was a 150-year-old barn near—get this—Upland, my tiny hometown in Indiana. Of course, I’ve never even seen the now-famous barn, let alone marveled at its historic significance. But I guess that’s kind of the point—if people knew how close they were to valuable pieces of the past, they might actually pay attention to preservation.

Besides that brief nod to beautiful Grant Country, Indiana (where, I’ll have you know, “Cool was born,” according to the brochures at the James Dean Museum in Fairmount), the Christian history connection to all of this concerns another item on the list: prairie churches in North Dakota.

Prairie churches were often among the first permanent structures in a frontier town—sometimes built by people who hadn’t even finished their own houses yet. The buildings served as spiritual centers, but they served civic and educational functions, too. As Ferenc Morton Szasz wrote in Christian History issue 66, “Modest though they might have been, these churches and Sunday schools served as bulwarks of social stability. Not only did they provide venues for regular services, their rooms held a variety of social gatherings as well, thus functioning as training grounds for political democracy.”

North Dakota was settled largely by European immigrants in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The state’s population peaked at 680,845 in 1930, then began a slow but steady slide. As communities shrank, churches closed. Today 400 of North Dakota’s 2,000 prairie churches are vacant, with more set to be shuttered soon.

The National Trust put North Dakota’s prairie churches on this year’s list in hopes of saving them from ruin, but its plan for restoring the buildings raises some new concerns. According to the National Trust Web site, prairie churches “have been adaptively reused as community centers, libraries, day care centers and museums. Or they can be preserved for occasional uses such as family and community reunions, summer services, weddings and baptisms.” All of these are identified as options that “honor the founders’ intentions.”

It’s true that prairie church buildings originally hosted many more events than Sunday services and prayer meetings, so a community center or day care could be considered a usage that would “honor the founders’ intentions.” But I have to wonder, why not just use them as churches? Perhaps what these buildings need isn’t just money for paint and a new roof, but people to continue the ministries begun in them so many years ago.

Elesha Coffman is managing editor of Christian History magazine.

Copyright © 2001 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere

More Christian history, including a list of events that occurred this week in the church’s past, is available at ChristianHistory.net. Subscriptions to the quarterly print magazine are also available.

The list of “America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places” is available at the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s site.

The Chronicle-Tribune of Marion, Indiana, has more on Grant County’s Miller-Purdue Barn.

Christian History‘s issue 66, “How the West Was Really Won,” examines prairie churches, frontier missions, travelling preachers, and other intersections between the Old West and Christianity. (The issue can also be purchased at the ChristianityToday.com store.

Christian History Corner appears every Friday at ChristianityToday.com. Previous Christian History Corners include:

The Communion Test | How a “Humble Inquiry” into the nature of the church cost Jonathan Edwards his job. (June 22, 2001)

Visiting the Other Side | The Israelites spent time on both sides of the Jordan. Now tourists can, too. (June 8, 2001)

Beyond Pearl Harbor | How God caught up with the man who led Japan’s surprise attack. (June 1, 2001)

Rivers of Life | In Africa, survival depends on open waterways. Missionary explorer David Livingstone believed that salvation did, too. (May 25, 2001)

Intro to the Inklings | C.S. Lewis’s intellect was stimulated at one of the most fascinating extracurricular clubs ever. (May 18, 2001)

How Not to Read Dante | You probably missed the point of The Divine Comedy in high school. (May 11, 2001)

If My People Will Pray | The U.S. National Day of Prayer Turns 50, but its origins are much older. (May 4, 2001)

Mutiny and Redemption | The rarely told story of new life after the destruction of the H.M.S. Bounty. (Apr. 27, 2001)

Book Notes | New and noteworthy releases on church history that deserve recognition. (Apr. 20, 2001)

A Primer on Paul | The History Channel uses Holy Saturday not to discuss Jesus, but the apostle who spread his message. (Apr. 12, 2001)

Image Is Everything | The Taliban’s destruction of Buddhist statues is only the latest controversy over the Second Commandment. (Apr. 6, 2001)

Christian Education for All | The first Sunday schools provide a positive example of government partnerships with faith-based organizations.(Mar. 23, 2001)

Foes Claim BJP is Using Arms Training to Win Crucial Election in India

Fears mount that reason for camps is to galvanize support for temple construction

Christianity Today June 1, 2001
Hindu nationalists in Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state, continue to train hundreds of young men and women in the use of various weapons, despite increasing opposition from political parties not part of the ruling National Democratic Alliance (NDA) coalition government led by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

In recent weeks opposition parties have demanded that the federal government halt arms training by the Bajrang Dal, the militant wing of the Hindu nationalist organization Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), whose political wing is the BJP. Training camps, which have become almost a routine affair, were first held in Ayodhya in June 2000.

