2271 lines
125 KiB
Plaintext
2271 lines
125 KiB
Plaintext
******************** THE MIND OF THE BIBLE BELIEVER ********************
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Stephen Doe at New Mexico State University
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usenet@nmsu.edu
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Well, I've received a lot of e-mail indicating interest in this
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subject, so I'll go ahead and start this weekend. Since I'm entering
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the end-of-the-semester-crunch here at NMSU, don't be too upset if the
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posts come at irregular intervals. Also, I'm going to do things a bit
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differently than I first thought; instead of summarizing each chapter,
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I'm going to summarize each of the main topics. I think that will
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make things a bit more coherent. I see at least four posts coming out
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of all this, in roughly this order:
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1) Historical Perspective. Dr. Cohen spends some time studying three
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eras of history--first century Christianity, the Reformation and our
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own recent surge of fundamentalism, which he terms a
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"mini-Reformation." Since one of his main ideas is that
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fundamentalist Christianity is closest to what the Bible authors had
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in mind, I thought I'd start with this topic. It's really the first
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link of the chain, so to speak.
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2) Some Fundamentals of Psychology. Potentially boring to some I
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suspect, but crucial since the third post will deal with Dr. Cohen's
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application of psychology to the experience of fundamentalist
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Christianity.
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3) The Evangelical Mind-Control System. To some this label may have a
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strident ring, but it is a fitting title since Dr. Cohen thinks that
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biblical Christianity can have such a devastating psychological
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impact. Here I will outline the seven devices used to attract and
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retain members of an evangelical community. This also gives an
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account for the Bible's success despite the numerous logical
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contradictions and "immoral" stories that atheists have been pointing
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out for a long time.
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4) Social Implications of the mini-Reformation. Here I will outline
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Dr. Cohen's concerns regarding the impact the current surge of
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fundamentalism is having. He worries not so much about the political
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impact as the psychological harm that can be visited upon those caught
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up in fundamentalist beliefs.
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Some of the responses I've gotten have been rather interesting. Some
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have asked for more information on this book, such as the ISBN number
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and publisher. The publisher is:
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Prometheus Books
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59 Glenn Drive
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Buffalo, NY 14228-2197
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The Mind of The Bible-Believer
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Edmund D. Cohen
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ISBN 0-87975-495-8
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The book is fairly recent (copyright 1988). I ordered it through my
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local bookstore, so you should have no trouble if you do decide you'd
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like to order it.
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Some have questioned the appropriateness of starting a discussion of
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this nature on alt.atheism, presumably because telling atheists about
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the harmful effects of biblical Christianity is like "preaching to the
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choir." Many atheists I know already take the position that
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Christianity can be psychologically damaging. But it's one thing to
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say, "oh, it's all psychological," and quite another to have a
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detailed model of the phenomenon. The a.a FAQ states that atheists
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want to get to truth and so should consider all arguments with
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skepticism, but also with an open mind. I see no reason why this
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attitude shouldn't apply to arguments that would *strengthen* one's
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position as well as to arguments against one's position.
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Others have suggested moving the discussion to alt.atheism.moderated,
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to avoid the inevitably low S/N ratio of unmoderated newsgroups. It
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has also been suggested that I try to post these articles on
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soc.religion.christian (also a moderated group). I may follow up on
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these suggestions. But I see no reason why I shouldn't post on the
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unmoderated groups as well. I think anyone who wishes to respond
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ought to be able to do so, even if it is only to flame me. Also, with
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all due respect to mathew, who seems to be doing a fine job with
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a.a.moderated, I have an intense dislike for moderated newsgroups in
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general. The best thing about the net is that it has come closer to
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the democratic ideal of free expression on the part of *everyone* than
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any other medium I can think of. Besides, your right to express
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yourself doesn't mean others must listen. Many posts in the
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unmoderated groups I skip right over as soon I get a glimpse of the
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content (or, more accurately, lack of). You don't need to eat the
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whole egg to know if it is rotten.
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I must say that I am encouraged by the responses that I have received.
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I have yet to receive a negative response (though alas, that may
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change when we get to the actual substance of Dr. Cohen's ideas!) At
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any rate, I am looking forward to the discussion. Expect my first
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post sometime this weekend.
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...[A] propensity to religious extremism does not require
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explanation since it is entirely consistent with basic
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religious tenets and authentic religious orientations. It is
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religious moderation or religious liberalism, the willingness
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of religious adherents to accommodate themselves to their
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environment, to adapt their behaviorial and belief patterns to
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prevailing cultural norms, to make peace with the world, that
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requires explanation.--A professor of political studies at
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Bar_Ilan University, Israel[1]
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An Historical Perspective
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A generation ago the proposition that conservative Christian
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churches were about to enter a phase of very rapid growth would have
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struck sociologists studying religion as absurd; one might as well
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have expected astronomers to flock to the geocentric model in droves.
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Statistics on church membership indicated a continuing decline. The
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prevailing opinion was that religion served to explain the origins of
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the universe, and one's relation to the universe. As the more
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competent natural sciences increased man's knowledge of the universe,
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conventional religion became more and more irrelevant. Unless
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religion could re-invent itself--and the statistics indicated that
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those churches attempting to do so, the liberal and mainline churches,
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experienced decline in membership as well--religion would, in a
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relatively short time, be relegated to the dustbin of history.
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Yet we live now in an era in which it is the conservative
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churches that show no decrease in vitality--indeed, they show a great
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increase. "Contrary to the conventional wisdom of mainline church
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professionals, those churches that were least "reasonable,"
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"tolerant," and "relevant" were (and are) the ones not declining.
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Those churches that continued to emphasize the primacy of the Bible,
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and to take for real the supernatural salvation plan set out in it,
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continued to add to their numbers each year."[2] What is going on
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here?
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Most of us, I think, would prefer to believe that the
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conservatives are just some fanatics that can be dismissed with a wave
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of a hand, that their harsh, literalist interpretation of the Bible is
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really going against the "spirit" of the Bible. We would like to
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think that the kindly, mellow, non-judgmental practitioners of the
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more liberal denominations are the true followers of Christ. But what
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the liberal Christians fail to recognize is that they are the heirs of
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a great tradition of rebellion *against* the harsher implications of
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the Bible. Each successive phase of theology served to both obscure
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these harsh implications, and to also find Biblical support for what
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passed for the conventional wisdom of the day. To see this in action,
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we must briefly trace the history of Protestant Christianity, from the
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Reformation to the present.
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The Reformation
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Two men figure prominently in the break from Catholicism:
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Luther and Calvin. Martin Luther had been a rather timid Catholic
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monk, who experienced anguish over his salvation doubts and his
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inability to make his life free enough from sin. His solution to this
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was to recognize that the Bible counseled that salvation was due
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solely to God's grace, and that a person's works have no effect on
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upon it. This was of course in contradiction to the Catholic doctrine
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that the Church had the authority to dispense forgiveness for sin, and
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to sell indulgences from particular sins. The Catholic Church
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accepts as authoritative many extra-biblical documents; indeed the
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Pope, as Vicar of Christ, is said to be infallible when speaking ex
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cathedra. If, as Luther did, one is to reject these extraneous
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teachings, one is left with only one possible source of authoritative
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information concerning God, Christ and salvation--the Bible.
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The main goal of the Reformation then, was to fashion a
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doctrine that, as rigorously as possible, followed Biblical teachings,
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and *only* Biblical teachings. "The Bible, the whole Bible, and
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nothing but the Bible." There was no particular interest in
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harmonizing the Bible with secular learning (one has only to read
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Luther's comments on Copernicus to see that). The man who provided
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the most rigorous rendition of the Bible's teachings, and hence the
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rendition accepted as authoritative among Protestants until the
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late eighteenth century, was John Calvin.
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We can set down five essential points of Calvinism, long used
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to teach its fundamentals. 1) The nature of man, as a result of
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Adam's fall, is totally depraved, so that nothing good can come from
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him without God's gracious intervention. 2) God decided before
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creating the world which people would receive salvation; that number
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may be a very small portion of humanity, God's elect. 3) Christ's
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sacrifice on the cross redeemed the elect only. 4) God's grace is
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irresistable by the elect, so that a decision or voluntary action
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by the recipient is not involved in salvation. 5) Those who are
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saved cannot lose their salvation.
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These five points were formulated in response to five points
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of opposite meaning proposed by Jacobus Arminius, who attempted to
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humanize Christianity. We can regard Calvinism, as expressed above,
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as closed and authoritarian, while Arminianism can be regarded as open
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and democratic.
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At this point it serves our purpose to compare Calvinism and
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Arminianism with Biblical teachings. Both, after all, claim to be in
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accord with the Bible. With this end in mind, Dr. Cohen combed the
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New Testament for verses clearly supporting only a Calvinist
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interpretation, and for verses supporting only an Arminian
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interpretation. The results: 133 verses clearly in favor of
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Calvinism, vs only twenty-three in favor of Arminianism[3]. More
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significantly, no parable or story in the NT has an ending consistent
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with Arminianism. Calvinism is the clearly the more accurate rendition
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of the two. (Of course, it's easier to strain 23 verses to fit
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Calvinism, than it is to strain 133 to fit Arminianism!)
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How does one know if one is saved? In Calvinism there is no
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discernable criterion, other than that "he that shall endure unto the
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end, the same shall be saved."[Matt. 24:13] One cannot know if
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someone is a true saint until the full span of that person's life is
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over. (I do not here mean "saint" in the Catholic sense. In the
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Bible, all the saved are refered to as "saints.") Aside from that,
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only ambiguous, even teasing allusions are given (2 Cor. 13:5, Heb.
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4:16, Phil. 2:12, 2 Cor. 10:7).
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I hope that the reader can now see how morbid fascination with
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question of one's salvation status could develop. Consider a passage
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from a sermon by Jonathon Edwards, the arch-proponent of Calvinsim in
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America:
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The God that holds you over the pit of hell, much as one holds
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a spider, or some loathsome insect over the fire, abhors you,
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and is dreadfully provoked, his wrath towards you burns like
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fire; he is of purer eyes than to bear to have you in his
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sight; you are ten thousand times more abominable in his eyes
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than the most hateful venomous serpent is in ours. You have
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offended him infinitely more than ever a stubborn rebel did
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his prince; and yet it is nothing but his hand that holds you
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from falling into the fire every moment. It is to be ascribed
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to nothing else, that you did not go to hell the last night,
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that you was [sic] suffered to awake again in this world,
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after you closed your eyes to sleep[4].
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Clearly not an attractive doctrine, however an accurate
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rendition of the Bible it may be. To continue to attract new members,
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Protestantism had to--and did--change. The next phase we can see is
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the ascendance of Methodism and Baptism.
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John Wesley was one of the co-founders of Methodism. This
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movement began in the 1730's at Oxford, where Wesley was educated. In
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particular, Wesley was strongly Arminian. Hence the emphasis was on
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good works and social action. This provided the model for nineteenth
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century efforts such as rescue missions, missionary organizations, the
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Salvation Army, and a generally civic-minded tone. The prevailing
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attitude in Methodism and Baptism was that anyone could decide to
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become a Christian, and that as a result would perform such good works
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as he was able. This charity, in the absence of any comparable
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secular efforts, goes a long way towards explaining the vague notion
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many have that the Bible is somehow connected to "doing good," despite
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the Calvinist injunction that works do nothing to ensure salvation.
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The key point to remember is that Wesley made individual
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judgment and conscience into a counterbalance upon the literal
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authority of Scripture. In fact, the authority of Scrpiture was made
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*subordinate* to common sense in Methodism. All the while, Wesley
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claimed to be following the Bible; as he wrote in his Journal on June
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5, 1766, "My ground is the Bible. Yea, I am a Bible bigot. I follow
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it in all things, both great and small." An absurd statement, in the
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light of the Calvinist verses he passed over. He followed the
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"spirit," as his *conscience* dictated, not the "letter." Thus this
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teaching is Biblical only in a very superficial sense; for every
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negative Biblical teaching, a modern idea was substituted and clothed
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in Biblical language. What was achieved was *containment* of the
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Bible's true teachings, rendering the Bible remote, confusing and
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impenetrable. This lead to dispensationalism, the division of the
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Bible into as many as seven epochs, each with different theological
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rules. In such a view there is no need for unity, continuity and
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consistency in the whole Bible, which is what Calvinism had done.
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What does the Bible itself say about the Arminian-Wesleyan
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approach? Considering that Jesus himself often spoke in parables and
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allegory, it seems probable to assume that parts of it are not to be
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taken *literally*. On the other hand it does see itself as
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authoritative:
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All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is
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profitable for doctrine, for instruction in righteousness:
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That the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto
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all good works.[2 Tim. 3:16-17]
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Also consider that:
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. . .no prophecy of Scripture is of any private
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interpretation.[2 Pet. 1:20]
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The worst punishments in Hell are reserved exclusively for those who
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bring a false gospel, ie adding to or detracting from the Scriptures.
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Understanding the Bible is declared to be beyond mere human reason (1
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Cor. 2:12-14, 1 Cor. 13:9-10,12). Clearly the Bible, the *whole*
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Bible, is taken to be authoritative, though taken on a figurative,
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allegorical level as well as a literal one. Also, since the
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Scriptures clearly deprecate any non-Scriptural influences
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("whatsoever is not of faith is sin" [Rom. 14:23], "But though we, or
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an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which
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we have preached unto you, let him be accursed." [Gal. 1:8]), we
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cannot possibly be meant to leaven Scriptural teachings with lore from
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any other source, not even with our common sense.
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Thus we can see that by the twentieth century, Protestant
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Christianity was well on its way to standing for--absolutely nothing.
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When individual conscience is made the primary discriminator between
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applicable and non-applicable verses, virtually any doctrine can be
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justified. In fact, the Bible can be emptied of any content
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whatsoever.
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One can consider "modernist theology" to be a complete, 180
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degree turnabout from Calvinist doctrine. Paul Tillich provided the
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main insights here. To put it very simply, the key concept here is
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the *symbol*. A symbol has a few basic properties: 1) It points to
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something that it cannot make totally explicit (a totally explicit
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notation or character is refered to as a *sign*); 2) The symbol "opens
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up levels of reality which otherwise are closed for us." 3) It
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"unlocks dimensions and elements of our soul which correspond to
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dimensions and elements of reality." 4) "Symbols cannot be produced
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intentionally." They are spontaneous, they occur to us. 5) They
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grow to meet the needs of their users, and die when the symbol has
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fulfilled its use, ie has become explicit. A larger system of symbols
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is called a myth; something mythic prompts a resonance in those for
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whom it has meaning. A myth has psychological truth.
