Pages

Friday, March 02, 2012

Interviews with a Vampire Novelist: Anne Rice drives stakes through the heart of Christianity

Mrs. Rice does not
come across as this
spooky "in person." 
Interview I: Are Evangelicals Anti-Semitic?

While I have not read her vampire books, which have sold tens of millions of copies, or her perhaps more scandalous "Christian" books, I should begin by saying that I like and respect Mrs. Rice.  She is an intelligent, educated woman who asks a lot of interesting questions, and is humble enough to wear her heart on her sleave, even when mucking around with (to her) exotic Internet denizens, such as yours truly. 

I also think Anne is wrong about many things, and is grossly unfair to Christians, especially those who are theologically or politically conservative. 

In late 2011, I had the chance to "talk" with her for quite a while on-line, along with other people, when she started a discussion forum on Amazon.com to talk about the problems she sees with Christianity. 

I came late to the game, after a month or so of discussion. 

The conversation was long, and included other people.  For the sake of clarity and time, I'll focus on comments between the two of us, cutting where helpful to make the conversation flow.

Rice is an emotional dialogue partner.  Readers may find my failure to answer some of her questions frustrating, too.  You may find my focus on the issue of Christian ant-Semitism, in this first dialogue, too narrow, given all the shots Anne takes at the Gospel.  Anne also seems loath to come to grips with my arguments, or back up her own, in this first round.  All this seems understandable: this is an informal conversation, and both of us (but no doubt especially Mrs. Rice) have other things to do.  The dialogue improves in later rounds, if I'm not mistaken. 
Nevertheless, I think some readers may find these talks interesting, as a portrait (or at least a cartoon sketch) of a writer whose thoughts and feelings seem to be in flux.  I hope those of you who are attracted to the Dark Side, for instance the Democratic Party, find this interesting. 

Final warning: this first post is fairly long.  Later posts will probably be a bit shorter.  (For those of you who were hoping the final warning would involve creatures of the dark with fangs, sorry to disappoint.) 

I.  Comments from where I came in. 

Anne Rice: I cannot accept a lot of Christian theology. And frankly I am hardly alone.

I think many churches today are trying to rescue Jesus from the theologies of the past. They want to preach a Jesus of love and get away from the theologies that involve the constant threat of Hellfire. But do these churches succeed?

I myself cannot accept Atonement theory, not at all. I find it very unconvincing, and I have never encountered a brand of atonement theory that did not argue for the literal interpretation of the story of Adam and Eve. This is something I cannot force myself to believe.

But Jesus Christ remains of the utmost importance to me.

What do you think?

Can He be reclaimed by those of us who cannot accept the theologies of the past?

AR: Theo, I cannot help but wonder why you believe these things. You mentioned having studied the bible for decades with a pastor teacher.  Why do you think that a Supreme Being would reveal so much in one book, or collection of writings, and that human beings would have to study this book so intensely in order to know this Supreme Being?

Doesn't really make much sense, does it? ---- The God who made DNA, and black holes in space, the Big Bang, evolution, all of that --- putting such a difficult series of revelations in one book to one human tribe in one very small part of the world, and then demanding that humans study it intensely. Doesn't make sense now, does it?

And of course we know it doesn't work ---- for every person claiming to understand it, we get a point of view, an approach, a theology, a religion, and then the arguing starts, Protestants damning Catholics, Catholics scorning Protestants and all the independents haggling over who is saved and how.

Doesn't all of this raise your suspicions? Aren't you even a little curious that such intellectual striving might not have much at all to do with a Supreme Being?

Myself, in twelve years of studying the bible and Christianity, I came to believe the religion is based on absurdities and contradictions, and a great deal of nonsense.

Christians think semantics can solve metaphysical problems. Just "say it" another way, or quote yet another passage.  But that just doesn't work, really.

Christians have to "study it" to convince themselves that all of these absurd and contradictory things are true. They've convinced themselves of their withering superiority to the Jews, and of all sorts of things based on this or that phrase or sentence from Scripture while ignoring so many others.

I don't think we're hard enough on Christians. And I don't think Christians are hard enough on themselves . . .

All those poor pious Jews singing psalms and feeling so close to Godand so devoted to him --- only to be corrected and told by Christians in the First Century, guess what, you're really the enemy of God and if you don't buy into Christ you're going to burn forever? Come on.

You would think that your Supreme Being would at least have told the Jews they were all going to Hell, wouldn't you? Instead of that pontificating from Sinai, he might have just given them an even break.

And then there's the beauty of the Old Testament, the magnificent poetry of Isaiah, Jeremiah, David, the Psalms.

And none of it matters, says Paul. They were the enemies of God until Jesus came along. What a bunch of fools the Jews were, according to Christians. Come on.

Sorry, my friend, it simply doesn't add up.

What comes across in these threads is that Christians are into personal empowerment. This religion makes them feel so good, helps them not to drink, cheat on the wife, that sort of thing.

And I think it makes some feel quite learned. After all they have studied Scripture, indeed, for years. And that must make one quite proud, indeed, to know at least one subject thoroughly.

But there is little logic to this, and the claims for revelation aren't credible, and last but not least, the world did not end as Jesus and Paul claimed it would.

No, it just didn't, did it?

I think you need to demand some hard answers, yourselves, and we should perhaps be demanding some hard answers from you.

Enough of the coddling . . .

We're told we're to respect you, but I don't know if I can.  After all, we do live in a vast and wonderful universe.  And you're claiming that the Maker is saving you, but not us. That's a pretty obnoxious claim when you get right down to it, and I don't think you have much to back it up.

