FOR many
centuries the Roman Catholic Church resisted translating the Bible
into the "vulgar tongue." To this day, you can still get rid
of a Bible salesman by saying, "We are Catholics and, of course,
don’t read the Bible." The Catholic hierarchy
included subtle theologians and scholars who knew very well that
such a difficult and diverse collection of ancient writings, taken
as the literal Word of God, - would be wildly and dangerously
interpreted if put into the hands of the ignorant and uneducated
peasants. Likewise, when a missionary boasted to George Bernard Shaw
of the numerous converts he had made, Shaw asked, "Can these people
use rifles?"
"Oh, indeed, yes," said the missionary. ‘Some of them are very good
shots."
Whereupon Shaw scolded him for putting us all in peril in the day
when those converts waged holy war against us for not following the
Bible in the literal sense they gave to it.
For the Bible says, "What a good thing it is when the Lord putteth
into the hands of the righteous invincible might."
But today, especially in the U.S., there is a taboo against
admitting that there are enormous numbers of stupid and ignorant
people, in the literal sense of these words. They may be
highly intelligent in the arts of farming, manufacture, engineering
and finance, and even in physics, chemistry or medicine. But
this intelligence does not automatically flow over to the fields of
history, archaeology, linguistics, theology, philosophy and
mythology which one needs to know in order to make any sense out
such archaic literature as the books of the Bible.
This may sound snobbish, for there is an assumption that, in the
Bible, God gave his message in plain words for plain people.
A truly loving God would give us a plain and specific guide as to
how to live our lives.
Belief in the divine authority of the Bible rests on nothing more
than personal opinion. The authority of the Bible, the church,
the state, or of any spiritual or political leader, is derived from
the individual followers and believers, since it is the believers’
judgment that such leaders and institutions speak with a greater
wisdom than there own. This is, obviously, a paradox -
for only the wise can recognize wisdom. Thus, Catholics
criticize Protestants for following their own opinions in
understanding the Bible, as distinct from the interpretations of the
Church, which originally issued and authorized the Bible. But
Catholics seldom realize that the authority of the Church rests,
likewise, on the opinion of its individual members that the Papacy
and the councils of the Church are autoritative. The same is
true of the state, for, as a French statesman said, people get the
government they deserve.
Why does one come to the opinion that the Bible, literally
understood, is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the
truth?
Usually because one’s "elders and betters," or an impressively large
group of ones peers, have this opinion. But this is exactly
what the Bandar-log, or monkey tribe, did in Rudyard Kipling’s Jungle
Book. They periodically got together and shouted, "We all
say so, so it must be true!"
Many people never grow up. They stay all their lives with a
passionate need for eternal authority and guidance, not trusting
their own judgment.
Nevertheless, it is
their own judgment that there exists some authority greater than
their own. The fervent fundamentalist, whether Protestant or
Catholic, Jew or Moslem is closed to reason and even communication
for fear of losing the security of childish dependence. He
would suffer extreme emotional pain if he didn’t have the feeling
that there was some external and infallible guide in which he could
trust absolutely.
This attitude is not
faith. It is pure idolatry- actually bibliolatry. The more
deceptive idols are not images of wood and stone but are constructed
of words and ideas mental images of God. Faith is an openness
and trusting attitude to truth and reality, whatever it may turn out
to be. This is a risky and adventurous state of mind.
Belief, in the religious sense, is the opposite of faith because it
is a fervent wishing or hope, a compulsive clinging to the idea that
the universe is arranged and governed in such and such a way.
Belief is holding to a rock; faith is learning how to fly.
Thus, in much of the English-speaking world, the King James Bible is
a rigid idol, all the more deceptive for being translated into the
most melodious English and for being an anthology of ancient
literature that contains sublime wisdom along with barbaric
histories and the war songs of tribes on the rampage. All this
is taken as the literal word and law of God, as it is by
fundamentalist Baptists, Jesus freaks and comparable sects, which by
and large know nothing of the history of the Bible, of how it was
edited and put together. So we have with us the social menace of a
huge population of intellectually and morally irresponsible people.
