Category: Guest Column


cross Sightings

I stopped wearing the cross years ago.  There are times when I wear it, Good Friday, as a religious symbol during worship, but otherwise it is not the symbol of my practice of Christianity that I choose to wear.  It has become a marker of Christian consumerism that it was never meant to be and in some ways represents bumper sticker faith.  Rather, I wear the first symbol of the practice of Christianity, the fish.  It is counter-Christian culture and better represents my discipleship and my journey in faith.  Martin Marty offers an interesting Sightings on the topic of the cross and secular society.

The Secularization of the Cross
— Martin E. Marty | June 27, 2011

Weekly, year in and year out, we sight new evidence that defining what is “religious” and what is “secular” remains difficult in the United States. One way to trace some attempts is to read The Humanist, as we often do. “Cross Purposes,” in the current July-August issue, is an example. In it Rob Boston plots the curious, not always thought-through, and apparently self-contradictory actions by “the religious right” which “secularize” the Christians’ sacred “central symbol.” Boston provides legal examples.

He takes for granted that “the cross is the most [sic] preeminent symbol of Christian faith,” the unifying marker for more than one billion people, the reminder to them of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. You’d think believers would guard the centrality and sacrality of the cross. Yet, to achieve certain worldly and civil ends, many recent court cases reveal the religious right leaders in public contexts saying, in effect, “Never mind. We don’t mean it. The cross isn’t really religious. . . it has become a generic symbol to memorialize any dead person” (e.g. in the Salazar v. Buono case where friend-of-the-right Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia ruled that the cross can be a secular symbol. If so, asked plaintiff Buono, a Catholic, “why don’t we see crosses in Jewish cemeteries?” Similarly, a Utah court said the cross can be deprived of religious significance, as on highway signs).

Boston writes that such uses of the cross reduce it to the “level of a public service announcement,” which is “a novel interpretation of law and theology, to be sure.” Agreed. You’d think firm Christians would be the first and loudest to protest such reductions, but in these court cases they promote the secularizing practice. For this “meager payoff,” as Boston calls it, “the religious right is willing to deny the meaning of the most significant symbol of Christianity.” He is brusque: “Rubbish. Who looks at a cross and thinks, ‘My, what an interesting way to arrange two planks of wood?’” Why, he asks, with this reduction prevailing, should believers still be asked to “take up the cross”? Why make it the focal point of churches, incorporate it into devotional art, and celebrate it in hymns? Has any non-Christian, he asks, ever felt compelled to cling to “the old rugged cross?”

Believers and non-believers alike have reason to back off in some cases on this scene, and not always be crabby, jumpy, and super-scrupulous about the intrusions across the “wall of separation of church and state.” Ours, we remember, is a messy religious, secular and pluralist society in which lines are never clear and walls are seldom the best symbols for separation, which is complex and changing. Sometimes to keep the civil peace or civil tone, citizens can wink and live with the mess a pluralist and contentious society creates.

Boston may be over-alert to these issues, but he raises enough flags that Christians, including many not only on the right, may become more aware of the risks. “At the end of the day what will [the cross-planters on public spaces] have achieved?” Not all of their games played with the cross as symbol have to be as cynical as Boston sees them. There can be naïveté and generalized reverence in some of these cross-posting moves. But critics may be doing articulate Christians a favor when they observe militant Christians having mounted crosses alongside highways and atop mountains, “simply and conveniently forgetting they did so by denying the symbol’s importance. They should ask ‘what if the secular symbolism sticks?’” For many, it has stuck.

References

Rob Boston, “Cross Purposes: What’s Behind the Religious Right’s Drive to Secularize Their Central Symbol?” The Humanist, July-August 2011.

Marriage Equality

This article on Religion Dispatches caught my attention.  I am a person that does not think that same sex marriage between consenting adults is a threat to my 21 year marriage.  There are many on the other side of that debate from where I am.  There are many “isms” in our world and this is one that I trust during my lifetime finally dissolves from public debate.  I oppose amendments to federal or state constitutions that legislate discrimination.  It is hard to change a person’s mind.  It is something each person comes to on her or his own terms.  Living, education, life experience, and relationship are all part of a person growing, evolving, and changing positions.  Some change is pragmatic while other personal change has something to do with universal Truth.

Here is a bit of the interview.  Click the title to read or listen to the entire interview.

“I ‘Came Out’ For Marriage Equality”: An Anti-Gay Activist Changes His Mind
By Welton Gaddy | Religion Dispatches | May 25, 2011

One of the most frustrating things about today’s political rhetoric is the entrenched nature of those who argue any side of an issue. Political leaders and the media provide a bounty of messages to support a position, and it is profoundly easy to consume only opinions one already agrees with.

There are times that it feels as if we are at a permanent stalemate regarding some of the biggest issues facing our society and our nation.

That is precisely why I was fascinated to read, early last month, that a respected, successful strategist and activist for a prominent issue dared to grapple with his own conscience and, despite a good deal of fear and concern, publicly distance himself from the work he had been doing.

The activist is Louis J. Marinelli, and the issue is marriage equality.

In the summer of 2010, it was impossible not to see headlines about the Summer of Marriage Tour, as powerful messages opposing same-gender marriage proliferated online and with a physical traveling bus tour.

When so much of today’s activism is spoken of in terms of war and battle, with a faceless enemy determined to destroy all that’s good, how does one come to see opponents as individual human beings, people of value and worth, deserving of respect and consideration, of empathy and even support?

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