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August 14, 2006
Reclaiming Prophetic Faith
by ChristianAlliance
By Michael L. Westmoreland-White, Ph.D
Surveying the global scene as a student of religion, I want to argue that religious conviction comes in three very broad types. The terms "liberal" and "conservative" are not all that helpful here and so I won't use them. Instead, I will compare "authoritarian," "mystical/ecstatic" and "prophetic" forms of religion. I am most familiar with the way these types play out in Christianity, but I think I see these rival forms in all the major religions--at least as far as I am familiar with them. Let me compare these different forms of religion more thoroughly.
The "mystic," or "ecstatic" form of religious faith is centered in joyous, enraptured delight with God or the sacred, experienced more or less directly and powerfully. The mystic is "God-drunk," and this form of religious experience is focused on God or the sacred almost to the exclusion of all else. The mystic may or may not have a community of faith, which may have various degrees of organization, but the mystic or ecstatic form of religion does not really require much institutional structure. Some in this type are solitary, and others live, work, and worship among similarly-minded folks.
Examples of this type of religion abound. In Christianity, they range from the medieval mystics (e.g., Dame Julian of Norwich; St. Teresa of Avila; St. John of the Cross; Bernard Clairvaux, etc.), to the early Quakers, to modern Pentecostals. In Judaism, some strands of the Chassidics and those who study the Kabala fall here. In Islam, the Sufis are the most obvious example of this form of religion.
Because of the intense otherworldliness of the mystical/ecstatic forms of religious faith, it can lead to neglect of matters of compassion and social justice here on earth. Others have used ecstatic religion to keep oppressed persons satisfied with the status quo. "Don't worry about segregation because there's a better world awaiting beyond the grave." "Christians don't need to worry about global warming or other ecological threats because Jesus is coming back soon and this old world will be destroyed for a new heavens and earth anyway." We've all seen this kind of thing.
But mystics are not necessarily "so heavenly minded that they are no earthly good," as my mother used to put it. Take, for instance, the Pentecostal movement that turned 100 this past April. Pentecostals are "ecstatics" if anyone is. But that first generation or so of Pentecostals were also social radicals. They were racially integrated during the deepest part of "Jim Crow" America. The earliest Pentecostals often had women evangelists and ministers. They were almost all pacifists and experienced persecution for refusing to fight in the First World War. They worked primarily, in those days, with and among the poor. Pentecostalism lost its social radicalism soon enough (although there is a movement to renew it called the Pentecostal & Charismatic Peace Fellowship), but its early years show that mystic/ecstatic religion isn't automatically or inevitably socially conservative. Mystics like St. Francis of Assisi or contemplatives like Thomas Merton show that such a combination of ecstatic religion and social radicalism comes in many different traditions.
The second form of religious faith is the "authoritarian." This is the villain of our day. It shows up among Muslim fanatics, Jewish ultra-nationalists, and Christian fundamentalists. When authoritarian religion attaches to powerful nationalist or imperialist forces, it becomes deadly to more than just its followers, but to everyone within its reach. Authoritarian religion is dangerous and is the plague of our era.
Authoritarian religion is hierarchical in its institutional form--even if the tradition was for a low-church, laity-centered polity. Power flows from the top down--and doesn't flow very far. An institutional hierarchy does necessarily promote authoritarianism and this is not an indictment aimed only at those faiths with bishops or other hierarchs. Sunni Islam is supposedly radically democratic in structure, but Hamas (a Sunni movement) is certainly authoritarian. So are the pastors of most mega-churches in evangelical Protestantism. But there is no denying that hierarchies make things easier for authoritarianism to take hold and that institutional structures which do not greatly emphasize a clergy/laity split and which trust the grassroots to be able to be led by the Spirit of God and /our human conscience are harder places for authoritarianism to get a toehold. Authoritarians like hierarchies, preferably with 'strong father' figures in charge who simply tell the faithful what to believe and how to act and expect instant obedience.
Authoritarian religion is concerned with rules and regulations to a very high degree, seeing sacred Scriptures primarily as a rulebook. Its ethics are focused on purity concerns, dividing the righteous from the wicked very sharply. With control and purity as the bywords, sexual issues take center stage in ethical concern: women are relegated to lesser status, and those whose sexual orientation doesn't fit a very narrow "norm" are objects of revulsion, discrimination, and fear.
By nature, this form of religion is exclusionary. Orthodoxy ("right teaching") is defined very narrowly. Differences of opinion are tolerated, if at all, on only a very narrow range of topics and only within a small degree. Thus, adherents in an authoritarian religion will have impassioned debates over distinctions that outsiders have a hard time telling apart.
