Thursday, August 13, 2009

JESUS KILLS




Let me start by saying that this is a difficult post to write. I am the son of a veteran of the conflict in Vietnam, my uncle was a chaplain in the military and I have relatives currently serving in the armed forces. I respect and thank them for their service and realize that to varying degrees, their faith played a part in their being able to endure that period in their lives. While there is some validity to the argument that it's their service that protects the
constitutional freedoms that allow me to speak openly about my convictions the way that I do, there are just some things that I refuse to ignore.

It's 1967, and my Father has just recently returned from his stint serving the U.S. Marine Corps for eleven months building pontoon bridges in Vietnam. The Assemblies of God Church, the largest evangelical christian denomination in the world and the one I was raised in, takes notice of the social struggle internationally as well as domestically that the conflict is causing and changes it's longstanding position of pacifism and embraces the worldly support of war and the US military as a metaphor for their spiritual struggle. To that point in time, the religious life in the Military had been largely populated by moderate mainstream conservative denominations like the Catholics, Methodists, Presbyterians, and Episcopalians. The evangelicals saw this as an opportunity to not only infiltrate this intended secular institution, but to turn it into a branch of their missionary work abroad. Flash forward to the 1980's and under Commander in Chief Ronald Reagan, The Pentagon began accrediting hundreds of Evangelical and Pentecostal Bible Colleges. This allowed graduates from these schools to dominate the ranks of the military chaplain positions. Schools that all too often preach that their faith is the one true way and all other faiths are nothing short of agents of Satan. (Ask a hardcore evangelical what he or she thinks of the Catholic or Mormon faith - odds are the word "cult" will be used more often then not). Today nearly eighty percent of the 2,900 chaplains in the US military are affiliated with Evangelical/Pentecostal denominations.

The Officer's Christian Fellowship (OCF) was an organization formed during World War II that once was a benign ministry group supporting a soldier's personal faith, but in recent years it has become much more Militant. It's the most organized fundamentalist group within the Military with 15,000 active members and a strong presence on over 80 percent of US Military bases worldwide. Their Executive Director Retired Air Force Lt. General Bruce L Fister, Calls the Global war on terror "a spiritual battle of the highest magnitude." Approximately 22% of the current US Military identifies themselves as evangelical. The Officer's Christian Fellowship calls them “ambassadors for Christ in uniform,” and the Campus Crusade Military Ministry called them “government paid missionaries". a book called "Under Orders: A Spiritual Handbook for Military Personnel", by Air Force Lieutenant Colonel William McCoy has been promoted with the following: “Under the rubric of free speech and the twisted idea of separation of church and state,” and endorsed publicly by General David Petraeus (the senior US Commander in Iraq, until September when he was promoted to the top spot in the US Central Command, running operations from Egypt to Pakistan) saying "Under Orders should be in every rucksack for those moments when Soldiers need spiritual energy". When asked to retract his endorsement by the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, Petraeus claimed it wasn't meant to be a public endorsement. The Military Religious Freedom Foundation is a group that has fought countless acts of religious intolerance. It's President, Michael Weinstein and his family have been the target of countless threats and acts of vandalism stemming from his investigation of the evangelical fundamentalist's actions. At a service at Fort Bragg promoting his book, Never Surrender: A Soldier’s Journey to the Crossroads of Faith and Freedom, retired three-star general William Boykin said of Weinstein's "attack' on Petreaus' comments. “Here comes a guy named Mikey Weinstein trashing Petraeus, because he endorsed a book that’s just trying to help soldiers. And this makes clear what [Weinstein’s] real agenda is, which is not to help this country win a war on terror.” “It’s satanic,” called out a member of the audience. “Yes,” agreed Boykin. “It’s demonic.” Then there's the Christian Embassy. Founded by Dr. Bill Bright who was was also a co-signatory of the Land Letter of 2002 which outlined a Just War rationale for the 2003 invasion of Iraq, providing a theological underpinning for the invasion being planned by President George W. Bush. The Christian Embassy is a group dedicated to the ministry of US leaders both political and military. They filmed a promotional video, in the Pentagon, using at least 4 uniformed officers, which is a direct violation of military protocol which prohibits the Military from endorsing any specific religion / faith. The Military repremanded all of the uniformed officers, but all were later promoted. Author Jeff Sharlet, wrote a piece in the May issue of Harper's Magazine titled "Jesus Killed Mohammed: The Crusade for a Christian Military". In it he details many examples of these actions that directly violate the current General Order Number One which specifically forbids "proselytizing of any faith, religion, or practice". An Easter morning in Iraq where after watching the widely considered anti-Semitic movie, "The Passion of the Christ" soldiers from the
1/26 Infantry of the 1st Infantry Division have an Iraqi interpreter spray paint the words "Jesus Killed Mohammed" in large red Arabic letters on a bradley armored fighting vehicle. This vehicle then did a "Run and Gun" mission through the city of Samarra to draw insurgent fire away from the camp. All while the same painting interpreter was commissioned with the task of chanting the same antagonistic message to the city via bullhorn. Assuming that all of the weapons fire trained on them was hostile insurgent action and not religiously offended Muslims, the bradley lays waste to the neighborhood. Later the driver of the bradley, lieutenant, John D. DeGiulio tells Sharlet that he had taken the movie earlier that day as a sign he would survive, and that "each time I go into combat, I get closer to God." Aljazeera television recently ran a story which showed footage of a meeting led by a chaplain in which they were discussing how best to distribute bibles translated into local languages. Stating that presenting them as "gifts" was a good way to circumvent the General Order number 1 prohibiting open proselytizing. Video from a Trinity Broadcasting network show showed two US christian missionaries being escorted and protected by Military personnel distributing bibles. Then there's the daily intelligence briefings that them Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, or The christian evangelists speaking at the Air Force Academy that preached that the only way to end terrorism is to "Kill Islam."

