Archive for the ‘Spirituality’ Category

Why Should Church and State Be Kept Separate?

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

By now many of us are familiar with the right-wing argument that religion and government are inextricably intertwined, that the two have always mixed and can never be completely separated, and that the Constitution does not bar religious influence in governance. However, a group of legal experts at a recent forum have criticized this assumption as a myth, maintaining that secular civil government is critical for preserving civil liberties and American exceptionalism. The only problem is our reasoning for keeping church and state separate–what does America being “exceptional” have to do with it, anyway? As a ULC minister, do you find it relevant?

The forum was held on Tuesday, 8 November, at the U.S. National Press Club, a professional organization and private social club for journalists in Washington, DC. (Every U.S. president since Warren Harding has been a member of the club.) During the forum, experts from the fields of law, history, and political science addressed growing concerns about references to God and religion on the part of conservative Republican presidential hopefuls during the 2012 U.S. presidential campaign. The event was characterized by overwhelming support for separation of church and state as a vital component of American democracy, and suspicion toward how Republicans are disingenuously using God and religion to promote their political and social agendas.

Those in attendance gave a number of reasons for their concern over the growing attempt to blur the boundary between church and state. John Ragosta, author of Wellspring of Liberty: How Virginia’s Religious Dissenters Helped to Win the American Revolution & Secured Religious Liberty, said that the United States would not have received the respect and support of non-Christians if it were an unequivocally Christian nation, according to Shahid Ali Panhwer and Maha Mussadaq in a story in The Miami Herald. Meanwhile, Jamie Raskin, Maryland state senator and director of the Law and Government Program at American University’s School of Law, argued that while the U.S. Constitution allows people to practice the religion of their choice, government actions themselves should rely on logic and science. He also pointed out that while most Americans may be Christian in a demographic sense, the government itself is not Christian, and forcing right-wing fundamentalist Christianity on to constitutional law would topple two centuries of developments in secular government. The basic message seemed to be that America needs to remain politically secular in order to remain exceptional as a paragon of democracy.

There are many fantastic points being made by people like Raskin: there is an important difference between the majority of private citizens being Christian on one hand, and government being Christian on the other–while most Americans are Christian, the actions of government are not predicated on the majority religious belief, for such beliefs are a private and not a political exercise.

But supporters of church-state separation are still emphasizing exceptionalism as their motive. Why should our commitment to secular civil government be motivated by America being “exceptional”? Isn’t the preservation of civil liberties reason enough? To say that the American government should remain secular (and thus preserve civil liberties) in order to remain exceptional is like saying that it should remain secular in order to look good in front of everybody else. While exceptionalism can be defined as “setting an example”, it also connotes superiority, so protecting secular civil government in order to be exceptional suggests greater interest in looking “cool” than in protecting people’s rights; it suggests a mercenary, “might makes right” sort of attitude preoccupied more with recognition and personal interests than with principles themselves. But that smacks of egoism. Perhaps you’ve asked the same question as a minister ordained online: should the U.S. be protecting civil liberties in order to be “better” than other nations; or should it be protecting civil liberties for their own sake?

Besides, why shouldn’t other nations be expected to serve as examples of successful democracy? Why shouldn’t they be expected or encouraged to develop secular civil governments themselves, thereby preserving the civil liberties of their own people? Placing this expectation on the U.S. alone suggests either that Americans alone have the ability to develop democracy, or that only Americans deserve it. But, obviously, if the U.S. believes that non-Americans deserve the same rights as Americans, it follows that the U.S. should expect other nations to be exceptional too. It is not, in other words, the sole prerogative of the U.S. to embody and benefit from democracy.

We do see the U.S. helping other nations demonstrate this kind of initiative with movements like the Arab Spring, in which fledgling Middle-Eastern democracies are earning the admiration of the world for toppling their erstwhile tyrants. Hopefully we will see more examples of this sort of assistance to other nations seeking the same liberties.

There are many reasons why preserving secular civil government helps to nurture a healthy democracy (some nations, like the United Kingdom, manage to do this through organic secularization), but what should be our motive for doing so? To protect civil liberties for their own sake, or to make ourselves look like the cat’s meow, and the rest of the world chopped liver? If we wish for every citizen of every nation to enjoy the benefits of secular civil government, at the same time enjoying free exercise of religion, it should be the former. The U.S. needs to start fighting this cause because it benefits people, and not to get something out of it, like the sniveling, fawning admiration of weak and dependent foreign nations. That sort of attitude borders on nationalistic.

What do you think as a nondenominational wedding officiant?

Source:

The Miami Herald

    Conan O’Brien Officiates Gay Wedding On-Air……

    Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

    Conan O’Brien may be better known for the occasional good-humored gay joke he cracks for his audience, but the ULC Monastery’s newest celebrity minister has proved to be a true supporter of social justice cause. On Thursday, O’Brien took advantage of New York State’s Marriage Equality Act to officiate a same-sex wedding in New York. The ULC Monastery couldn’t be happier with O’Brien’s clear public support for marriage equality.

    The host of TBS’s Conan recently revealed to The Washington Post his reason for deciding to get ordained online and take his show to New York City’s Beacon Theater was to officiate the wedding–but it remained unclear who the lucky couple was. Now the Post reports, America’s beloved ginger comic will be marrying the show’s long time costume designer, Scott Cronick, to his partner David Gorshein on air during the show. The ceremony will be the first of its kind as well: O’Brien told The Post, “[t]his will be the first, I believe, same-sex wedding performed on late night television”. So, people have yet another good reason to tune in to the lightheartedly self-deprecating comic’s late night show.