Sorry for being so blunt.  But the truth matters. It really does.  And I'm tired of soft peddling what I feel is the truth.

II.  First Response and dialogue. 

DM: "Doesn't really make much sense, does it? ---- The God who made DNA, and black holes in space, the Big Bang, evolution, all of that --- putting such a difficult series of revelations in one book to one human tribe in one very small part of the world, and then demanding that humans study it intensely. Doesn't make sense now, does it?"

The early scientists talked of God revealing himself through two books -- Scripture, and the Book of Nature. Since empirically, the Bible has in fact changed history in many ways -- not least through early science -- apparently this was not such an ineffective way to communicate, after all. But I have no problem with the idea that God also spoke to and through, say, Lao Zi.

"And of course we know it doesn't work ---- for every person claiming to understand it, we get a point of view, an approach, a theology, a religion, and then the arguing starts, Protestants damning Catholics, Catholics scorning Protestants and all the independents haggling over who is saved and how."


That's because people like to argue. Witness the Internet. Witness the Amazon comments forums. I've been damned to hell by atheists more than once, online. For one with a sense of irony, this can actually be pleasurable. It is also ironic, of course, that Christians talk so much about love, and still throw pots and pans at one another -- but such is human nature.

"Myself, in twelve years of studying the bible and Christianity, I came to believe the religion is based on absurdities and contradictions, and a great deal of nonsense."


And in 45 years of studying both, I have come to believe that Christianity is true, though there are a lot of difficulties and unanswered questions. And I don't think it helps to offer a child's understanding of Christianity up for refutation -- throw out the bathwater, not the baby.

Paul doesn't say none of the OT matters, at all. He clearly loved the Jewish traditions and found deeper meaning in the prophets than ever before. But if he was harsh on Jewish (and Christian, BTW) failure, so were those very prophets you mention. They agree with him!

Pascal was being a little unfair when he wrote of "the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, not of the philosophers and scholars . . ." (You can hardly accuse him of dismissing the OT, though!) Some of the philosophers an scholars were keen in knowing God experientially, too. You assume so many boundaries to Christian orthodoxy. I deny that they are as normative as you seem to think. I am just now finishing my dissertation on this very question, but wrote my first book on it -- True Son of Heaven: How Jesus Fulfills the Chinese Culture -- more than 15 years ago. I wish you'd check into Fulfillment Theology: it is intellectually exciting and also orthodox in a way that embraces truth wherever it is found, allowing us to appreciate, say, Confucius or Lao Zi, and God's work in the universe, more deeply. It also joins us intellectually with some of the wisest and most sympathetic thinkers in human history.


DM: I find many passages in the OT much harsher towards "the Jews" than anything in the NT.

When I was in seminary, I tried to reconcile James and Galatians. I came to the conclusion that Paul was talking about the ceremonial law, not the moral law.

I open Paul at random:

"Then what advantage has the Jew? . . . Much in every way. First of all, they were entrusted with the oracles of God."

That's a lot more positive about the OT than, say, Richard Dawkins, or even many modern Jews. If Paul reinterpretted Jewish tradition around Jesus, and found he could thus "save" most of it intellectually, that's far more than secular Jews do, maybe more than most religious Jews do, either, and infinitely more than the Gnostics.

As we learn more, our view of reality broadens, without losing the truth that appeared in the picture at first glance -- like rising in a rocket from earth. I can't claim to know anything special about eternity. Paul made it possible for billions of Gentiles to be intellectually-fulfilled "Jews," in essence. If Paul was anti-Jewish, his actually historical effect on human society -- among which was to make the Jewish scriptures the planet's best-seller -- may be the most startling paradox in history.


AR: That's a rather novel way of looking at it, David -- your statement:

"If Paul was anti-Jewish, his actually historical effect on human society must be the most startling paradox in history."

Hmmm.  I don't see it that way

AR: I think the study of Paul yields the obvious, based on his own words. He suggests that the Jews are in fact the enemies of God, and can only be reconciled to God through jesus Christ.
I see no evidence in the O.T. that God or the Jews thought the Jews
were the enemies of God.


Atonement theory and its absurdities (eternal Hellfire, a wrathful God damning a world based on Adam and Eve et al) is rooted in Paul. There is no way to escape this.  The O.T. does not support supercessionist Christianity.  It does not support the cliches offered again and again by Christians as to why Christ had to come, and how the Jews had "failed." The "failure" just isn't there. Ultimately the reasons for Christ come off as rationalization because He was crucified.

DM: Let me put it this way. I once took a flight across China, from Shanghai to Kunming. Across the aisle was a Chinese man, who turned out to be a leading scientist. Inside his jacket, he carried a copy of the Union Version Bible. His uncle was a respected elder in the church, and he peppered me with questions about the Bible (before I even said I was a Christian, as I recall.)

If it weren't for Paul, is it likely that a Chinese scientist flying over central China would carry a copy of the Jewish Scriptures, in Chinese, in his jacket?


AR: I have to confess, I'm not getting your point. Which is what? That Christians don't benefit from education? That Christians wouldn't be helped by knowing something about the evolution of their basic ideas?  That Christians wouldn't benefit from some perspective on the history of their religion? That they should just read the N.T.? Is that what you're suggesting?

If that is your point, I'm afraid I can't agree with you.  I must come down on the side of education.