I could cite countless other examples of religious intolerance, bigotry, and complete disregard of our constitution. The radical evangelical movement within the military, concentrated in the officer ranks, is bent on spreading their special brand of religious nearsightedness around the world. As another Chaplain states in that Aljazeera video that while the special forces hunt men, they are "hunting souls." Driven by what they call the "Great Commission". Matthew 28: 19, 20 (19) Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: (20) Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world. Amen. They are blind to the fact that these actions do nothing but support Al-qaeda and other anti-US groups contention that the United States is on a religious crusade. Giving them the greatest of recruitment tools. That these actions do nothing to separate us from the religious extremists that flew those planes into the World Trade Center Towers. The Oath of Enlistment states, "I, do solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic..." It says nothing about hunting souls, spray painting crosses on mosques, or getting into an argument over who's god can beat up who's. I was against the military actions to begin with. but now, when someone asks me to support the troops, there is no way I can respond positively. I'm not trying to deny a soldier the right to believe the way he wants. In fact, If a soldier's faith is what helps him or her get through the daily horrors of war, then that's great and within their constitutional rights but keep it to yourself. Nobody held a gun to their head and forced them to join the Military. If 80 percent of enlisted soldiers and officers consider themselves Christian, then they can rely on their god for support. But when the Military goes away from protecting my Constitution, and begins spreading ideologies and revisionist US History in some Christian Jihad wielding weaponized
faith, then that's where my support ends.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

THE UNFORGIVABLE SIN

But whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never be forgiven; he is guilty of an eternal sin. - MARK 3:29

Back in the Winter of 2006 the Atheist site The Rational Response Squad issued a challenge to atheists everywhere to come out of the closet so to speak, and make a public affirmation of their beliefs by denouncing the "holy spirit" and thus committing the only unforgivable sin mentioned in the Bible. It was called "The Blasphemy Challenge" and soon after they threw down the proverbial gauntlet, You Tube was overwhelmed with video after video of people stating for all the interweb world to see that they denied the holy spirit. It even became national news on shows like Nightline and CNN. Videos are still being added to You Tube this day, as are the opposing Christian responses.

While I'd tell people I was an atheist if they asked, I had never made a point to tell anyone, especially those in my family that are still outspoken practicing evangelical christians. I never felt it was that big of a deal. I mean I've always enjoyed pushing boundaries and offending them to some degree. A Jesse Jackson for President T-shirt worn to a family reunion comes to mind. I'm not sure one of my Uncles ever got over that one. For the most part, these are very good people who I enjoy spending time with. It was the primary reason I had ignored the Facebook friend requests of an Aunt and Uncle. The very uncle that married my wife and I. I told myself it was because I didn't want them to be offended by anything I might say, and to some degree I suppose that it true. Then two days ago I was talking to my mother on the phone. My mother, to whom I've never said "I'm an atheist". Our conversation covered many things, but ultimately found it's way to a couple religious topics. There I found myself mentioning things like the Boy Scouts policy against atheists and my reading a book by noted Atheist Sam Harris, and I'll be dammed if I wasn't all of a sudden on the verge of a panic attack quickly changing the subject. What the fuck was that about? For all my rants on Facebook with old friends and my blog posts here I suddenly found myself feeling like that quiet boy that didn't ask questions and just followed her to church. I think at that moment it might have been easier to admit to her that I was gay.

I am an Atheist. I Believe there is no god. I no more believe in the Judeo-Christian god than I do Allah, Ra, Apollo, Quetzalcoatl, Santa Claus, The Easter Bunny, or Midi-Chlorians. I believe that faith is a intellectual cop out. I believe that it's a waste of my time to deal with people that say "Faith is all I have, and nothing you say will change my mind". That's fundamentalist for "shut up and go away". I believe that being an atheist frees me to share ideas with everyone rather than arrogantly dismissing everyone else's viewpoints because they don't match your own. I believe that being an atheist frees me to focus on those that I love rather than be afraid of some supreme being and his punishment/or reward of an afterlife. This is the one and only shot we get, so we need to make the most of it. I need to do a better job of doing that and stop being worried about what someone might think of me and my beliefs, Family or not.

Oh, and about that Blasphemy Challenge...



And if I'm wrong...In the Immortal words of Han Solo in the Empire Strikes Back "Then I'll see you in hell"