    It was originally rumored that the flame-haired comic decided to become a minister and perform the ceremony as part of a publicity stunt to boost the show’s ratings, which have fallen since he left NBC. However, it is wise not to jump to that conclusion, according to the Web site Vulture, show sources have suggested that the event is actually a quite serious and meaningful affair. His intentions should be taken seriously not only because the ceremony is being held in New York (and is therefore legal), but also because Cronick is a longtime staffer of the show. For those reasons it seems fair to treat the Conan ceremony as a genuine validation of same-sex affection.
    And for that we are grateful. The ULC Monastery would like to congratulate Cronick and Gorshein on their new life together and to thank O’Brien for showing so much support for the gay and lesbian community. We hope to see many more quirky, offbeat ceremonies from the inimitable humorist for years to come–and a boost to those ratings, to boot.

    Sources:

    Vulture

    The Washington Post

      Does Lady Gaga’s “Born This Way” Send the Right Message?

      Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

      Upon its release, Lady Gaga’s dance hit “Born This Way” instantly became a brazen vindication of homosexuality’s biological basis. The LGBTQ community revelled in the message that homosexuality was immutable and therefore deserved society’s approval. The problem, though, is that the song’s message is founded on the principles of biological determinism, a philosophy which reinforces the social inequities that the LGBTQ community and other minorities are struggling to eliminate. In other words, the song’s message relies on a socially damaging cop-out about human nature. Perhaps what we need to do is take a fresh approach on gay and lesbian apologetics by critically examining the consequences of biological determinist thinking for oppressed groups.

      Essentially, biological determinism states that people are born with certain immutable biological characteristics, and that these characteristics help explain the social inequities we see in society. By contrast, social determinism (a seemingly non-canonical term) posits that the behavior of the individual is determined by social mores and institutions. Since they are both forms of determinism, biological and social determinism are the opposite of free will, a philosophy which states that human beings ultimately possess agency and volition over their actions. Finally, compatibilism states that free will and determinism are not incompatible, and that both simultaneously influence the behavior of the individual. And then there is epigenetics, which is relevant but lies outside the scope of this article.

      One might think that, ostensibly, biological determinism would serve gays and lesbians, because it transfers responsibility for homosexual behavior from the person to the person’s biology, thereby exonerating that person of any claims of moral turpitude. According to this view, if homosexuality is biologically predetermined, gays and lesbians are not sinning against God, because they are blameless. A person’s sexual and romantic affection for members of the same sex is driven by the neurochemistry of his or her brain (which happens to be created by God, as Christians themselves would argue), and it is unfair to blame a person for the neurobiological processes they cannot control, hence it is unfair to blame a person for his or her same-sex affection. In short, the idea is, “You can’t blame a person for something they can’t control.”

      It seems like a triumphant final “hurrah” in defense of homosexuality, but is it really a good philosophy for human beings in general? Maybe not so much.

      Using biological determinism as an excuse for our behavior might inadvertently hamper efforts at achieving gender equity. The biological determinist model posits that boys are inherently more aggressive, lustful, and dominating than girls, and girls, more passive, emotional, and nurturing than boys, because of some genetically-influenced cocktail of hormones which shaped their brains in the womb. But is this philosophy scientifically sound, and does it serve boys and girls? As Cordelia Fine points out in her book Delusions of Gender: How Our Minds, Society, and Neurosexism Create Difference, scientists do believe that testosterone determines which set of genitals a baby will develop, but it is much less certain how it determines which toys children like to play with, let alone which types of careers they wish to pursue later in life. The neuroscience used to support the hardwired sex differences which result in gender inequity, Fine shows again and again, is methodologically flawed, misinterpreted, or simply nonexistent. If we think about it, we can see the slippery slope of excuses which might be used if we embrace biologically determined sex inequity: for example, when a man rapes a woman, it isn’t really his fault, because he was being controlled by testosterone. In effect, rapists get off the hook because “boys will be boys”. But bio-determinism is dehumanizing for another important reason: empathy is something that defines us as human beings (or as mammals at least), and we need as much of it as we can get, but bio-determinism posits that boys are inherently less empathetic than girls, so, essentially, what it is suggesting is that half of the human race should be crueller than the other half. This is absurd if our greatest goal is to encourage as much empathy as possible. Does the LGBTQ community really want to promote such destructive self-limitation?

      Biological determinism could even be used to justify certain racist assumptions. As bio-determinists, we might argue that black people are inherently more violent than white people in order to explain the disproportionately high number of black people in American prisons. We might also invoke bio-determinism to explain the higher mortality rate of black people, and why they need this-or-that medicine (the commercialization of race for the purpose of lining the pockets of drug companies). This racialization of social issues is roundly criticized by Dorothy Parker in her book Fatal Invention: How Science, Politics, and Big Business Re-Create Race in the Twenty-First Century. When we embrace bio-deterministic explanations for racial inequity in health and crime rates, we are automatically enabling such inequity to persist. Clearly it is not beneficial for us, though, so we should probably stop making excuses, show some volition, and pick up the slack, no? For this reason, the LGBTQ community might wish to be cautious about how they use the bio-determinist explanation for homosexuality.