Opposition leaders fear that the training is intended to galvanize support for construction of the Ram temple on the site of the centuries-old Babri Mosque, which was demolished by Hindu nationalists in December 1992, and garner support for the BJP in the upcoming state Assembly elections.

Senior officials of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP, World Hindu Council) have said that construction of the temple could begin anytime after March 12.

Organizers of the weapons training programs contend that the instruction is “self-defense against the anti-Hindu forces, such as the Inter Service Intelligence (ISI, Pakistan’s intelligence agency) and foreign missionaries.

“We are preparing these able-bodied persons to fight any eventuality,” claimed Ved Prakash Sachchan, joint convener of the state unit of the Bajrang Dal. “With the ISI spreading its tentacles, these people are being trained to challenge the anti-Hindu forces.”

Uttar Pradesh, with more than 166 million people, is in northern India and borders Nepal.

In Lucknow, from which Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee was elected to parliament, 162 women were trained to wield daggers and lathis (sticks) during a 15-day camp that concluded on June 14 at Saraswati Shishu Mandir. It was conducted by Rashtriya Sevika Samiti, the RSS’s women’s wing.

An exercise in Sarojini Nagar, Lucknow, was organized by the Bajrang Dal, allegedly in a state guest house, Star News television reported on June 14. Vijay Kumar Malhotra, BJP spokesperson, denied that training was conducted on government property. “It is not proper to conduct the arms training in government-owned properties,” he said.

The Bajrang Dal has been giving self-defense training for some time, he said. In August the organization plans to teach 50,000 youth from all over the state to use the trishul, a sort of trident.

Vikas Babu Mishra, a trainee from Unnao, said he learned “how to beat those who do not respect Hinduism.” His friend Sadhu Ram added: “Now we are ready to face any eventuality.”

Ashok Singhal, acting president of the VHP, said his organization plans an extensive program beginning with the celebration of the anniversary of the Somnath temple in Gujarat on September 18, to be followed by a Ram Naam Yagna—a ritualistic fire offering to Lord Rama—starting October 16. Those dates correspond with the approximate time of the state Assembly elections, for which no firm date has been set. A Chetavani Yatra— awareness movement or march — from Ayodhya to New Delhi would begin January 21 and visit 10,000 villages.

VHP leaders deny that their programs have anything to do with the elections in Uttar Pradesh. “When is the election? It has not been announced,” Senior Vice President Acharya Giriraj Kishore told Newsroom. “The VHP has already announced its program. Only cynics can interpret this as an election gimmick.”

Nonetheless, opposition leaders have condemned the BJP government’s silence over the activities of the Sangh Parivar, the extended family of RSS affiliates. Jaipal Reddy, a senior member of the Congress Party, warned, “The Bajrang Dal, with the support of the Uttar Pradesh government, is starting a dangerous game in this country. Bajrang Dal and the BJP are playing with fire.”

Anand Sharma, a Congress Party spokesperson, said the weapons training “shows the Sangh Parivar does not trust in the Uttar Pradesh government’s ability to control the law and order.”

But Ashok Yadav, a minister in Uttar Pradesh, said that if anyone takes the law into his own hands, the government will not be silent. The arms training program by the Bajrang Dal so far has not created any trouble, he insisted.

The BJP’s interest in reviving the Ayodhya issue was hinted at in the deposition of Union Home Minister Lal Krishna Advani before the Liberhan Commission, which is probing the demolition of the mosque more than eight years ago.

Indian media and political observers noted with surprise when Advani returned to his aggressive style of politics last week, striking postures reminiscent of the days when he rode the rath, or campaign chariot, to Ayodhya to convince Hindus of the need for a temple at the disputed site. Striking a hard line as a Cabinet minister, Advani said he was proud of the movement for a Ram temple, which led to the razing of the 16th century mosque on December 6, 1992.

