Month: February 2014
Potpourri, 2/17/14
- No limits
- What if the Prodigal had succeeded?
- Scott Walker tests the KoolAid
- Product development, not intelligence
- Creationists and Astrologists
- If I go missing …
I had no potpourri begun 90 minutes ago, but having collected a few, I might as well share them a bit late-ish.
Potpourri, 2/18/14
Sunday, 2/16/14
Food from the “garbage pail”
Thank goodness, the NFL has spared us anything nasty at Superbowl halftime, like Janet Jackson’s nipple.
Instead we had that nice, clean-shaven young man, Bruno Mars, with wholesome lyrics like … oh. I hadn’t noticed.
Never had much faith in love or miracles
Ooh!
Never wanna put my heart on the line
Ooh!
But swimming in your water is something spiritual
Ooh!
I’m born again every time you spend the night
Ooh!
‘Cause your sex takes me to paradise
Yeah, your sex takes me to paradise
And it shows, yeah, yeah, yeah
Gee, thanks for nothing, NFL.
Truth be told, I don’t follow pop music – not even to tut-tut about it. (H/T or Tut-Tut credit to Fr. Josiah Trenham) I don’t follow the spectacle of sport (unless Purdue men are winning at basketball this year). I don’t watch much commercial TV.
I wish I could say it was because of high principle, like refusing to let my eyes and ears and soul be sold to manufacturers intent on multiplying sovereign desire. Alas, it’s because I find it boring, and generally feel a twinge of Calvinist guilt that I’ll never see those 30 or 60 minutes again, and have nothing to show for them beyond an odd urge for a Whopper or a trip to the Mall.
All that, plus sometimes, like if I’d seen those lyrics on close captioning, I feel rage, or the need to shower off the slime. “Like looking for food in a garbage pail when there’s so much wholesome food around you already,” a wise father said to his son, who solemnly, mendaciously, insisted “I read Playboy for the articles” some 45 years ago.
So I overlooked Leonard Cohen for, well, decades until I stumbled onto him within the last ten or so years. If I heard the name at all, I took him for just another occupant of the pop music garbage pail, with no reason to think he was even a cut above, let alone near-genius.
Harpers has extracted a tasty Leonard Cohen bit from the archives not of pop music, but of poetry: Pico Iyer writes about Leonard Cohen’s performance at 92Y in New York City on February 14, 1966. It’s accompanied by 52:34 of streaming audio.
Pico Iyer’s an artist in his own right. So, if you hadn’t yet noticed (as I hadn’t), is Leonard Cohen. Enjoy the brief essay and the audio stream. Yes, it’s 52:34 you’ll never see again, but unless you think poetry is always and everywhere a waste of time, it’s worth it.
But beware. Adolescent boys might enjoy it for the wrong reasons: it’s got nipples.
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“The remarks made in this essay do not represent scholarly research. They are intended as topical stimulations for conversation among intelligent and informed people.” (Gerhart Niemeyer)
Our Irreligious POTUS
[T]he Hosanna-Tabor case … revolved around the ability of a Lutheran academy in Michigan to fire a teacher. Here, the Obama administration advanced another extreme argument, claiming that job regulations prevented the academy from being able to fire anyone over a difference in beliefs.
The lawyers for the Obama administration went far beyond the issues of the case to instead advance the legally absurd position that there is no general ministerial exception, arguing that religious groups don’t even have the Constitutionally protected right to select their own ministers or rabbis.
Thankfully, here, the administration’s extreme position was rebutted by the Supreme Court in decisive fashion, with a 9-0 decision opposing its perspective. You have to take a pretty extreme position for Elena Kagan to join with Samuel Alito on an opinion.
…
Third, for those of you who follow pop culture, you may have taken note of the recent flap between The Robertson family of Duck Dynasty fame, and the A&E Network that produces and broadcasts the Duck Dynasty show. And you may have further observed that the one of the loudest and most aggressive defenders of the Robertson family was the Governor of Louisiana.
You may think that I was defending the Robertsons simply because I am the Governor of their home state, the great state of Louisiana. You would be wrong about that.
I defended them because they have every right to speak their minds, however indelicately they may choose to do so. Of course, A&E is a for-profit business, and they can choose what they want to put on the air.
But there was something much larger at stake here. There was a time when liberals in this country believed in debate. But that is increasingly not the case for the modern left in America. No, the modern left in America has grown tired of debate.
Their new strategy is to simply try to silence their critics. So these leftists immediately mobilized and did all they could not to debate the issues, but rather to attempt to silence the Robertsons.