      Ironically, the “Born This Way” maxim might not just hurt women and racial minorities–it might actually end up hurting the LGBTQ community, too. By using biological innateness to justify their desires, gays and lesbians are simply giving power to the oppressor, because they are sort of implying that they “can’t help doing something that is wrong.” In other words, they suggest, homosexuality shouldn’t be accepted because it is inherently good; it should be accepted because gay people can’t help being gay. It’s kind of like saying, “congenital heart disease is bad because it kills people, but it should be accepted because it’s biological.” That’s just ludicrous. Of course it shouldn’t be accepted just because it’s biologically-based; it should be eliminated because it kills people. What is taking place here is an “appeal to nature” fallacy, which states that a thing is good because it is natural, and bad because it is unnatural. But a thing is not good because it is natural, or bad because it is unnatural. So, what gays and lesbians should be doing is saying, “Even if homosexuality weren’t natural, that doesn’t make it wrong. It is also your choice to be a Christian, but I don’t discriminate against you because of that.” Thus, to deny power to the oppressor, the LGBTQ community might focus on critiquing the appeal to nature fallacy rather than affirming it.

      As we can see, Lady Gaga’s widely adored anthem ostensibly vindicates same-sex desire, but in many ways it actually reinforces damaging social inequities for women and racial minorities. It is even self-sabotaging for the LGBTQ community itself, given how it requires homosexuality to be natural in order to be justifiable. Certainly, the body does play a role in how we behave as human beings, but it does not necessarily control our behavior in every way from birth. Absolute social determinism and absolute biological determinism both seem a little implausible, so perhaps we should consider paying more heed to compatibilism–the philosophy that allows for a complex interaction between the mind, the body, and society. We might even argue that we have more free will, more agency and autonomy, than we give ourselves credit for. Maybe we weren’t strictly “born this way” after all, and maybe there’s a bigger “socio-biological” picture to why we do what we do, but that doesn’t make homosexuality wrong any more than it makes Christianity wrong. Maybe what we should be doing is defending minority sexual identities for their own sake, not for their basis in biology.

      Of course, at the end of the day, it just so happens that there is a mounting heap of evidence defending at least the partial innateness of homosexuality, but, alas, it is exceedingly difficult to teach a religious fundamentalist new tricks, isn’t it?

      Source:

      The Muck of Ages

        Conan O’Brien Ordained by Universal Life Church Monastery

        Friday, October 28th, 2011

        As New York Magazine‘s Vulture blog has just announced, Conan O’Brien, will be celebrating the one-year anniversary of his Late Night TBS talk show, by officiating the same-sex marriage of a longtime staffer.  We’re proud to confirm that Conan is one of the Universal Life Church Monastery’s most recent ordained ministers! Though the date of the wedding ceremony has yet to be released, Conan was ordained with Universal Life Church Monastery on October 21st and will likely be performing the marriage as part of the shows one week stint of episodes in New York City next week.

        The Monastery salutes Conan’s courage to perform a same-sex marriage and to set the example that we are all children of the same universe; gay, straight, black, white, brown, young and old.  The church invites all to become a minister of their own beliefs and speak truth to power during these critical times of change.

          Does Reading the Bible Make People More Liberal?

          Thursday, October 27th, 2011

          Frequent Bible-reading can make people more liberal, posits a Baylor University doctoral candidate in his master’s thesis, contradicting commonly-held stereotypes about liberals and conservatives. (That is something for ULC wedding officiants to ponder, given their need to identify potential adversaries of online ordination.) People who read the Bible frequently, the thesis suggests, tend to have a more left-leaning attitude about issues like economic equality, criminal justice, and the role of science. However, frequent Bible reading does not make people more liberal on other issues, suggesting that the growth in liberalism among Bible-readers is very much selective.

          Analyzing data from the 2007 Baylor Religion Survey, Aaron Franzen, the study’s author, showed how Bible readers’ attitudes changed in very specific areas of political and social significance. Franzen found that frequent reading of Scripture and Bible verses resulted in greater opposition to the Patriot Act (a U.S. law curtailing civil liberties under the pretext of national security), expanded government authority to fight terrorism, and harsher punishments for criminals, including the death penalty. Additionally, frequent Bible readers were 27 per cent more likely to believe it important to consume less energy to be a good human being and 22 per cent less likely to see a conflict between science and religion.

          These liberal views, though, were balanced out by more conservative views in other areas. (It would be interesting to know their thoughts about people who get ordained online.) While frequent Bible readers showed greater apprehension toward things like jingoism, capital punishment, unbridled energy consumption, and anti-scientific attitudes (all trademarks of a twenty-first century American conservative), they were also critical of abortion and same-sex marriage. Franzen found that almost half of people who read the Bible less than once a year support same-sex marriage, but only 6 per cent of frequent Bible readers did, and there was also a statistically significant negative correlation between frequent Bible reading and support for abortion services.

          What could be the reason for this unexpected divergence in attitude between terrorism, environmentalism, and criminal justice on one hand, and abortion and same-sex marriage on the other? One possible explanation is that the Bible treats criminals and the poor as generic sinners deserving of forgiveness, but does not necessarily treat sexual “deviants” like homosexuals and women who seek abortion services by the same standard. The Bible is full of parables teaching the reader to forgive generic miscreants, but where homosexuality is mentioned, right-wing, evangelical Christians overwhelmingly treat the text as condemning the act, and abortion does not seem to be mentioned at all, which tempts frequent Bible readers to fill in the gaps with their own personal preference, or with what the Bible says elsewhere about the sanctity of life. Another explanation could be that the frequent readers’ choice in liberal values reflects a generational difference: perhaps frequent Bible-readers tend to be older, and for older people, helping the poor, forgiving criminals, and caring for nature may be traditionally acceptable forms of charity, but allowing consenting adults of the same sex to marry one another, or a woman to terminate a pregnancy, may not. Interestingly, the frequent Bible readers tend to reject the values which place more importance on the idea of adult consent, suggesting that this fundamental humanist principle figures little in the minds of such individuals. Of course, these are only explanations, and there are plenty of others to consider.