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Tillich did little to guide Christians towards a new
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idea-content which the Bible could stand for. The void was more than
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filled by C. G. Jung's investigation into religious symbolism. He saw
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the death-to-life transformation story in the Gospels as an image of
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the individual's innate, "authentic" destiny. The demands to submit
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to Biblical teaching were re-interpreted as openness to one's
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unconsciousness and living out that innate destiny. The focus is
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individualistic, and the idea that obligation is imposed from without
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vanishes. In essence, the goal is the development of one's true Self.
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(Notice that this approach completely frees one from taking
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any part of the Bible as meaning what it says. A believer who takes a
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Biblical verse literally is merely responding to the symbol system
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differently than the believer who is further along in
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self-development. The approach resembles nothing so much as the
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Gnosticism of early Christianity.)
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Here was the hoped-for rejuvenation of Christianity--or so
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Jung thought. Instead, the period saw no birth of new symbols to help
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Christians along in developing the Self. Instead, theologians
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complaining about the spiritual bankruptcy of contemporary
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Christianity were most vocal. The cover of the April 8, 1966 Time
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magazine featured the phrase "Is God Dead?" in large red letters on a
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black background. Theologians discussed topics such as the synthesis
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of Christianity and Marxism and gender-neutering the Bible.
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Against such a backdrop, the rise of conservative Christianity
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becomes a bit more comprehensible. The conservative message is, at
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least, unequivocal. "The Bible means what it says it means, and
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that's that!" In times of great social upheaval, such certainty is
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compelling, particularly if the liberal approach becomes more and more
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uninspiring. Furthermore, the liberal gloss put on the Bible by
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preceding generations has prepared people for the notion that it
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contains some sublime wisdom, while leaving them unfamiliar with the
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Bible's actual content. Thus for the first time since the
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Reformation, we have a significant portion of the population once
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again ready for the old Calvinist/Paulinist doctrine. The
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alternatives have played themselves out.
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I hope the reader of the preceding is ready to accept, at
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least in a provisional way, the notion that the Bible really does mean
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what it says it means, that the Calvinist doctrine really is the
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closest approximation of the Bible's message. Then we are left with a
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conundrum. Liberal Protestantism grew out of a rebellion against
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Calvinism's nastier implications. Yet churches built on liberal,
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humanistic premises have grown progressively weaker over time, while
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the conservative churches of our time (not to mention first century,
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Paulinist Christianity) display a great deal of vitality. Obviously
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there is something about Christianity that enables it, in its pure,
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undiluted form, to spread like wildfire, while tampering with the
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"recipe" spoils the effect.
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But if Calvinist/Paulinist Christianity is so repulsive as to
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have spawned the liberal Protestant rebellion against it, what is
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there to draw people towards it? The answer is that the themes of
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cleansing, rebirth, peace, prayer and so on, seen by the conservatives
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as literally true, by the liberal religionists as symbolic of sublime
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wisdom, and by skeptics as sheer invention, are not really any of the
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above. The Bible is primarily a *psychological* document. The
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relevant criterion for evaluating the contents of the Bible is not the
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Bible's intellectual content, but the Bible's psychological effect.
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Unravelling the Bible's true, psychological purpose will be a
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fascinating undertaking. But first, the foundations for discussion
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must be laid down. My next post will deal with the psychological
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premises at the core of Dr. Cohen's model.
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[1] Trans. Talcott Parsons (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons,
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1958), p. 182.
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[2] The Mind of the Bible Believer, Edmund Cohen, (Buffalo, NY:
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Prometheus Books, 1988) p. 41.
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[3] Verses consistent only with Calvinism: Matt. 2:6; 7:16-20;
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9:37-38; 10:5-6; 11:25, 27; 13:24-30; 37-43; 15:13, 24; 20:23, 28;
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22:2-14; 24:22; 25:32-34; Mark 4:11-12, 15-20; Luke 1:77; 3:17;
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6:43-45; 8:5-15; 10:22; 13:23-30; 14:23; 16:31; 18:7; John 1:12-13;
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3:6;6:44, 65; 10:14, 16, 26; 15:16; 17:2; Acts 2:39; Rom. 8:29-30, 33;
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9:15-16, 21-24; 10:20; 11:5; 2 Cor. 10:7, 18; Gal. 1:15; Eph. 1:4-5;
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2:8; 2 Thess. 2:11-12; 2 Tim. 2:10, 19-20; 1 Pet. 2:8; Jude 4; Rev.
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7:3-15; 13:8; and 22:11.
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Verses consistent only with Arminianism: Matt. 11:28; Luke 2:10;
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11:9-10; 13:34; 20:38; Acts 2:17; Rom. 10:9, 13; Gal. 5:13; Eph. 4:6;
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Phil. 2:10-11; Col. 1:28; 1 Tim. 2:4, 6; 2 Tim. 2:21; Titus 2:11; 2
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Pet. 3:9; and Rev. 22:17-19, 21.
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[4] "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God," preached July 8, 1741.
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In Ola Elizabeth Winslow, ed., Jonathon Edwards: Basic writings (New
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York: New American Library, 1966) p. 159.
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The initial word does not lie within the province of the
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theologian, but of the historian and the psychologist.--Hugh
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J. Schonfield, _The_Passover_Plot_
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I ended Part 1 by asserting that the Bible is primarily a
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psychological document, and that the long and bitter debate over its
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didactic content had missed the point. To continue in this review, we
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must lay down the psychological premises at the core of Dr. Cohen's
|
|
work. We may sum this up as follows: Freud's stance towards
|
|
Christianity was the correct one, but his method was flawed; Jung's
|
|
stance towards Christianity was flawed, but his general psychodynamic
|
|
concepts (minus the religious theory) are useful. Dr. Cohen seeks to
|
|
unite was is useful in both approaches.
|
|
|
|
Freud
|
|
|
|
For the sake of brevity, I assume the reader is familiar with
|
|
the basic Freudian concepts--id, ego, superego; resistance, libido,
|
|
Oedipus complex; and the five stages of psychosexual development. The
|
|
basic idea was that from the id, two drives emerge: the erotic drive
|
|
and the self-destructive drive. The aim of the former is possession
|
|
of the parent of the opposite sex; the aim of the latter, the
|
|
reduction of all tension and a return to the inorganic state. The
|
|
attainment of either goal would have antisocial consequences, so only
|
|
displacements, substitute gratifications are possible. These reduce
|
|
tension but do not eliminate it. The ego develops through the fives
|
|
stages of psychosexual development to cope with the outside world,
|
|
where there are objects that psychic energy, libido, can be invested
|
|
in. The superego develops out of the internalization of prohibitions
|
|
laid down in childhood. The aims of the two drives are so terrible
|
|
that they cause anxiety, and hence are repressed by the superego.
|
|
This allows an individual to retain socially acceptable illusions
|
|
about himself. Repressed material can cause various neuroses;
|
|
analysis consists of bringing repressed material to consciousness, one
|
|
small dose at a time.
|
|
How did Freud view religion? Freud was a radical materialist.
|
|
Almost alone among behaviorial scientists of the time, Freud was a
|
|
destructive critic of religion. (This makes sense if we remember that
|
|
religion was almost the sole provider of charitable outreach at the
|
|
time, and that most of the destructive teachings in the Bible, which
|
|
they would have criticized, were being explained away by liberal
|
|
theologians anyway. Also, many of the behaviorial scientists had
|
|
liberal Christian affiliations themselves. They were very gentle
|
|
critics indeed, seeking mostly to encourage the positive
|
|
effects--charity--that were socially useful. One has only to read
|
|
William James' _Varieties_of_Religious_Experiences_ to see this
|
|
attitude.) Freud saw three functions of religion: 1) The
|
|
explanatory function, ie creation myths, which were losing
|
|
significance with the advance of science; 2) the wish-fulfilling
|
|
function, in which the need for a "protector," a father-figure, was
|
|
projected onto God, and (in contradiction to his notion of a
|
|
self-destructive urge) death was denied; 3) the social regulatory
|
|
function, in which religion takes over the parental role of laying
|
|
down rules against anti-social gratification. Freud saw the first two
|
|
positions as illusions, while the third function would have to find
|
|
some foundation other than religion, which was built up from false
|
|
premises. Freud once said that participating in a universal neurosis
|
|
such as religion spared one from constructing an individual neurosis.
|
|
In Dr. Cohen's view, there are some things to commend in
|
|
Frued's attitude. The first is that it helps to stand apart from the
|
|
phenomenon being studied, to refuse to apply more lenient standards to
|
|
religious truth claims. The second is that looking beneath surface
|
|
impressions is necessary; we are looking for something that
|
|
theological study serves to divert our attention from. The third is
|
|
that the religious problem ought not be severed from the other motives
|
|
and conflicts present in a person; Freud had a good point, in seeing
|
|
religion could serve as a substitute neurosis.
|
|
All the same, there are aspects of Freudianism to be avoided.
|
|
One is its rigidity. No theory other than the sexual one is
|
|
considered worthy of discussion; anyone proposing otherwise is
|
|
diagnosed as having unanalyzed resistance to it. Any critics must
|
|
have horribly intense, and repressed, sexual complexes. When Jung and
|
|
Adler, his prize disciples, broke with him over the theory, they were
|
|
accused of currying favor with outsiders. (It is interesting to note
|
|
that in some aspects--namely, the negative view of humanity, and the
|
|
demonization of outside views--Freud mimics aspects of conservative
|
|
Christianity. An ironic result, considering that Freud proclaimed
|
|
himself a proponent of the scientific method!) Misuse of history also
|
|
ought to be avoided. Freud sometimes tailored history to fit his
|
|
views. Christianity itself is an example of this. If Christianity's
|
|
purpose was social control, then it was superfluous, as many such
|
|
controls already existed in the Roman Empire. We will see later than
|
|
maintaining social order is really not what early Christianity was
|
|
concerned with.
|
|
The key point then is that while Freud's insight into religion
|
|
was good--ie, that it can act as a substitute neurosis--we will need
|
|
some more flexible tools to extend this insight. (I hope the reader
|
|
doesn't analyze this as "resistance" on our part!) Next we shall
|
|
consider the views of Jung.
|
|
|
|
Jung
|
|
|
|
Jung viewed the subconscious as a much livelier place than
|
|
Freud's dour trio of id, ego and superego. The fundamental concept
|
|
here is that of the complex, which is defined as a grouping of
|
|
energy-laden psychic contents which are compatible and belong
|
|
together. These act as organized centers of activity within a
|
|
personality, which the conscious is not aware of. They are distinct
|
|
from the ego-personality because they embody attitudes at odds with
|
|
the conscious attitude.
|
|
Dr. Cohen gives us an apt analogy when he compares the various
|
|
complexes to a parliament. "In a normal person, there is a majority
|
|
party (the ego-personality) and a relatively docile, loyal opposition
|
|
(the complexes). . . In a neurotic person, there is also a majority
|
|
party, but the opposition is disruptive and combative, largely because
|
|
the majority party has been too narrow and intransigent, not allowed
|
|
the minority a hearing, and made too few concessions. In the
|
|
schizophrenic, no party is able to form a government and confusion
|
|
reigns."[2]
|
|
There are several complexes for us to consider. The first is
|
|
the ego-personality. This is the person's awareness of self,
|
|
including memories and knowledge. The ego-personality grows and
|
|
becomes more differentiated as it matures. There is the persona, the
|
|
image presented to the outside world. Several unconscious complexes
|
|
that one attempts to deal with in Jungian analysis are the shadow, the
|
|
anima (in a male) or animus (in a female), and the Self. From the
|
|
conscious standpoint, the shadow embodies all that is related to bad
|
|
conscience. The anima or animus embodies qualities missing from the
|
|
conscious attitude, and in dreams is represented as a person of the
|
|
opposite sex. The Self is the "final complete quintessence towards
|
|
which the person is growing," often represented as a child or an
|
|
abstract personification. As such it has a relation to the idea of
|
|
God, and to a Jungian, the personal religious quest and actualization
|
|
of the Self (individuation) are the same. In the Jungian view,
|
|
compensation is important in relating different aspects of the psyche,
|
|
just as causality is important in the exterior world. Thus
|
|
unconscious elements embody psychological opposites to the conscious
|
|
attitude.
|
|
Other Jungian concepts include intraversion vs extraversion,
|
|
the four functions, and archetypes. Introverts feels overstimulated
|
|
by their environment; extraverts, understimulated. The popular usage
|
|
of the terms is what Jung means as well. The four functions are
|
|
diagrammed thus:
|
|
|
|
Thinking
|
|
|
|
Sensation + Intuition
|
|
|
|
Feeling
|
|
|
|
Thinking means mental activity from an objective standpoint; feeling,
|
|
subjective menatal activity. These are the raional functions, because
|
|
they involve reflection. Sensation and intuition are irrational
|
|
because they are kinds of perception. Sensation involves the explicit
|
|
data of perception, while the intuitive type deals with tacit,
|
|
subliminal data. Each individual has one of these functions most
|
|
developed; that function is the main function. The psychologically
|
|
opposite function is the inferior function--inferior in the sense of
|
|
its poor response to voluntary conscious control. Archetypes can be
|
|
thought of as universal symbols, that occur in the same way despite
|
|
differences in culture and time because the psyche has fundamentally
|
|
the same structure. This fascination with religious symbolism
|
|
dominated Jung's later career.
|
|
In Jung's view maturity is reached through the synthesis of
|
|
opposites. "A psychic state or condition at a particular time,
|
|
expressible in symbols, will finally combine with another, from the
|
|
unconscious, that is in some ways it opposite, and a higher synthesis
|
|
will emerge."[3] This is a continually ongoing process; there is
|
|
always some finer nuance of individuation to be experienced. Jung
|
|
connected this with his religious theory.
|
|
Life's true main issue is the personal religious quest.
|
|
Meaningful religious symbols are created and enable one to get in
|
|
touch with deeper levels within oneself. As I've alluded to earlier,
|
|
this resembles the Gnosticism of early Christianity, and has also been
|
|
viewed as compatible with Tillich's conception of symbols. Jung was
|
|
thus much friendlier to Christianity than Freud was--but Christianity
|
|
in the Tillichian sense. He made no concession at all to the Bible's
|
|
declarations about its meaning.
|
|
One disturbing aspect of all this is that Jung and his
|
|
disciple's seem to have been overwhelmed by the rich religious
|
|
symbolism available for study. As Dr. Cohen says, "Jungians turn out
|
|
to be escapists. . ."[4] and that they "prided themselves on putative
|
|
superior individuation, and disdained those less withdrawn than
|
|
themselves as benighted and unconscious. To me, they seemed like
|
|
refugees from reality. . ."[5] We can correct for this by severing
|
|
Jung's psychodynamic theory from his religious theory, and saying that
|
|
individuation, the reconciliation of psychic opposites, is the goal.