Two months earlier, his comments were more moderate when he addressed the commission headed by Justice M.S. Liberhan. On April 10, Advani told the commission that the demolition was “unfortunate” and he “seldom felt as dejected as on December 6, 1992.” He said the “kar sevaks (activists in the chariot procession) should not have destroyed the structure.”

But on June 13, Advani appeared to be on the campaign trail. In Uttar Pradesh, where the ruling BJP is weakened, the state government has reiterated its decision not to pursue prosecution of BJP and VHP leaders, including three Cabinet ministers — Home Minister L.K. Advani, Human Resources Development Minister Murli Manohar Joshi, and Sports Minister Uma Bharatrei — after the Allahabad High Court quashed their case.

“Things are not so good for the BJP,” observed Vijay Kumar Malhotra, the party spokesperson.

Some analysts suggest that the party may face its worst rout ever after its five-year rule in the state. Sources in the BJP said internal assessments indicate the party could win only 75 seats in the 403-member Legislative Assembly. The BJP has 158 members in the current Assembly.

“The BJP has reached its saturation point. The party will face the biggest-ever election rout in the coming Assembly election,” said Anil Shastri, All India Congress Committee (AICC) general secretary.

There are many reasons for the BJP’s dismal prospects. The first is an anti-incumbency wave that appeared during state and national elections in 1993 and 1996. In Uttar Pradesh, bad governance, frequent changes of chief ministers, and internal feuds in the party have dimmed the BJP’s chances of victory in the next election.

In the 1999 parliamentary election, the state party managed 29 seats, even though it previously held 53 seats in the earlier Lok Sabha (lower house of parliament). Foreseeing a not-so-bright future, the national leadership is considering a variety of possible alliances in the state. The BJP has almost 50 legislators as alliance party members in the Assembly, and the chief minister had to make all of them ministers in order to run the government.

“We will have all possible alliances in Uttar Pradesh. As the election comes closer, the picture will be clearer,” said Kushabhau Thakre, former president of the BJP.

Copyright 2001 © Newsroom

Related Elsewhere

Party leaders admit Uttar Pradesh victory is going to be an uphill task, according to The Economic Times.

Recent May elections in 5 India states didn’t go well for the Bharatiya Janata Party and led to party meetings to chart new post-election strategy.

VOA News reported on the case against political leaders in the razing of the Uttar Pradesh mosque.

Elections India includes an explanation of the electoral system of India, a breakdown of the recent state elections and a listing of the parties.

The official Web site of the Bharatiya Janata Party gives party history.

For more articles, see Yahoo’s full coverage area on India.

Previous Christianity Today articles on India include:

India Election Results Rattle Ruling Nationalists | Hindu BJP “getting irrelevant day by day” say rivals.(June 13, 2001)

Catholic Protesters Make Language an Issue in Choice of Indian Bishop | Retiring Archbishop says the campaign is the work of only a handful of people. (June 13, 2001)

Christians Say Sikh Book Threatens Centuries of Harmony Between Faiths | Author arrested on three counts, including “derogatory language.” (June 11, 2001)

Militants Blamed for Death of Three Missionaries in India | 5,000 attend funeral, Catholic schools close in mourning. (June 7, 2001)

Churches Adopt Entire Villages in Devastated Gujarat to Help the Homeless | Charities aim to meet basic needs after January’s western India earthquake (June 7, 2001)

Communist-Backed Orthodox Priest Loses Election for Kerala Assembly | Nooranal’s electoral campaign annoyed some Christians with support of Communists (June 7, 2001)

Despite Tensions, Indian Churches Agree to Talks With Hindu Groups | Mainline churches will join talks, but other Christians say “partisan” meeting is dangerous. (Apr. 11, 2001)

Christians Help Overlooked Villages | Many Christian agencies are still doing earthquake relief among India’s poorest victims. (Apr. 5, 2001)

In Southern India, Orthodox Priest Has Communist Support in State Election | Popular priest says he’s independent despite strange bedfellows, but many Christians are wary. (Apr. 4, 2001)

Christians Call for India’s Prime Minister and Government to Resign in Wake of Scandal | Web site releases tapes of party president taking bribes from men posing as arms dealers. (Mar. 22, 2001)

India Relief Abuses Rampant | Radical Hindus hijack supplies in quake intervention. (Mar. 20, 2001)