          So, habitual Bible readers seem to be a bit inconsistent in their liberalism. All explanations as to why frequent Bible-readers pick some liberal values and dismiss others are mere speculation until we do more research into the subject and dig up more answers. Nevertheless, it serves as a starting point to imagine why habitual Bible reading leads to a consolidation of both liberal and conservative beliefs. Perhaps the Bible paints a prettier, more sympathetic picture of criminals, the poor, and even nature (often viewed by Christians as subordinate to man) than of people who deviate from sexual norms. Perhaps people who spend a lot of time reading the Bible tend to be older, and older people have a harder time accepting same-sex marriage and abortion than younger people because these practices redefine traditional institutions with which older people are familiar. Again, though, these are just hypotheses.

          As a Universal Life Church minister, what do you think? Why do people who frequently read the Bible show more liberal attitudes about criminal justice, poverty, and the environment than they do about same-sex marriage and abortion?

          Sources:

          Baylor Proud

          The Biblical Recorder

          The Houston Chronicle

            Turning the Traditional Wedding on Its Head

            Tuesday, October 25th, 2011

            For many brides-and-grooms-to-be, the image of a young woman in a fluffy white dress being led by her father down the aisle to say “I do” to a stern man in a sober black suit has grown stale, and a trifle generic. Nowadays, more people want to have an alternative wedding ceremony which reflect their unique tastes as a couple, and sometimes this means reinventing age-old traditions and, quite literally, throwing a little dirt on things. Below are a few ideas that are catching the wedding industry by storm might inspire a more creative and personalized wedding for the reader.

            A lot of trends have focussed on re-defining what it means to be a bride or groom, and one of these is the “little black bridesmaid’s dress”, something even a lot of ULC wedding officiants haven’t seen at the altar yet. Traditionally, as we all know, black has been reserved for the groom and his men while the bride has donned and her bridesmaids, a vibrant blue, magenta, purple, or other similar color. But never black. Nowadays, though, bridesmaids and even brides themselves are wearing black because they like it, and it fits with the sartorial concept they had in mind (i.e. “Maybe I want my bridesmaids in black silk to resemble the night sky”, or something similarly inspired). For modern couples, white is no longer a symbol of purity, and black opens up countless creative opportunities.

            But the change in symbolism goes a little deeper than wearing black instead of white, and sex roles based on specious notions about intrinsic biological differences are beginning to crumble with the emergence of more egalitarian wedding and engagement trends like the “man-gagement” ring. Historically engagement rings symbolized a woman’s bondage to a man, and while engagement rings no longer bear this connotation, it is a wonder why a symbol of engagement should grace the woman’s finger, but not the man’s. After all, they’re both getting engaged, right? In response to consumers questioning this odd double standard, retailers are now selling engagement rings, albeit usually less ornate than the typical engagement ring, for grooms. Finally, we have arrived at the point where both women and men feel obliged to signal their commitment to another person.

            Things like rings and dresses are just objects, though, and the wedding ritual itself is undergoing a transformation too. Fewer brides are comfortable with the idea of walking down the aisle clinging to their fathers’ arms as if they are property being given away to the men who, in real life, they’re marrying out of love and mutual respect. For this reason, more brides and grooms are choosing to walk down the aisle together. (As children, some us might have assumed that this is the way it had always been done, only to be surprised by the revelation that the groom had traditionally received the bride from her father.) As Lori Stephenson, co-founder of the wedding planning and design firm Lola Event Productions, tells Joe Mont of The Street, “They are coming together to the altar as equals and there is none of this old-fashioned idea of leaving your family”. In addition, more women are proposing to their fiances, and more grooms have groomswomen while more brides have bridesmen. As marriage evolves into an equal economic partnership between two stable individuals, and as the larger society echoes this egalitarianism, the wedding ceremony is increasingly being re-conceived to reflect this social development.

            These are all somewhat solemn and philosophical considerations, but the modern wedding ceremony can be fun and quirky, too, reflecting the eccentricities of bride and groom, which is why photography shoots–those precious moments captured in time–are taking on a new twist, too. The pressure placed on brides to “play the part” and act like flawless beauty queens permanently embalmed in wedding photograph albums for decades to come can be truly nerve-wracking. As a way of alleviating some of this stress, and to create memories which reflect their off-the-wall side, brides are creating the perfect antithesis to the typical prim, proper, composed wedding photo shoot by deliberately . In some photo shoots, brides are dumping chocolate syrup on themselves, rolling around in the dirt, or running down the street in the rain–all in that expensive white, fluffy gown. (Usually the dresses go to the dry-cleaners afterward.) With the pressure to perform the part of the white-clad princess finally past her, the bride can now let loose and make a statement about who she really is (and still keep that heirloom dress, too).