|
|
This is accomplished through projection, the application of the
|
|
archetypes to stimuli (which we can call the progressive flow of
|
|
libido, or psychic energy) and withdrawal of projections that don't
|
|
fit and result in the blockage of progressive flow (which we can call
|
|
regressive flow).
|
|
Having defined the mentally healthy individual as one in whom
|
|
individuation takes place, one who can successfully distinguish
|
|
fantasy from non-fantasy (we use "non-fantasy" because reality can be
|
|
a loaded term), we can speak of mechanisms that prevent individuation.
|
|
Dissociation occupies roughly the same place in Jungian thought as
|
|
repression does in Freudian. Psychic contents become dissociated
|
|
(placed within the unconscious) which are incompatible with conscious
|
|
attitudes. That which is dissociated is always a matter of bad
|
|
conscience to the person. Dissociation is the ego-defense mechanism,
|
|
in which one seeks to 1) avoid negative emotions associated with the
|
|
dissociated material, and 2) avoid incongruity or conflict in
|
|
attitudes. As we shall see later, dissociation induction, and the
|
|
management of dissociation, is one of the most important features of
|
|
the Biblical program, which Dr. Cohen refers to as "the Evangelical
|
|
Mind Cointrol System."
|
|
One can view Jung's notions about individuation as similar to
|
|
Goldstein's view of "self-actualization." This is defined as
|
|
"adequate, adaptive behavior, in accordance with the capacities and
|
|
capabilities of the organism." In both we can see one overall,
|
|
teleologically constituted drive--not for the reduction of tension,
|
|
but for the maintenance of an optimum level of tension.
|
|
The key insight of Jung's theory is that individuation takes
|
|
place through the synthesis of psychic opposites. We can take our
|
|
provisional definition of mental health to be that state in which
|
|
individuation, or self-actualization, takes place. Now we can ask
|
|
ourselves--is the Biblical system such an environment?
|
|
|
|
The Biblical View of Human Nature
|
|
|
|
Not to put to fine a point on things, we must say that the
|
|
Bible has the most negative possible view of human nature. If it were
|
|
even more negative, the whole system would be untenable. Some
|
|
applicable verses:
|
|
|
|
The wicked are estranged from the womb: they go astray as
|
|
soon as they are born, speaking lies. [Ps. 58:3]
|
|
|
|
For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; Being
|
|
justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is
|
|
in Christ Jesus. . .[Rom. 3:23-24]
|
|
|
|
. . .there is none good but one, that is God.[Mark 10:18]
|
|
|
|
The implication is that this guilt is universal. Good works
|
|
do not cure it. Outside of the Biblical program, there is no source
|
|
of self-esteem.
|
|
One objection to this scheme is the good that the unsaved do.
|
|
The Bible's answer to this is that the unsaved have a form of the Law
|
|
written in their hearts. Presumably this is put there to prevent the
|
|
unsaved from wiping the saved off of the face of the earth. At any
|
|
rate, this conscience that the unsaved have is vastly inferior to
|
|
knowledge of the Scrpitures. Certainly conscience is never portrayed
|
|
as a source of relief from Bible prescripts that are repugnant.
|
|
Secular culture is uniformly condemned as "unprofitable."
|
|
This takes advantage the fact that most people innately feel
|
|
"wrong, inferior and unhappy." We have a distorted view of our own
|
|
moral nature. Dr. Cohen's service as a defense attorney provides an
|
|
illustration of this. Often he was called upon to defend street
|
|
criminals. These people had fairly good information as to the
|
|
punishment risk of their crimes; in general, they decided the crime
|
|
was worth it. The sole exception to the rule comes in the area of
|
|
confessions. Each criminal knows that what he says will be used
|
|
against him, so self-interest dictates one say nothing. Yet a
|
|
substantial number of convictions would have been unattainable had not
|
|
the defendents essentially convicted themselves. There is typically a
|
|
compulsion to confess, indicative of sound but guilty conscience.
|
|
This blind spot to our own moral nature may serve a purpose.
|
|
After all, it is those criminals whose self-esteem remains high are
|
|
most prone to repeating crimes. Feeling "wrong, inferior and unhappy"
|
|
serves to prevent us from doing great harm to others and ourselves.
|
|
Being deprived of these feelings would be akin to being deprived of
|
|
pain sensitivity. Mental-health officials do us no favors when they
|
|
advocate a bland, untroubled state of mind, life on an even keel. The
|
|
emphasis on self-esteem stems from a tendency to over-react, to do
|
|
whatever seems to be the opposite of the bad, old way of doing things.
|
|
The Bible exploits this tendency to its fullest, aggravating
|
|
and distorting it enormously. Often we will hear Evangelicals say
|
|
that Christ is the only thing that prevents them from being very
|
|
wicked people. Yet we never hear from people for whom the Bible has
|
|
helped to relieve an immense burden of guilt. What the Evangelicals
|
|
seek relief from is a fairly low-key, nagging sense of guilt. They
|
|
are guilt "dilletantes."
|
|
On the other hand, the Bible does offer some sound advice on
|
|
managing inner discord:
|
|
|
|
Bear ye one another's burdens. . .[Gal 6:2]
|
|
|
|
There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to
|
|
man: but God is faithful. . .but will with the temptation
|
|
also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear it.[1.
|
|
Cor. 10:13]
|
|
|
|
In the world ye shall have tribulation. . .[John 16:33]
|
|
|
|
These realistic pieces of advice protected the Bible authors
|
|
against losing credibility with their hearers.
|
|
The Bible author's approach then, is to start with some sound
|
|
insight--tacitly expressed perhaps, but unmistakeable--about their
|
|
people. They offer some useful practical advice about it. Then they
|
|
veer off into something contrived and artificial. We can see that the
|
|
Bible is profoundly "anti-Jungian"--the unconscious is protrayed in
|
|
profoundly negative terms. The believer is not to seek individuation,
|
|
reconciliation with psychological opposites, but instead to widen the
|
|
gap between conscious and subconscious as much as possible. The good
|
|
in man can only come from the outside. As complete an alienation from
|
|
one's own inner being as possible is advocated. From the viewpoint of
|
|
our provisional definition of mental health, such an attitude is sick.
|
|
Here we are already seeing the psychological acumen of the
|
|
Bible authors in action. They were not trying to create an
|
|
intellectually corect model; they wanted to create a human
|
|
organization that could get started without social power, prestige or
|
|
acclaim on their side. The aim was not education, but indoctrination.
|
|
In the process, they created the most successful assault on human
|
|
psychological vulnerabilities ever devised.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
We have seen that, from the viewpoint that the primary drive
|
|
in humans is individuation, the Bible authors advocate a scheme
|
|
profoundly at variance with this goal. They advocate widening the gap
|
|
between conscious and subconscious as much as possible. In my next
|
|
post, I shall outline the seven devices the Bible uses to attract new
|
|
devotees, to induce dissociation in the believer, and stabilize that
|
|
state within believers.
|
|
|
|
SD
|
|
|
|
[1] (New York: Bernard Geis Associates, 1965), p. 51.
|
|
|
|
[2] The Mind of the Bible Believer, p. 97.
|
|
|
|
[3] Ibid., p. 91.
|
|
|
|
[4] Ibid., p. 96.
|
|
|
|
[5] Ibid., p. 96.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Our method of explaining why people hold certain religious
|
|
views can easily degenerate into argumentum ad hominem if used
|
|
improperly.
|
|
The most impressive Christian apologetic argument for
|
|
believing things that cannot be verified as propositions in
|
|
other fields is that Christianity's long history of attracting
|
|
and holding the loyalty of people of good will must reflect
|
|
that its truth and beneficiality was manifest to those people,
|
|
even if it cannot be explained, or appreciated within the
|
|
narrow breadth of the individual's perspective. That
|
|
argument, and the history behind it, is the crucial datum for
|
|
which social scientists studying religion have never
|
|
accounted. Our purpose, which has never been undertaken
|
|
before, is the explanation of the psychological attraction
|
|
that has given Christianity such a tenacious hold upon people,
|
|
despite the unverifiability or wrongness of its ideas. In so
|
|
doing, we make no statement about Christians more derogatory
|
|
than that they possess normal human psychological
|
|
vulnerabilites. It is perfectly consistent with our approach
|
|
to concede that nearly all Christians are sincere and bona
|
|
fide, and that many of them are intelligent.
|
|
The key to distinguishing ad hominem from fair criticism of
|
|
psychological bias in holding any given view, is to keep track
|
|
of who should have the burden of proof. The proponent of a
|
|
position that is neither self-evident nor supported by
|
|
intelligible argument, or the one attacking a point that has
|
|
been made and supported by some proof, must draw on substance,
|
|
or else we are entitled to suppose that it is only subjective
|
|
motives and desires that account for the views expressed. If
|
|
a Christian comes at me, saying that my failure to believe as
|
|
he does indicates my lack of the Holy Spirit, or my having
|
|
received a spirit of blindness, it is up to him to prove it.
|
|
If he believes for no articulate reason, then it is fair for
|
|
me to try to explain away his belief psychologically. Behind
|
|
his biblical pseudopsychological analysis of me necessarily
|
|
lies an indirect attack on my character. If my psychological
|
|
analysis fails to make sense and fit the facts, then it is no
|
|
better. The end result hopefully will be observables brought
|
|
together and made intelligible by my analyses. The
|
|
Christian, unable to make fact and his doctrine cooperate,
|
|
will finally be heard to say that his view is right because it
|
|
follows biblical teaching, and the Bible is right because it
|
|
says it is.----Cohen, The Mind of the Bible Believer, p. 140.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
We are now prepared to discuss the seven psychological devices
|
|
embodied in the Bible. These devices reinforce each other, so that
|
|
their effect when working together is much more powerful than one
|
|
would suspect. Some of the devices outlined would be too blatant to
|
|
work on their own; others are so subtle that without other devices to
|
|
reinforce them, their effects would quickly subside. The devices are
|
|
arranged from the more obvious to the more hidden, from the more
|
|
important in the experience of the newcomer to the more important in
|
|
the deeply involved and indoctrinated believer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Device 1: The Benign, Attractive Persona of the Bible
|
|
|
|
|
|
One way of understanding the kindly, mellow, non-judgmental
|
|
and charitable liberal and mainline churches is to recognize that they
|
|
have taken the lovely surface impressions of Jesus in the Gospels and
|
|
built a whole new religion out of them alone. In essence, a few
|
|
well-chosen fragments were taken to stand for the whole. This
|
|
corresponds roughly to the "Arminian" viewpoint that we discussed in
|
|
the first post--ie, that one could choose to be saved, and that doing
|
|
good works went a long ways towards ensuring salvation.
|
|
As we shall see later though, the more deeply indoctrinated
|
|
believer must gradually be weaned away from the Arminian notions of
|
|
doing good in this world, and gradually introduced to the notion that
|
|
only preaching the salvation message is important. The newcomer is
|
|
gradually made to understand that the teachings mean something
|
|
different than what appears on the surface--and that it is oriented to
|
|
the next life, not this one. The only promise kept is that a
|
|
tranquilized state of mind will be attained, but with a net
|
|
detrimental effect on mental health.
|
|
These misleading surface impressions are crucial. Without
|
|
them, recruitment of new members would be impossible. Once in the
|
|
fold though, the old "bait-and-switch" sales pitch is what takes
|
|
place!
|
|
|
|
|
|
Device 2: Discrediting "The World"
|
|
|
|
|
|
In my first post I covered some biblical teachings that
|
|
require believers to distrust reliance on their own minds for
|
|
knowledge. Only through the biblical teachings does any knowledge
|
|
come. In essence reliance on any of the four Jungian functions is shunned.
|
|
Since this state of mind is elusive, discrediting of people other than
|
|
believers and of the environment is added.
|
|
The Bible defines three sorts of people for the believer, as
|
|
well as modes of conduct towards each. There are: 1) believers; 2)
|
|
ordinary unbelievers and 3) missionaries of "false" gospels. The
|
|
Bible doesn't prescribe depth of contact between believers and
|
|
ordinary unbelievers; unbelievers are often referred to as "crops" to
|
|
be "harvested," or "fish" to be "netted." Abundant numbers of
|
|
contacts are being mandated. When the believer is in the presence of
|
|
an unbeliever, it is to preach and "witness," not to listen. When we
|
|
look at some indirect references to unnatural self restraint and
|
|
apparent freedom from negative emotions in the face of provocation,
|
|
(Luke 6:29-31, 1 Pet. 2:23) a pattern of conduct emerges. Believers
|
|
in the presence of unbelievers are put in a frame of mind that closes
|
|
them off to anything unbelievers might have to say. The unbeliever
|
|
also sees in the believer a very odd state of euphoric calm, which the
|
|
unbeliever mis-interprets as a spriritually higher, happier state.
|
|
Actually, as we shall see in the later Devices, what actually occurs
|
|
in the believer is artificially induced inner turmoil, masked by the
|
|
dulled, divided state the believer is in. The believer develops a
|
|
knack for being aloof and oblivious to what the unbeliever has to say;
|
|
this is often mistaken for tolerance on the believer's part.
|
|
Within the churchly life, protected by outside influences,
|
|
believers can open up to each other--to a limited degree. (Col.
|
|
3:1-17, Phil 2:1-11) Complete immersion in the Bible is prescribed;
|
|
other human priorities are devalued, and any investment of psychic
|
|
energy in them is withdrawn. Intolerance for individuality is at the
|
|
core; believers see each other as organs in the "body of Christ."
|
|
While differences in gifts are praised as having their purpose,
|
|
individuality of personality is not. (1 Cor. 12:12-31, Eph. 4:1-16)
|
|
We also see that while other supernaturalistic premises are
|
|
presented as being extremely hazardous (indeed, proponents of "false"
|
|
gospels are the only ones to receive even harsher punishment in hell),
|
|
devaluation of anything that passes for learning is implied. Paul
|
|
often equates whatever is not in the Biblical program with
|
|
homosexuality (eg Rom. 1:18-27) Consider the following:
|
|
|
|
For many deceivers are entered into the world, who confess not
|
|
that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh. This is a deceiver
|
|
and an anti-christ. Look to yourselves, that we lose not
|
|
those things which we have wrought, but that we receive a full
|
|
reward. Whosoever transgresseth, and abideth not with the
|
|
doctrine of Christ, hath not God. . . If there come any unto
|
|
you, and bring not this doctrine, receive him not into your
|
|
house, neither bid him God speed[ie, give him no greeting]:
|
|
For he that biddeth him God speed is partaker of his evil
|
|
deeds.[2 John 7-11]
|
|
|
|
The implication of this teaching for our times is that
|
|
"secular humanists", educators, mental health practitioners and
|
|
liberal politicians, as well as proponents of other religious beliefs,
|
|
all fall within the definition of "false prophets," preaching false
|
|
gospels. The believer is not to heed any of them. The believer is
|
|
effectively insulated from other doctrines.
