Posted on 04/03/2015 1:43:06 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
As Indiana peddles its "religious freedom" garbage, it's time to call the religious right's trash what it really is.
Just in time for Holy Week, the State of Indiana has passed a new Religious Freedom Restoration Act. The law explicitly permits for-profit corporations from practicing the free exercise of religion and it allows them to use the exercise of religion as a defense against any lawsuits whether from the government or from private entities. The primary narrative against this law has been about the potential ways that small businesses owned by Christians could invoke it as a defense against having to, for instance, sell flowers to a gay couple for their wedding.
Any time right-wing conservatives declare that they are trying to restore or reclaim something, we should all be very afraid. Usually, this means the country or, in this case, the state of Indiana is about to be treated to another round of backward time travel, to the supposedly idyllic environs of the 1950s, wherein women, and gays, and blacks knew their respective places and stayed in them. While the unspoken religious subtext of this law is rooted in conservative anxieties over the legalization of same-sex marriage in Indiana, Black people and women, and all the intersections thereof (for instance Black lesbians) should be very afraid of what this new law portends.
Last year, the Supreme Court ruled in the Hobby Lobby decision that corporations could exercise religious freedom, which means that corporations can deny insurance coverage for birth control. Now this same logic is being used to curtail and abridge the right of gay people to enjoy the same freedoms and legal protections that heterosexual citizens enjoy.
And given our current anti-Black racial climate, there is no reason to trust that these laws wont be eventually used for acts of racially inflected religious discrimination, perhaps against Black Muslims or Muslims of Arab descent, for instance. Surely this kind of law in this political climate sanctions the exercise of Islamophobia.
As a practicing Christian, I am deeply incensed by these calls for restoration and reclamation in the name of religious freedom. This kind of legislation is largely driven by conservative Christian men and women, who hold political views that are antagonistic to every single group of people who are not white, male, Christian, cisgender, straight and middle-class. Jesus, a brown, working-class, Jew, doesnt even meet all the qualifications.
Nothing about the cultural and moral regime of the religious right in this country signals any kind of freedom. In fact, this kind of legislation is rooted in a politics that gives white people the authority to police and terrorize people of color, queer people and poor women. That means these people dont represent any kind of Christianity that looks anything like the kind that I practice.
To be clear, because Im an academic, I get static often from folks who wonder how I could dare ally myself in name and religious affiliation with the kind of morally misguided, politically violent people who think it reasonable to force women to have babies they do not want and who think their opinions about whom and how others should marry matters even a little bit.
I often ask myself whether I really do worship the same God of white religious conservatives. On this Holy Week, when I reflect on the Christian story of Christ crucified, it is a story to me of a man who came, radically served his community, challenged the unjust show of state power, embraced children, working-class men and promiscuous women and sexual minorities (eunuchs). Of the many things Jesus preached about, he never found time to even mention gay people, let alone condemn them. His message of radical inclusivity was so threatening that the state lynched him for fear that he was fomenting a cultural and political rebellion. They viewed such acts as criminal acts and they treated Jesus as a criminal. And all who followed him were marked for death.
This is why I identify with the story of Jesus. And frankly, it is the only story there really is. This white, blond-haired, blue-eyed, gun-toting, Bible-quoting Jesus of the religious right is a god of their own making. I call this god, the god of white supremacy and patriarchy. There is nothing about their god that speaks to me as a Black woman of working-class background living in a country where police routinely murder black men and beat the hell out of black women, where the rich get richer while politicians find ever more reasons to extract from the poor, and where the lives the church imagines for women still center around marriage and motherhood, and no sex if youre single.
This God isnt the God that I serve. There is nothing holy, loving, righteous, inclusive, liberatory or theologically sound about him. He might be biblical but hes also an asshole.
The Jesus I know, love, talk about and choose to retain was a radical, freedom-loving, justice-seeking, potentially queer (because he was either asexual or a priest married to a prostitute), feminist healer, unimpressed by scripture-quoters and religious law-keepers, seduced neither by power nor evil.
Thats the story I choose to reflect on this Holy Week. The Christian lawmakers seeking to use the law to discriminate against gay people are indicative of every violent, unrighteous, immoral impulse that organized religion continues to represent in this country. I have said elsewhere recently that it is a problem to treat racism as if it will simply go extinct. But as I watch the religious right engineer pain and obstacles for queer people in Americas heartland, I find myself wishing that this particularly violent and vicious breed of Christianity would die off.
I cannot stand in a church and worship on Sunday alongside those who on the very next Monday co-sign every kind of legislation that devalues the lives of Black people, women and gay people. I am a firm believer that our theology implicates our politics. If your politics are rooted in the contemporary anti-Black, misogynist, homophobic conservatism, then we are not serving the same God. Period.
And more of us who love Jesus, despite our ambivalence about Christianity, the Church or organized religion, need to stand up and begin to do some reclamation of our own.