            And, of course, it has to be mentioned that more people are choosing get ordained online so that they can marry their loved ones. More and more, however, couples are double-checking with their local clerk to confirm the legal status of their wedding officiant and have low-key weddings ahead of time to avoid any surprises later on. It is a smart decision to make, but it’s also a relief to know that wedding performed by ULC ministers are legal in always every jurisdiction in the U.S.

            These ideas aren’t for everyone–some people will still want to retain the more traditional elements of the wedding ceremony–but such quirky new customs wouldn’t be catching on like wildfire if there weren’t a substantial number of people who wanted to try them out. People are waiting until they’re older to marry, women no longer belong to men, marriage requires less approval from society to be considered valid, and when people do marry they tend to do so after much waiting and deliberation, making for a big, painstakingly planned out affair. Consequently, marriage requires a little tweaking for the modern couple, and maybe a way for stressed-out brides to let off some steam. The Universal Life Church Monastery thinks it’s a good thing that we’re taking a critical look at what the wedding ceremony means for us today and redefining it, without any lingering sense of shame, to suit our modern-day needs and desires.

            As a minister ordained online, or as an individual who recently married or hopes to do so in future, what do you think about the changing face of this cherished tradition? Do you like the creative, sometimes odd, ways in which weddings are being reinvented to reflect personal tastes and changing social attitudes?

            Source:

            Business Insider

              Sex, Race, and the Biology Excuse

              Thursday, October 20th, 2011

              Inside the Brain
              Digging Up Dinosaurs
              Have you ever heard anyone exclaim, “It’s biology!” when confronted with the problem of male promiscuity, or the disproportionately high number of black people in American prisons? Perhaps their wording was “It’s genetic!” Either way, it shows just how convenient it is to attribute social inequalities to biologically hard-wired differences. As the figurehead of this trend, the emerging New Traditionalist movement has been pining for a return to a bygone era characterized by old-fashioned racial and sexual roles, but a new host of critics are raising their voices in dissent, pointing out the danger of this deceptively appealing retrogressiveness. And Universal Life Church ministers have a vested interest in this debate.

              “It Must Be Because They’re Black!”

              Hard-wired biological differences have been used to excuse racial inequalities in some of the most disturbing and questionable ways. As Lisa C. Ilkemoto of Ms Magazine explains, U.S. president Bill Clinton, along with the two leaders of the effort to map the human genome, announced in 2000 that racialization was all but dead. Biologist Craig Venter had proclaimed that “race has no genetic or scientific basis”, she notes, and this opinion was widely accepted in the scientific community.

              Since then, however, efforts have been made by powerful institutions to re-introduce race as an explanation for human social inequalities. In her book Fatal Invention: How Science, Politics, and Big Business Re-Create Race in the Twenty-First Century, social critic Dorothy Roberts examines and attempts to discredit this trend. She points out how scientists, governments, and big business are using recent findings in genetics to render racial differentiation “neutral” and “factual”, and to justify racially-based explanations of health inequities such as the lower breast cancer rate but higher mortality rate among black American women.

              Roberts also critiques how the commerce and justice systems use “genetic race” to justify bias in government as well as in personalized medicine–to make a profit. The commercialization of race-based drug sales, Ilkemoto paraphrases her as saying, “may impose a norm of genetic self-regulation that will fall most negatively on those deemed the source of genetic risk”, and these will too often be women of color. The genetic race hypothesis is also being employed in the U.S. government’s rapidly-growing DNA database. Roberts also notes how blacks represent a disproportionately large sample of offenders in the DNA databases due to racial profiling, racism in prosecutions and convictions, and assumptions about biologically hard-wired race differences which stem from a renewed interest in pseudoscientific, race-based explanations for violent tendencies.
              A struggle for power
              Responding to this glut of seemingly uncontroversial, benevolent attention to race, Roberts critiques the motives driving supporters of racial science. In particular, she points out the ideological motives behind the effort to preserve genetically race-based explanations for social inequity:

              What links racial science from one generation to the next is the quest to update the theories and methods for dividing human beings into a handful of groups to provide a biological explanation for their differences—from health outcomes to intelligence to incarceration rates.

              In other words, Roberts argues, racial science becomes a meme which keeps humans neatly classified and reinforces biological explanations for social inequity. This is critical in the effort to pawn off violence, disease, and traits generally regarded as inferior on less privileged groups, without having to think critically about how our minds and society influence this process. Every ULC wedding officiant and nondenominational priest should treat this pseudoscientific trend with suspicion.

              “Men Are Like This, and Women Are Like That”

              But the biology excuse does not end with race–it is also used to excuse sexual inequity. Consider the new gender-education movement, which is founded on the premise that boys and girls should be educated separately because they possess immutable biological sex differences. This hypothesis, which is supported by family physician and psychologist Leonard Sax and author and consultant Michael Gurian, posits that boys should trained to be leaders and competitors because they are naturally more aggressive and disciplinarian, and that girls should be trained to be followers and cooperators because they are naturally more passive and nurturing.

              But Caryl Rivers and Rosalind C. Barnett, in their book The Truth about Boys and Girls: Challenging Toxic Stereotypes about Our Children, challenge these assumptions and attempt to refute the pseudoscientific claims made by people like Sax and Gurian. One case in point, argue Rivers and Barnett, is the lack of empirical evidence showing that girls should be taught in whispers because their hearing is so much more acute than that of boys, and the assumption that boys need to expend more energy than girls is also refuted by evidence showing that there is a positive correlation between exercise and learning in both boys and girls. As J Goodrich of Ms explains, chapter after chapter Rivers and Barnett refute the evidence used to support the Sax-Gurian principle that boys are dominators, and girls, doormats. This is important work, because it reminds us as ULC ministers how harmful, oppressive, and tyrannical sex roles based on bad science can be.