|
|
Also, looking for confirmation of biblical beliefs in the
|
|
outside world is effectively discouraged. Although the believer
|
|
constantly prays, he is not to tempt God by praying for a sign. If
|
|
the thing prayed for didn't happen, it just means God said no. When
|
|
bad things happen to good people, and good things to the wicked, it
|
|
just proves how far beyond our sin-cursed, wicked minds God's wisdom,
|
|
justice and foresight are. Thus no pattern of events fail to take on
|
|
an aura of purpose for the believer. No matter what happens, the fact
|
|
that it did, proves it is God's will.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Device 3: Logocide
|
|
|
|
|
|
In the Appendix of 1984, Orwell describes the purpose of
|
|
Newspeak, which was to provide a mode of expression for the mental
|
|
habits proper to the devotees of Ingsoc (English Socialism), *and*
|
|
also to make other modes of thought impossible. This was done by
|
|
overburdening some words, and eliminating others. We can see a
|
|
similar technique in key biblical terms. Dr. Cohen coins the term
|
|
"logocide" for the technique of so overburdening words with ponderous,
|
|
contrived, dissonant meanings that they are effectively put out of
|
|
commission. Key terms (life, death, truth, wisdom, righteousness,
|
|
justice, liberty, bondage, love, hate, will, grace, witness and word)
|
|
are given this treatment in the Bible. In our discussion, biblical
|
|
distortion of these terms will be denoted by a '; that is, "life" will
|
|
refer to the usual connotations of the word, and "life'" will refer to
|
|
the biblical meaning.
|
|
Life and death are two such terms. Superficially, the Bible
|
|
promises eternal life to those who heed its message. Naturally, most
|
|
of us are interested in anything that promises to circumvent death.
|
|
Yet if we look into life and death a little more deeply, a double
|
|
layer of meaning is evident:
|
|
|
|
Then said Jesus unto his disciples, If any man will come after
|
|
me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow
|
|
me. For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and
|
|
whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it.[Matt.
|
|
16:24-25]
|
|
|
|
And these shall go away into everlasting punishment: but the
|
|
righteous into life eternal.[Matt. 25:46]
|
|
|
|
But Jesus said unto him, Follow me; and let the dead bury
|
|
their dead.[Matt. 8:22]
|
|
|
|
God is not the God of the dead, but of the living.[Matt.
|
|
22:32]
|
|
|
|
. . . [T]he dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God: and
|
|
they that hear shall live.[John 5:25]
|
|
|
|
Clearly the Bible promises continuity of existence to all,
|
|
saved and unsaved. But instead of solving a problem, a new one is
|
|
added: now we have to worry about eternal damnation. Death' means
|
|
not the end of biological existence, but lack of salvation. Life'
|
|
means attaining salvation, not continuity of existence, which the
|
|
Bible promises to everybody. The confusion between the two serves the
|
|
Device 1 purpose of recruitment as well. Paul added a key ingredient
|
|
of confusion masquerading as profundity:
|
|
|
|
For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of god is eternal
|
|
life through Jesus Christ. . .[Rom. 6:23]
|
|
|
|
. . . [R]eckon ye also yourselves to be dead unto sin, but
|
|
alive unto God through Jesus Christ. . .[Rom. 6:11]
|
|
|
|
. . .[T]o me to live is Christ, and to die is gain.[Phil.
|
|
1:21]
|
|
|
|
To be alive', then, is simply to be a believer.
|
|
Another important thing to recognize is that truth, wisdom,
|
|
righteousness, and justice, which we all recognize as terms ascribing
|
|
value to their referents, are completely arbitrary in the Bible. The
|
|
commandments depend on the notion that God, as Creator, has the right
|
|
to do as he will with his creations.
|
|
|
|
. . .O man, who art thou that repliest against God? Shall the
|
|
thing formed say to him that formed it, Why has thou made me
|
|
thus? Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same
|
|
lump to make one vessel unto honour[ie, dignity, economic
|
|
value], and another unto dishonour? What if God, willing to
|
|
shew his wrath, and to make his power known, endured with much
|
|
longsuffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction: And
|
|
that he might make known the riches of his glory on the
|
|
vessels of mercy, which he had afore prepared unto glory, Even
|
|
us, whom he hath called. . .?[Rom. 9:20-24]
|
|
|
|
The question of God's righteousness is a thorny issue with
|
|
believers, given the record of the many acts of God that would be
|
|
wicked, had they been committed by anyone other than God. The answer
|
|
to the question "Is God unrighteous?" becomes a deep mystery for the
|
|
believer. Yet there is no mystery here, but simply a sterile
|
|
tautology. God is *defined* as righteous; whatever God does is by
|
|
definition "good", "wise," "just" and "righteous," no matter how
|
|
repugnant those actions are to man. All these words are redefined in
|
|
terms of Him.
|
|
Wisdom' and wise', righteous' and righteousness', simply
|
|
become code words for believers. Truth' refers not to the factual
|
|
content of a statement, but to its accordance with doctrine:
|
|
|
|
Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ?
|
|
He is antichrist, who denieth the Father and the Son. . .But
|
|
the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you,
|
|
and ye need not that any man teach you: but as the same
|
|
anointing teacheth you of all things, and is truth, and is no
|
|
lie, and even as it hath taught you, ye shall abide in him.[1
|
|
John 2:22, 27]
|
|
|
|
One term that in particular suffers from inflation is "grace."
|
|
Since the Reformation, this has been regarded as a Christian mystery.
|
|
But when we look at the ancient-language texts, we find grace' to be
|
|
pretty much an artifact of translation. The words translated as
|
|
"grace" could just as well be translated as "favor" or "preference."
|
|
Only the context determines when "grace" is to be inserted into the
|
|
text. If not for the inflation of grace', the relevant verses would
|
|
more clearly illustrate the arbitrariness of the bestowal of eternal
|
|
life':
|
|
|
|
For by. . . [preference] ye are saved through faith; and that
|
|
not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest
|
|
any man should boast.[Eph. 2:8-9]
|
|
|
|
Now our Lord Jesus Christ himself, and God, even our Father,
|
|
which loved us, and hath given us everlasting consolation and
|
|
good hope through. . .[preference].[2 Thess. 2:16]
|
|
|
|
Thou therefore, my son, be strong in the . . . [favoritism]
|
|
that is in Christ Jesus.[2 Tim. 2:1]
|
|
|
|
The last term I wish to discuss is love'. Again we see
|
|
inflation of this term, when we consider some biblical definitions of
|
|
it:
|
|
|
|
. . .[L]ove is the fulfilling of the law.[Rom. 13:10]
|
|
|
|
And this is love, that we walk after his commandments.[2 John
|
|
6]
|
|
|
|
Could it be that this new kind of love, said to be so much
|
|
superior to our own inclinations, is nothing but a very strict and
|
|
obsessive type of self discipline? It seems so. We can harmonize all
|
|
the Bible has to say about love' by saying that love' is "Holy
|
|
Spirit-aided self-discipline in internalizing Christian doctrine and
|
|
performing the devotional program." Too bad for the new believer;
|
|
he's getting love' when he expected love.
|
|
There are also indications that the believer's love' for God
|
|
consists not of love, but of the outpouring of energy:
|
|
|
|
And Jesus answered him, the first of all commandments is,
|
|
Hear, O Israel; the Lord our God is one Lord: And thou shalt
|
|
love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy
|
|
soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength: this
|
|
is the first commandment.[Mark 12:29-30]
|
|
|
|
In psychodynamic terms, God is a complex, siphoning libido
|
|
from ego-personality, disrupting the balance between progressive and
|
|
regressive flow of libido. This harmonizes with the biblically
|
|
mandated alienation from the world and other people.
|
|
The last topic of discussion pertaining to Device 3 is that of
|
|
contradiction. There are some examples of factual contradictions in
|
|
the Bible, mostly in the Old Testament. Such errors can be
|
|
explained away as scribal errors or testing devices to lead the
|
|
unfaithful astray. Atheists tend to focus on these contradictions;
|
|
and so fall into the trap of considering these contradictions to be
|
|
the ones of consequence. The inconsistencies we should be concerned
|
|
with are all camouflaged. They consist not of contradictions so much
|
|
as dissonance between biblical statements. Camouflaged
|
|
inconsistencies can be best highlighted by a method Dr. Cohen calls
|
|
triadic anti-apologetics--bringing together three passages that
|
|
highlight inconsistency. Through the interaction of these statements,
|
|
inconsistencies calculated to stick in one's unconscious are impressed
|
|
upon the believer. Consider the following:
|
|
|
|
. . .[E]very creature of god is good, and nothing to be
|
|
refused, if it be received with thanksgiving. . .[1 Tim. 4:4]
|
|
|
|
Let love be without dissimulation. Abhor that which is evil;
|
|
cleave to that which is good.[Rom. 12:9]
|
|
|
|
Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world.
|
|
If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in
|
|
him.[1 John 2:15]
|
|
|
|
Also consider how we are exhorted to obey god and secular authorities
|
|
simultaneously:
|
|
|
|
. . .[W]e have had fathers of our flesh which corrected us,
|
|
and we gave them reverence: shall we not rather be in
|
|
subjection unto the Father of spirits, and live? For they
|
|
verily chastened us after their own pleasure; but he for our
|
|
profit, that we might be partakers of his holiness.[Heb.
|
|
12:9-10]
|
|
|
|
No servant can serve two masters: for either he will hate the
|
|
one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and
|
|
despise the other.[Luke 16:13]
|
|
|
|
Slaves, obey your earthly masters in everything. . .[Col.
|
|
3:22]
|
|
|
|
Since "the whole world lieth in wickedness," then submitting
|
|
oneself to unsaved earthly authorities makes one a partaker in that
|
|
wickedness. But that is just what is being commanded. One is
|
|
required to serve two masters, and to serve each totally and
|
|
exclusively--a logical impossibility.
|
|
Consider also an antiapologetic triad on love:
|
|
|
|
As the Father hath loved me, so have I loved you: continue ye
|
|
in my love. If ye keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my
|
|
love; even as I have kept my Father's commandments, and abide
|
|
in his love. . . This is my commandment, That ye love one
|
|
another, as I have loved you.[John 15:9-10,12]
|
|
|
|
He that loveth father or mother more than me is not worthy of
|
|
me: and he that loveth son or daughter more than me is not
|
|
worthy of me.[Matt. 10:37]
|
|
|
|
If any man come to me, and hate not his father, and mother,
|
|
and wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, yea, and
|
|
his own life also, he cannot be my disciple.[Luke 14:26]
|
|
|
|
The ambiguity here serves a purpose; to make affections for
|
|
others equal, (so that they lose their distinctiveness) and
|
|
unimportant compared to the God-complex. Coupled with instructions
|
|
stressing obedience, discipline and prohibition of emotional
|
|
spontaneity, libido is siphoned away from people and concerns of this
|
|
world and cathected towards the God-complex.
|
|
We see here a consistent pattern of words that have
|
|
significant connotations for us being devalued, becoming code words
|
|
for an obsessive program that, if it were expressed in plain terms,
|
|
would lose all power to enthrall. This also reinforces Device 1, as
|
|
the newcomer naturally uses these terms with their ordinary
|
|
connotations. Deeply indoctrinated believers use the biblical
|
|
connotations, though they usually have trouble articulating these new
|
|
connotations. Believers and unbelievers are not just speaking about
|
|
different concepts, but in different languages.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
If we are mentally unbalanced because of spiritual
|
|
despondency--and a lot of mental imbalance comes from
|
|
this--the fear of hell and mental imbalance can be an escape
|
|
mechanism to escape the reality of having to face the judgment
|
|
throne. . . anything of this nature still leaves man a
|
|
sinner. . . --Harold Camping, 1985
|
|
|
|
|
|
Devices 4-7
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now I will outline Devices 4-7 and conclude this discussion of
|
|
the Evangelical Mind Control System.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Device 4: Assaulting Integrity
|
|
|
|
|
|
I know that labelling this device "Assaulting Integrity" will
|
|
strike Christians as an insult. Before I begin, let me offer this
|
|
little caveat from Dr. Cohen's book:
|
|
|
|
There is no group around, whose people as a rule are more
|
|
sincere, well-meaning, generous, natively tolerant if no one
|
|
inveigles them into being otherwise, and free from saying one
|
|
thing while intending another than the conservative
|
|
Evangelicals. It will seem incongruous and even mean to claim
|
|
that impairment of integrity has to do with their believing as
|
|
they do. The reader versed in the mental-health professions
|
|
will note drawing a blank as to technical understanding, there
|
|
having been little written, and no consensus, on what is meant
|
|
by integrity.--Edmund Cohen, The Mind of the Bible Believer,
|
|
p. 234.
|
|
|
|
Thus our first step is to make up for this deficiency on the
|
|
part of mental-health officials and define "integrity."
|
|
|
|
. . . with the complex model and varieties of psychopathology
|
|
in mind, we perceive that all psychological conditions other
|
|
than integration and relative cooperation of the
|
|
ego-personality with the other complexes involve impairment of
|
|
integrity. An ego-personality with control over its own
|
|
boundaries, communicating with and continually integrating
|
|
what lies in those reaches of the psyche beyond those
|
|
boundaries, has a measure of integrity that the "psychotic" or
|
|
the "neurotic" lacks. One who can use his capabilities to
|
|
come to continually better terms with the circumstances of his
|
|
existence we would say has integrity.--Cohen, p. 234.
|
|
|
|
The main idea is that the believer uses the knowledge process to
|
|
maintain self-deceptions rather than to make the conscious attitude as
|
|
well informed as possible. It becomes like a journalist who makes
|
|
selective use of information to make propaganda seem credible instead
|
|
of communicating information fairly. An example of this assault can
|
|
be seen in the case of the hysterically blind soldier patient that Dr.
|
|
Cohen discusses. This soldier had seen a friend die in combat, and
|
|
naturally began to wonder if he had done all he could to save his
|
|
friend. Eventually an hysterical symptom manifested
|
|
itself--blindness. In a demonstration Dr. Cohen once witnessed, such
|
|
a patient was led into a room, and in his path was a stool. The
|
|
patient was led so that he could not avoid stumbling over the stool,
|
|
if he were truly blind; yet the patient avoided the stool. On one
|
|
level, the patient knew he wasn't blind, but to maintain his illusions
|
|
he repressed that information.
|
|
Now the knowledge process keeps on trying to work properly;
|
|
assaulting integrity requires energy. The inducement to expending
|
|
this energy is avoiding the pain that goes with bad conscience, as we
|
|
can see in the example of the hysterically blind soldier. How does
|
|
the Bible induce one to expend that energy? Basically, the believer
|
|
is subtly encouraged to repress any tendency he might have to think
|
|
critically about his beliefs.