Take a ruler and measure the listings under "Churches" in the Yellow
Pages of the phone directory. You will find that the
fundamentalists have by far the most space. And under what
pressure do most hotels and motels place Gideon Bibles by the
bedside. Bibles with clearly fundamentalist introductory
material, taking their name Gideon from one of the more ferocious
military leaders of the ancient Israelites?
The enormous political power of fundamentalism is what makes
legislators afraid to repeal laws against victimless crimes, and
forces the police to be armed preachers enforcing ecclesiastical
laws in a country where church and state are supposed to be
separate. There is a basic Christian doctrine that no actions, or
abstentions from actions, are of moral import unless undertaken
voluntarily. Fundamentalists ignore this premise and try to
force people to be "good." Freedom is risky and includes the
risk that anyone may go to hell in his own way.
Now, The King James Bible did not, despite what the fundamentalists
may claim, descend with an angel from heaven in 1611, when it was
first published. It is an elegant, but often inaccurate,
translation of Hebrew and Greek documents composed between 900 BC
and AD 270. There is no manuscript of the Old Testament, that
is, of the Hebrew Scriptures, written in Hebrew, earlier than the
Ninth Century BC. But we know that these documents were first
put together and recognized as holy scriptures by a convention of
rabbis held at Jamnia (Yavne) in Palestine shortly before AD 100.
Likewise, which early Christian documents to include in the New
Testament and which to drop, was finally decided by a council of the
Roman Empire held in Carthage in the latter part of the Fourth
Century. Several books that had formerly been read in the
churches, such as The Shepherd of Hermas and the Gospel of Saint
Thomas, were then removed.
The point is that the books translated in the King James Bible were
declared canonical and divinely inspired by the authority (A) of the
Synod of Jamnia and (B) of the Roman Empire, meeting in Carthage
more than 300 years after the time of Jesus. It is from this
foundation of sand that fundamentalist Protestants get the authority
of their Bible from Jews who had rejected Jesus and from Catholics
whom they abominate as the Scarlet Woman mentioned in Revelation.
The Bible, to repeat, is an anthology of Hebrew and late Greek
literature, edited and put forth by a catholic council of bishops of
many faiths who were acting under political imperitives.
Before this time the Bible as we know it did not exist. There
were the Hebrew Scriptures and their Greek translation, the
Septuagint, which was made in Alexandria between 250 BC and 100 BC
There were also various codices, or Greek manuscripts, such as the
four Gospels. There were numerous other writings
circulating among Christians, including the Epistles of Saint Paul
and Saint John, the Apocalypse (Revelation) and such documents
(later excluded) as the Acts of John, the Didache, the Apostolic
Constitutions and the various Epistles of Clement, Ignatius and
Polycarp.
In those days, and until the Protestant Reformation in the 16th
Century, the Christian scriptures were not understood exclusively in
a narrow literal sense. From Clement of Alexandria (Second
Century) to Saint Thomas Aquinas (13th Century), the great
theologians, or Fathers of the Church, recognized four ways of
interpreting the Scriptures: the literal or historical, the moral,
the allegorical and the spiritual and they were overwhelmingly
interested in the last three. Origen (Second Century)
regarded much of the Old Testament as "puerile" if taken literally,
and Jewish theologians were likewise preoccupied with finding hidden
meanings in their holy scriptures, for the concern of all these
theologians was to interpret the Biblical texts in such a way as to
make the Bible intellectually respectable and philosophically
popular. Concern over the historical truth of the Bible is
relatively modern, whether in the form of fundamentalism or of
scientific research.
But when the Bible was translated and widely distributed as a result
of the invention of printing, it fell into the hands of people who,
like the Jesus freaks of today, were simply uneducated and who, as
the depressed classes of Europe, eventually swarmed over to America.