              River and Barnett are not the only voices speaking out against pseudoscientific biological excuses for sex discrimination. Another prominent critic of New Traditionalism is psychologist Cordelia Fine, a senior research associate at the Centre for Agency, Velues and Ethics at Macquarie University and an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne’s Department of Psychology. In her book Delusions of Gender: How Our Minds, Society, and Neurosexism Create Difference, Fine critiques the commonly-held belief that men are hard-wired to systematize, and women, to empathize, is damaging to ourselves and society. She shows how our minds feed into, interact with, and influence observable sex differences, which in turn reinforce our assumptions in a vicious cycle. At one point she critiques Dr John Gray (author of Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus) for excusing the greater domestic workload of women by suggesting women need to do more housework because it produces the oxytocin which facilitates social bonds. She points out how Gray’s hypothesis is not empirically tested and that there are more satisfying sociological explanations for this double standard.

              In addition to providing sociological and psychological insight, Fine combs through the neuroscientific studies justifying sex discrimination and debunks them, pointing out their methodological flaws and misguided interpretations of the data. For example, she points out, even in species in which adult males do not normally care for the young, such as rats, the males consistently show an uncanny knack for nurturing the young when females are absent, proving that nurturing abilities are not hard-wired and suggesting that if adult male rats can do it, well, so can adult male humans. Breaking down such paradigms is partly what people get ordained online to do. It is exactly this kind of nuanced, sophisticated, uncompromising scrutiny of simplistic, convenient, reductive belief systems that we should be taking more seriously.

              Challenging beliefsChallenging Beliefs

              We can basically see how powerful social institutions and systems perpetuate myths about hard-wired biological differences in order to justify racial and sexual inequity, using misleading or poorly-supported scientific studies as a crutch. Why? Because it benefits privileged groups like white, males, and heterosexuals while treating everyone else like chopped liver. It’s no longer clever to spout the platitude “It’s biology!” and expect people to take these words for granted. The consequences are foreboding: a return to the nineteenth-century, when blacks were enslaved because they were seen as intrinsically subhuman, or even further back to the prehistoric savanna when males hunted and waged war while females cooked the meat and popped out babies. Conceivably, biological determinism might also provide a justification for eugenics and racial cleansing.

              Every period of history has its own pretty, pseudoscientific ideas about race and sex differences, which attract non-critical thinkers like a shiny metallic bauble, and only when the next generation arrives do we observe how preposterously subjective and sentimental our forbears’ “evidence” really was. Perhaps we perpetuate these myths because they make us feel safe and secure, and because they’re easy and convenient to believe in, but this doesn’t mean that they are good for us. The Universal Life Church Monastery takes a cautious, skeptical position on biological determinism, always emphasizing that we should challenge long-held, comforting beliefs, especially those which divide rather than unite us, for, after all, we are all children of the same universe.

              Sources:

              Barnett, Rosalind C. and Caryl Rivers. The Truth about Boys and Girls: Challenging Toxic Stereotypes about Our Children. New York: Columbia University Press, 2011. Print.

              Fine, Cordelia. Delusions of Gender: How Our Minds, Society, and Neurosexism Create Difference. New York: Norton, 2010. Print.

              Ms Magazine: “Rethinking Venus and Mars”

              Ms Magazine: “Selling Race?”

              Roberts, Dorothy. Fatal Intervention: How Science, Politics, and Big Business Re-create Race in

              the Twenty-First Century. New York: The New Press, 2011. Print.

                Christian Professor: “Did Jesus die for Klingons too?”

                Saturday, October 15th, 2011

                Did Jesus die for Worf too? One man has attempted to answer this very question.

                A while ago on the ULC Monastery blog, we discussed what discovering extraterrestrial life would mean for religion, but we did not exactly address how such a discovery might challenge the foundations of Christian beliefs specifically. According to one Christian professor of religion, Christianity will have a hard time explaining the discovery of intelligent alien life given its current set of doctrines. If alien life ever is discovered in the future, Christian teachings will have to be modified in order to remain relevant and account for new data, and there are several possible ways to do this.

                The problem facing Christian doctrine and theology if alien life is discovered was summarized in a speech by the Christian religion scholar Christian Weidemann of Germany at the 100-Year Starship Symposium on space travel in Orlando, Florida, a conference sponsored by U.S. defense department Darpa (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency). Weidemann’s speech, entitled “Did Jesus die for Klingons too?” was intended to address the conflict between Christian theology and the potential discovery of life on other planets. In his speech, Weidemann presented several theories in an attempt to answer the question whether the blood sacrifice of the Christ avatar could redeem advanced alien life forms on other planets.

                Among these is the theory of multiple incarnations. For scientists, the whole of creation consists of 125 billion galaxies with hundreds of billions of stars in each galaxy. For Christians, however, the whole of creation (as described in the Biblical book of Genesis) is limited to life on planet earth, while the rest of the cosmos is a vast, lifeless wasteland (at least in the traditional view). This leaves the salvation of alien life unaccounted for. Weidemann attempts to correct this problem is by suggesting the possibility of multiple incarnations. If intelligent life exists on other planets, they are probably sinners too, so God would have had to incarnate multiple times on these different planets in order to save their inhabitants from damnation. Otherwise, Weidemann explains, God would have to abandon these worlds and their inhabitants and choose only the human race to save, which seems a little bit unfair to say the least. However, the multiple incarnations theory would account for the redemption of extraterrestrial life-forms.