|
|
|
|
The point of the stratagem of assaulting integrity is inducing
|
|
the believer, for the sake of obedience, to affirm teachings
|
|
that are inherently incredible, not germane to, and in discord
|
|
with, the rest of the Bible. He violates his conscience, his
|
|
common sense, his good inclination to tell the truth as it
|
|
occurs to him, to call things as he sees them.--Cohen, p. 241.
|
|
|
|
An extreme example comes from Luke:
|
|
|
|
And he [Jesus] spake a parable to them to this end, that men
|
|
ought always to pray, and not to faint [shirk]; Saying, There
|
|
was in a city a judge, which feared not god, neither regarded
|
|
man: And there was a widow in that city; and she came unto
|
|
him, saying, Avenge me of mine adversary. And he would not
|
|
for a while: but afterward he said within himself, Though I
|
|
fear not God, nor regard man; Yet because this widow troubleth
|
|
me, I will avenge her, lest by her continual coming she weary
|
|
me. And the Lord said, Hear what the unjust judge saith. And
|
|
shall God not avenge his own elect, which cry day and night
|
|
unto him, though he bear long with them? I tell you he will
|
|
avenge them speedily. Nevertheless when the Son of man
|
|
cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?[Luke 18:1-8]
|
|
|
|
Here God is likened to a wicked judge, lazy and infirm, tiring
|
|
easily. The notions of God's perfection and faithfulness, and the
|
|
selflessness the believer strives for, are turned topsy-turvy in this
|
|
passage. By passively accepting passages such as this, by being
|
|
encouraged to see them as enhancing those notions of God's perfection
|
|
and faithfulness, though they seem in discord with those notions, the
|
|
believer subtly attacks his own integrity.
|
|
There is an amplification of this "vicious cycle" of
|
|
continually repressing the bad conscience caused by assaulting
|
|
integrity, by loading some biblical content with lurid, scandalous
|
|
implications. The biblical content implicates both relatively neutral
|
|
things, made taboo only by biblical doctrine, and aspects of the
|
|
personality that would be taboo in any civilized society. Thus a very
|
|
powerful dissociation is triggered.
|
|
We can see here the sadistic and masochistic activities the
|
|
believer is supposed to partcipate in. We are so hardened to these
|
|
topics that we must pause and reflect to see them clearly. How many
|
|
stop to really think about the fact that Christianity takes as its
|
|
main symbol a Roman instrument of terror? There are many aspects of
|
|
Christianity that we would deem nauseating, if it were part of a
|
|
tradition outside our culture. One example is the communion ritual,
|
|
in which believers are urged to eat Christ's flesh and drink his
|
|
blood. This goes way back to ancient beliefs in the ingestion of
|
|
totem animals or enemies. The biblical image of ". . .having their
|
|
conscience seared with a hot iron[1 Tim. 4:2]" is ironically an apt
|
|
metaphor for the state of mind a believer must be in, desensitizied to
|
|
the unappetizing notion of eating flesh and drinking blood.
|
|
Christians of course characterize this as a deep, spiritual mystery,
|
|
but this doesn't change the character of the communion ritual.
|
|
Another example is the idea of substitutionary atonement, the
|
|
remedy for the sin affliction. The premise of the idea is that man is
|
|
so wicked and depraved that there is nothing he can do to please God.
|
|
For some reason, God requires propitation for sin, which man comes
|
|
into the world totally saturated with, yet somehow becomes
|
|
supersaturated by the inevitable bad deeds. So Christ had to be
|
|
sacrificed in man's stead. The enormity of Christ's sufferings are
|
|
supposed to guilt-trip the believer into obedience. But how enormous
|
|
were those sufferings? The Father sacificed his "only begotten son,"
|
|
but unlike mortal fathers he had his son back safe and sound in three
|
|
days. Christ's sufferings began with his anxiety attack in the Garden
|
|
of Gethsemane and ends with his death on the cross. (The Bible hedges
|
|
on the question of whether Jesus was even *conscious* before
|
|
resurrection.) Viewed objectively, the suffering seems about on par
|
|
with what after all must have been the fate of many a Jewish partriot
|
|
of the time; certainly one begins to question if it really equalled
|
|
all the sins of humanity!
|
|
We should also note here another method of assaulting
|
|
integrity, which is the call to evangelize others. Many of the most
|
|
intelligent men in Christianity's history spoke of how terrifying God
|
|
can be for those who know the Bible too well. Luther for example
|
|
described his state of mind before hitting on the notion of "grace":
|
|
|
|
Is it not against all natural reason that God out of his mere
|
|
whim deserts men, hardens them, damns them, as if he delighted
|
|
in sins and in such torments of the wretched for eternity, he
|
|
who is said to be of such mercy and goodness? This appears
|
|
iniquitous, cruel, and intolerable in God, by which very
|
|
many have been offended in all ages. And who would not be?
|
|
I was myself more than once driven to the very abyss of
|
|
despair so that I wished I had never been created. Love
|
|
God? I hated him![1]
|
|
|
|
Frequently these men had mentors who recommended that they go out and
|
|
preach as a means of getting themselves to believe. Luther's mentor,
|
|
Dr. Staupitz, arranged for Luther to preach, and to succeed to his
|
|
university chair of Bible[2]. Wesley also encountered such advice, as
|
|
his Journal entry of March 5, 1738 illustrates:
|
|
|
|
Immediately it struck into my mind, "Leave off preaching.
|
|
How can you preach to others, who have not faith yourself?"
|
|
I asked Bohler whether he thought I should leave it off or
|
|
not. He answered, "By no means." I asked, "But what can I
|
|
preach?" He said, "Preach faith till you have it; and then,
|
|
because you have it, you will preach faith!"
|
|
|
|
Such a self-deception would be obviously seen as illegitimate in any
|
|
other setting; yet these men freely accepted it.
|
|
The basic idea behind this device is that the Bible's
|
|
unbelievable premises, which the believer strives to believe anyway,
|
|
are always accompanied by latent taboo content. These premises remain
|
|
in the believer's blind spot, so that focussed thought about them
|
|
becomes less likely. We can close this section with a quote from Dr.
|
|
Cohen:
|
|
|
|
When Christianity comes on with the figure of the man in
|
|
whose words the echoes of the best human achievements of
|
|
the far distant future must have resounded, being tortured,
|
|
mutilated, killed early in what should have been the prime
|
|
of his life, for its central emblem, it is telling us
|
|
plainly what it proposes to do to the corresponding tendencies
|
|
in ourselves, and we are too desensitized to turn away in
|
|
nauseated disbelief! That emblem is, itself, an "integrity
|
|
assaulting" piece of business, seen in that light.--Cohen, p.
|
|
258.
|
|
|
|
Now we come to the core of Dr. Cohen's work. What does it
|
|
take to make a person believe that he believes? What does it take to
|
|
turn a Luther from hating God to loving him? The answer to these
|
|
questions is covered in our discussion of Device 5.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Device 5: Dissociation Induction
|
|
|
|
|
|
This Device is the core of Dr. Cohen's work. Here we at last
|
|
get into an intensive application of depth-psychology insights to
|
|
explain the Bible's power over people. The previous devices set the
|
|
stage for the this one; the last two devices stablize its effects.
|
|
In conventional Christianity the notions of "sin" and "faith"
|
|
are essential. In Dr. Cohen's work they are also essential notions,
|
|
since dissociation lies at the root of the matter.
|
|
What is "sin?" In the Bible, we actually see two senses of
|
|
the word. In the Old Testament, the majority of mentionings of sins
|
|
refer to epsisodes of disobedience to scriptural rules. But there is
|
|
also a notion of sin portrayed in Genesis 2 and 3, and in the writings
|
|
of Paul, that have nothing to do with individual behavior--in other
|
|
words, original sin. Individual sins only add to a sinful condition
|
|
that was already total from birth.
|
|
To Christians, what was wrong with Adam and Eve's behavior was
|
|
simply disobedience. It makes no difference that they violated
|
|
neither the Ten Commandments nor the Golden Rule--the law had not been
|
|
laid down at the time. Although some might infer that sexuality is
|
|
part of God's curse, there is no indication that sex was unknown
|
|
before the Fall, or a result of the newly acquired knowledge. The
|
|
implication one gets is that the desire for knowledge, for
|
|
self-awareness, is the essence of the transgression against God. A
|
|
few more indications of this are present in the first eleven chapters
|
|
of Genesis. One example is the story of the Tower of Babel.
|
|
Apparently the advance of human science and technology, and the drive
|
|
for mankind to cooperate as a single global community, usurps God's
|
|
prerogatives.
|
|
One can interpret the first eleven chapters in terms of the
|
|
Jungian ideas of psychodynamics. First there is the division of
|
|
primordial chaos into upper and lower parts, followed by the
|
|
appearance of dry land. Then an innocent and naive male is created,
|
|
and out of him an anima figure, Eve. Next a shadow figure, Cain,
|
|
appears, cursed by God but essential as the ancestor of Enoch and
|
|
Noah. Consciousness gets restricted to Noah's ark, with the rest of
|
|
the human and animal imagoes swept into unconsciousness. After the
|
|
Flood, the unity and concentration of human energies symbolized by
|
|
Noah's descendants is fragmented into many language groups, i. e.
|
|
complexes.
|
|
What is sin then? Clearly gaining self-consciousness,
|
|
psychological integration, is the essence of sin. One is to believe
|
|
that there is nothing in the unconscious is worth redeeming, that it
|
|
is all, in Jungian terms, shadow, and that all one can do is to keep
|
|
the shadow in check. Having one's energies unified and focussed for
|
|
an individualistic goal is essentially what the Bible abhors. This is
|
|
what lies behind the idea that original sin makes one totally sinful,
|
|
that sinful acts are just the outwards signs of this inner condition.
|
|
Immorality or unethical behavior or thought is not even of the essence
|
|
of sin.
|
|
We can see further hints as to the nature of sin by examining
|
|
the proposed remedy, faith. The Bible gives the definition of faith
|
|
in the following verse:
|
|
|
|
Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence
|
|
of things not seen. For by it the elders obtained a good
|
|
report. Through faith we understand that the worlds were
|
|
framed by the word of God, so that things which are seen were
|
|
not made of things which do appear.[Heb. 11:1-3]
|
|
|
|
Faith is belief in that for which there is no direct evidence, only
|
|
hearsay evidence--i. e., the Bible. The nature of faith is ultimately
|
|
subjective. References to faith as a mystery[1 Tim. 3:9] and as a
|
|
supernatural gift[1 Cor. 12:9 and Eph. 2:8] rule out the notion that
|
|
it is somehow an extension of human intuition.
|
|
In many places we find the Bible exhorting the believer to do
|
|
something, or to adopt a certain mental attitude. If faith is a gift
|
|
bestowed by God, why exhort the believer to do something? The things
|
|
the believer is exhorted to do are arranged so that the connections
|
|
between them and the subjective experiences the believer goes through
|
|
are cleverly obscured. All these exhortations basically boil down to
|
|
fostering dissociation. We can divide them into four categories: 1)
|
|
Explicit Devotional Program Instructions--concrete acts that the
|
|
believer is commanded to do. 2) Implicit Devotional Program
|
|
Instructions--exhortations to do an act not meant to be done
|
|
literally. 3) Direct Suggestions--allegory that serves to illustrate
|
|
the mental state wanted of the believer. 4) Reverse
|
|
Suggestions--some allegory, particularly those involving animals,
|
|
demons and disasters, serve to illustrate the negative psychological
|
|
effects of being a believer, subtly providing the believer with
|
|
feedback.
|
|
The most explicit instructions deal with prayer. The Bible is
|
|
very specific about the sort of prayer it requires. Prewritten or
|
|
rote prayers, and liturgy in foreign languages, are not really what
|
|
the Bible authors had in mind. Instead, intelligible content,
|
|
engaging the believer's conscious mind, is the key. (The Lord's
|
|
Prayer [Matt. 6:9-15, Luke 11:2-4] is presented as an example, not as a
|
|
rote formula.) By continually telling God what he thinks God wants to
|
|
hear, the believer internalizes biblical doctrine and forces the
|
|
conscious mind to conform to it. Prayer boils down to
|
|
self-brainwashing. As a result, the God-complex, if nourished with
|
|
enough psychic energy, causes the believer to experience the illusion
|
|
that another presence possessing personality is there. Hence the
|
|
declaration that believers experience a "personal" relationship with
|
|
God. Constant prayer is necessary to keep the God-complex energized,
|
|
hence the need for church twice on Sunday, constant prayer and
|
|
devotion, and maybe having a religious radio station playing in the
|
|
background, to keep the God-complex pumped up.
|
|
Also the various instructions to "put on" certain qualities,
|
|
and to "put off" others, constitute Explicit Devotional Program
|
|
Instructions.
|
|
Earlier we examined the biblical definition of "love," and
|
|
found it be little more than following the rules laid down in the New
|
|
Testament. If we look at statements involving faith and love, we see
|
|
further clues to the nature of faith:
|
|
|
|
. . .[F]aith . . .worketh[energeo, has effect] by love.[Gal.
|
|
5:6]
|
|
|
|
. . .[Y]our work[ergon, expenditure of energy] of faith, and
|
|
labour[kopos, toil] of love, and patience of hope in our Lord
|
|
Jesus Christ, in the sight of God. . .[1 Thess. 1:3]
|
|
|
|
. . .[W]e pray always for you, that our God would count you
|
|
worthy of this calling, and fulfil all the good pleasure of
|
|
his goodness, and the work[ergon] of faith with
|
|
power[dunamis]: That the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be
|
|
glorified in you, and ye in him, according to the grace of our
|
|
God and the Lord Jesus Christ.[2 Thess. 1:11-12]
|
|
|
|
While these passages do not explicitly define faith, we are notified
|
|
that it requires effort and labor, that it is difficult. The Greek
|
|
words highlighted, besides being the roots for words like energy, erg
|
|
and dynamic, hint at a notion psychic energy in accord with that we
|
|
have developed. Faith consists of a constant outpouring of energy;
|
|
obsessive conscious concentration is lauded, and mental relaxation,
|
|
shunned. Let down your guard, and that could be the moment Christ
|
|
returns "like a thief in the night," and sends you to Hell. This
|
|
tense, on-guard sense of faith is further elaborated by Paul:
|
|
|
|
Finally, my brethren, be strong in the Lord, and in the power
|
|
of his might. Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may
|
|
be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. . .Stand
|
|
therefore, having your loins girt about with truth, and
|
|
having on the breastplate of righteousness; And your feet
|
|
shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace; Above all,
|
|
taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to
|
|
quench all the fiery darts of the wicked. And take the helmet
|
|
of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word
|
|
of God. . .[Eph. 6:10-17]
|
|
|
|
The Bible's cynicism about human nature, supposing he can rise no
|
|
higher than passive follower, is expressed here. The believer is to
|
|
be in uniform and cumbersome military attire, submerging his
|
|
individuality, restricting freedom of movement, and insulating him
|
|
from all but a few kinds of approved stimulation. The objective of
|
|
the campaign is to use "the sword of the Spirit," the word of God, to
|
|
pierce others, and to use the shield of faith to avoid being pierced
|
|
by any other insight. Faith is a barrier against unapproved psychic
|
|
content.