No matter how much the official doctrine of this form of religion speaks of "grace," "mercy," "forgiveness," or "eternal security," the underlying ethos is one of fear: fear of heresy, fear of breaking the rules, fear of science, fear of social change, fear of other religions, fear of forms of its own religion which are NOT authoritarian, fear of secularism, fear--ultimately--of God. (A person I know who holds to this form of religion has created clothing with the slogan, "I Fear God" and cannot figure out why they won't sell!)
It is clear to me that the U.S. Religious Right, composed of Protestant Fundamentalists and the far-right fringe of U.S. Catholics, is a form of authoritarian religion. That is why its political allies are profoundly anti-democratic and engage in the politics of fear and secrecy. A democratic republic with separation of powers, checks and balances, real participation by the people is too messy. So, more and more power is invested in the Executive, laws are changed to allow more secret decisions, the legislature is turned into a rubber stamp for the Executive, and steps are taken to undermine an independent judiciary. The forms of voting are still allowed, although all kinds of tricks are used to disenfranchise groups likely to vote for another agenda. But real power is invested in plutocratic oligarchy.
Media consolidation erodes that check on power concentration as well. Every time a speed bump on the road to total domination is met, the masses of true believers in the dominant form of authoritarian religion (the "Christian" Right in this case) are mobilized through a manufactured threat (fear again). Though they control most forms of public life, they constantly are told that they are persecuted victims who MUST rise up and defeat law x or pass law y in order to avoid the downfall of civilization or the end of the world. Objectively, they hold more power than any other group in the nation, but one would never know that to hear the language of victimization, discrimination, and persecution which characterizes their discourse.
By contrast, prophetic faith is non-hierarchical in nature, striving for a discipleship of equals and servant leadership. Power is shared widely and tends to flow from the people to leaders. If the institutions are structured in hierarchical ways, prophets or prophetic figures appear on the edges of the faith community, outside the usual structures. The role of the prophet is to hold up a mirror to the faith community and the society in which it lives, to measure devotion to God, to justice, to mercy and compassion, and to bluntly say where all these fall short.
Prophetic faith may have a place for rules, but they are hardly the center of its understanding of the life of faith. Sacred Scriptures are not seen primarily as rulebooks, but as visions of the character of God and God's purposes in the world--at least in monotheistic religions. The ethics of this type of faith redefines purity and holiness in terms of "compassionate justice" for the vulnerable, marginalized, or powerless.
By its nature, this type of faith is inclusive--it may warn of judgment against those who are violent or unjust to the powerless, but it seeks the redemption even of the oppressor. Orthopraxy ("right practice") takes precedence over orthodoxy and both are defined in terms that allow for disagreements, dialogue, disputes, uncertainties, and ambiguity. The focus of prophetic faith is on justice for the neighbor, not on the righteousness of one's self. Its major concerns are compassion, justice, peacemaking, the common good, care for the creation, empowering others. Sexual issues are not ignored, but do not dominate ethical concern. Even then, what counts is justice, right-relatedness, dignity, covenant faithfulness, and nonviolence in sexual matters, not purity concerns. The underlying ethos is not fear but joy--the joy of empowered service.
When this form of religion enters the political sphere, it does so to promote the common good. It may be motivated by the particularities of its own faith, but it offers arguments that can be understood by those of other faiths or no faith. It seeks to respect the adversary, no matter how much it must denounce particular actions, policies, attitudes, etc. In pluralistic democracies, prophetic faith will also seek to respect everyone's religious liberty, rather than demanding special treatment for its followers or seeking to use the power of the state to enforce its mandates.
This form of religion has been marginalized in recent decades in the U.S., but it is clear that this was the form of religion which motivated the abolitionists, the first generation feminists and suffragists, the Social Gospel, the Catholic Worker movement, the church-based Black Freedom ("Civil Rights") movement, the Liberation theologies of Latin America with their Base Communities, the church-based struggle against apartheid in South Africa, and much of the gospel-motivated peace movement. All these and more are forms of prophetic faith. So is the Jewish Renewal movement and so is the Muslim Peace Fellowship, and the movement for "Engaged Buddhism." These are places where the prophetic spirit breaking through existing authoritarianisms, not in the name of secularism or a rival religion, but in the name of a more authentic version of the faith in question.