                This solution can also be applied to another problem Weidemann attempts to tackle–Christianity’s inherent monotheism. Hypothetically, God could incarnate into life-forms belonging to different species from different planets, and he would still be the same spirit in each incarnation, solving the problem of polytheism. However, these beings would still look physically very different from one another, leading Christians to view them as discrete entities and hence reject them as polytheistic. Besides, Christians tend to believe that God took the form of Jesus alone, and of no other being. For these reasons, the multiple incarnations theory would be hard for Christians to swallow. This is not the case with other religions. Hindus, pagans, and other polytheists would not have as much of a problem with the multiple incarnations theory, because they are comfortable with the idea of embracing multiple deities, and Islam has no avatar, so the multiple incarnations theory might not conflict as much with that religion either. The solution to this problem is simple: Christians would have to move past the doctrine which states that Jesus is the only human being who ever embodied the soul of God and allow for the possibility that God inhabited the bodies of intelligent creatures on other planets too.

                But the conflict extends beyond these two discrepancies–Weidemann also tries to resolve the conflict between Christian theology and the discovery of extraterrestrial life by exonerating extraterrestrial beings of all wrongdoing. It is possible, he posits, that human beings are the only sinful life forms in the universe, and that the rest of life in the universe is morally incorruptible. If so, God would only have to incarnate as an avatar on planet earth, and he could trust alien life to its own devices without having to send them Jesus Christ of Nazareth. However, Weidemann has an important caveat in regard to this theory: if there is life elsewhere in the cosmos, it is probably sinful, too. So, the theory of alien moral incorruptibility would be insufficient to resolve the Christian-extraterrestrial conflict, and we must search for a better theory.

                To summarize, there is a conflict between Christianity and the potential existence of extraterrestrial life: Christian teaching does not account for extraterrestrial life in providing a pathway to redemption, because Christians believe that life is limited to planet earth and that God incarnated only as Jesus of Nazareth. In addition, any aliens that have existed would probably be sinners, so they would have to have been visited by Jesus in order to be redeemed. Weidemann attempts to solve the first two problems by positing a multiple incarnations theory: alien life can exist on other planets and be redeemed there if God incarnates on those planets, while the multiple incarnations theory solves the problem of Christian monotheism, because it allows a single over-soul to inhabit multiple, very different bodies. And we can also say that aliens would not have to have been visited by Jesus and redeemed by him if they are morally incorruptible, but we seem to find it hard to view extraterrestrial beings as absolutely perfect, so the former two scenarios seem more plausible. The point is that if extraterrestrial life is discovered in the future, Christianity will need to be seriously revamped in order to account for this new scientific discovery and remain relevant in a changing world–just as it is having to do with the overwhelming evidence in support of evolution.

                Source:

                The Daily Mail

                  “Occupy Wall Street” Draws Religious Progressives

                  Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

                  Religion and liberal progressivism have become increasingly polarized in the United States, but new grassroots forces are rising to reunite the two. Typically religion has been absent from left-wing protest movements, but the Occupy Wall Street movement which has spread from New York to other American cities has been characterized by an unusually vociferous religious contingent. It seems only appropriate when one thinks about it. After all, the faithful have traditionally been among the first to speak up against greed and show support for the underdog.

                  The unexpected spiritual component of the Occupy movement became apparent early on at the demonstration in Zuccotti Park, in downtown Manhattan. Amid the din of drums and shouting could be heard the hymns of the “Protest Chaplains”, a group of progressive students, ministers, seminarians, and laypeople from Boston who joined the protesters in their denunciation of corporate greed. Marisa Egerstrom, an organizer of the group and a student at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Arts Sciences, said, “In a group that had a lot of bandanas and black hoodies, we stood out…. But people kept coming up to us and saying, ‘You know, you are the first Christians I’ve seen at a protest … on our side.’” For the Protest Chaplains, it was only natural to speak out against economic practices they views as unethical, and the best way of doing so was through their faith.

                  But it is not only Christians who are getting involved in the growing protest movement against corporate greed; in many cases Christians, Jews, and Muslims have joined together in an interfaith effort at reform. Another group led by major New York City religious leaders joined the march at Zuccotti Park on 9 October and held a prayer session afterward, but it was not purely a Christian activity; it also involved prayers and speeches by leaders of the Jewish and Muslim faith communities. According to Rev. Donna Schaper, senior minister at New York’s Judson Memorial Church, the group’s chief motivating principle is the “golden rule” of the Bible–to do unto others as you would want them to do unto you. “The golden rule is not just one that Christians observe”, she tells Jack Jenkins of Religion News Service, “… it’s a way that all major faiths can unite”. But the nondenominational religious activities which have begun to characterize the Occupy movement do not end with prayer sessions. The Protest Chaplains worked with the organizers of the “Occupy Boston” tent community to set up a “Faith and Spirituality” tent, which has hosted Muslim prayer services, yoga workshops, and even a Yom Kippur service.

