A banner and a placard greeted students returning to
Roseville High School in northern California. The banner read �Homosexuality Is
Sin.� The placard read �Gays Hate God.� An article in the local
media reported that the banner and the placard were on a �regional tour� of
public schools.
��This is a sad day here in
Roseville when you have signs that are trying to educate our children in high
school to hate,� Roseville resident Maria Trevizo said.� Ms. Trevizo was
correct, but understated the case.
Aside from the �hate gays�
campaign, the Christian Right is also intent on having the Genesis myth taught
as �alternative science� in public school science classes. Ms. Trevizo and all
women should be concerned. Evolution means men and women are equal; creationism
means women are inherently inferior to men. That�s made clear in Genesis and
confirmed by the apostle Paul in First Timothy when he admonished Christians
�suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in
silence� because �Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived, was in
the transgression.� A woman caused
original sin. �They� cannot be trusted after such a �sin against God.�
If ye will not hear, and if ye will not lay it to heart,
to give glory unto my name, saith the LORD of hosts, I will even send a curse
upon you, and I will curse your blessings: yea, I have cursed them already,
because ye do not lay it to heart.
Behold, I will corrupt your seed, and spread dung upon
your faces, even the dung of your solemn feasts; and one shall take you away
with it. (Malachi 2: 2�3)
But then again, the Genesis myth that started it all echoes
other creation myths. The original Greek gods, the Titans (Cronus), had a nasty
habit of eating their children. That�s mirrored in Genesis when a
mean-spirited, all-knowing god creates two humans, sets them up in a test he knows (being �all-knowing�) they�ll fail
and when they do, he damns them for eternity thus creating the ultimate weapon
of control: sin.
The concept of �original sin� was a winner for the leaders
of the early Christian church in their quest for unlimited political power. It
prompted St. Augustine -- an architect of the new religious politics called
�Christianity� -- to decree that an unbaptized child is forever damned not
because of anything s/he did, but because of original sin. Needless to say,
more than a few rushed to baptism and helped fill the church�s coffers along
the way. Would true Divinity condemn an innocent child?
Not likely. But the �God� of the monotheistic Western
religions would. Philosopher Olaf Stapledon unmasked such a �God� in his 1937
work �Star Maker�:
I stood, confronted by the infinity
that men call God, and conceived according to their human cravings (409).
For on the next cosmos he consciously
projected something of his own percipience and will, ordaining that certain
patterns and rhythms of quality should be the perceivable bodies of perceiving
minds. Seemingly these creatures were intended to work together to produce the
harmony which he had conceived for this cosmos; but instead, each sought to
mould the whole cosmos in accordance with its own form. The creatures fought
desperately, and with self-righteous conviction. When they were damaged, they
suffered pain. This, seemingly, was something which the young Star Maker had
never experienced or conceived. With rapt, surprised interest, and (as it seemed
to me) with almost diabolical glee, he watched the antics and the suffering of
his first creatures, till by their mutual strife and slaughter they had reduced
their cosmos to chaos (416).
When my dream presented me with this
crude, this barbaric figment, I was at first moved with horror and incredulity.
How could the Star Maker, even in his immaturity, condemn his creatures to
agony for the weakness that he himself had allotted them? How could such a
vindictive deity command worship? (420)
After
typing Stapledon�s words, I got out my trusty copy of Walter W. Skeat�s A
Concise Etymological Dictionary to see how the words �sin� and �god� had
evolved.
Part
of �sin�s� etymological history stems from Latin sons (stem sont-) that
originally meant �real.� As scholar Peter Stanford pointed out in "The
Devil: A Biography," everything human was deemed a sin by religious
authorities interested in political control. The �seven deadly sins� illustrate
this. And again the evolution-creationism debate came to mind. For
creationists, evolution is the original sin of secular humanists who believe in
a concept not condoned by their �God�: equality.
When
I checked the word �god,� the etymology led back to Sanskrit �hu, to sacrifice (to), whence huta-, one to whom sacrifice is
offered.� In other words, �God� is the thing living creatures are killed to
honor. The Old Testament is filled with animal sacrifices (�burnt offerings,�
as they were called), and �God� did demand a human sacrifice from Abraham, but eventually
settled for Isaac�s foreskin. The final notation was most appropriate: �Not allied with good, adj.�
�Divine�
came straight from Sanskrit daiva-,
divine, albeit with major cultural and spiritual differences. What the original
speakers of Sanskrit -- the classical language of Hinduism -- understood as
�divinity� had nothing to do with the personified, anthropomorphic gods of
early Western cultures or the single anthropomorphic, personified �God� that
consumed them. That�s clear from the different etymologies for �god� and
�divinity.� The entry�s final notion��See Tuesday��clarified the difference:
Tuesday.
Anglo-Saxon Tiwes daeg, the day of Tiw, the god of war + Icelandic Tys-dagr, the day of Tyr; Danish Tirsdag, Swedish Tisdag;
Old High German Zies tac, the day of Ziu, god of war.
Like
the word, it would seem �sin� is really a human concoction ascribed to a
wrathful, sacrifice-demanding, mythic �God� conjured by political opportunists
for their own mortal purposes. They, like their �God,� profit from fear and
hatred and enjoy war, murder and mayhem whether they�re called �crusades� or
�jihads.�
That
sounds like the �God� who chats with and directs televangelist and former
presidential candidate Pat Robertson. With near perfect etymological timing,
Robertson made headlines on Tuesday,
after he�d called for the assassination
of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
The �reasons� Robertson offered for this murder in the name of
�God� and country were that Chavez was bent on exporting �Communism and Islamic
extremism across the Americas.� Aside from the fact that �communism� has
historically been staunchly atheistic, the last time I checked premeditated murder
was a �sin,� but then again, �God� and his henchmen demand bloody sacrifices.
Robertson wholeheartedly agrees with the �Homosexuality Is Sin�
banner and �Gays Hate God� placard on tour in northern California. He
enthusiastically supports the teaching of creationism as science. And he was
just repeating �God�s� words when he said of women who demand equality, �The
feminist agenda is not about equal rights for women. It is about a socialist,
anti-family political movement that encourages women to leave their husbands,
kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism, and become
lesbians.�
That
Pat Robertson would openly call for the murder of a world leader is not that
surprising. Also not surprising is the deafening silence of the leaders of the
evangelical Christian Right who have not uttered one word of criticism. Their
silence confirms their complicity.
The
politicians that the Christian Right bankrolls have been dubiously silent as
well. And for the Bush administration to say that Robertson was speaking �as a
private citizen� was the epitome of absurdity. How many �private citizens� do
you know who have their own syndicated TV shows, command a media empire the
size of Robertson�s, and exercise the political clout he does?
The Philadelphia Inquirer polled its readers about Robertson�s
comments. A common theme was summarized by this poignant posting:
In calling for the democratically elected leader of a foreign government
to be assassinated Reverend Roberts is only spreading the message of love,
compassion of his lord and savior Jesus Christ. Even though Jesus said, what
you do to the least of these you do to me, even though his message was one of
love, even though Jesus said, love thy neighbor as thyself, I guess Jesus made
exceptions [for] Presidents of other countries who criticized the policies of
the US. In these cases, the [ten] commandments, even though Robertson supports
having them displayed in public schools and government buildings, simply do not
apply. What the commandment really says is, �Thou shall not kill (unless Pat
Robertson say to).