There was a time when the left preached tolerance. And they are indeed tolerant, unless they disagree with you. To paraphrase William F. Buckley, a liberal is someone who welcomes dissent, and is astonished to find there is any.
The modern left in America is completely intolerant of the views of people of faith. They want a completely secular society where people of faith keep their views to themselves.
…
Finally, let me finish by mentioning an incredible irony. I’ve been working on this speech for a good while. And last Thursday, exactly one week ago, something truly bizarre occurred.
The person who is at the tip of the spear prosecuting this quiet war on religious liberty spoke at the annual National Prayer Breakfast in Washington. The topic he chose to speak about was defending religious liberty.
I was stunned, and I bet the President of Hobby Lobby, who was in the audience, was stunned as well. Yes, President Obama did wax eloquent, as he always does, about the horrors of religious persecution that are occurring beyond our borders. And good for him.
To be clear, churches in America are not being burned to the ground, and Christians are not being slaughtered for their faith. There is really no comparison to the persecution of people of faith inside our borders and outside.
Yet, it is stunning to hear the President talk of protecting religious liberty outside the United States, while at the very same time his Administration challenges and chips away at our religious liberty right here at home. Once again, there is a Grand Canyon sized difference between what this President says and what he does.
Here is what the President said last week, no doubt playing to his audience — “History shows that nations that uphold the rights of their people — including the freedom of religion — are ultimately more just and more peaceful and more successful.” Well said Mr. President, I couldn’t agree more.
So I leave you with this — The President is very concerned about religious liberty…and also, if you like your religion you can keep your religion.
(Bobby Jindal, 2/13/14; H/T Andrew Walker)
Speaking of which, I wrote this two weeks ago:
[A] religion held deeply and with integrity carries with it a view of what is truly true, and of what constitutes human well-being. In other words, anyone who can, upon demand, distinguish
- what he thinks is truly true from
- what is merely religiously true
is truly irreligious beneath the thinnest and most nominal veneer.
Guess who fits that description:
“I believe that marriage is the union between a man and a woman. Now, for me as a Christian — for me — for me as a Christian, it is also a sacred union. God’s in the mix.” – April 17, 2008, while running for president, defining marriage at the Saddleback Presidential Forum.
“I’ve just concluded that for me personally it is important for me to go ahead and affirm that I think same-sex couples should be able to get married.” – May 9, 2012, as president, in an interview with Robin Roberts of ABC News.
(Both quotes from Politico, emphasis added)
I knew he was lying temporizing with his “for me as a Christian” dodge on April 17, 2008. I knew that when the time seemed right, he’d drop the “Christian” grounds.
I’ve allowed that he’s a “liberal Christian.” I now say that he’s “irreligious beneath the thinnest and most nominal veneer.”
I do not mean that every liberal Christian is irreligious other than nominally. I’ve tended to believe that for most of my life, but I’ve been moving away from it – not because I understand liberal Christianity better, but because (a) I better understand how invisible the historic Christian option is to people whose brains or sensibilities won’t let them swallow the visible “conservative” Christianity and (b) I’m more inclined generally to grant a presumption that others are acting in good faith.
I also don’t mean that Obama has no convictions – that he is merely a sort of political weather vane. I think he has some very deep convictions – to which some adjective other than “Christian” applies.
I also see abundant evidence that of conservative Christians who are merely nominal.
Obama’s not an exception to that presumption of good faith, by the way, but it’s rebuttable, and the evidence rebuts it thoroughly.
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“The remarks made in this essay do not represent scholarly research. They are intended as topical stimulations for conversation among intelligent and informed people.” (Gerhart Niemeyer)
Saturday Potpourri 2/15/14
HJR-3/6 and E.R.A.
I thought Indiana HJR-6/3‘s second sentence, now gone, was problematic because it was going to invite litigation over its meaning.
Now that the second sentence of HJR-3/6 is gone, its former opacity gives way miraculously to lucidity: it was a ban on civil unions. Yup. That’s what it was.
Score one for Team HRC. They may now hope to get through civil unions (the possibility of circumventing a “Civil Union” ban by finding a new name was why the second sentence was a bit opaque) what the second sentence sought to deny them.
If some conservatives think I was wussy about the second sentence, remember the Equal Rights Amendment: “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied on account of sex.” Conservatives had no difficulty understanding how language so sweeping invited litigation back then.
ERA was a platitude, designed to make legislators sound good for uttering it, while leaving the heavy interpretive lifting to the courts so legislators could get back to graft, corruption, sodomizing interns (“See. I’m a feminist. I voted for ERA. Could I get a little, please?”) and other lifestyles of the powerful and famous.