No matter how much one studies the N.T. it can be wondrously illuminating and inspiring to read Josephus and Philo, and Tacitus ---  No matter how long and hard one studies the bible, it can be a a powerful thing to read learned commentary on the obscure Greek words, and possible mistranslations, to seek knowledge as to the history of interpretations, and their evolution.

I think education is a beautiful and wonderful thing.

It's a joy to read some body like N.T. Wright or Craig S. Keener because these biblical scholars are so finely educated, and have so much light to shed on the text of the N.T.

Why do you think some Christians put so little value on education in general?


You lost me there, David. I don't know what you're talking about . . .

DM: You're right, Anne, you did badly miss my point.

The point is, in my experience, education has made the NT seem more remarkable, not less, as you seem to assume it should.

Why do some Christians not value education? It may be that some perceive that a lot of college professors have a chip on their shoulders about Christianity. It may be that some correctly recognize an unwarranted intellectual snobbery on the part of some scholars and science, that is too easily assumed to bleed over from areas where they really are experts, into everything else. But I'm speculating, because I can't claim to know many people who don't value education.

The point here is that far from having it in for Jewish tradition, Paul is one of the reasons why Jewish tradition is now univerally known and partially followed by billions of people around the world.

AR: Did anyone here suggest Paul had it in for Jewish tradition? I don't quite "get" that.

Paul took aim at the Law as given by God on Sinai.  He felt that circumcision was no longer necessary.

All this is pretty clear, isn't it?

Judaism still is a vigorous and healthy religion.  It has withstood 2,000 years of Christian criticism and persecution.

DM: Anne: Sure, Paul denied that circumcision was no longer necessary -- and I don't mean any disrespect to orthodox Jewish friends to say I'm glad of it!

But what are you saying, then, about Paul and Jewish tradition? One of the characteristics of Fulfillment Theology, as I understand it, is that it is dialectic -- it sees both good and bad in the tradition, and reconstitutes them into a viable new form that remains in some sense faithful to the original. That's what I see Paul, and other NT writers, doing with their beloved Jewish tradition, with Christ as the interpretive key. In a sense, this is what everyone has to do with an old tradition, as new facts come to light -- and the Incarnation, death of Jesus, and Resurrection, were empirical facts that Paul's letters are reflecting on, and trying to figure out.


I seem to share with you a great respect for the Jewish people, and their amazing success in preserving their traditions and community over thousands of years of exile. I actually see that as the work of God, also the reconstitution of their nation, as I think many Jews do, too.

But Christians have NOT persecuted Jews for 2000 years. I know of none in the first 300 years, and very little until the 11th Century. As Rodney Stark points out (Rene Girard does much to explain this, too), persecution of Jews was generally a symptom of larger civilizational struggles in Europe. (This is very clear from Richard Fletcher's account in The Barbarian Conversion, too.) It was like two continental masses colliding, with little volcanoes erupting at points in the continental plate -- the masses being Islam and Christianity, the volcaoes being pogroms. This happened in both Europe and in the Muslim world, as similiar persecutions occur of minorities in China, Japan, India, and everywhere else where people are people.

Most often, the Church protected Jews against this persecution, though not always as vigorously as you might wish. The worst of it often came from non-Christians, including Babylonians, Egyptians, Romans, Muslims, communists, and of course worst of all, the Nazis. Even some East Asian cults have been anti-Semitic, strangely enough, even in Japan.

Lots of Christians were guilty as well. I share your repugnance for the crimes Christians have committed against Jews. But given the larger pattern, I don't think Christian theology is a necessary or sufficient explanation for that. I think people who use the NT to justify attacking Jews, are engaged in grossly dishonest rationalization.


AR: David, I don't think the picture you give here of Christian antisemitism can stand up under scrutiny.

DM: Where did I err? Sounds like you know a lot about the subject; I'm willing to be corrected.

One thing I've always been intrigued about: that most of the world's Jews lived in Europe, by 19th and 20th Centuries. They didn't start out there. Somewhere along the line, someone seems to have done a lot of voting with their feet. If "Christendom" (a dubious word) was as horrible as it is often portrayed, it seems pretty strange.

But I like the American system better, where religions compete freely. There has been some bigotry, but no pogroms, so far as I know.


AR: David, research into Jewish history is one of my passions.  It was the story of the Jews in history that drew me back to God.

And I do know something of the subject. I'm not a professional historian.  I'm familiar with the persecutions of Jews during the time of the Crusades and the time of the Black Death, and earlier expulsions of the Jews from England and France, and later from Spain. I have researched Jewish life in Renaissance Italy.

What I have not studied in detail is what happened right after Constantine's conversion. I'm in Europe right now, and my Jewish library is of course at home in California. I need to check references there.
I am also familiar with the kinds of remarks Luther and Calvin made about Jews, etc. which can be found online.


David, your statement here: "One thing I've always been intrigued about: that most of the world's Jews lived in Europe, by 19th and 20th Centuries. They didn't start out there. Somewhere along the line, someone seems to have done a lot of voting with their feet. If "Christendom" (a dubious word) was as horrible as it is often portrayed, it seems pretty strange."

This strikes me as a really bizarre statement. Where exactly did you expect these Jews to live?
In Muslim countries?  You do know that when the Romans destroyed Jerusalem in 70 a.d. they drove the Jews out of their own city, don't you? You are familiar with what is called the Jewish Diaspora?

What do you think all these Jews should have done, exactly?

I'm not sure oppressed peoples in any culture can ever be seen as voting for anything with their feet.
Women are treated pretty badly in Saudi Arabia.
They're not voting with their feet for anything when they remain where they were born and where their families live.