This is, naturally, a heroic generalization. There were, and
are, fundamentalists learned in languages and sciences (although the
standard translation of the Bible into Chinese is said to be
in fearful taste), just as there are professors of physics and
anthropology who somehow manage to be pious Mormons. Some
people have the peculiar ability to divide their minds into
logic-tight compartments, being critical and rational in matters of
science but credulous as children when it comes to religion.
Such superstition would have been relatively harmless if the
religion had been something tolerant and pacific, such as Taoism or
Buddhism. But the religion of the literally understood Bible
is chauvinistic and militant. It is on the march to conquer
the world and to establish itself as the one and only true belief.
Among its most popular hymns are such battle songs as Battle Hymn of
the Republic and Onward, Christian Soldiers. The God of the
Hebrews, the Arabs and the Christians is a mental idol fashioned in
the image of the great monarchs of Egypt, Chaldea and Persia.
It was possibly lkhnaton (Amenhotep IV, 14th Century BC), Pharaoh of
Egypt, who gave Moses the idea of monotheism (as suggested in
Freud’s Moses and Monotheism). Certainly the veneration of God
as "King of kings and Lord of lords" borrows the official title of
the Persian emperors. Thus, the political pattern of tyranny,
beneficent or otherwise, of rule by force and violence, whether
physical or moral, stands firmly behind the Chiristian idea of
Jehovah.
When one considers the architecture and ritual of churches, whether
Catholic or Protestant, it is obvious until most recent times that
they are based on royal or judicial courts. A monarch who
rules by force sits in the central court of his donjon with his back
to the wall, flanked by guards, and those who come to petition him
for justice or to offer tribute must kneel or prostrate themselves
simply because these are difficult positions from which to start a
fight. Such monarchs are, of course, frightened of their
subjects and constantly on the anxious alert for rebellion. Is
this an appropriate image for the inconceivable energy that
underlies the universe? True, the altar-throne in Catholic
churches is occupied by the image of God in the form of one
crucified as a common thief, but he hangs there as our leader in
subjection to the Almighty Father, king of the universe,
propitiating him for those who have broken his not always reasonable
laws. And what of the curious resemblance between Protestant
churches and courts of law? The minister and the judge wear
the same black robe and "throw the book" at those assembled in pews
and various kinds of boxes, and both ministers and judges have
chairs of state that are still, in effect, thrones.
The crucial question, then, is that if you picture the universe as a
monarchy, how can you believe that a republic is the best form of
government, and so be a loyal citizen of the U. S.? It is thus
that fundamentalists veer to the extreme right wing in politics,
being of the personality type that demands strong external and
paternalistic authority. Their "rugged individualism" and
their racism are founded on the conviction that they are the elect
of God the Father, and their forebears took possession of America as
the armies of Joshua took possession of Canaan, treating the Indians
as Joshua and Gideon treated the Bedouin of Palestine.
In the same spirit the Protestant British, Dutch and Germans took
possession of Africa, India and Indonesia, and the rigid Catholics
of Spain and Portugal colonized Latin America. Such
territorial expansion may or may not be practical politics, but to
do it in the name of God is an outrage.
The Bible is a dangerous book, though by no means an evil one. It
depends, largely, on how you read it with what prejudices and with
what intellectual background. Regarded as sacred and
authoritative, such a complex collection of histories, legends,
allegories and images becomes a monstrous Rorschach blot in which
you can picture almost anything you want to discover, just as one
can see cities and mountains in the clouds or faces in the fire.
Fundamentalists "prove" the truth of the Bible by trying to show how
the words of the prophets have foretold events that have come to
pass in relatively recent times. But any statistician knows
that you can find correlation’s, if you want to, between almost any
two sets of patterns or rhythms - as between the architecture of the
Great Pyramid and the history of Europe. This is because of
eidetic vision, or the brain’s ability to project visions and forms
of its own into any material whatsoever. But scholars of
ancient history find the remarks of the prophets entirely relevant
to events of their own time, in the ancient Near East. The
Biblical prophets were not so much predictors as social
commentators.
