This year through both Advent and Christmas I’ve continually
felt drawn toward the multiplicity of our narratives—from Matthew to Mark to
Luke to John, the church has long told many stories to explain our faith. To be
religious is to be bound by a certain set of questions and symbols, but at the
same time to hold a radical openness to truth—to stand at the doorway of
Scripture and see shepherds at the manger on our left and Magi at the house
with Jesus on the right and be able to extend our arms wide and say to both,
“yes,” “thank you,” “Amen.” The shepherds teach me that God’s truth is
revealed in some unlikely corners of society; the Magi teach me that the
revelation of truth sometimes comes from far away.
There is much in the media this week over the attacks against the satirical French newspaper Charlie Hebdo, in which twelve staff members were shot this week in an attack apparently by Islamic fundamentalists. Is religion the problem? One of my favorite authors, Salman Rushdie, says it is, and calls it “a medieval form of unreason,” and says religion deserves our “fearless disrespect.” Certainly I have little sympathy for homicidal fundamentalists, but it seems unuseful to lump every impulse toward transcendence and mystery in the same category. Religious violence has endured through millennia. The Egyptians oppressed the Hebrews and the Spanish Inquisition oppressed non-Catholics. Christian fundamentalists have bombed abortion clinics and now Islamic fundamentalists attack cartoonists and school girls. The thing those all have in common is contempt and violence, not religion. Charlie Hebdo was contemptuous (and from what I’ve seen, probably racist, too)—but not violent, and not deserving of murder. It’s cruel irony that one of the police officers murdered in the attack was Muslim, risking his life to protect those on the magazine who pilloried his prophet.
There is much in the media this week over the attacks against the satirical French newspaper Charlie Hebdo, in which twelve staff members were shot this week in an attack apparently by Islamic fundamentalists. Is religion the problem? One of my favorite authors, Salman Rushdie, says it is, and calls it “a medieval form of unreason,” and says religion deserves our “fearless disrespect.” Certainly I have little sympathy for homicidal fundamentalists, but it seems unuseful to lump every impulse toward transcendence and mystery in the same category. Religious violence has endured through millennia. The Egyptians oppressed the Hebrews and the Spanish Inquisition oppressed non-Catholics. Christian fundamentalists have bombed abortion clinics and now Islamic fundamentalists attack cartoonists and school girls. The thing those all have in common is contempt and violence, not religion. Charlie Hebdo was contemptuous (and from what I’ve seen, probably racist, too)—but not violent, and not deserving of murder. It’s cruel irony that one of the police officers murdered in the attack was Muslim, risking his life to protect those on the magazine who pilloried his prophet.
So what to do? As thousands in France held up their pens in
support of the writers and artists who were killed on Tuesday, as a
religious person I hold out two open hands. I hold out open hands
for mystery, for attentiveness and for curiosity. Open hands to say that I
don’t come to Scripture—or even my own life!— with certainty, but with
faith. I’ll imagine the magi in the stable and give thanks for the holy
strangeness of kings in a barn. I’ll imagine the shepherds at the house and
hope that their lambs don’t wander into the kitchen. I’ll get out of bed every
day to meet my own chaotic life of distraction and wonder—parenting and
preaching and learning and falling and getting up again—through all of it so
grateful for a faith big enough to hold the pieces together.
At Epiphany, we remember the magi following a star and listening to the
invitation in their dream to go home by another way. What new path are
you on today? What’s the power of your faith against violence? Where do
you need the stars to illuminate your road? Where does mystery win over certainty?