Perhaps you're putting a burden here on Jews that is quite unfair.

The peasants of Czarist Russia weren't voting for Czarist Russia with their feet by remaining where they were born and where their families lived.


DM: The issue here is the effect of Christian theology on treatment of Jews. No serious person denies that Jews have often been mistreated in "Christian" countries. My question is whether they have been treated worse in traditional Europe than elsewhere, so that there is an effect (Christian anti-semitism) which must have a theological rather than just sociological cause.

To answer that question, one has to begin with the fact that the Jewish people began in Israel. Babylonian, Egyptian and Roman anti-Semitism, culminating in the destruction of Israel, are part of the data.

Where else could the Jews have gone? Somewhere closer, of course. Somewhere warmer, maybe. Many commentators claim that Islamic civilization was richer and treated the Jews better than Europe did, during the Middle Ages. It is, therefore, significant that while many Jews did remain in the Middle East, most did not. What exactly does it signify? I'm not sure, that's why I'm asking. But it certainly undermines the likelihood that Christian theology was the "independent variable" that "caused" anti-Semitism.

People living in Israel could, one might think, also have gone east, into India. Some did, I think. Some Jews did make it as far as China, and eventually assimilated there, though I admit that would have been too long a journey for mass emigration.

But I think at some point in history, yes, Jews must have found relative welcome in Russia, or so many wouldn't have gone there. You know they didn't go there for the weather.

American history is also relevant to this issue. Jews have lived in America for almost 400 years, in a dominantly and often zealously Christian culture, at peace with their neighbors, thank God.

So as bad as Medieval anti-Semitism could be, even before opening the NT and finding a bunch of Jewish writings by Jews who loved their traditions, from a bird's eye perspective, it seems unlikely that Christianity was the cause of that anti-semitism.

This has nothing to do with "putting burdens on the Jews." I'm asking why most chose to move to quasi-Christian Europe.

Of course oppressed people often "vote with their feet." That's why America has so many Cubans, Vietnamese, Russians, Cambodians, Irish, Koreans, and, yes, Jews. Indeed, that's a large part of the history of the Jewish people.


AR: David, this may be so.  But any time you have a large block of irrational people trying to get control of political power for their own religious objectives (deminionists led by Bachmann, Perry, or fanatical Catholics like Santorum) you have a dangerous situation.

Irrationality is dangerous. Secular humanism is based on reason, solid principles of reason, the idea that law is arrived at by reason, not revelation. America was brought into existence by rational men. And Irrationality always poses a threat.

America has always rejected this kind of hysteria and I am confident they will again.

David, there are so many inaccurate statements here, I don't know where to begin. I really don't have at my fingertips the numbers of Jews who lived in thriving communities throughout the Middle East until the creation of the State of Israel. I know that Iraq and Syria had some of the oldest Jewish communities in the world, and there have been ancient communities in India.

Nor do I have figures on how early Jews migrated to Russia, and throughout all the other countries of the world. I do know there were Jewish merchants working in Russia before the conversion of the country to "orthodox" or Eastern Christianity which became Russian orthodox Christianity.

I think you are way underestimating their numbers. Europe was one place that Jews lived. Jews have lived everywhere.  Again, I simply don't have the facts and the figures. Wish I did.

I sense that you feel uneasy about the record of Christian persecution of Jews. You're trying to avoid the topic somehow, with simplistic suggestions that "it couldn't have been all that bad, etc." I suggest more reading.

Find out about the massacres and the persecutions.  There are many excellent books on Jewish history.
I would say face up to it.

Millions cannot vote with their feet. Jews migrated to America along with all the other immigrants. What is your point? The presence of ancient Jewish communities throughout Europe, dating back to before Roman times, does not mean Christian persecution wasn't cruel and ghastly and completely immoral.

Why is it Christians don't want to take responsibility for the dark side of the religion? I simply don't get it.

DM: Again, what am I wrong about? Some 12 million Jews lived in Europe before Hitler came along; half were murdered. When Israel became a state, most Jews were expelled or left Islamic states in the ME; the total of immigrants to Israel from those sources were less than a million. No doubt others went to the US, etc. But clearly, the vast majority of the world's Jews lived in Europe and the Americans before WWII.

According to Josephus (says Wiki), by far the main Jewish populations at the time of Christ were in Palestine, Syria, Babylon, and Egypt.

Of course Christian persecution was "cruel and ghastly and completely immoral." I think I've admitted that, already, more than once. I am appalled by it, I admit and renounce it. But let's not blame everyone for the crimes of a few. Let's set historically accurate boundaries around the issue.

What I want is truth. You comment just now about how evangelicals are anti-semites is I think not true. What makes you think most evangelicals feel that way? What evidence can you point to? I have seen very little evidence, having grown up in the community, that evangelicals have it in for Jews. Let's be fair about the facts, first, then decide what they signify.

Millions can and do "vote with their feet," all the time. The partition of India, for instance, resulted in the displacement of some 10 million people, alone, who largely walked away from their homes. The founding of Israel led to maybe 2 million people moving, one way or the other, in a year or so. 2 million Nationalist Chinese went to Taiwan after the communists took over; others went elsewhere, often on foot. This is a common story throughout human history.

But I don't think we need to disagree on principle, here. Persecution of the weak and marginalized is always disgusting, whoever is responsible.


AR: "But let's not blame everyone for the crimes of a few. Let's set historically accurate boundaries around the issue. "

I don't see you doing that here. You seem to be trying to draw attention away from the persecution of the Jews by Christians over time.