That concern for "authenticity," is why terms like "liberal," and "conservative," are not adequate. Yes, prophets may emphasize change and revision: "Behold, I will do a new thing," God says in Isaiah 43:19 (cf. Rev. 21:5) and Jesus, in the Sermon on the Mount can contrast what "you have heard of old," with what "I say unto you." This openness to newness is at the heart of the current United Church of Christ campaign, "God is Still Speaking." But prophets also often reach behind current traditionalisms for even older inspiration and bring that forward for renewal. The biblical prophets constantly upheld the spirit of Torah against current corruptions. Their battle cry might be paraphrased, "You have heard it said of old, AND GOD INSISTS!!" When Dorothy Day led the Catholic Worker folk to challenge her church's institutional siding with the rich, she confronted bishops not only with Scripture, but also the traditional moral teaching of the church—pointing out that charging interest was condemned in the catechism itself! During the fundamentalist takeover of the Southern Baptist Convention (c. 1979-1994), the non-fundamentalist resistance continued to insist that dictator pastors, creedalism, the denomination telling local churches whether or not they could ordain women or sexual minorities (ordination is a strictly local church affair in most of Baptist history), and much else were monumental BETRAYALS of historic Baptist faith, rather than a return to traditional orthodoxy. And so it goes, mutis mutandis, in other traditions. Prophetic faith is often steeped in the tradition, even as it opposes all dead traditionalisms.
It is easier to motivate people by fear than hope in the short run. Thus, today, authoritarian religion is dominant in the U.S.--if not in numbers of adherents, surely in social and political power. But people grow tired of fear mongers and tyrants, even religious tyrants. Theocracies never last.
I believe there is a hunger abroad in the land today for prophetic faith. If we work to paint a vision of justice, compassion, creation-care, and peacemaking, motivated by a spirituality of nonviolence, people will respond. The authoritarian religious tyrants and their political allies will begin to lose influence. Of course, this means that people who hold to prophetic faith will have to share it, to get over their squeamishness about evangelism (rooted in the bad models they've seen from the authoritarian types) and bear witness to their alternative spirituality at every opportunity. I hope there is a renewal of the prophetic in every faith tradition, but I am most concerned about Christianity, and especially the unhealthy state of the churches in contemporary North America. We need to reclaim prophetic faith and we need to be bold in sharing it
An African-American Pentecostal student at a Mennonite college was full of praise for the faculty and students and the way they lived their faith in service. Asked if he had any criticism at all, he responded, "I wish they would preach what they practice more!" Let us proclaim and practice a prophetic faith--the world is hungry for it.
Michael L. Westmoreland-White, Ph.D. is a former soldier converted to gospel nonviolence and a former academic theologian who is currently a peace educator and independent scholar. His weblog, Levellers (http://www.anabaptist418.blogspot.com), seeks to renew prophetic Christianity for 21st C. America.
Posted by ChristianAlliance at August 14, 2006 01:14 PM
Comments
Thanks for some sound decipherment of the religious landscape, of which many haven't a clue. When I post, I try to show a sound academic basis, which is where I come from too. The following will try to enhance a little rather than to disagree or challenge.
No doubt about it, we are plagued by authoritarianism in the U.S.: storefronts & warehouses, radio & television, breakups & breakoffs, subterfuge & sectarians, fundamentalists & mega-churches, stand-alones & under-the-radar dysfunctionals while wearing a traditional nameplate. All embarrass the name of 'religion' simultaneously & establish us as 'kooks' abroad. Thanks for noting that it is a bare century that we have suffered the presence of Pentecostalism, altho' with their adopted Landmarkism, they claim lineage all the way back to the N.T. Landmarkism was run out of the SBC with a lot of work throughout the first half of the 20th Century & with finality in the 1950s; it continued its strange history among this religious subgroup for the last 50 years, but since they are so anticlerical, most haven't a clue. To put Pentecostals in the "mystical" grouping is a bit generous since they are a mainstay authoritarian listee, but the line of demarcation is blurred. Authoritarians are indeed "the villian of our day" & the "plague of our era."
You are a bit generous in your dating for SBC takeover by fundamentalists. Maybe I was closer to it, a little more affected & madder than a hornet, but surely this goes back into the 1950s with the attack on Duke McCall at Southern and S. Stealey at Southeastern. The latter was victim to a real heresy hunt with four professors terminated & others who resigned in protest in 1960. The end was apparent then, but the players themselves are still a bit surprising, especially a one like James Draper. With the takeover of the seminaries [late 1970s to 1983 when it was complete] the rest is history. The DisneyWorld fiasco Convention with pronouncements that excluded many turned into a public relations nightmare, but many are not yet ashamed of their actions: Al Mohler the new Southern President & Richard Land of a major branch with visibility. I had enough with the 1960 mess, but it took a few years to end up as a Congregationalist with the UCC. I think the "God is Still Speaking" is indeed a major step in "prophetic faith"; however, don't fail to notice subterfuge from within by the Biblical Witness Fellowship, a listening piece for the Institute for Religion & Democracy, a rightist group which is anything but its name!