In Orissa, You Must Ask the Government If You Want to Change Religion | Christian church leaders say they’re trying to ignore the controversial law, but police aren’t doing the same. (Mar. 12, 2001)

New Delhi Conference Condemns ‘Immense Suffering’ in Caste System | National Campaign for Dalit Human Rights plans to appeal to United Nations. (Mar. 9, 2001)

Weblog: Take Up Arms Against Missionaries, Says Hindu Leader | Clouds darkening over India (Mar. 6, 2001)

Churches Angry that Indian Census Ignores 14 Million Christian Dalits | Only Hindu, Sikh, and Buddhist members of “untouchable” caste being counted. (Mar. 2, 2001)

Churches Have Not Worked to End Dowry Practice | India’s women are seen as less valuable than men in a society that supports bride burnings and “suicide.” (Feb. 20, 2001)

India’s Christians Face Continued Threats | We must preach what we believe in spite of Hindu pressure, says Operation Mobilization India leader. (Feb. 15, 2001)

India’s Quake Survivors Need Counseling | Earthquake survivors are desperate for more than material aid, Indian bishop warns. (Feb. 9, 2001)

Quake Rocks Hindu Hotbed | Agencies appeal for funds to aid victims. (Feb. 8, 2001)

Politician Who Saw God’s Hand in Gujarat Quake Forced to Resign | Civil aviation minister had told Christians that quake was God’s judgment against persecution of Christians. (Feb. 5, 2001)

Militant Hindus Assault Christians | Persecution of religious minorities stirs Christian outrage against government inaction. (Jan. 31, 2001)

THE WOMB BOMBER

Books & Culture May 30, 2001

Chapter1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23

Jenny Lemke sat close to Jim Westford on a stiff wooden bench in the entrance–way at the convent in Pensacola, waiting for Mary Sebastian to call them in for a conversation with the nurse. The afternoon light was brilliant and clear. It broke through a swaying palm outside and lit up a stained glass Virgin across from them like ocean water, flooding their faces with purple and green. For the moment, all was deathly, deep quiet in the hall.

Was there really a school next door? Nuns living upstairs? You wouldn’t have known. Jenny was thinking of the last time she’d been here, when she came to adopt her son. The sisters gave them a party with ginger ale and red velvet cake. Then she walked with him past this same little bench, holding his hand, and they opened the big oak doors onto the Florida sun.

Jim groaned, interrupting her reverie.

“What is it?” she asked.

He leaned forward with his elbows on his knees.

“Oh, I was thinking that if this woman doesn’t calm down, we might have to take a tougher line.”

She sat quietly for a second, and then laughed.

“Sibyl will gladly break her thumbs if she talks.”

“Yeah, Sibyl!” he said. “She’d have made a good hitman.”

“Well, she wants a revolution. You and me, Jim, we’re the ones holding it back.”

“That’s definitely how she sees it.”

“I think sometimes I should just hand it all over to her.”

“I don’t know. If she were in charge of the League, I could never be a part of it. She has no judgment.”

“But she has the passion,” said Jenny. “I’ve talked myself into a kind of blandness. I feel blank. Meanwhile nothing changes.”

“That’s bull. Plenty’s changed.”

“Like what? Three percentage points on an opinion poll? Does that count for anything in human lives?”

“Listen, if people don’t choose to care, we can’t make them. We can only argue our case. The rest is up to God and the courts.”

“So what happens if the courts don’t see things our way, Jim? Do we ever give up?”

“I don’t know. I can’t answer for you.”

“What about for yourself?”

“I need to keep fighting abortion, that’s all I know.” He sounded tired. “But definitely not with my sister in charge.”

“How about your feelings? Do you get moved any more?”

“No,” he said, “not often. Not really.”

“Millions of babies dead,” she said. “I don’t even feel it.”

” ‘Baby’ is just a word, Jenny. And the numbers don’t matter. I don’t know why, but the numbers don’t matter. You can’t expect to be moved all the time. You just have to keep going.”

“Maybe I was making up for my past. It’s so far away, now. It seems like another life.”

“Stop trying to feel it if you can’t. You’re tired, that’s all.”

They sat in silence for a moment. She could hear him swallow.

“Did you ever think about doing something revolutionary?” he asked in a low voice.