The second sentence of HJR-3/6 risked, though, frustrating future legislatures’ bona fide efforts to grant some legitimate legislative requests of same-sex couples. Surely there are some marginal marital-looking privileges that would have been imperiled by the second sentence interpreted by a not-very-bright judge.
I’ll admit I’ve had a few second thoughts. Maybe the goal of not incentivizing motherless or fatherless families would have been worth the litigation over interpretation of the second sentence. But the debate has gone on for years, and for every point, there’s a counterpoint, including one little discussed: how courts gleefully pounce upon, and quote in their opinions, the most extreme anti-gay (no scare quotes) rhetoric in a referendum campaign in favor of any restrictions on “gay rights” (note scare quotes).
Ya’ just can’t win when you’re “on the wrong side of history.” Damned if you do, damned if you don’t, and federal judges are the Monday Morning Quarterbacks who call it.
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“The remarks made in this essay do not represent scholarly research. They are intended as topical stimulations for conversation among intelligent and informed people.” (Gerhart Niemeyer)
Unromantic Potpourri 2/14/14
Creationists and Cappadocians
I’ve been a little snarky about 6-day, young-earth creationists of late, like here for instance.
At The Week, Michael Brendan Dougherty rises to their defense – although not on the science. (H/T Rod Dreher) His defense echoes something I’ve said from time to time in defense of a sort of agnosticism on the subject for most people – said largely to affirm that it really isn’t vital for us all to hold any opinion at all (let alone the opinion endorsed by most experts) on most topics:
In the world most of us inhabit, day to day, the world of lovers, wriggling kids, disease, war, and death, the sureness of God’s love is relevant in a way that the details of early hominid fossils never will be, glorious as they are. Have some perspective, people.
But I’m not going to retract the snarkiness, valid though that point is.
Ken Ham (Creationist synechdoche as well as literal participant in the recent “debate” that’s generated the buzz) isn’t just saying “God loves you, and worrying too much about these fossils may make you forget that.” He’s saying instead, I think:
- that mainstream science is all wrong on the science
- some mainstream scientists are just sheep, but some are knowing deceivers who just want people to forget God
- Biblical flood catastrophism is a scientifically superior explanation of fossil phenomena
- Genesis 1-3 is a reliable scientific account
If I’m right (and I’m almost certain that Ham is at least “in bed with” people who so teach), then it is important to inoculate against the loss of faith that’s apt to come when, for instance, a fundy kid goes off to study science and finds mainstream science overwhelmingly better than Creationism.
My position is not revisionism. It’s not a new intellectualoid Christian rearguard action. No, in the grand sweep of Christian history, including the writings of the most important Church Fathers like the Cappadocians, Creationism or something like it has not been by any means the sole position or even the consensus position. It’s not exactly a late arrival (though Bad Catholic argues that “Creationism Is Materialism’s Creation”), which is the indictment I levy against some Evangelicalish dogmas, but there’s no need to rewrite Christian history to make science and faith appear compatible because Christian history isn’t much about science, or predicting the future, or any other common obsession of some Christians today.
That’s some of Father Stephen Freeman’s gravamen in his recent essays here and here.
A really, really, really perceptive and critical reader, who has followed me obsessively in my “real life” as well as in cyberspace, gathering it all in a sort of “opposition research” database, might now pounce: “Well, didn’t you once bitterly criticize the biology ‘Team Teachers’ at Lafayette Jefferson High School for making the same point about non-creationist religious alternatives?”
Not really. What I critiqued was them transgressing the bounds they supposedly were observing against “religion in the science classroom” as they goaded the administration into threatening an award-winning Chemistry teacher (of creationist persuasion).
They (and I don’t doubt the fundamental decency of their motivation) were trying to show other religious alternatives to creationism to the disadvantage of creationism (whereas the public school classroom shouldn’t be putting its thumb on the religious scales) via crude caricatures, like a supposed “spectrum” of beliefs, with creationism positioned just one step toward the center from “flat earthers,” the ne plus ultra of lunacy.
There was more, though the “spectrum” specially stuck in my craw. The gist was that they were using the biology classroom to lobby for “mainstream” Christianity, if one really must be a Christian, and to lampoon creationism by guilty associations.
That’s nothing public school should be involved in. But I can be involved in blogging for historic Christianity versus the modern errors of Creationism.
I now return, I hope, to normal life – where it’s not all that important that I give a rip about the Ken Ham/Bill Nye “debate.” and where I need hold no opinion at all on Creationism versus Evolutionism.
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“The remarks made in this essay do not represent scholarly research. They are intended as topical stimulations for conversation among intelligent and informed people.” (Gerhart Niemeyer)