We need not put ourselves in the position of those liberal
Christians who reject fundamentalism but must still insist that
Jesus was the one and only incarnation of God, or at least the most
perfect human being. No one is intellectually free who feels
that he cannot and must not disagree with Jesus and is therefore
forced into the dishonest practice of wangling the words ofthe
Gospels to fit his own opinions.
There is not a scrap of evidence that Jesus was familiar with any
other religious tradition than that of the Hebrew Scriptures or that
he knew anything of the civilizations of India, China or Peru.
Under these circumstances, he was faced with the virtually
impossible problem of expressing himself in the peculiar religious
language and imagery of his local culture. For it is obvious
to any student of the psychology of religion that what he needed to
express was the relatively common change of consciousness known as
Christ Consciousness - the vivid and overwhelming sensation that
your own being is one with eternal and ultimate reality. But
it was as hard for Jesus to say this as it still is for a native of
the American Bible Belt. It implies the blasphemous,
subversive and lunatic claim to be identical with the all-knowing
and allruling monarch of the world - its Pharaoh or Cyrus.
Jesus would have had no trouble in India, for this experience is the
foundation of Hinduism, and the Hindus recognize many people in both
ancient and modern times as embodiments of the divine, or sons of
God. Not, of course, the kind of God represented by Jehovah.
Buddhists, likewise, teach that anyone can, and finally will, become
a Buddha (an Enlightened One), in the same way as the historic
Gautama.
If the Gospel of Saint John, in particular, is to be believed, Jesus
emphatically identified himself with the godhead, considering such
phrases as "I and the Father are one," or "He who has seen me has
seen the Father," or "Before Abraham was, I am," or "I am the way,
the truth and the life." But this was not an exclusive claim
for the man Jesus, for at John 10:31, just after he has said "I and
the Father are one," the crowd picks up rocks to stone him to death.
He protests: "Many good works have I shown you from my Father; for
which of those works do you stone me?"
The Jews answered him, saying, "We do not stone you for a good work,
but for blasphemy, and because you, being a man, make yourself God
."
And here it comes:
Jesus answered them, "Is it not written in your law, I said, you are
gods [quoting Psalms 82]? If He [i.e., God] called those to
whom he gave his word gods and you can’t contradict the Scriptures,
how can you say of him whom the Father has sanctified and sent into
the world, 'You blaspheme!’ because I said, ‘l am a son of God" [The
original Greek says ‘‘a son, not "the son."]
In other words, the Gospel, or "good news" that Jesus was trying to
convey, despite the limitations of his tradition, was that we are
all sons of God. When he uses the terms I am (as in "Before
Abraham was, I am") or Me (as in "No one comes to the Father but by
Me"), he is intending to use them in the same way as Krishna in the
Bhagavad-Gita:
He who sees me everywhere and sees all in me; I am not lost to him,
nor is he lost to me. The yogi who, established in oneness, worships
me abiding in all beings, lives in me, whatever be his outward life.
And by this "me", Krishna means the atman that is at once the basic
self in us and in the universe. To know this is to enjoy
eternal life, to discover that the fundamental "I am" feeling, which
you confuse with your superficial ego, is the ultimate reality
forever and ever, amen.
In this essential respect, the Gospel has been obscured and muffled
almost from the beginning. For Jesus was presumably trying to
say that our consciousness is the divine spirit, "the light which
enlightens every one who comes into the world," and which George
Fox, founder of the Quakers, called the Inward Light. But the
Church, still bound to the image of God as the king of kings,
couldn’t accept this Gospel. It adopted a religion about Jesus
instead of the religion of Jesus. It kicked him upstairs and
put him in the privileged and unique position of being the boss’s
son, so that, having this unique advantage, his life and example
became useless to everyone else. The individual Christian must
not know that his own "I am" is the one that existed before Abraham.