Your speculation is interesting but beside the point. Christians have persecuted Jews for thousands of years and it was more than the actions of a few. The documentation is easy to find. There are innumerable studies of what happened right through the Holocaust.

Again this "voting with their feet" idea seems suspect. You seem to be saying, "well, it couldn't have been all that bad."

Again, that's beside the point.

I do think Christianity is in crisis today with regard to anti-semitism. It's having to learn to live without it, and this is going to be tough.

As we can see in this thread, casual denigration of the Jews, casual statements of superiority to them, casual judgments of them abound.

With regard to Evangelicals, I think their anti-semitism is so thoroughly documented that no one needs to argue you it here.


DM: "I don't see you doing that here. You seem to be trying to draw attention away from the persecution of the Jews by Christians over time."

Then you're not really reading fairly. I have admitted that persecution many times, here. What I deny is that it is caused by NT theology. I also have pointed to several larger patterns in the context of which it should be understood: (1) general scapegoating of minorities; (2) persecution in times of civilizational stress; and (3) anti-Semitism in many non-Christian civilizations.

The issue is not the fact of persecution, but its cause.

"I do think Christianity is in crisis today with regard to anti-semitism. It's having to learn to live without it, and this is going to be tough."

This is a strange comment. Maybe you mean something broader than usual, by the term "anti-Semitism." But you seem to think that Christianity needs to persecute Jews to get along? Is that really what you're saying? If so, what about all those time and periods when there were no Jews to persecute, but still lots of Christians? What are 150 million Asian Christians and 500 million African Christians going to do?

"As we can see in this thread, casual denigration of the Jews, casual statements of superiority to them, casual judgments of them abound."

I haven't read the whole thread; it's a long one. But there's a difference between: (a) denigrating Jews as a racial group, and (b) claiming that the beliefs one holds are superior to some other beliefs. (a) is what we call "racism," and is usually pretty obnoxious. (b) is naturally implied by any set of beliefs. If you think something is true, naturally you think what is true is superior to ideas that are less true -- that's why you believe it. This is true of ANY belief system, including atheist or pluralist positions, like that, say, of John Hick or Wilfred Cantwell Smith.

I haven't seen much of (a) among evangelicals. If anyone did that here, then I'll be on your side in disavowing their comments, and rebuking them.

"With regard to Evangelicals, I think their anti-semitism is so thoroughly documented that no one needs to argue you it here."

Heh. Well that makes it easy, doesn't it? No evidence is needed! Or can you cite this alleged "thorough documentation?"

Let me just say this, though: whoever "documented" this alleged "fact" was, I have to think, most likely a liar. Because as a generalization, having lived among evangelicals for half a century, that is certainly a lie.

Let me recommend you open a dialogue with the orthodox Jewish talk-show host, Michael Medved. A large portion of his audience seems to be evangelicals. He's a very smart fellow, spends his life talking across religious lines, and knows this issue extremely well. As a well-known writer, I imagine you would probably have access to him. He would, I am sure, give you a better perspective on how evangelicals feel about Jews.


I didn't ask for a "complete education on Christian anti-semitism in the West."  I asked you to define and defend your claims in this forum.

You still haven't answered my most fundamental question: what do you mean by "anti-Semitism?" Do you mean (1) The opinion that one's own beliefs contain more of the truth than Judaism does? or (2) An active hatred of the Jewish people?

You seem to be committing the fallacy of equivocation: you are attempting to apply to (1) the stigma that belongs to (2). So I have to ask that you choose between the two, and stick with whichever meaning you choose.

You keep on implying that I'm ignorant of something important, but have yet to explain what that is. What important claim have I made that you (or Carroll) can show to be false?

"I have no idea what percentage of Evangelicals are "guilty" of anything, of course. And I think you know this."

Then you shouldn't make such sweeping accusations. I'm glad, though, that you admit you lack any serious empirical basis for blanketly claiming that "evangelicals are anti-Semitic." That's a pretty serious charge, and should be backed up by serious evidence, if made.

"I get the impressing you are stunningly and irresponsibly ignorant about the history of your belief system in this regard, and you want to protect your ignorance."

And I get the impression that your "impression" is based on nothing at all that I have said.

Rather than answer reasonable questions, define your terms, and defend your claims, you now relapse into patronizing ad hominem that ought, frankly, to be beneath you:

"There is a lot we can accomplish in these threads, but the full education of an ignorant person we cannot accomplish here, for obvious reasons."

I strike you as an "ignorant" person, do I? So what glaringly ignorant comment have I made, that forced this opinion on you? What are my supposed errors?

Come on, now, Anne, I think you're better than this. Please engage with facts, logic, and evidence, not this nebulous and thin form of ad hominem. I know you're not at home with your library, but surely you can do better to explain and defend your comments.


AR:  there's little I can add to my earlier posts. I've addressed the issues again and again.
Again and again, I've discussed here the problems of Christian supercessionism and how I feel after years of study that the Old Testament does not support Christian supercessionism.

The Old Testament does not support the casual attitude of spiritual superiority to the Jews expressed here and in other places by so many Christians.

On the Christian persecution of Jews for the last 2,000 years, I have provided some summary info from Wikipedia and some bibliography.

Again, there's not a whole lot more that I can add, or feel moved to add. Again, the material is out there on both this subjects if you want to read it. I stand by my frequent observations here that some Christians are woefully ignorant about Judaism, Jesus as a Jew, and the history of the Christian religion as regards the Jews.

I don't feel moved to go into any further detail, and I've explained why.