As a note of non-inclusion, I never let "fundamentalist" be associated with the proper name Protestant. If one lets the term be used at all, it should be "Protestant fringe" so that the non-entity status for cultic sectarians is established & so that they do not derive any legitimacy from nomenclature, subterraneans that they are. Barnacles do not define ships, and these people are barnacles. Nor are they a majority except in loudness: they account for no more than 25% to 33% gross -- anymore than they in their fusion of pseudopolitics with religion account for more than a minority block within the GOP although a block, to be sure. Mainline Protestantism is still the historical norm, even though "the faith of fear" is indeed more than a concern in more recent times. I myself have a problem in using the term 'evangelism' so as NOT to be associated with some things, but I have NO fear whatsoever in stating opposition to the loudmouths at any & every opportunity.
Thanks, Michael, for a nice thought-provoking piece.
Posted by: Arden C. Hander at August 14, 2006 07:19 PM
Thanks for the comments, Arden. I would never say that we have "suffered the presence of Pentecostalism." Yes, that branch of Christianity has been rather thoroughly colonized by the Religious Right (not as much outside the U.S.), but it has very prophetic roots--roots that can be recovered. We should support movements to recover the prophetic roots of Pentecostalism--if for no other reason than that this is the fastest growing branch of Christianity in the world. 50% of the world's Christians are Roman Catholic; 25% are some form of Pentecostal (including most of the Independent African churches); all the rest of us make up the remaining 25%. Now, numbers are hardly everything--but imagine 25% of the world's Christians remembering their prophetic roots and working non-stop for economic justice, racial and gender equality, and peacemaking! (Getting a strong commitment to GLBT justice among Pentecostals might be more difficult--but I believe in miracles.) I was invited to be the "outside guest speaker" last October at the first annual conference of the Pentecostal and Charismatic Peace Fellowship--The risks these mainly 20-somethings were taking for justice and peace were amazing. So, despite the inroads that the Right has made among them (as among Baptists as you and I can testify!), I don't talk about "suffering the presence" of Pentecostals. They may be God's gift to the whole Bodey of Christ.
Posted by: Michael the Leveller at August 14, 2006 07:37 PM
Hi Michael
Great point about the Bible as rule book. I claim I can prove the Bible wasn't intended to be a rule book. Well, maybe "prove" is a little too strong, but here's my argument nonetheless. I['ve made it here before but I was hoping you might comment on it.
Consider the 6th commandment, "thou shall not kill". Conservatives usually translate the passage as "thou shalt not murder", thus allowing for killing when it isa (allegedly) appropriate, presumably in war and in capital punishment. But just what does "thou shall not murder" mean? Murder mewans unlwaful murder, distinguishing it from lawful killing. Thus the 6th commandment becomes an empty tautology, saying that the 6th law is no killing contrary to law--the commandment doesn't tell you which *kind* of killing is prohibited.
Unless...
the commandment presumes we already know when killing is wrong. In that case, the 6th commandment isn't designed to provide us with new moral knowledge but rather to convict us of violating the moral knowledge we already possess. We *know* God doesn't want us to murder, but we too often manage to hide from ourselves that knowledge. God's commandment forces us to look at what we ought to be doing.
My claim is that 6th commandment is a specific case of this general biblical principle. We know somewhere in our heart what's wrong or right--if we had no idea we'd be crazy and not morally responsible for our behavior. And God aims to show us our sin, and to show us our need for him. That's what the prophets were doing; reminding us what we already knew we ought to be doing--loving God with all our heart and strength and mind, and loving our neighbors as ourselves. Really.
your friend who often fails at that Great Commandment
Keith
Posted by: keith johnson at August 15, 2006 02:22 AM
There is long tradition of treating the Decalogue as principles rather than concrete rules. Another solution is to say that all homicide is wrong, whether abortion, capital punishment, war, murder, etc. The "seamless garment" network takes this approach.
You are right, though, that translating "Thou Shalt not Kill" as "Thous shalt not murder," is a tautology--and therefore unlikely.
Posted by: Michael the Leveller at August 15, 2006 10:21 PM
THE BETRAYAL OF PENTECOST
BY MICHAEL EDDS
Acts 1:8 declares, "But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be My witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and even to the remotest part of the earth."
The fulfillment of that prophetic word is recorded in Acts 2:4 when a rag-tag group of refugees met in an upstairs room in Jerusalem. It states, "And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit, and began to speak in other languages, as the Spirit gave them utterance. I guess these could be called "the first Pentecostals."