I am heartened to say that there is a generation of young people of faith rising up, spurred on by the Ferguson events of last summer. A group of young seminarians at Union Theology Seminary in New York City have been at the fore of effort to #ReclaimHolyWeek. I spoke with one of the organizers, Candace Simpson, who told me that, #ReclaimHolyWeek is a way for us to challenge and disrupt the sanitized stories we share during Holy Week. We refuse to pretend as though the main story of Jesus resurrection was that he died for our sins. We need to be better in discussing the ways Jesus represented a threat to his empire, that his teachings disrupt power structures. We pretend that we would be mourning at his tomb, but it is clear in the ways we blame victims of the system that we are not as moral as we pretend to be. They will spend this week protesting various forms of state-sanctioned violence against Black and Brown people.
What this vocal contingent of the religious right is seeking to restore is not religious freedom but a sense of safety in expressing and imposing dangerous, retrograde and discriminatory ideas in the name of religion. I continue to support the free and unimpeded expression of religion. And I am hopeful that Indiana Gov. Mike Pences call for clarification of the law amid a massive backlash will actually force the Legislature to explicitly ban discrimination based on gender and sexual orientation. Then perhaps the law could do what some legal scholars claim it was meant to do, namely, protect freedom of religious expression for religious minorities in the U.S.
Alongside that, I maintain that another kind of reclamation needs to occur. We need to reclaim the narrative of Jesus life and death from the evangelical right. They have not been good stewards over the narrative. They have pimped Jesus death to support the global spread of American empire vis-à-vis war, missions, and free trade, the abuse of native peoples, the continued subjugation of Black people, and the regulation of the sexual lives of women and gay people. Let us mark this Holy Week by declaring the death to the unholy trinity of white supremacist, capitalist, heteropatriarchy. And once these systems die, may they die once and for all, never to be resurrected.
******
Brittney Cooper is a contributing writer at Salon, and teaches Women's and Gender Studies and Africana Studies at Rutgers. Follow her on Twitter at @professorcrunk.
Keep your fingers away from the donuts she’ll bite them
She teaches Women’s AND!! Gender studies? Why then she’s a doubly worthless oxygen thief..
There should be no doubt left in anyone’s mind that there is a war on religion particularly Christianity being conducted here through the use of the “Political correctness” device. The GOPES (gop elite statists) could have tied the 2012 convention resolution on God and begin calling them “godless “ but haven’t then or now.
If she’s so discriminated, can she give up her stuff?!!!
Another leftist kook who bends Jesus to fit her moral relativism. Homosexuality is a mockery of the bride (church) and husband (Christ). The rear passage is analogous to death and decay. The female genitalia to life . The bible is clear that a covenant was sealed with blood. The virgin and her husband consumating their holy union and blood shed via hymen (yes yes I know hymen is not always intact in many virgins but you catch my drift). This is what Christian leaders should be saying. The left wants their meek and mild Jesus. The lamb came. Next time Christ comes it will be the lion. Roooaarrrrr
OMG! She/he is a PROFESSOR?????
Greenfield hit the nail square yesterday. The libturds have quashed every conservative organization and now have to get down almost to the molecular level to continue to crush any remaining opposition. Individuals become “the nail that sticks up.”
Has this “lady” ever even read the Bible?
I’d honestly love to get in a discussion of scripture with this professed Christian. She can’t possibly understand scripture and believe Jesus endorsed sin. Jesus didn’t tell the prostitute to go forth and sin more!
This “professor” is ignorant.
Bigoted, Godless buffarilla?
I would love to be a fly on the wall in her classroom. I suspect she is intolerant of any student in her class who dares to challenge her false beliefs.
She looks like a lesbian to me
It's clear to me, Brittany, that you do not know Him.
His message of radical inclusivity was so threatening that the state lynched him for fear that he was fomenting a cultural and political rebellion.
From what I understand of it, death by lynching does not equal death by crucifixion. Crucifixion is particularly painful.
You're right, Brittany. I server the risen Christ. Whom do you serve?
It is clear from her lexicon, she is rooted in
the socialist dialectic, probably a member of
the Church of Obama.
The vocabulary give them away every time.
Another fat termite eating away at the
foundation of our beliefs.
One almost wishes that she gets the
world she seeks, it would eat her in a
second, as it always does.
Hate much, “professor”?
So much media coverage aimed at one specific group(Christians) and one specific situation(queers). Replace “Christian” with “Muslim” and let’s see if she feels the same way. (Hate to pick on the darlings of the left, but they’ve demonstrated such tolerance for gays).
And sorry professor, only you are beating the race thing yet again...
She professes to be a Christian, but her article is chock full of anti-Christ rhetoric. As I pointed out, Christ did NOT tell sinners to go forth and sin more! While it’s true He was extraordinarily compassionate towards sinners—literally dying for us while we were still slaves to sin—He never said or implied that sin was OK.
He also wasn’t a social justice warrior, and He didn’t come to fix the material world. Christ certainly COULD have done whatever He wanted, to include setting himself up as an earthly king, but no one on earth had the power to harm or stop Him. A “social justice” Christ certainly had the power to appoint unrepentant prostitutes and sodomites as His apostles, but the fact is...He didn’t. Why?
That’s a succinct refutation of her views using her own reasoning against her. Well done.
CC
She looks like a mountain range to me. A small one.
CC
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