What you really want here is an extended engagement with you, on your terms, though you've already indicated you are close minded on the subject and not likely to believe people who offer you other opinions or material to support different conclusions.

I'm not finding this fruitful or illuminating enough to continue it.


Again, I think you face some real problems here with your lack of knowledge and lack of curiosity in these matters.

I'm sorry I can't give you what you seem to want, but I am suspicious of what you seem to want.

By the way, David, I won't be sacking my Jewish library to offer you a crash course in all this when I do get home.  I think I've offered enough general information and enough bibliography.

DM: Sorry, Nicholls' thesis is obviously incoherent:

"The Nazis chose the Jews as the target of their hate because two thousand years of Christian teaching had accustomed the world to do so."


Dr. Richard Weikart explains one of the problems with that claim in From Darwin to Hitler. Hitler didn't just target Jews. He also targeted Poles, the mentally retarded, and Gypsies, among others.

Did Christian theology also prepare the world to hate the mentally retarded? Hardly. In fact, Christian theology was distinguished for the care it lavished on the marginalized and weak, for two thousand years.

Weikart argues that Social Darwinism was the real driving force behind Nazi ideology, and furnishes numerous telling quotes to show that this is so. One could also cite Hitler himself, who in Mein Kampf describes how the communists inspired him to their hateful methods.

The "Christ-killer" slur has always been an obviously stupid rationalization for scapegoating that comes natural in times of civilizational stress. No honest person could read the NT and suppose it teaches followers of Jesus to persecute his own people.


AR: Thanks, David. I'm glad you considered the book. I've given you my best thoughts on the entire subject. Don't have any more to give. Thanks again for sharing your responses here.

DM: Anne: Here's what you HAVEN'T done:

* You haven't defined "anti-Semitism," despite my repeated requests that you do so, and the obvious importance of doing so.

*You haven't explained which of the two meanings I gave you prefer. It seems, from the following review, that Carroll also conflates these two meanings:

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1252/is_2_128/ai_71578793/

* You haven't offered a scrap of evidence to defend your claim that American evangelicals in general are "anti-Semitic." You now admit, in fact, that you can't back that claim up in more than a very subjective way.

*You haven't acknowledged the fact that the "2000 years" you keep referring to is an over-generalization.

* You haven't dealt with the fact that real anti-Semitism has been common in non-Christian cultures, undermining the claim that it is "caused" by Christian theology.

* You haven't dealt with the fact that there are other causes for anti-Semitism that seem to explain it better than Christian theology.

* You haven't pointed to any serious errors I have committed, that justify describing me as "ignorant."

It is possible that Christian theology has in some indirect way been a contributing cause of anti-Semitism. Stranger things have happened. But I think you and Carroll both are engaging in a bit of anachronistic thinking. The Holocaust was a shock that alerted most sane people to a lot of things, including the injustice of racism and the long European history of anti-semitism. I have a lot of problems with Christian institutions: I think the Gospel was diluted by Roman power, European superstitions, and the competition with Islam, and perverted by human nature. But I think you're mistaking the bathwater for the baby.

Of course you don't need to engage with my arguments more seriously if you don't want to. But I don't think I'm the only one who thinks you could stand to back up your claims here a little better, or better yet, mellow out a few of them, at least a little.


AR: David, I have nothing to add to my earlier posts. If you will go back I think you will see I did provide info on many of your questions.   Thank you for sharing.

Again, there is ample info out there to answer all your questions and address all the issues you raise.

DM: That's fine, Anne. I'm heading up to Vancouver this morning to give a series of lectures (a mostly historical approach to understanding world religions, actually), then off to Asia for a month for research, on Tuesday, so I probably wouldn't have much time to respond if you tried to seriously answer my challenges, anyway.

Looks like you've moved on to the subject of life after death, though. Interesting topic; about which, I confess, I truly do have almost everything to learn. (But hopefully not too soon. :-) )


Note: skipping a shorter post related to our discussion, here's Part III of Interview with a Vampire Novelist. 

17 comments:

  1. I would say that Ms. Rice  is correct to choose Jesus and therefore reject  Christianity. In doing this she is probably a better follower of Jesus than most "christians". Jews have also been correct to reject the central theological claims of Christianity. Fair play to them!  I would go further and say that JESUS HIMSELF would reject many of the central claims of Christianity I.e. the incarnation, the trinity and the resurrection. So the sooner orthodox Christians stop insisting on these beliefs the better - then we could all stop squabbling and get on with the most important thing, which is learning and practicing the true teaching of Jesus, as revealed above all in the Sermon on the Mount - a teaching  which may be unparalleled in its wisdom and goodness.

    What i would say to christians is this: Ditch the travesty of the Nicene Creed, and come follow Jesus!

    Above all else, Christians should,stop believing (and thankfully not all of them do believe it, but far, far too many of them do) that only believing Christians will be "saved" and that everyone else is damned. In fact, they need get rid of this monstrous, barbaric and false notion of eternal damnation.  There are hopeful signs that many of them are doing so. 

    ReplyDelete
  2. Because many people are repulsed by the theological dogmas of orthodox Christianity, and by the sins of organised and institutional Christianity, they  are deaf to the true teaching of Jesus. What I would say to such people is: you can reject christianity without rejecting Jesus. The true miracle of jesus lies in the  immortal wisdom and goodness of his  teaching and his example. Cherish that teaching and example, and strive to live by it, even if you cannot swallow Christian theological dogmas.