|
|
One Bible incident brings these themes together, which also
|
|
comes closest to defining the true nature of faith:
|
|
|
|
And straightaway Jesus constrained his disciples to get into a
|
|
ship, and to go before him unto the other side, while he sent
|
|
the multitudes away. And. . .he went up into a mountain apart
|
|
to pray: and when the evening was come, he was there alone.
|
|
But the ship was now in the midst of the sea, tossed with
|
|
waves: for the wind was contrary. And in the fourth watch of
|
|
the night Jesus went unto them, walking on the sea, they were
|
|
troubled, saying, It is a spirit; and they cried out in fear.
|
|
But straightaway Jesus spake unto them, saying, Be of good
|
|
cheer; it is I; be not afraid. And Peter answered him and
|
|
said, Lord, if it be thou, bid me come unto thee on the water.
|
|
And he said, Come. And when Peter was come down out of the
|
|
ship, he walked on the water, to go to Jesus. But when he saw
|
|
the wind boisterous, he was afraid; and beginning to sink, he
|
|
cried, saying, Lord, save me. And immediately Jesus stretched
|
|
forth his hand, and caught him, and said unto him, O thou of
|
|
little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? And when they were
|
|
come into the ship, the wind ceased. Then they that were in
|
|
the ship came and worshipped him, saying, Of a truth thou art
|
|
the son of God.[Matt. 14:22-33]
|
|
|
|
This story contains the central psychological paradigm of the Bible.
|
|
In the Bible as well as in our psychology, water represents the
|
|
unconscious, a mountain or high place a particularly lucid state of
|
|
consciousness, and stormy weather to passion and emotion. In other
|
|
verses the believer learns that by faith he can make mountains go into
|
|
the sea, i. e., he can rearrange psychic contents so unbiblical
|
|
thoughts or attitudes are submerged into the unconscious. Here he
|
|
learns that by faith he can strengthen the barrier between conscious
|
|
and unconscious. But if his concentration is diverted, as Peter's was
|
|
when he failed to tune out natural stimuli (i. e., his own emotions),
|
|
then the barrier reverts to its usual permeability. Failing to be
|
|
obsessed with Jesus results in a rapid deterioration of faith, and
|
|
then one has to confront one's unconscious, mischaracterized as a
|
|
stormy sea in which to drown. But it only seems that way when one
|
|
bottles it up, forcing it to express itself too turbulently.
|
|
On another occasion Jesus and his disciples cross the sea. In
|
|
the stern, Jesus lies asleep, and an afternoon storm arises. The
|
|
disciples, becoming afraid, awaken Jesus, who orders the sea to calm
|
|
and chides them for their lack of faith. (One wonders at the
|
|
disciples apparent lack of faith, when they could see and hear Jesus,
|
|
and, being relatively provincial and uneducated, would have no trouble
|
|
believing in the supernatural premise of Jesus' ministry.) Again the
|
|
fluid boundary is smoothed over, and troublesome emotions gotten out
|
|
of the way by faith, which seems to be enhanced if Jesus is in the
|
|
forefront of attention.
|
|
There are other references to water and to boats that pertain
|
|
to fishing and the casting of nets. Jesus' disciples were "fishers of
|
|
men." Paul describes loss of faith as "shipwreck." Mark and John
|
|
also tell us what the disciples were doing in the boat before Jesus
|
|
arrived, that is, rowing against the wind in a troubled sea. Here we
|
|
see another image of the work that faith really entails.
|
|
An image of heaven, according to our analysis, might that of a
|
|
solidified membrane, so that proscribed mental contents are kept down
|
|
without constant effort. Such an image is contained in the following
|
|
passage:
|
|
|
|
And I saw another sign in heaven, great and marvelous, seven
|
|
angles who had seven plagues, which are the last, because in
|
|
them the wrath of God is finished. And I saw, as it were, a
|
|
sea of glass mixed with fire, and those who had come off
|
|
victorious from the beast and from his image and from the
|
|
number of his name, standing on the sea of glass, holding
|
|
harps of God. And they sang the song of Moses the bond-
|
|
servant of god and the song of the Lamb. . .[Rev. 15:1-3]
|
|
|
|
The sense of a peaceful, restful state, yet one that takes constant
|
|
effort, is expressed in the mixture of solid, inert glass and gaseuos,
|
|
active fire.
|
|
The theme of personality fragmentation is also symbolized by
|
|
images of bodily fragmentation and division. Hence references to
|
|
those who eunuchs "for the kingdom of heaven's sake"[Matt. 19:12],
|
|
figures of plucking out an eye, a hand or a foot, rather than entering
|
|
hellfire whole, and division between left and right, "let not thy left
|
|
hand know what thy right hand doeth,"[Matt. 6:3. Also passages
|
|
refering to this left/right theme include Matt. 25:31-37, 40-41, 46,
|
|
Matt. 27:38, Rev. 10:1-2, Matt. 20:20-23].
|
|
The true biblical program is one that promotes this state of
|
|
inner dividedness. Paul gives us an outstanding example in the
|
|
following passage:
|
|
|
|
. . .[W]e know that the law is spiritual: but I am carnal,
|
|
sold under sin. For that which I do I allow not[i. e., don't
|
|
understand]: for what I would, I do not; but what I hate,
|
|
that do I. If then I do that which I would not, I consent
|
|
unto the law that it is good. Now then it is no more I that
|
|
do it, but sin that dwelleth in me. For I know that in me
|
|
(that is, in my flesh), dwelleth no good thing: for to will
|
|
is present with me; but how to perform that which is good I
|
|
find not. For the good that I would I do not: but the evil
|
|
which I would not, that I do. Now if I do that I would not,
|
|
it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me. I
|
|
find then a law that, when I would do good, evil is present
|
|
with me. For I delight in the law of God after the inward
|
|
man: But I see another law in my members, warring against
|
|
the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law
|
|
of sin which is in my members. O wretched man that I am!
|
|
who shall deliver me from the body of this death? I thank
|
|
God through Jesus Christ our Lord. So then with the mind
|
|
I myself serve the law of God; but with the flesh the law
|
|
of sin.[Rom. 7:14-25]
|
|
|
|
Apparently the peace that passeth understanding doesn't come until the
|
|
next life; hence Paul's explanation of the old nature remaining as an
|
|
outer shell. Alienation from the world, others outside church, and
|
|
oneself are in view here. Putting noncomplying mental content into
|
|
the unconscious does not get rid of it. We can see this in two other
|
|
biblical themes: that of evil spirits and the Trinity.
|
|
If we make the connection between complexes and spirits, then
|
|
the Bible shows if people do not integrate the unconscious to the
|
|
conscious attitude, then they are doomed to live out the implications
|
|
blindly, perhaps as weird neurotic symptoms. This is expressed in
|
|
this reverse-suggestive passage:
|
|
|
|
When the unclean spirit is gone out of a man, he walketh
|
|
through dry places, seeking rest, and findeth none. Then
|
|
he saith, I will return into my house from whence I came out;
|
|
and when he is come, he findeth it empty, swept, and
|
|
garnished. Then goeth he, and taketh with himself seven
|
|
other spirits more wicked than himself, and they enter and
|
|
dwell there: and the last state of that man is worse than
|
|
the first. Even so shall it be also unto this wicked
|
|
generation.[Matt. 12:43-45]
|
|
|
|
Unclean spirits represent the unconscious from the conscious
|
|
standpoint. The attribute most clearly identifying them as so is
|
|
their knowledge; they know much more about Jesus than human
|
|
onlookers[Matt. 8:28-32, Mark 1:23-28; 3:11 and Luke 4:33-35]. They
|
|
are characterized as legion[Mark 5:9, Luke 8:30] and yet speak with
|
|
one voice, exhibiting unity of mind. They do not cease to exist when
|
|
cast out, but must go somewhere else, such as swine--symbolizing a
|
|
lower, more primitive level of the psyche[Matt. 8:28-32]. Negative
|
|
images of the unconscious are once again conveyed.
|
|
The personality fragmentation expected of the believer is also
|
|
conveyed in passages about the multiple personality of God:
|
|
|
|
And he said, Abba, Father, all things are possible unto
|
|
thee; take away this cup from me: nevertheless not
|
|
what I will, but what thou wilt.[Mark 14:36]
|
|
|
|
Jesus saith. . . I am the way, the truth and the life: no
|
|
man cometh unto the Father but by me. . . Believest thou
|
|
not that I am in the Father, and the Father in me? The
|
|
words that I speak unto you I speak not of myself[i. e.,
|
|
on my own initiative]: but the Father that dwelleth in me,
|
|
he doeth the works.[John 14:6-7, 10]
|
|
|
|
I and my Father are one.[John 10:30]
|
|
|
|
But of that day and that hour knoweth no man, no, not the
|
|
angels. . . neither the Son, but the Father.[Mark 13:32]
|
|
|
|
The servant is not greater than his lord; neither he that is
|
|
sent greater than he that sent him.[John 13:16]
|
|
|
|
. . .[W]hen he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide
|
|
you into all truth: for he shall not speak of himself[i. e.,
|
|
on his own initiative]; but whatsoever he shall hear, that
|
|
shall he speak. . .He shall glorify me: for he shall receive
|
|
of mine, and shall shew it unto you.[John 16:13-15]
|
|
|
|
According to Scrpiture, Jesus determined who would receive saving
|
|
knowledge of God, and the Father determined who would sit on Jesus'
|
|
left and right hand. Jesus and the Holy Spirit only serve as parrots
|
|
in declaring God's Word. Yet they *are* God's Word and were with him
|
|
from the beginning. Jesus apparently does not know the hour of his
|
|
own second coming. All three persons of the Godhead are endowed with
|
|
God's power, yet the Father is apparently more omnipotent. This
|
|
picture of God resembles nothing so much as a case of multiple
|
|
personality disorder.
|
|
Another source of dissonance concerns God's moral nature.
|
|
Although the "lovingkindness" of God is often touted, the Bible
|
|
contains many examples of God's apparent wickedness. In the book of
|
|
Job for instance, God lets Satan torture Job, a righteous man,
|
|
apparently so that he can win a bet with Satan. Job is unequivocal
|
|
about making God responsible for evil, whether he does evil actively
|
|
or by allowing evil angels to persecute his chosen. One also gets a
|
|
sense of such hand-in-glove cooperation between God, Satan and other
|
|
evil angels in other passages[2 Chron. 18:17-21, 1 Kings 22:20-23].
|
|
God sends lying spirits to those he chooses to harden, ". . .God shall
|
|
send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie."[2 Thess.
|
|
2:11] Yet despite these many references to God's evil, despite
|
|
references to God blinding people *spiritually* as well as causing
|
|
physical suffering, believers overwhelmingly continue to perceive God
|
|
as good, loving and just. Why? Because the believer is conditioned
|
|
to project all his more positive qualities onto the God-complex.
|
|
Psychologically the images of the good cop/bad cop God, and
|
|
the trinitarian, three-faces-of-God God cancel each other out. The
|
|
pull of one image keeps the other from coming into focus, leaving one
|
|
with the task of identifying with an indescribable blob. That
|
|
God-image is the ideal stumbling block for the "related" flow of
|
|
psychic energy. Other descriptions of God can be understood as
|
|
metaphors for mental activity:
|
|
|
|
God is a Spirit: and they that worship him must worship
|
|
him in spirit and in truth.[John 4:24]
|
|
|
|
. . .God is light, and in him no darkness at all.[1 John 1:5]
|
|
|
|
God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God,
|
|
and God in him.[1 John 4:16]
|
|
|
|
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God,
|
|
and the Word was God.[John 1:1]
|
|
|
|
. . .[R]eceiving a kingdom which cannot be moved, let us have
|
|
grace, whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and
|
|
godly fear: For our God is a consuming fire.[Heb. 12:28-29]
|
|
|
|
God turns out to be nothing but a psychological complex. The goal is
|
|
to give the God-complex so much psychic energy that other complexes
|
|
are drowned out. The believer thinks he is free of them, but actually
|
|
he has covered them up with the shared psychopathology, as Freud
|
|
indicated. Thus the Christian claim to a transformed outlook is true,
|
|
in a rather ironic sense!
|
|
Dissociation Induction consists of stratagems to get a person
|
|
to inwardly divide his awareness, to project his better qualities onto
|
|
a God-complex and to occupy his mind with biblically prescribed
|
|
artificialities. There are secondary gains as a result of this
|
|
strategy, such as relief from whatever neurotic symptoms may be
|
|
present (at least, in the short run), but so much energy goes into
|
|
stifling one's authentic humanness, that it is no exagerration to say
|
|
that this is a case where the cure is worse than the disease!
|
|
|
|
|
|
Device 6: Bridge Burning
|
|
|
|
|
|
In several ways the New Testament seeks to make the gap
|
|
between believers and outsiders so wide the believers do not get out,
|
|
though outsiders should get in. Passages against family and
|
|
association with unbelievers, and passages suggesting that believers
|
|
are to be blind, deaf and dead to worldly things, all work together to
|
|
keep believers from even considering outside influences, even when
|
|
exposed to them constantly. To accomplish this, something a lot more
|
|
powerful than that which attracts a few a susceptible people to
|
|
sequestered cults is needed. The dissociated state of mind is that
|
|
powerful.
|
|
Here is a passage illustrating that gap between believers and
|
|
unbelievers:
|
|
|
|
Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for
|
|
what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness?
|
|
and what communion hath light with darkness? And what
|
|
concord hath Christ with Belial? or what part hath he that
|
|
believeth with an infidel? And what agreement hath the temple
|
|
of God with idols?. . . Wherefore come out from among them,
|
|
and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean
|
|
thing; and I will receive you, And will be a Father unto you,
|
|
and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord
|
|
Almighty.[2 Cor. 6:14-18]
|
|
|
|
Muted disgust is to be the the reaction to the world outside the
|
|
flock. Also, the life of the believer is described in terms of
|
|
hating those members of his earthly family who do not come along, of
|
|
leaving them and all one's possessions behind to be a follower. One
|
|
is to burn all bridges behind one, to make it as hard as possible to
|
|
return. Besides the flock, one is to have on other place to go.