“What do you mean?”

“I mean whether you’d be capable of it. I don’t mean shooting a doctor. Just a little butyric acid in a clinic, something more than what we’re doing.”

She shook her head.

“Do you? What good would it serve? Giving the other side free martyrs. Great.”

“I used to think about it, before I cooled off. I mean like maybe if I got a terminal illness, and I was going to die anyway. I’d go do some damage, you know? With nothing to lose.”

“You’d never hurt people, Jim.”

“You mean I’m too much of a coward?”

“I mean it’s against God. Against natural law.”

The Bible’s full of violence. And this is to save innocent life, anyway. So it’s different.”

She shook her head.

“You Protestants. You have to figure everything out for yourselves.” She crossed herself with a skinny purple hand and stretched out her lime green legs. “So anyway, what happens if the nurse does go to the police?”

He shrugged.

“I think we win either way. If we can get names from her, great. If she goes to the police and it comes out that we saved a live baby, we get some free publicity.”

“You’d be disbarred. We’d probably both go to prison.”

He scratched the back of his head.

“We’re always saying that we need victims. God gives us one, a living child. Everything’s turned rightside up. No more abortion doctors acting like lambs to the slaughter. The child’s the victim.”

She shuddered.

“I don’t want to go to jail.”

“So maybe next time we better take the baby straight to family services. If we’re willing to risk what they’ll do with it.”

She sat up and folded her arms.

“Anyway,” she said, “it wouldn’t be fair to Clara or the baby. It’s bad enough what we have to do to save them; we’re not going to use them for publicity, too.”

“Yeah, yeah.” He sighed, and then nodded. “Jenny, I’ve been thinking about Rose Merriman. What if we get her to take pictures of some of the older victims—the girl that’s been on TV already, or that boy in Canada? He has to be six or seven by now. Maybe Theresa, if I can talk her into it.”

“Do you think Rose would do it? Did you get to know her very well?”

“I almost told her about the baby.”

“Good Lord.” She put her head against the palm of her hand. “Jim, what gets into you?”

“I was pretty sure she’d honor a confidence.”

“You didn’t mention the network, the doctors—”

“Of course not!” He sat up. “But she’s not the FBI after all. She’s looking for a story. I told her a little about Theresa and the case. Not much, but a little.”

Jenny stretched her left arm behind his back and poked a finger into his shoulder.

“I like Rose. I like her a lot. But I don’t think she should hear too much. You understand?”

“Why not?”

“I know you have your weak spots. Did she tell you she had an abortion once?”

“You’re not saying that you hold that against her?”

“It means she’s confused. If you introduce her to anyone, for now let it be Theresa. Theresa’s strong.” Jenny paused, thinking. “Also I think we should let this nurse see the baby. Not because of good strategy or bad strategy or politics. Not because she might give us some information. Just because she did save a life, I think we should respect that.”

He nodded and she looked straight into his eyes. She’d known him for a very long time, now. He was almost like a son to her. Sometimes she even felt the hint of a crush; but it made her smile at herself. “I’m an old bat,” she thought. “Just a lonely old bat.” A door closed down the hall.

“I hear the sister coming,” she said softly. “Why don’t you talk to the nurse by yourself, first? I’ll come after a few minutes.”

“You sure?”

“Yes.”

Jim stood up, staring at the floor. He rose above the ocean colors and floated in the pale yellow of the Virgin’s nimbus. She smiled.

“And I’m sorry for that comment about your weak spot.”

“You’re not really sorry at all.”

“No, I guess I’m not. You’re no priest, after all. I think you should get a girlfriend.”

He might have answered, but Sister Mary swished around a corner just then. Her face looked brown and drawn against the white frame of the habit. She let out a deep sigh.

“Theresa’s done her best, but we’ll be lucky if this doesn’t ruin everything.”

The nun motioned for Jim and then turned; he ambled slowly after her. Jenny got up and walked the other way down the hall, to a high door that opened on a courtyard outside. She hadn’t realized how sleepy she was. The sun blinded her as she stepped out to the brick porch. She smoothed the jacket of her suit. A pair of seabirds were making circles in the sky, but she couldn’t look up at them; she had only an impression of their motion.

Copyright © 2001 by the author or Christianity Today/Books & Culture Magazine.Click here for reprint information on Books & Culture.

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