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Hyper-Muscular Christianity: Any reflections?

Sightings 2/19/09

Hyper-Muscular Christianity

— Joseph Laycock

In Seattle, self-described “charismatic Calvinist” Mark Driscoll preaches that “Jesus is a pride fighter with a tattoo down His leg, a sword in His hand, and the willingness to make someone bleed. That is a guy I can worship…I cannot worship a guy I can beat up.” Justin Fatica, founder of the Catholic ministry group Hard as Nails, found a different way of demonstrating the rugged power of Christ when he appeared in an HBO documentary shouting “Jesus loves you!” as a colleague beat him with a folding chair.

Although Fatica is Catholic and Driscoll is Protestant, there are remarkable similarities between the two: Both were raised Catholic but had a lackadaisical approach to their faith until a conversion experience in their late teens (at age seventeen for Fatica, and age nineteen for Driscoll). Both men also emphasize their tough origins. Driscoll believes Jesus had calluses and does not hesitate to compare Joseph’s vocation as a carpenter with his own father’s career as a drywaller. Fatica comes from affluence but emphasizes that prior to his conversion he lived a shady, worldly life in New Jersey where he “hung out with some characters.” These narratives generate the capital of manliness necessary for their sermons.

The preaching styles of Driscoll and Fatica–which are both controversial and confrontational–appear to be motivated by a concern that Jesus has been emasculated by a bloodless church that is more concerned with culture than salvation. They are not alone in this view. Fundamentalist cartoonist Jack Chick produces a comic tract entitled “The Sissy,” in which a hirsute trucker named Duke mocks a fellow trucker’s Christianity because “Jesus was a sissy.” Have we actually reduced Jesus to, “a limp-wristed hippy in a dress with a lot of product in His hair,” as Driscoll claims? Or are there other cultural forces behind these types of extreme preaching?

As Molly Worthen notes in a New York Times piece on Driscoll, men from Billy Sunday to the Promise Keepers have railed against the feminization of the church. “Muscular Christianity,” which emphasized an ideal of vigorous masculinity, first appeared in Victorian England. The term was coined to describe the writings of Charles Kingsley and Thomas Hughes, who felt that sports and athleticism would produce Christians who were more fit for civic duty. Hughes and Kingsley also shared a concern over the changes of industrialism and worried whether traditional morality would be able to adapt.

Driscoll and Fatica appear to embody a sort of muscular Christianity on steroids. Rather than sports, Driscoll and Fatica tie Christianity to modern spectacles of violence. Fatica admits that his signature use of folding chairs is borrowed from World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). Driscoll has organized an event called “Fighting with God” in which he discusses spiritual warfare with Christian athletes from the Ultimate Fighting Championship.

If Kingsley and Hughes were concerned about industrialism, Driscoll and Fatica seem to blame consumerism for feminizing Jesus. Driscoll writes in his book Vintage Jesus , “Jesus did not have Elton John or the Spice Girls on his iPod, The View on his TiVo, or a lemon-yellow Volkswagen Beetle in his garage.” Tim Hanley, a speaker for Hard as Nails Ministries, has commented, “We’ve had enough of the facades and the fake people…We live in a world that’s so fabricated.” According to Worthen, the most popular movie at Driscoll’s church is Fight Club , a tale of manly emancipation from consumer culture.

However, the perception that manliness must be restored to the church seems suspiciously linked the rise of women as well as gays and lesbians in the ministry. Another similarity between Driscoll and Fatica is that both have been cited making misogynistic comments. Fatica is known for pointing out overweight women in his audience and yelling, “You’re fat!” He claims this is done to demonstrate the cruelty of consigning people to their categories. While Fatica encourages women to join the Hard as Nails ministry, Driscoll reminds his congregation that women must submit to their husbands and are forbidden from taking preaching roles. On his blog, Driscoll implied that Ted Haggard’s wife contributed to his downfall: “A wife who lets herself go is not sexually available to her husband in the ways that the Song of Songs is so frank about is not responsible for her husband’s sin, but she may not be helping him either.” These comments beg the question: Is this hyper-muscular Christianity really a radical, transgressive approach to ministry? Or is it actually the death-throes of an outmoded patriarchy?

