The inmates are becoming either jihadist warriors or rock stars.
Something like the following, which is excerpted from Rod Dreher's review of The Close, by Chloe Breyer:
Breyer runs across Touchstones kind of guy at Bellevue, and she doesnt know what to do with him. His name is Thomas, and he is one of the members of the pastoral care program who does not hail from General. Hes a Yale Divinity School student from a traditional Protestant background.It is eye-opening to watch Thomas unapologetically defend his pastoral decisions on Scriptural grounds, she observes. While the rest of us trip over each other to see situations in murkier shades of gray.
Her Future Ministry I predict Thomass ministry will go far, while those of Ms. Breyer and her faithless lot will . . . well, see for yourself. Our Chloe decides to set up a Bible study for a group of Bellevue patients who are in from Rikers Island, the notorious city prison. She plays a video segment from the Bill Moyers series Genesis. The inmates see Bible scholars agreeing that Genesis gives us plenty of questions, but few answers. Her students dont get it.
Theyre supposed to be experts, right? says Tyrone. So then why are they giving us all this stuff about not having any answers? I mean, it doesnt take a Ph.D. not to have answers! And if they dont have any answers, then who does?
Others chime in with contempt for the equivocating liberal scholars Breyer so admires. Finally, a Muslim convert speaks up. See, this is what Im telling you, man. The Koran is the place to go for answers! . . . I became a Muslim because the Koran has the most truth in it. You dont argue about what it means. You read it, and you know what to do. The Prophet got the word directly from God.
Is that right? asks Tyrone. Is that how it is? The Koran has more answers than the Bible? Undeterred, and unable to grasp the significance of the moment, Breyer sets out to teach these poor sinners that the Bible doesnt have to be taken literally. There are lots of gray areas, she tells them, and they should feel empowered by the fact that they can interpret Scripture any way they like. The inmates are unmoved.
They want answers, not questions, Breyer writes. [T]he more contradictions I point out in the Bible, the more the inmates decide there is no point in wasting their time with a religion that lacks answers. Smart cookies, those crooks, who intuitively grasp the worthlessness of Breyers baptized sophistries to their broken lives. Their critique is utterly lost on this earnest young woman, who does not know, or perhaps simply does not have the courage or conviction to say to these men, that Jesus is the Way, the Truth, and the Life.