In this way, the Church institutionalized and made a virtue of
feeling chronic guilt for not being as good as Jesus. It only
widened the alienation, the colossal difference, that monotheism put
between man and God.
When you try to explain this to Jesus freaks and other Bible
bangers, they invariably reveal theological ignorance by saying,
"But doesn’t the Bible say that Jesus was the only -begotten son of
God?" It doesn’t. Not, at least, according to Catholic,
Eastern Orthodox and Anglican interpretations. The phrase
"only-begotten son" refers not to the man Jesus but to the Second
Person of the Trinity, Christ, who is said to have been expressed
through the man Jesus. Nowhere does the Bible, or even the
creeds of the Church, say that Jesus was the only begotten son of
God in all time and space. Furthermore, it is not generally known
that Son of God is symbolized as both male and female, as
Logos-Sophia, the design and the wisdom of God, based on the passage
in Proverbs 7:9, where the wisdom of God speaks as a woman.
"But then," they go on to argue, "doesn’t the Bible say that there
is no other name under heaven whereby men may be saved extept the
name of Jesus? But what is the name of Jesus? J-E-S-U-S?
lesous? Aissa? Jehoshua? Or however else it may be
pronounced? It is said that every prayer said in name of
Jesus will be granted, and obviously this doesn’t mean that "Jesus"
is a signature on a blank check. It means that prayers will be
granted when made in the spirit of Jesus, and that spirit is, again,
Christ, the only begotten son of God, who is as equally incarnate in
Buddha, Lao-tzu or Ramana Maharshi as in Jesus the Nazarite.
It is amazing what both the Bible and the Church are presumed to
teach but actually don’t. Listening to fundamentalists, one
would suppose that if there are living beings on other planets in
this or other galaxies. they must wait for salvation until
missionaries from Earth arrive on spaceships, bringing the Bible and
baptism. But if "God so loves the world" and means it, he will
surely send his son to wherever he is needed, and there is no
difference in principle between a planet circling Alpha Centauri and
peoples as remote from Palestine AD 30 as the Chinese or the Incas.
It should be understood that the expression "son of" means "of the
nature of," as when we call someone a son of a bitch and as when the
Bible uses such phrases as "sons of Belial" (an alien god), or an
Arab cusses someone out as e-ben-i-el-homa "son of donkey!" or
simply "stupid". Used in this way,"son of’ has nothing to do with
maleness or being younger than. Likewise, Christ, God the Son,
the Logos-Sopia, refers to the basic pattern or design of the
Universe, ever emerging from the inconceivable mystery or the Father
as the galaxies shine out of space. This is how the great
philosophers of the Church have thought about the imagery of the
Bible and as it appears to a modern student of the history and
psychology of world religions. Call it intellectual snobbery
if you will, but although the books of the Bible might have been
"plain words for plain people" in the days of Isaiah and Jesus, an
uneducated and uninformed person who reads them today, and takes
them as the literal Word of God, will become a blind and confused
bigot.
Let us look at this against the background of the fact that all
monotheistic religions have been militant. Wherever God has
been idolized as the King of the world, believers are agog to impose
both their religion and their political rulership upon others.
Fanatical believers in the Bible, the Koran and the Torah have
fought one another for centuries without realizing that they belong
to the same pestiferous club, that they have more in common than
they have against one another and that there is simply no way of
deciding which of their "unique" revelations of God’s will is the
true one. A committed believer in the Koran trots out the same
arguments for his point of view as a Southern Baptist devotee of the
Bible, and neither can listen to reason, because their whole sense
of personal security and integrity depends absolutely upon
pretending to follow an external authority. The very existence
of this authority, as well as the sense of identity of its follower
and true believer, requires an excluded class of infidels, heathens
and sinners people whom you can punish and bully so as to know that
you are strong and alive. No argument, no reasoning, no contrary
evidence can possibly reach the true believer, who, if he is
somewhat sophisticated, justifies and even glorifies his invincible
stupidity as a "leap of faith" or "sacrifice of the intellect."