                  Interestingly, the interfaith protest efforts of the Occupy movement’s religious progressives are driven largely by a traditional understanding of sin and moral corruption. For Schaper and other progressive, left-wing Christians, Wall Street’s transgressions are multifarious and conflict directly with the values cherished by their faith communities, and greed is only the most obvious of these moral missteps. In their march at Zuccotti Square, Schaper’s group carried a handmade golden calf resembling the famous bull statue near the New York Stock Exchange. “We think Wall Street has become idolatrous”, she tells Jenkins. “I’m not saying God is against the people of Wall Street, but I think God is sick of Wall Street taking more than they deserve”. Shaper suggests that Wall Street has mistakenly elevated money to the level of the divine, placing less importance on altruism than on the thrill of personal material gain, to the detriment of more indigent members of society. Of course, this position conflicts with that of many right-wing evangelicals, who often seem to champion the theory of trickle-down economics, arguing that the rich must remain rich in order for the poor to benefit from them. However, critics of this position ask whether anyone ever feels this wealth trickle down. Wouldn’t a true Christian support legislation which places money directly in the hands of those who need it, without making them dependent on the whims and fancies of the wealthy, who might not be so keen on creating more jobs for people they don’t want to pay?

                  The Occupy Wall Street movement has shown an unexpected religious and spiritual dimension, and a successfully interfaith one, to boot. Groups like Protest Chaplains are protesting extortive and usurious practices of the banks and Wall Street because of their religious convictions, not despite them. Perhaps it is time for right-wing evangelicals to fall in step with their more progressive peers by taking a hard look at how wealth is really being distributed in the United States, who really benefits and how much, and whether their views truly reflect the teachings of the Bible and other holy texts to which they might claim to subscribe. Somehow Jesus managed to give to the needy and remain poor at the same time, so it might be an interesting experiment for religious conservatives protective of their wealth to welcome a few new taxes for once just to see whether the poor can benefit without the economy tanking. The point is not which economic theory works, though–the point is whether Christians, Jews, Muslims, and others have acted in accordance with that commandment which is common to nearly all religions: “He that hath two coats, let him impart to him that hath none “.

                  Source:

                  The Washington Post

                    Christian Teens Embracing “Sinful” Sexual Relations

                    Tuesday, October 11th, 2011

                    While a growing number of American teenagers are leaving church and religion, those who do stay are exhibiting decidedly impious behavior when it comes to sex. A study cited in Relevant magazine indicates that premarital sex rates among evangelical Christian American teenagers fall only slightly behind those of the average American teenager. However, there may be good reason to believe that this trend is perfectly appropriate, and that premarital sex is not a sin.

                    The study in question was conducted by the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unwanted Pregnancy, an American non-profit organization which provides statistical insight and analysis into teenage and unwanted pregnancy. While the findings might not phase the average Universal Life Church minister, they have wider implications for evangelical Christian youth movements. According to the study, eighty-eight per cent of American teenagers are having premarital or extramarital sex, while eighty per cent of evangelical Christian teenagers are engaging in this type of sexual activity. Meanwhile, though, seventy-six per cent of evangelical Christian teenagers still believe that sex before or outside marriage is immoral.

                    Bloggers, journalists, and commentators from all over the media have been offering their two cents’ worth to explain why so many evangelical Christian teenagers have premarital sex. One explanation comes from Nicole Neroulias of Belief Beat. As Neroulias explains, Biblical sexual mores which may have made sense in the past no longer do today, and it would be ridiculous to preserve them just because they are found in a holy book:

                    … the Bible and traditional social mores come from a time when puberty and marriage were synonymous, if not even reversed. So “waiting until marriage” was kind of a no-brainer. But now, the average Americans don’t wed until they are over 25. That’s another decade or more of polishing those purity rings — twice their lifetimes, at that point, and during the years when hormones and peer pressure are at their most insistent.

                    In other words, what Neroulias is saying, and something we should understand as interfaith wedding officiants, is that in the Bible it made sense to wait until marriage to have sex, because back then a person got married as soon as they were physiologically capable of producing children. The most obvious reason why premarital sex was considered immoral is that an unmarried person was physiologically unable to have sex (at least for reproductive purposes). Nowadays, however, people normally choose to marry long after they reach sexual maturity, so there is no longer a correlation between the two.

                    But will all of this finally prove to be the last nail in the coffin for youth abstinence movements? There is some indication that young people’s commitment to abstinence is more or less transitory in nature. In the Relevant article, author Tyler Charles describes movements such as True Love Waits, which encourages teenagers to wear purity rings, sign chastity pledges, and pledge chastity during public ceremonies. (Probably not the type of occasion presided over by the average minister ordained online.) However, many youths in Christian abstinence movements eventually break their pledges. One of these young people, with whom Charles speaks in his article, is “Maria”, who waited to have sex until she was twenty, when she realized almost none of her fellow college students was still a virgin. The problem becomes when evangelical Christian youth movements tell people who remain single long after they reach sexual maturity, “just keep waiting”.

                    Perhaps what we should take from the Relevant article is that we should move on from Bronze Age moral codes, because they do not work for us in the present day–if they ever did. And even though more than three quarters of evangelical Christian teenagers say that premarital sex is immoral, even more end up having it, so there is obviously a psychological disconnect between what young people say they want, and what they really want. It might behove us to refrain from telling young people what is right and wrong according to a five thousand year-old book, and to start telling them to think for themselves, while providing them guidance, support, and educational resources along the way.

                    As a ULC pastor, what do you think? Should we keep telling young people to wait, or should we teach them sex before marriage is OK, depending on the individual, as long as it is safe?

                    Sources:

                    Beliefnet

                    CNN Belief Blog

                    Jewish Journal

                    Relevant