|
|
If the believer were to notice how convenient for controlling
|
|
him it is for him to perceive outside ideas as emanating from Satan,
|
|
he would first have to give himself permission to think such a
|
|
firbidden thought. But he needs to entertain such thoughts first,
|
|
before he could give himself that permission. The well-indoctrinated
|
|
believer can't quite get himself to do either. To see his position in
|
|
perspective, he needs to clear away all the biblical irrelevancies he
|
|
is presently occupied with; but to identify the irrelevancies, he
|
|
would already have to have that perspective. This paradox produces
|
|
intellectual deadlock in the believer. The believer fixates on this
|
|
paradox, and thus adds one more irrelevancy to the many already
|
|
occupying his conscious thought. An impasse in rational thought is
|
|
created.
|
|
Thus Bridge Burning strengthens Dissociation Induction by
|
|
splitting the believer's psychological reality into the realms of
|
|
believers and unbelievers, and widening the gap so much that it remains
|
|
uncrossable. This can be done by poisoning his mind against
|
|
unbelievers, or placing logical conundrums in his path out of the
|
|
Bible's semantic labyrinth, or bluffing him with the prospect of how
|
|
harmful anything that would dispel this biblical intrusion from his psyche
|
|
would be. Bridge Burning can't create the gap, but it can keep it
|
|
open and widen it, lending stability to the mind control already in
|
|
place.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Device 7: Holy Terror
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basically, frightening people into compliance with biblical
|
|
doctrine is what it is all about. Every other issue we have examined
|
|
is transformed into something radically different from the
|
|
superficial, Device 1 form. The initial promise to transform mundane
|
|
life is modified later on by the knowledge that in this life, we will
|
|
experience persecution. Evangelicals disparage the "relativism" they
|
|
see in non-biblical beliefs; but we have seen that the notion of the
|
|
punishment fitting the crime is "spiritually naive." All that
|
|
biblical "justice" comes down to is dwelling on offenses that pertain
|
|
to keeping indoctrination in place, ratifying any existing secular
|
|
state decrees, and maybe incorporating any prohibitions against theft,
|
|
murder, etc. that all human groups invent anyway; it's only thanks to
|
|
the rhetorical style that there seems to be anything more to it. What
|
|
of the "love" a believer is to receive? We have seen that "love"
|
|
boils down to an obsessive self-discipline in accord with the
|
|
devotional program. The "hope" a believer receives is that there is
|
|
some small chance that he won't spend eternity getting worked over in
|
|
God's torture chamber. And as for the Bible being "pro-family"--the
|
|
best it does is to provide some pro-family verses to cancel out the
|
|
anti-family verses. Only the fear appeal remains the same as the
|
|
indoctrination deepens. (Of course, pastors have developed the habit
|
|
of saying that "fear" really means awe or reverence, just as "hate"
|
|
really means psychological distance. Unfortunately, there's not much
|
|
in the way of contextual, thematic or etymological justification for
|
|
such an approach. This is a variation on the theme we have developed
|
|
of selective dissociation, of isolating emotion from the idea that
|
|
elicits it.)
|
|
The Bible threatens non-elect with the worst fate
|
|
imaginable--namely, eternal punishment coupled with the catastrophe at
|
|
the end of the world, i. e. the destruction of everything the
|
|
non-elect loved in this life. The punishment is described in terms of
|
|
corporeal punishment, so that even densest of the rank and file will
|
|
get the point. Thus the references to burns inflicted eternally[Matt.
|
|
25:41, 46; Luke 3:9, 17; 16:24; John 15:6; Heb. 10:27; Jude 7; Rev.
|
|
14:10; 19:20; 20:10 and 21:8], being deprived of rest, and being
|
|
whipped [Luke 12:47-48]. Whatever happens takes place in darkness,
|
|
elicits weeping and gnashing of teeth, and will be worse than what
|
|
happened to Sodom and Gomorrah.
|
|
How does this fear appeal help foster dissociation? The Bible
|
|
authors state that though heaven and earth pass away, it is with their
|
|
earthly bodies and present psychological makeup that the unsaved are
|
|
resurrected. Not only does the punishment consist of pain being
|
|
inflicted upon one's now indestructible body, but also the denial of
|
|
all creature comfort to creatures that still desire it. The saved on
|
|
the other hand, get "incorruptible" bodies. The Bible doesn't say a
|
|
lot about the way the saved will live in the new heavens and new
|
|
earth, but apparently the "joy" of their existence will be release
|
|
from creature wants and bonds of affection that only seemed important.
|
|
The saved will be like the angels--no gender, no intimate bodily
|
|
functions, no ordinary human feelings or compassion. The image one
|
|
receives is that heaven is mainly the received ability to sit through
|
|
an eternal church service without getting bored or without getting an
|
|
aching posterior.
|
|
|
|
And before the throne there was a sea of glass like unto
|
|
crystal: and in the midst of the throne, and round about the
|
|
throne, were four beasts full of eyes before and behind.
|
|
And the first beast was like a lion, and the second beast
|
|
like a calf, and the third beast had a face as a man, and
|
|
the fourth beast was like a flying eagle. And the four
|
|
beasts had each of them six wings about him; and they were
|
|
full of eyes within: and they rest not day and night, saying,
|
|
Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and
|
|
is to come. . . The four and twenty elders fall down before
|
|
him that sat on the throne, and worship him that liveth for
|
|
ever and ever, and cast their crowns before the throne,
|
|
saying, Thou art worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honour
|
|
and power: for thou hast created all things, and for thy
|
|
pleasure they are and were created.[Rev. 4:6-8, 10-11]
|
|
|
|
(Here we can see the four beasts representing the despised
|
|
unconscious, three parts animal and one human, and fragmentation
|
|
indicated by the multiplicity of eyes, representing complexes. The
|
|
beasts both regard the throne and are superimposed on God the Father,
|
|
who occupies the throne even while the beasts are in the "midst of the
|
|
throne." Also God here is protrayed as receiving power from the
|
|
twenty-four elders worshipping him, which is consistent with the
|
|
notion of a God-complex being constantly energized by believers. Once
|
|
again, the conclusion is that God consists of pieces of oneself,
|
|
projected and energized with one's own energy.)
|
|
This contrast between saved and unsaved modes of existence in
|
|
the afterlife--which really represents the state of the psyche--is
|
|
just another way of pitting conscious against unconscious, where
|
|
unconscious is once again negatively portrayed in terms of the shadow.
|
|
Christianity comes down to a destructive, wasteful effort towards the
|
|
goal of keeping the conscious and unconscious estranged; fear of hell
|
|
is a metaphor for the fear of the consequences of letting the two
|
|
mental realms communicate. If the dissociation should weaken, the
|
|
fear of hell drives the believer to redouble his efforts, to perfect
|
|
the dissociation, perhaps by praying more, going to church to get peer
|
|
re-assurance, more Bible readings, etc.
|
|
What keeps this fear from getting out of hand? The great
|
|
genius of Christianity lies in the fact that it protects itself with
|
|
intricately contrived non-disprovability. That which could disconfirm
|
|
Christianity is is (conveniently) out of reach, beyond the grave as it
|
|
were. Thus even though, like our hysterically blind soldier, the
|
|
believer knows on some level he has no real proof for the belief, and
|
|
so must dissociate this awareness to maintain the belief, he also
|
|
knows that nobody has any direct basis for declaring the belief false.
|
|
This "double orientation" keeps the fear remote enough for it not to
|
|
get out of hand, and accounts for the mind knowing, at some level,
|
|
what to expel from conscious awareness.
|
|
Also it must be admitted here that there will be an enormous
|
|
difference in effect on "inner-directed" and "other-directed"
|
|
individuals. "Inner-directed" individuals are mainly guided by
|
|
conscience, where "other-directed" individuals take their cues from
|
|
other people. Most people are really more "other-directed" than we
|
|
would like to think. The Devices we have been describing have a much
|
|
greater impact on such "inner-directed" individuals than they do on
|
|
the rank-and-file, who just "go with the flow" in any event. The
|
|
great danger for the "other-directed" believer is to spend most of his
|
|
life working into a position where the superficialities of Device 1
|
|
wear off and the true implications of the Bible make themselves felt.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Because of the Protestant tradition of the last couple
|
|
centuries of obscuring the Bible's true import, of making the Device 1
|
|
"sales pitch" into the whole religion, present-day Evangelicals have a
|
|
potential crop of clientele almost as unsuspecting as those of the
|
|
first century must have been. Once again, people are "open" to the
|
|
concept that a kind of weakness, i. e. inner dividedness, really
|
|
represents strength. Part of the blame lies with the failure of
|
|
secular ideologies to provide a satisfactory answer--they all made
|
|
falsifiable promises, and they were all, indeed, falsified. Add an
|
|
underlying end-of-the-world hysteria, fostered by biblical images
|
|
resembling a nuclear holocaust, and the approach of the year 2000, and
|
|
it becomes quite conceivable that a socially dangerous situation could
|
|
be brewing. Even in the best-case scenario, the new biblicism is
|
|
probably resulting in needless fear, manipulation and mental anguish
|
|
being spread all over our country.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[1] Bainton, Roland H. Here I Stand (Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon
|
|
Press, 1978), pp. 44-45.
|
|
|
|
[2] Ibid.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Having experienced it before, in my Jungian phase, I call
|
|
giving up on reality and withdrawal into fantasy and fiction
|
|
by a different name: decadence. For me, Christianity is
|
|
simply a cleaner form of decadence than recreational drugs,
|
|
perverse sex, or rock and roll. Christianity has shown me
|
|
that I, too, could be decadent. But, serious person that
|
|
I am, I chose the way wherein one can be decadent--and still
|
|
not have much fun at it.--Cohen, Mind of the Bible Believer,
|
|
p. 405.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
We have painted a very drastic picture of the harmful
|
|
psychological effects biblical Christianity can have. By such an
|
|
analysis, one might be led to conclude that the biblical authors
|
|
cynically pushed Christianity upon an unsuspecting populace. Such a
|
|
conclusion ignores two pertinent facts: 1) We have shown, via
|
|
appropriate quotes from Luther and Wesley, that the biblicist can
|
|
essentially "brainwash" himself. It is perfectly consistent with our
|
|
view that the Bible authors "brainwashed" themselves with their own
|
|
doctrine, even as they invented it. 2) The unique historical
|
|
situation, i. e. the Roman conquest of Israel, and the influence of
|
|
Hellenistic culture, did much to create the situation in which such a
|
|
strange doctrine as Christianity could come into being.
|
|
But even though we acknowledge that present-day Evangelicals
|
|
are sincere, we must evaluate biblical Christianity upon its effects,
|
|
not upon the intentions of its practitioners. This final post in the
|
|
series examines some of the social implications of the
|
|
mini-Reformation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mental-Health Implications
|
|
|
|
|
|
We have seen that, as Freud led us to expect, there is a
|
|
relation between the biblical, devotional program and neuroses. The
|
|
program basically helps the individual to become more neurotic,
|
|
widening the gap between the conscious attitude and the rest of the
|
|
personality. The believers share the symptoms in this case, and
|
|
spurious intellectual interpretations of these symptoms are provided.
|
|
While the biblical program may help those with addictions, by
|
|
diverting energy to a God-complex; while Christianity may not have
|
|
that much of an effect upon those "other-directed" enough not to put
|
|
the implications of the belief together in a coherent manner; the
|
|
inescapable conclusion is that biblical Christianity is a poor
|
|
substitute for optimum psychological integration.
|
|
The main problems to be observed in conservative Christians
|
|
are those of fear and depression. Because most mental-health
|
|
professionals do not recognize what they are dealing with in
|
|
conservative Christianity, those with Christian fear are usually
|
|
misdiagnosed as phobic. But when properly questioned, the fearful
|
|
Christian can discuss what he is afraid of, unlike those who come by
|
|
irrational fears in other ways. What they are afraid of, of course,
|
|
is hell, and they weary themselves with the anticipation of it.
|
|
Fearful Christians tend to stay away from anything that remotely
|
|
threatens to send them there by accidental death, and avoid situations
|
|
requiring action, lest more demerits be entered into God's record
|
|
book. (Dr. Cohen remarks that this "reflects faulty epistemology, not
|
|
illogic.") Fearful Christians will testify that Christianity has
|
|
delivered them from even greater mental distress; they don't identify
|
|
the program as the source of the problem as well as the source of the
|
|
palliative for it. It resembles nothing so much as addictive
|
|
behavior, which may explain Christianity's success in helping some
|
|
cope with other addictions. (An example can be seen in Old Order
|
|
Amish. Though they eschew most forms of technology, they do avail
|
|
themselves fully of modern medical care: they seem even more
|
|
preoccupied than others with delaying the end as long as possible!
|
|
This may be accounted for by over-riding fear of the hereafter.)
|
|
The other main problem is depression. The Bible-believer
|
|
needs constant exhortation and encouragement from others and, with
|
|
that and self-discipline, attains a certain momentum that prevents
|
|
what would otherwise be complete inactivity. One can see this
|
|
depressed demeanor in the few conservative denominations with a long
|
|
tradition. In the new, successful conservative church, one encounters
|
|
a well-planned and well-acted show of cheerfulness, which partly
|
|
compensates for the cheerlessness implicit in the doctrine, and also
|
|
acts as more Device 1 "sales pitch." Basically, the purposeful
|
|
misrouting of mental energy is draining, so the conservative must
|
|
convince themselves that it is otherwise by "testifying" to how
|
|
empowered they feel. (Again, using Old Order Amish as a an extreme
|
|
example of a conservative sect, we can see some confirmation of our
|
|
expectations. In the general population, the major cause of admission
|
|
to mental-health facilities is schizophrenia; among Old Order Amish,
|
|
the major cause of admission is depression[1].)
|
|
How should these problems be dealt with? Unfortunately, we
|
|
cannot say that the secular mental-health professionals necessarily do
|
|
good. Every secular competitor to religion turns out to have too many
|
|
orthodox defenders of some doctrine. Such doctrines always seem to
|
|
have an overly simple but appealing concept of human nature at its
|
|
core, subtly misleading and harmful in the long run. (One thinks of
|
|
Freudianism, with its negative view of human nature, of Jungians whose
|
|
religious quest has degenerated into escapism, of Rogerians with their
|
|
"radical nonjudgmentalness," in which they basically repeat back to
|
|
the client what he has said using different words.) Both the
|
|
Christian and secular programs that promise a "better" life, life on
|
|
an even keel, ought rightly to be viewed with suspicion.
|
|
Self-reliance is the way to go. But a therapist can help, just by
|
|
using his intuition and basic human qualities; just being
|
|
reality-oriented is helpful to someone put through the wringer by
|
|
conservative churches.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Three Unproductive Questions
|
|
|
|
|
|
Journalists and liberal commentators often fail to ask
|
|
conservative Christian leaders the right questions. Instead, we often
|
|
hear questions like "Don't you see truth isn't black and white, that
|
|
there are many shades of gray?" "Do Jews who reject Jesus go to
|
|
Heaven or don't they?" "How can you say your interpretation of the
|
|
Bible is correct, when there are so many floating around?" These
|
|
questions don't give outsiders any insight into conservative
|
|
Christianity, and the conservative Christian in turn can reassure
|
|
himself that the know-it-all interviewer really has no inkling as to
|
|
what Christianity is all about.