References :

“Who Would Jesus Smack Down? Mark Driscoll–A Pastor with a Macho Conception of Christ,” Molly Worthen, The New York Times , 6 January 2009.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/11/magazine/11punk-t.html?_r=1

“Controversial Preacher is ‘Hard as Nails,'” John Donovan and Julia Hoppock, ABC News.com, 20 June 2008.

http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/FaithMatters/Story?id=4013475&page=1

Mark Driscoll, Vintage Jesus (Good News Publishers, 2008).

Joseph Laycock is a PhD student studying religion and society at Boston University, and the author of Vampires Today: The Truth About Modern Vampires (Praeger Publishers, 2009).

Filed under: Culture, Personal Reflections, Spirituality

Lenten reflections from Catholic Charities perspective: March 6


Friday of the First Week in Lent

March 6, 2009

Readings: Ez 18:21-28, Ps 130:1-2, 3-4, 5-7a, 7bc-8, and Mt 5:20-26

Today’s readings remind me of just how human we really are and how difficult it is to walk the path of Jesus on a daily basis even for those of us serving our faith at Catholic Charities. “Unless your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will not enter into the Kingdom of heaven.” We think that we are following His ways but are we really?

We may externally (just like the scribes and Pharisees) do all the right things, like going to mass on Sunday, work with the poor and vulnerable, and give money to our favorite charity, and yet harbor resentment to a family member or someone at work because of the way we were treated. I believe the Lord is talking to us in these readings and telling us that the best path to heaven is through forgiveness. As I say the Our Father daily, I am constantly reminded with these words, “please forgive me for my sins as I forgive those who have sinned against me”. Yikes! That can be really hard to do when someone has hurt you or taken advantage of you especially those closest to you.


I realize much of the hurt I felt in my life was largely due to misunderstandings and miscommunications and the inability to communicate and resolve these differences in a timely and positive manner. This can only lead to a heart filled with anger, resentment, and/or holding on to grudges. But if we can forgive ourselves first for our trespasses (we are human after all) knowing that Jesus forgives us, then we should have the courage to forgive others. It would be so sad if we are looking at Jesus in our final hours and he said oops sorry you didn’t forgive your sister and brother so off you go! So today, let’s pray to God that he will help us to forgive all those who have injured us in any way and free us from resentment and bitterness. Only then will we be able to freely serve the Lord and do His work.

I love the Lenten Season as it provides us with the time of self examination and what we can do to improve our relationship with God and with our family, friends, and co-workers. It is a time to forgive and be forgiven. It is a time of sacrifice and a time to celebrate life.

Lisa Sakamoto

Vice President Finance

Catholic Charities Hawaii

lisa.sakamoto@catholiccharitieshawaii.org

Filed under: Personal Reflections

JUSTICE FOR IMMIGRANTS CAMPAIGN TO HOLD REGIONAL CONVENING IN OHIO, MARCH 26-28

WASHINGTON—The Justice For Immigrants (JFI) campaign of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) will hold a regional convening and training near Cincinnati, Ohio, on March 26-28. The convening, which will take place at the Kings Island Conference Center in Mason, will bring together immigration reform supporters from Ohio, Indiana, West Virginia, Kentucky and Michigan to provide them with coalition building skills, advocacy tools and other materials to strengthen and grow the support base for immigration reform. It will also seek to arm advocates with updated Catholic messages and educational pieces to continue to push for comprehensive immigration reform.

 “Comprehensive immigration reform remains a priority for the Catholic church. The convening in Cincinnati will provide the necessary training and educational tools for immigration reform and JFI supporters to continue to grow the grass roots base that seeks humane and compassionate changes to our nation’s immigration system,” said Johnny Young, executive director of the Migration and Refugee Services of the USCCB.