    And what I would say to orthodox Christians is: if you want to believe in the incarnation, the trinity, the resurrection or the last judgement, then that is fine. Perhaps they are true. But perhaps they are NOT true. There is room for reasonable people to disagree about these matters. These beliefs should be optional rather than mandatory. 

    ReplyDelete
  3. What i would say to christians is this: Ditch the travesty of the Nicene Creed, and come follow Jesus!


    Wouldn't you say, "Ditch God altogether."? You're an atheist, ja?

    Or is it more, "I don't think God exists, but whether God exists or not, or whether you believe God exists or not, doesn't matter."? Or something else?

    And on the flipside, would your advice to atheists be, "Ditch atheism. Come follow Jesus."?

    ReplyDelete
  4. I would advise atheists to study and meditate upon the life and words of Jesus, as there is much to admire and learn from that life and those words, even for an atheist.

    I call myself an atheist, because most christians and theists would regard me as one. I do not believe in a personal God, although it's possible that I am wrong about that, and I think many people might be better off believing in a personal god, so I do not necessarily recommend that they become atheists.  I believe that God is the totality of all reality, the Whole. My views about God are basically the same as those of Spinoza, Einstein, or those found in many philosophical forms of Hinduism. I suppose it's a sort of "panentheism" or "pantheism".

    ReplyDelete
  5. although it's possible that I am wrong about that, and I think many people might be better off believing in a personal god, so I do not necessarily recommend that they become atheists.

    So, then, some people who already are atheists, you may recommend they'd be better of being theists?

    My views about God are basically the same as those of Spinoza, Einstein, or those found in many philosophical forms of Hinduism. I suppose it's a sort of "panentheism" or "pantheism".

    Alright. Are you a materialist, then? Neutral monist? Panpsychist? Something else?

    Spinoza's views on God weren't very simple, and atheism as the West knows it is pretty rare in Hinduism as far as I know. Identifying God with the universe is one thing, but for many religious faiths which involve that, the result is a universe which is in stark contrast to the universe as conceived by materialists.

    ReplyDelete
  6. "some people who already are atheists, you may recommend they'd be better of being theists"

    It's possible some theists would be better off as atheists and some atheists better off as theists, but I would be very, very reluctant to make that judgement in any particular case myself. How can I know better than they do themselves?

    God is the Whole, everything that exists, whether "material" or not.

    ReplyDelete
  7. How can I know better than they do themselves?

    You've been recommending people switch religions in this thread.

    God is the Whole, everything that exists, whether "material" or not.

    So, are you a materialist? Something else? Don't you find it odd to say, "Whatever that is, it's God."? Not to mention, as pantheism or panentheism at least implies, worshiping and revering this thing no matter what it is?

    ReplyDelete
  8. Actually, reading reviews for one of Rice's books yesterday, I started to think I was being too kind to her. She seems to have glorified torture, sadism, rape, and sometimes pedophilia. Her traditional accusations against Christianity come to seem ironic. But maybe "following Jesus" has changed her, maybe she regrets the sewage she poured into millions of minds, now?

    ReplyDelete
  9. "Pantheism or panentheism at least implies, worshiping and revering this thing no matter what it is." It does imply that knowledge of God (i.e. Reality) is a state of enlightenment, or wisdom, or blessedness, or even salvation. That is what Spinoza argues -  that knowledge of God (i.e. Nature, for him) is the true state of blessedness, because that knowledge liberates you from illusion and error, and hence makes you free. 

    If one takes this perspective, can Christian teaching make any sense? To some extent yes. For Aquinas, the greatest Christian theologian, God is Truth. Aquinas says, "God is Truth itself". So to love God (as Jesus commands) means to love the Truth i.e. to strive with all your might to attain and know the Truth about reality. This command to love God (i.e. Truth) taken together with Jesus' command to love your neighbour, is the key to attaining salvation.

    ReplyDelete
  10. hat is what Spinoza argues - that knowledge of God (i.e. Nature, for him) is the true state of blessedness, because that knowledge liberates you from illusion and error, and hence makes you free.

    Not really. You make it sound as if Spinoza said 'Learn things that are true, and whatever they are, that's God and that's freedom!' But Spinoza had very particular views on what God was, what nature was, etc. Some truths are incompatible with his vision. If (say) Platonism was true, Spinoza by his own terms would be wrong about God.

    For Aquinas, the greatest Christian theologian, God is Truth.

    No. First, you're apparently thinking that Aquinas identifies God with truth univocally - that's something Aquinas specifically denies. God is identical with His properties analogically, and there are a variety of properties - goodness, justice, mercy, power, wisdom, etc.

    Second, as with Spinoza, Aquinas doesn't just cash things out with 'God is truth, so you know, whatever is truth is God. Also, learning that truth is salvation, whatever it is.' If nominalism and materialism was true, then Aquinas would say God does not exist. 'God not existing' is a live option for Aquinas, and arguably Spinoza, dependent on what's true.

    Also, as I asked. Are you materialist? Something else? No opinion?

    ReplyDelete
  11. David,

    But maybe "following Jesus" has changed her, maybe she regrets the sewage she poured into millions of minds, now?

    Good question. I think she took a different turn once she started believing in God, but I've never heard anyone directly ask her about those things.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Your comments about Aquinas are well-taken. From the perspective of orthodox Christianity my views are a kind of paganism, which could be said to limit the search for common ground between the two. But it is worth noting that Aquinas's intellectual project sought to find a synthesis between Christianity and Aristotle (a pagan, "the philosopher", whose theological views did not include a personal God), and this synthesis was mediated by a Muslim (Averroes,"the commentator"). So,how sure can we be sure that Aquinas would be averse to attempts to find some common ground between Spinoza and himself, for example?