The First Century Church was given this supernatural power in order to evangelize the world, and evangelize the world they most certainly did! From tiny Israel to Asia, Europe and around the world, this revival company became a channel through which the message of salvation was given to a lost and helpless humanity. The Book of Acts records the massive revival that swept the known world by those whose souls the Holy Spirit had set on fire. Millions were swept into the kingdom of Heaven because of their powerful witness.
This Holy Spirit - endued group aroused the fury of Hell. All-out-war was savagely waged against them. The Hebrews 11 records, "....(They) were tortured, not accepting deliverance; that they might obtain a better resurrection: And others had trials of cruel mockings and scourgings, and, moreover of bonds and imprisonment: They were stoned, they were sawn asunder, they were tried by temptation, they were killed with the sword. They went from place to place in sheepskins or goatskins, enduring want, oppression and cruelty ... of whom the world was not worthy; in deserts wandering, and in mountains, and in caves, and in the holes of the earth..." The more the dark forces of Hell killed, the more the Early Church grew. What a legacy drenched in their blood they have left for the church of the 21st Century!
What have the Pentecostals of the 21st Century done with this legacy? For many of their televangelists, the message is PROSPERITY! The message of self-sacrifice, of giving all for the salvation of others has been replaced with "seed faith," a self-centered creed that encourages people to give to God (or their ministries) in order to get back even more. It is an appeal to one of the baser elements of the fallen nature of man......greed.
Michael Scott Horton, teacher at a seminary in California, made this observation:
"Some of these people are charlatans. Others are honestly dedicated to one of the most abhorrent errors in religious theology."
Quite a spectacle on television today! On our tv screens, we see miracle water being offered that will cure all, books, tapes, dvds for sale full of secret scriptural codes on how to get rich and prosper, and televangelists' appealing to give to their "ministry" with a certainty to receive much more financial gain in return. While "speaking in tongues," a female televangelist "prophetically" stated that God had given her the number 777. She told the people who were viewing that "God told her" that they needed to quickly give to that particular "ministry" money according to those set of numbers.... $777, $7777, and on up. They were promised a great return on their "seed faith investment." Another televangelist labeled people as stupid who question his prosperity doctrine. He declared, "Hell will be full of these stupid people." He further stated, " I can handle the flames (of Hell) but not being with stupid people for eternity."
"Can't pay your bills, you rent, utilities, and medical bills? The appeal is, "take what you have and send it in right away!! Within a few days, you will receive a hundred-fold, more than enough to pay all of those bills! It is like playing a "divine lottery" in the hopes to get rich quick. Sadly, gullible people give by the millions.
Quite a contrast between the early Pentecostals and those of the 21st Century.
The first were revolutionaries filled with a holy fire to bring the message "Jesus Saves" to a lost, dying generation. They counted it an honor to give away all and expect nothing in return in order to save a lost soul.
Beatings, imprisonment, mockings and even death for the sake of the Gospel were signs of spiritual prosperity for them.
Designer clothes, upscale homes, sleek cars, huge bank accounts and living the good life were not measures of spiritual success. Instead, sheep skin and goatskin rags, wandering in the desert, mountains and living in caves and the holes of the earth, suffering and even death for the sake of Christ were evidences of real prosperity for them. Hell feared and trembled before them. Satan sought to destroy them. Selfless sacrifice was the banner that was raised high over them. Multiple millions were transformed by their message. The world was turned upside down by them.
What about this latter group of Pentecostals?
Their message is "gain is a sign of Godliness." They invite you to give sacrificially in order to be wealthy. Wear the finest, drive the best, live in the upscale in order to demonstrate to the world that you are blest of God!
Heaven weeps over them, Hell laughs at them, and the world is lost because of them.
They preach "another gospel," which is beamed around the world. Millions are being led astray by their apostasy. Multitudes end up on the trash heap of disillusionment when their false theology does not work. They are blind guides leading the blind. They have disgraced the precious Holy Spirit and His gifts. They mock and blaspheme Him and use His gift in error. They teeter on the brink of blasphemy. They have trampled under foot the legacy given and paid for by the blood of martyrs.
THEY HAVE BETRAYED THE GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST!! THEY HAVE BETRAYED PENTECOST!!!
The cry of the hour is, "Oh that YOU would rend the Heavens and come down!" Restore your church, Lord!! Raise up shepherds after your own heart!!
My heart yearns for what the prophet of old longed to see:
"O LORD, I have heard thy speech, and was afraid: O LORD, revive thy work in the midst of the years, in the midst of the years make known."
Posted by: Michael Edds at October 20, 2007 03:00 AM