He quotes the Roman lawyer and theologian Tertullian, Credo, quia
absurdum est ,"l believe because it is absurd" as if Tertullian had
said something profound. Such people are, quite literally,
idiots - originally a Greek word meaning an individual so isolated
that you can't communicate with him.
Oddly enough, there are unbelievers who envy them, who wish that
they could have the serenity and peace of mind that come from
"knowing", beyond doubt, that you have the true Word of God and are
in the right. But this overlooks the fact that those who supposedly
have this peace within themselves are outwardly obstreperous and
violent, standing in dire need of converts and followers to convince
themselves of their continuing validity just as much as they need
outsiders to punish.
Mindless belief in the literal truth of the Bible and furious zeal
to spread the message lead to such widespread follies, in the
American Bible Belt, as playing with poisonous snakes and drinking
strychnine to prove the truth of Mark 16:18, where Jesus is reported
to have said: "They [the faithful] shall take up serpents: and if
they drink any deadly, thing, it shall not hurt them." As recently
as April 1973, two men (one a pastor) in Newport, Tennessee, died in
convulsions from taking large amounts of strychnine before a
congregation shouting, "Praise God! Praise God!" So they didn’t have
enough faith; but such barbarous congregations will go on trying
these experiments again and again to test and prove their faith, not
realizing that by Christian standards this is arrant spiritual
pride. Meanwhile, the Government persecutes religious groups that
use such relatively harmless herbs as peyote and marijuana for
sacraments.
What is to be done about the existence of millions of such dangerous
people in the world? Obviously, they must not be censored or
suppressed by their own methods. Even though it is impossible to
persuade or argue with them in a reasonable way, it is just possible
that they can be wooed and enchanted by a more attractive style of
religion, which will show them that their unbending "faith" in their
Bibles is simply an inverse expression of doubt and terror a frantic
whistling in the dark.
There have been other images of God than the Father-Monarch - the
Cosmic Mother, the inmost Self (disguised as all living beings) as
in Hinduism, the indefinable Tao - the flowing energy of the
universe - as among the Chinese, or no image at all, as with the
Buddhists, who are not strictly atheists but who feel that the
ultimate reality cannot be pictured in any way and, what is more,
that not picturing it is a positive way of feeling it directly,
beyond symbols and images. I have called this "atheism in the name
of God" a paradoxical and catchy phrase pointing out something
missed by learned Protestant theologians who have been talking about
"death of God" theology and "religionless Christianity," and asking
what of the Gospel of Christ can be saved if life is nothing more
than a trip from the maternity ward to the crematorium. It is weird
how such sophisticated Biblical scholars must go on clinging to
Jesus even when rejecting the basic principle of his teaching the
experience that he was God in the flesh, an experience he
unknowingly shared with all the great mysticsof the world.
Atheism in the name of God is an abandonment of all religious
beliefs, including atheism, which in practice is the stubbornly held
idea that the world is a mindless mechanism. Atheism in the name of
God is giving up the attempt to make sense of the world in terms of
any fixed idea or intellectual system. It is becoming again as a
child and laying oneself open to reality as it is actually and
directly felt, experiencing it without trying to categorize,
identify or name it.
This can be most easily begun by listening to the world with closed
eyes, in the same way that one can listen to music without asking
what it says or means. This is actually a turn-on a state of
consciousness in which the past and future vanish (because they
cannot be heard) and in which there is no audible difference
yourself and what you are hearing. There is simply universe, an
always present happening in which there is no perceptible difference
between self and other, or, as in breathing, between what you do and
what happens to you. Without losing command of civilized behavior,
you have temporarily "regressed" to what Freud called the oceanic
feeling of the baby - the feeling that we all lost in learning to
make distinctions, but that we should have retained as their
necessary background, just as there must be empty white paper under
this print if you are to read it.