    Spinoza says that knowledge of God (I.e knowledge of ultimate reality) is blessedness. Regarding his own views about what God is, he is quite clear that those views should NOT be publicly honoured ... He states explicitly that the ONLY things that should be publicly honoured are Justice and Charity, and not any metaphysical or theological dogma or creed.

    ReplyDelete
  13. So,how sure can we be sure that Aquinas would be averse to attempts to find some common ground between Spinoza and himself, for example?

    Aquinas clearly illustrated and argued for what he took God to be. He specifically opposed God not only to nature, but also nature as he saw it to nature as conceived by others, including people who had views similar to Spinoza's.

    Now you can say "yeah, but imagine a hypothetical scenario where history was utterly different and Aquinas said things totally other than he did and he was placed in a radically different situation. Maybe in that case he would have..." Okay. It's just not very useful here.

    Spinoza says that knowledge of God (I.e knowledge of ultimate reality) is blessedness.

    And again, Spinoza happened to think he knew what a considerable portion of 'ultimate reality' is - which is why he could make the move that 'knowledge of God is blessedness'. But if Spinoza got certain things wrong about God, then it's no longer clear even he would call the knowledge 'blessedness'.

    Unless all you're saying here is 'Spinoza said knowledge of the universe is blessedness, no matter what that knowledge is, no matter what metaphysical view of God or nature turns out to be correct, no matter how wrong he was about all these things at the time.' In which case Spinoza's claim is radically thin on content.

    He states explicitly that the ONLY things that should be publicly honoured are Justice and Charity, and not any metaphysical or theological dogma or creed.

    Remove metaphysical dogma and theology, and it's no longer clear what Justice or Charity are, or if they even exist. And some metaphysical dogma, of course, eliminates both concepts or reduces them to arbitrary standards.

    I suppose that question could help sharpen my point. 'If someone's knowledge of the world leads them to the conclusion that there is no justice or charity aside from arbitrary labels, and otherwise these things are delusions foisted upon us by blind mechanical processes, would Spinoza say this knowledge made us blessed? If so, what if the idea of being blessed shared a similar fate?'

    Anyway, are you a materialist? Something else? I didn't catch your reply to this one.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Aquinas is open to Aristotle, who is a Pagan and who does not believe in a personal God, so the possibility I have described is not entirely hypothetical.

    “Spinoza happened to think he knew what a considerable portion of 'ultimate reality' is”. That is true, and he says that both mind and extension (i.e. matter) are two attributes of the same substance. I think the technical term for this is “neutral monist” (and not “materialism”). If I am compelled to plump for a “metaphysical” position on this, I would be inclined to go with that.

    Regarding justice and virtue, Spinoza says: “Men who are governed by reason—that is, who seek what is useful to them in accordance with reason, desire for themselves nothing, which they do not also desire for the rest of mankind, and, consequently, are just, faithful, and honorable in their conduct”. They do unto others as they would have others do unto them. So the man who acts in accordance with reason is virtuous and just, according to Spinoza.

    And he does not think certain common religious beliefs contribute to true virtue : “How far astray from a true estimate of virtue are those who expect to be decorated by God with high rewards for their virtue, and their best actions; as if virtue and the service of God were not in itself happiness and perfect freedom.”

    ReplyDelete
  15. David,

    This is a nobel attempt to have a reasonable discussion with a very prejudiced and misinformed person. When she says "With regard to Evangelicals, I think their anti-semitism is so thoroughly documented that no one needs to argue you it here." I think it was time to wrap it up. This is not someone with whom rational discourse is going to be productive.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Bill: Perhaps. I may post other parts of the dialogue later, and you can see. Of course, I have an agenda, too.

    Anyway, I just posted a new blog in which I address (among other things) some of my own misgivings about Mrs. Rice.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Aquinas is open to Aristotle, who is a Pagan and who does not believe in a personal God, so the possibility I have described is not entirely hypothetical.

    No, it is entirely hypothetical - what with Spinoza living hundreds of years after Aquinas, having fundamental differences in their philosophies, etc. And it's not as if pagans around Aristotle's time didn't have views Aquinas disagreed with - he spent a fair chunk of his writings explaining why they were wrong.

    And it's not clear that Aristotle 'did not believe in a personal God' - if 'personal' means 'a being, an agent, a thinker', then it would seem Aristotle's God was personal. A God concerned with day to day affairs of humanity? No.

    So the man who acts in accordance with reason is virtuous and just, according to Spinoza.

    Which both hinges on "reason" being what Spinoza thought it was, and highlights that his 'virtue' and 'justice' were either tied up with his metaphysical views, or were non-seqs. And again we're left to the live possibility that Spinoza was wrong (if you want to get hypothetical, perhaps after a conversation with Aquinas Spinoza would have recanted and come to believe in a personal God), or that Spinoza's thoughts along these lines are very close to empty.

    So there's a problem to consider. Spinoza values truth and regards truth (among other things) as blessed as part of a metaphysical system. It's not a claim that 'knowledge is blessedness, full stop' - some knowledge may uproot his conclusions, even about being blessed. If you go to the other end and say 'no, no, knowledge is blessedness regardless of any physical or metaphysical truth', then it's just a pretty useless tautology. Even Conan the Barbarian could just flat out state 'what is best in life'.

    ReplyDelete

Sincere comments welcome. Please give us something to call you -- "Anon" no longer works.