|
|
1) "Don't you see truth isn't black and white?" There is a
|
|
caricature of the Evangelical as one with simple, pat answers to
|
|
everything, as one who can't tolerate ambiguity. Actually, the
|
|
Evangelical is just the opposite--he tolerates too much ambiguity,
|
|
lets artificial confusion operate where there should be clarity.
|
|
The caricature of Evangelicals stems from the authoritarian
|
|
personality theory, which says that conservative political attitudes
|
|
result from personality inadequacy. The symptoms are supposed to be
|
|
defensive over-compensation against anti-social impulses, rigid,
|
|
overly conventional attitudes, and intolerance of ambiguity. This
|
|
theory came out of the McCarthy era and implies that anyone not
|
|
politically ultraliberal and not "radically non-judgmental" is
|
|
mentally ill. It's an appealing theory, but is not confirmed by the
|
|
empirical data gathered to prove it.
|
|
The skillful Evangelical apologist can make it seem as if
|
|
logic, rationality and self-discipline are exclusively Christian
|
|
virtues, which "secular humanists" are necessarily against.
|
|
2) The second question can be described as a clumsy ploy to
|
|
get Evangelicals to say that they are anti-Semitic. Actually
|
|
Evangelical leaders deserve a lot of credit for instilling pro-Jewish
|
|
and pro-Israel attitudes in their flocks. The Evangelical can
|
|
honestly reply that unconverted Jews just don't go to Heaven, any more
|
|
than unconverted Gentiles do, and that the Evangelical is just trying
|
|
to save anyone he can.
|
|
One can sharpen this question by changing it into what Dr.
|
|
Cohen calls the "Anne Frank question." We can fairly describe Anne
|
|
Frank as a "secular humanist," and it is quite possible she remained
|
|
one right to the bitter end. The inescapable conclusion, from the
|
|
biblical viewpoint, is that after the earthly Nazi death camp, she
|
|
will be eternally remanded to God's death camp, where her torment goes
|
|
on forever. Quite a picture of God's "lovingkindness!"
|
|
3) "How can you say your interpretattion is any better than
|
|
anyone else's?" The assumption here is that the Bible is so ambiguous
|
|
and incomprehensible, that it can be used to support any conceivable
|
|
position. We have seen that, though the Bible does make use of
|
|
ambiguity and contradiction for mind-control purposes, it *does* set
|
|
forth a specific doctrine. Only the liberal Protestant tradition of
|
|
encasing the Bible in an ever-thickening layer of obscuration gives
|
|
the impression that the Bible can be made to stand for any doctrine.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Religion in Politics
|
|
|
|
|
|
We are by now nauseatingly familiar with politicized
|
|
Evangelicals such as Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell. These preachers
|
|
basically got a free ride from Evangelical churches, because despite
|
|
efforts to politicize him, the Evangelical develops a fatalistic
|
|
attitude towards worldly affairs. Ceasing to become concerned with
|
|
worldly things is, after all, a prominent part of the teachings of
|
|
Jesus. Extreme concern with worldly things can be construed as
|
|
symptomatic of unbelief! The religious right are reacting to a real
|
|
failure on the part of the old-left intellectuals to make liberalism
|
|
live up to its promises; this is what gives the religious right the
|
|
opportunity to make conservative Christianity seem like an uplifting
|
|
lifestyle.
|
|
Aside from this disinclination to become involved in worldly
|
|
activities, we see two Big Lies being propagated by the Evangelicals:
|
|
that our nation has a Christian foundation, and that the Bible has
|
|
something to contribute to our democratic tradition.
|
|
The Founding Fathers were mainly Anglicans, with a minority of
|
|
Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Baptists, Roman Catholics and Jews.
|
|
Their generation wasn't noted for religious fervor. Prominent
|
|
Founding Fathers include Franklin, Jefferson and Paine, individuals
|
|
with religious views so unorthodox that I doubt they would be
|
|
tolerated in public life today. Many of the Founding Fathers were
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|
also Freemasons, which meant they spent much of their free time
|
|
participating in a religious tradition at variance with their nominal
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|
Protestantism or Judaism. Fervent religious groups sat out the
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|
Revolutionary War, mostly because they were pacifists. One has only
|
|
to read documents left behind by men such as Franklin and Jefferson to
|
|
realize that these men were scarcely fervent Christians.
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|
As we have seen, the Wesleyans learned not to look too closely
|
|
at the Bible, so that they could espouse a humane salvation plan. The
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|
abolitionists had reason to pass over the Bible even more lightly,
|
|
given its unequivocal support of slavery. This is a part of history
|
|
that Evangelicals conveniently overlook, when they claim that our
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|
nation has a Christian heritage. The archaic, authoritarian social
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|
views, which the Evangelicals uncover when they strip away the layers
|
|
of tradition obscuring what the Bible really says, are ultimately
|
|
foreign to our democratic tradition. (Peter's admonition in Acts,
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|
that "we ought to obey God, not men" applies exclusively to spreading
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|
the Gospel. Nowhere does the New Testament instruct the believer to
|
|
oppose the State for other forms of injustice. Instead, we are
|
|
instructed to be good slaves of both God and of earthly authorities,
|
|
despite being told elsewhere that no one can serve two masters. In
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|
any event, given the negative biblical view of man's nature, we can
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|
hardly envision a Bible-authentic believer picturing "noble savages"
|
|
coming together and basing a decent society on a social contract, a la
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|
Rousseau!)
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|
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|
Charity
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|
|
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|
We have seen that one motivation for nineteenth and early
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|
twentieth-century mental health professionals to treat Christianity
|
|
gently was that Wesleyan-style Christianity provided much charity that
|
|
was not then being provided by the secular sector. In Evangelical
|
|
circles we don't see that much emphasis on charity, not because they
|
|
are a bunch of skinflints but because they correctly interpret the
|
|
biblical figures of providing food and clothing to the needy as
|
|
figures for spreading the Gospel. (After all, when do we see Jesus
|
|
and his disciples providing food and shelter for the unfortunate?
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|
More often than not, they were the recipients of such charity, not its
|
|
providers.) In any event, we can expect the Evangelical to say that
|
|
bringing eternal life to unbelievers takes precedence over making
|
|
things better in this life, because the suffering in hell will be so
|
|
much more awful than anything that could occur in this earthly life.
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|
|
|
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|
Creationism
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|
|
|
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[Dr. Cohen has little to say on this topic, but because it
|
|
seems an important one, I have interpolated some of my own comments
|
|
here.]
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|
Along with the surge in Evangelicalism, there has been a surge
|
|
in so-called Scientific Creationism. In the 1980's Arkansas and
|
|
Louisiana passed laws mandating equal time in schools for evolutionary
|
|
theory and Creationism. I think with Creationists we see another kind
|
|
of "double orientation" that we saw earlier in the hysterically blind
|
|
soldier patient. Not too put too fine a point on it, Creationists
|
|
regularly use tactics that most ordinary scientists wouldn't have
|
|
anything to do with--not due to superior morality, but because
|
|
engaging in such tactics undermines the scientific method itself.
|
|
Creationists routinely misrepresent evolution, and then "demolish" it
|
|
with straw-man arguments; quote prominent scientists out of context;
|
|
use old arguments against the occurence of evolution, such as the one
|
|
based on the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics, that were long ago shown to be
|
|
false. They regularly distort evidence for evolution, as can be seen
|
|
in their arguments about "transitional forms." They chide scientists
|
|
for making extrapolations into the past (such as assuming that
|
|
radioactive decay rates are constant) but extrapolate wildly when it
|
|
suits their purposes.
|
|
The failure of "scientific" creationists to construct a
|
|
rigorous scientific theory of creation, and their assertion that in
|
|
any conflict between what the data seem to be telling us and what the
|
|
Bible tells us, the Bible takes precedence, ought to alert us that
|
|
something other than science is going on here. The "double
|
|
orientation" we have spoken of can help us understand why they seem
|
|
convinced by arguments that strike those who understand evolution as
|
|
so faulty. On some level they know they are falsifying science to
|
|
suit their beliefs; and since doing so is an integrity-assaulting
|
|
piece of business, they have to repress that knowledge more deeply,
|
|
and often accuse scientists of the very tactics they indulge in! In
|
|
Creationists we can see that the need to interpret Genesis literally
|
|
prevents one from attaining the insight that it is really an allegory.
|
|
And if Genesis can be interpreted as allegory, what is to prevent
|
|
other parts of the Bible--such as Jesus' watery walk that we
|
|
highlighted in Device 5--from being interpreted allegorically? The
|
|
need to interpret Genesis literally is symptomatic of the need to
|
|
suppress the conscious awareness that one is subconsciously
|
|
interpreting the whole Bible as an allegory, symbolizing the
|
|
believer's inner state. Thus we can expect Creationism to be a
|
|
continuing preoccupation of Evangelicals.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Scapegoating
|
|
|
|
|
|
Evangelicals tell us that the Bible is a great guide for
|
|
modern life, but never seem to make the conscious connection that part
|
|
of the indoctrination leads to alienation and unconcern for others
|
|
unlike themselves. While they have very commendably distanced
|
|
themselves from racism and anti-Semitism, they have filled their need
|
|
for scapegoats by adopting homophobia. The norm for conservative
|
|
Christians seems to be hatred towards homosexuals. When AIDS first
|
|
became prominent news, the immediate reaction of every conservative
|
|
Christian spokeperson seemed to amount to gloating over God's wrathful
|
|
judgment on the homosexuals. The thought that Christian spokepersons
|
|
ought to evince some compassion never seemed to occur until after the
|
|
demagogic benefit had been reaped from the "fag-bashing." (For anyone
|
|
who thinks that the Bible advocates tolerance for homosexuals, check
|
|
out Rom. 1:26-27; 1 Cor. 5:11; 6:9; 11:14; Phil. 3:2; Jude 7; Rev.
|
|
22:15 and of course, Deut. 22:5.)
|
|
Scapegoating is integral to the biblically authentic program.
|
|
Not only is one to expel negative thoughts and emotions from
|
|
consciousness, but also the sort of natural affection and empathy that
|
|
our "relatedness" psychology requires. One is to be a good Christian
|
|
soldier, like those Roman soldiers who were among the first Gentile
|
|
converts. One can see this mental approach in the present-day
|
|
Afrikaaner, working the machinery of apartheid, and who typically has
|
|
had a very severe, Scripture-saturated Christian-school upbringing.
|
|
If some Evangelicals had their way, a pogrom against homosexuals would
|
|
probably commence immediately. And to satisfy their appetite, they
|
|
would then need more outgroups to bash. . .
|
|
|
|
|
|
The End of the World
|
|
|
|
|
|
Another peculiarity of our time concerns end-time events. The
|
|
resemblance of some biblical images to a nuclear holocaust, and the
|
|
immanent approach of the year 2000, has fueled intense interest in
|
|
end-time scenaria. Here is the key New Testament passage concerning
|
|
the end of the world:
|
|
|
|
The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men
|
|
count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not
|
|
willing that any should perish, but that all should come
|
|
to repentance. But the day of the Lord will come as a
|
|
thief in the night; in which the heavens shall pass away with
|
|
a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent
|
|
heat, the earth also and the works that are therein shall
|
|
be burned up. Seeing then that all these things shall be
|
|
dissolved, what manner of persons ought ye be in all holy
|
|
conversation and godliness, Looking for and hasting unto
|
|
the coming of the day of God, wherein the heavens being on
|
|
fire shall be dissolved, and the elements shall melt with
|
|
fervent heat? Nevertheless we, according to his promise,
|
|
look for new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth
|
|
righteousness. Wherefore, beloved, seeing that ye look
|
|
for such things, be diligent that ye may be found of him
|
|
in peace, without spot, and blameless. And account that
|
|
the longsuffering of our Lord is salvation; even as our
|
|
beloved brother Paul also according to the wisdom given
|
|
unto him hath written unto you. . .[2 Pet. 3:9-15]
|
|
|
|
The biblically-authentic believer is to regard the destruction of the
|
|
natural world as immanent, and thus encouraged to cultivate unconcern
|
|
for the natural world, and emotional disinvestment in it.
|
|
There are three consequences that concern us here. Obviously
|
|
the biblical images have a similarity to images of a nuclear war.
|
|
That correspondance may be the single biggest factor behind the
|
|
mini-Reformation. This situation prompts people to shift everything
|
|
important to them to another plane, away from the impending calamity.
|
|
The second consequence is a lack of interest in conservation, in
|
|
preserving natural resources for future generations at the expense of
|
|
short-range goals. James Watt, former Secretary of the Interior, is
|
|
an outstanding example of this tendency. The third consequence
|
|
concerns the Jewish people. Many of the end-time scenaria include a
|
|
gory end for contemporary Israel. Perhaps the Evangelicals will
|
|
eventually become less benign in their feelings towards Israel than at
|
|
present.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Conclusion
|
|
|
|
|
|
I have outlined a theory concerning Christianity that is at
|
|
variance with both the standard theories of religion and the standard
|
|
theology that believers occupy their conscious thoughts with. We
|
|
cannot directly observe the unconscious of the Evangelicals, but we
|
|
can look for symptoms such as fear and depression, scapegoating, the
|
|
need to twist scientific evidence to make creationism look tenable,
|
|
and lack of charitable outreach on the part of Evangelicals as
|
|
trends that tend to confirm Dr. Cohen's theory. Also his
|
|
interpretations do more to make the Bible into a united, coherent
|
|
whole than any Christian position I have encountered, liberal or
|
|
conservative. Conservative Christianity comes down to a withdrawal
|
|
into a shared fantasy, possibly as a result of the fact people are
|
|
becoming tired of rapid social and technological change, and the fact
|
|
that the end of the existence of all living via a nuclear holocaust
|
|
has been a real possibility since the 1950's, and yet a possibility
|
|
that in some ways seemed beyond our control during the Cold War. This
|
|
sense of futility, more than anything else, may be the root cause of
|
|
the mini-Reformation. As indicated in the quote at the beginning of
|
|
the article, this comes down to a form of decadence, albeit of a
|
|
cleaner variety than other activities we associate with the word.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SD
|
|
|
|
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|
[1] Janice A. Egeland and Abram M. Hostetter, "Amish Study, I:
|
|
Affective Disorders Among the Amish, 1976-1980," American Journal of
|
|
Psychiatry, 140, no. 1 (January 1983), pp. 56-61.
|
|
|