When you listen to the world in this way, you have begun to practice
what Hindus and Buddhists call meditation - a re-entry to the real
world, as distinct from the abstract world of words and ideas. If
you find that you can’t stop naming the various sounds and thinking
in words, just listen to yourself doing that as another form of
noise, a meaningless murmur like the sound of traffic. I won’t argue
for this experiment. Just try it and see what happens, because this
is the basic act of faith of being unreservedly open and vulnerable
to what is true and real.
Certainly this is what Jesus himself must have had in mind in that
famous passage in the Sermon on the Mount upon which one will seldom
hear anything from a pulpit: "Which of you by thinking can add a
measure to his height? And why are you anxious about clothes?
"Look at the flowers of the field, how they grow. They neither labor
nor spin; and yet I tell you that even Solomon in all his splendor
was not arrayed like any one of them. So if God so clothes the wild
grass which lives for today and tomorrow is burned, shall He not
much more clothe you, faithless ones? . . . Don’t be anxious for the
future, for the future will take care of itself. Sufficient to the
day are its troubles." Even the most devout Christians can’t take
this. They feel that such advice was all very well for Jesus, being
the Boss’s son but this is no wisdom for us practical and
lesser-born mortals.
You can, of course, take these words in their allegorical and
spiritual sense, which is that you stop clinging in terror to a
rigid system of ideas about what will happen to you after you die,
or as to what, exactly, are the procedures of the court of heaven,
whereby the world is supposedly governed. Curiously, both science
and mysticism (which might be called religion as experienced rather
than religion as written) are based on the experimental attitude of
looking directly at what is, of attending to life itself instead of
trying to glean it from a book.
The scholastic theologians would not look through Galileo’s
telescope, and Billy Graham will not experiment with a psychedelic
chemical or practice yoga.
Two eminent historians of science, Joseph Needham and Lynn White,
have pointed out the surprising fact that in both Europe and Asia,
science arises from mysticism, because both the mystic and the
scientist are types of people who want to know directly, for
themselves, rather than be told what to believe. And in this sense
they follow the advice of Jesus to become again "as little
children," to look at the world with open, clear, and unprejudiced
eyes, as if they had never seen it before. It is in this spirit that
an astronomer must look at the sky and a yogi must attend to the
immediately present moment, as when he concentrates on a prolonged
sound. Years and years of book-study may simply fossilize you into
fixed habits of thought so that any perceptive person will know in
advance how you will react to any situation or idea. Imagining
yourself reliable, you become merely predictable and, alas, boring.
Most sermons are tedious. One knows in advance what the preacher is
going to say, however dressed up in a fancy language. Going strictly
by the book, he will have no original ideas or experiences, for
which reason both he and his followers become rigid and easily
shocked personalities who cannot swing, wiggle, lilt or dance.
In this connection it should be noted that the blacks of the South
swing and wiggle quite admirably, even in church but this is because
the preacher, starting from the Bible in deference to his white
overlords, very soon reverts to the rhythms and incantations of some
old-time African religion, and there is no knowing at all what he is
going to say. This is perhaps one of the principle roots of conflict
between whites and blacks in the American South that the former go
by the Book and the latter by the spirit, which, like the wind, as
Jesus put it, blows where it wills, and you can’t tell where it
comes from or where it’s going.
Thus, we reach the seeming paradox that you cannot at once idolize
the Bible and embody the spirit of Christianity. The New Testament
twitted the Pharisees as today it twits the fundamentalists: "You
search the scriptures daily, for in them you think you have life."
The religion of original Christianity was to trust life, both within
and around. Most of us would feel that this was a ridiculous gamble
- to the Jews a stumbling block and to the Greeks foolishness but,
come to think of it, is there any real alternative? Basically, no
human community can exist that is not founded on mutual trust as
distinct from law and its enforcement. The alternative to mutual
trust, which is indeed a risky gamble, is the security of the police
state, and we can’t have that.
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