 “JFI is looking to draw attendees from Ohio and the surrounding states because of the region’s large population of Catholics,” said Antonio Cube, JFI manager. “We know that the majority of Catholics have heard the bishops’ call for immigration reform but have not felt compelled enough to act. By convening in Cincinnati, the JFI campaign is looking to seize upon the opportunity to educate the region’s many Catholics about the church’s position on immigration reform and urge them to act on it. We invite Catholics, other people of faith, and supporters of comprehensive immigration reform to attend the convening,” he said.

 To register or get more information about the Ohio regional convening, call 202-541-3165. 

Information can also be found on the following Web sites:

http://guest.cvent.com/i.aspx?1Q,M3,2f041b23-ed4b-4f43-9c78-63424b863ea2

www.justiceforimmigrants.org  and http://www.usccb.org/mrs/ .

Filed under: Migration, Social Justice

Concerns about Sebelius HHS Nominations

More from Archbishop Naumann on the Sebelius HHS nomination

Posted on March 5, 2009 by Dennis Sadowski

Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann of Kansas City, Kan., has been questioning Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, a Catholic, for her support of legalized abortion for a year and a half now, and he has asked her on at least two occasions not to present herself for Communion in Kansas.

In his latest public comment, he now says her nomination by President Barack Obama as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services is “troubling” because of her abortion stance. The archbishop offered his most recent comments about Sebelius — summarized in a Catholic News Service report – in his column in the March 6 issue of The Leaven, the archdiocesan newspaper.

In an interview with Our Sunday Visitor, he further explains his stance.

While calling Sebelius a gifted leader who represents Catholic social teaching well when it comes to concerns such as the development of affordable housing and increasing access to health care for poor children, Archbishop Naumann strongly takes the governor to task for her long-held support for abortion. In the interview the archbishop said he can understand why Sebelius was nominated to the federal post but reiterated that he finds it troubling.

An excerpt: “But I think from the church’s point of view, it’s sad because it places another high-profile, pro-abortion Catholic into national leadership along with Vice President (Joe) Biden and Speaker (Nancy) Pelosi and a raft of others that are in the Congress. And so I think it makes our job as bishops more challenging, because we have to be even more clear that this is not acceptable for a person in public service to say that they are Catholic and then to support these policies that are anti-life, you know go against the most fundamental of all human rights, the preservation of innocent life.”

Filed under: healthcare, Medical Ethics, Social Doctrine

PRO-LIFE E-MAIL CAMPAIGN TO CONGRESS EXPANDS NATIONAL POSTCARD EFFORT


 

WASHINGTON—The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) has launched an e-mail campaign urging Congress to maintain widely-supported pro-life policies and to oppose the federal funding and promotion of abortion. The e-mail campaign augments the massive national postcard campaign launched in dioceses throughout the country in late January. Both efforts are being coordinated through the USCCB’s partner organization, the National Committee for a Human Life Amendment (NCHLA).
            Since 1993, NCHLA has coordinated national postcard campaigns equipping citizens to express their pro-life views clearly and respectfully to Congress. The current campaign is unprecedented in scope, exceeding those sponsored by the Catholic bishops in the past.
            Deirdre A. McQuade, Assistant Director for Policy and Communications at the USCCB’s Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities, explained the supplementary e-mail campaign. “Tens of millions of cards have been distributed in parishes, schools, non-Catholic churches, and civic organizations across the country,” she said. “The e-mail campaign will give even more citizens the chance to participate.”
            The e-mails urge a constituent’s Senators and Representative to “please oppose FOCA or any similar measure” and “retain existing laws against funding and promotion of abortion.” They also state: “It is especially important that Congress retain these laws in the various appropriations bills, e.g., the Hyde Amendment in the Labor/Health and Human Services appropriations bill.”
            “To guard against the erosion of current pro-life measures—and to keep abortion from becoming a federal entitlement—our voice is needed now more than ever,” McQuade said.

Filed under: Culture, healthcare, morals, Politics, Social Doctrine