Monday, August 2, 2010
Ann Rice and Christianity
On Facebook,
Ann Rice has announced that she continues to follow Christ, but is no longer a
Christian. On July 28, she said, “For those who care, and I understand if you
don't: Today I quit being a Christian. I'm out. I remain committed to Christ as
always but not to being ‘Christian’ or to being part of Christianity. It's
simply impossible for me to ‘belong’ to this quarrelsome, hostile,
disputatious, and deservedly infamous group. For ten ...years, I've tried. I've
failed. I'm an outsider. My conscience will allow nothing else.
Five minutes later, she elaborated, “Christ, I quit
Christianity and being Christian. Amen."
The next day
she said this: “My faith in Christ is central to my life. My
conversion from a pessimistic atheist lost in a world I didn't understand, to
an optimistic believer in a universe created and sustained by a loving God is
crucial to me. But following Christ does not mean following His followers.
Christ is infinitely more important than Christianity and always
will be, no matter what Christianity is, has been, or might become.”
The response
has been enormous. Thousands responded in one way or another on Facebook. The
United Church of Christ invited her to become a member, because it believed its understanding of
Christianity matches hers. But Rice has arrived at the conclusion that
organized religion is not for her.
Joseph
Bottums at First
Things heaped sarcasm on her decision. In a post that exuded superiority,
Bottoms criticized her for exhibiting a sense of superiority. I cannot help but
thinking that Bottom’s post exhibits a form of argumentation that is itself not
Christian.
It would be
the rare Christian liberal who did not understand the impetus for Rice’s
position. Although conservative Christians are a minority of Christians
– at least in the United
States, the media has constructed an image of Christians that is
decidedly in
the conservative mold. Conservative Christians and the mass media have
given
Christianity a bad name – at least from the perspective of progressives.
For
them, it is necessary to say, “I am a Christian – but” Or, as I am often
forced
to say, “I am a Catholic – but.” In the case of Catholicism, the
ordinary
citizen and the traditional Catholic thinks that what the Vatican says
defines
Catholicism – even though the vast majority of American Catholics as a
matter of conscience reject many
solemn Vatican pronouncements and the ordinary citizen is generally
unaware of the Church's many Christian commitment's to social justice or
the Church's non-resistance to science.
In the end,
although I admire Rice, in the end, I do not agree. I do not think the term
Christianity should be ceded to anti-feminists and anti-gays. Enormous progress
has been made in this area within Christian sects in the past few decades
(although, if I may resort to euphemism, Rice’s former Catholic home has
registered less progress on both fronts). The tide of history runs against
conservatives on these issues.
Even more
important, a major strand of Christianity from the progressive perspective is
to fight for social justice and in most cases that is best done with others.
Moreover, Christianity is all about loving, supporting, and helping others.
That is less easy to accomplish in an isolated mode.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2010/08/ann-rice-and-christianity.html
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When I read about Rice on CNN.com this morning I was fairly puzzled. I'm not entirely certain of how she hopes to follow Christ without following any of his followers (aka Christians). It seems that the only we can begin to "know" Christ in the first place is through witness and through following. The witness makes the proposal that I verify in my life. If Rice can do without this and still follow Christ, more power to her. For me in my weakness, however, I have to follow.
On another note, I'm also puzzled by her hope, and what often seems to be the hope of "liberal" Catholics ("conservative" Catholics have their issues, too), to judge Christianity by a secular humanist criteria. Yes, when I judge Christianity with a man-made secular criteria, it fails miserably. But to follow Christ, for me, has meant coming to judge things by an entirely different criteria. Christ is not an add-on to a secular human life that gives justification to secular humanist dispositions. Christ is a person through whom all of reality is united and consumed. The experience Rice purports to have of Christ, simply put, has not been my own. Insofar as I am convinced of what I have lived, I wonder who this "Christ" is that Rice is "following."