Personal Jesus: A Response To Andrew Sullivan

Zack —  April 6, 2012 — 11 Comments

 

 

 

Apparently Andrew Sullivan didn’t watch the Jefferson Bethke “Why I Hate Religion, But Love Jesus” video that went viral a few months ago.

Instead, in his latest article for Newsweek he’s decided to use another Jefferson, in this case Thomas, to make what is essentially the same argument. Namely, that in order to truly follow Jesus we must separate ourselves from the church and/or organized religion. In that way we can discover the “real” Jesus, free from all of the dogma and boundaries the Church has supposedly placed upon his followers since the resurrection. In doing so, Sullivan hopes that Christians will stop letting their faith overlap with their politics.

To be fair, there are many points at which I agree with Mr. Sullivan. Particularly in regards to giving up power, loving and caring for others, and forgiveness. As it pertains to those facets of the Christian life, Sullivan is right on point. In fact, I could not agree more with his statement, ”What does it matter how strictly you proclaim your belief in various doctrines if you do not live as these doctrines demand?”

However, this article is full of statements that are either patently false or incredibly misleading. Some of the factual errors are minor, but others are a much more significant. The issue here is not to nit pick, but to point out that the Jesus Sullivan describes is a sanatized Jesus, free from any controversy or quirks that Sullivan is not comfortable with. It’s a disembodied Jesus, free from the Body which incarnates him to the world and free to be molded into whatever form the religious consumer desires. It’s a Jesus formed in the image of Andrew Sullivan.

So, what are all of these discrepancies?

For starters, Jesus never disowned his parents. That is a radical reinterpretation of the story of the boy Jesus teaching in the temple that ignores the gospels’ account of Jesus’ close and ongoing relationship with his mother. Implying that he did, allows Sullivan to make the case that our abandonment of the Church is somehow in line with Jesus’ actions and therefore justified.

Likewise, Jesus actually had more to say about marriage than Sullivan would have us believe. Like it or not, in Jesus’ condemnation of divorce (which Sullivan cites) Jesus also, very clearly and very specifically, describes the sacrament of marriage. What we do with that is a matter for another time, but to leave out Jesus’ words on this matter is deceptive. However, for Sullivan’s purposes, minimizing Jesus’ words on contemporary “hot button” issues allows Sullivan to minimize their significance or ignore them altogether when they don’t exactly line up with his own personal theology, thereby adding another layer to his straw man Jesus.

The gospels make no claim that Jesus expected the immediate end of the world. Not only does Jesus utter the famous words “no man knows the hour”, but at the ascension Jesus tells his disciples that he will be with them to always, even to the very end of the age. This promise of ongoing comfort and support are not exactly the words of a man expecting the world to end tomorrow. Implying that Jesus was focused on the life after this one allows Sullivan to further support his case that Christians need not worry so much about the “political” issues of our day.

Contrary to Sullivan’s claim, Jesus did not flee from crowds. The one occasion of Jesus leaving to go pray by himself is not the normative paradigm for his ministry. If anything it’s the exception that proves the rule that Jesus spent most of his ministry preaching to crowds, i.e. the sermon on the mount, preaching to 5,000 before feeding them, and preaching to the crowd before going off to pray after he finished his message. Simply put, Jesus didn’t advocate the sort of retrenchment Andrew Sullivan claims that he did.

And since Sullivan doesn’t want us to make conclusions about things the Bible doesn’t specifically mention, the Bible also says nothing about whether or not reproduction will take place in eternity.

Again, this may seem like nit picking, but it’s important nit picking because what Sullivan does is create a new Jesus which will more easily support his case than the Jesus we actually find in the gospels. Without this reconstruction of Jesus, Sullivan doesn’t have the Biblical support he seeks in making a case that Christians should “forget the church, [and] follow Jesus.”

Those factual issues aside, Sullivan’s case is still riddled with problems.

Sullivan grounds the validity of his argument in the work of Thomas Jefferson and his infamous cut and past Bible. However, Thomas Jefferson was not a theologian.

Brilliant though he was, Jefferson was no more qualified to discern the “real” teachings of Jesus than the guy delivering our pizza tonight. Jefferson seemed to know that, which is, in large part, why he took pains to make sure that hardly anyone would read his work (which in turn is why most people have never heard about Jefferson’s Bible until recently). It was a private hobby of his intended only for himself and a small group of friends. (See Stephen Prothero’s wonderfully titled The American Jesus for more on this.) To imply that he was someone able discern the “real” teachings of Jesus and that we should in turn follow this “pure” gospel is simply absurd.

The manipulative politicization of the faith today is certainly problematic. Running a blog entitled The American Jesus I am particularly sensitive about the ways in which Jesus is wedded to American political ideology. However, to claim Jesus was in no way political is either incredibly ignorant or intentionally deceptive, particularly for a self-professed Catholic during Holy Week.

Whether Catholic or Protestant you are probably aware that last Sunday was Palm Sunday. While admittedly Jesus didn’t perform many overtly political actions, his entrance into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday was nothing short of a political revolt, an act which led very quickly to his death at the hands of a Roman government which would abide no threat to its rule.

While his political actions where very different from what we see today, riding into Jerusalem and declaring yourself king instead of Caesar was an incredibly political act and the beginning of the climax of a ministry which offered an alternative kingdom to the established empire. Guess what kingdoms and empires are. They’re forms of government. Offering an alternative form of that government is a political act. While Sullivan is right to call attention to the problematic relationship between the modern religious and political right, he demonstrates a very myopic understanding of politics.

Despite this flawed understanding of politics, however, Sullivan employs it to further his case that Christians should abandon a church he views as too wedded to “politics”. Instead, for Sullivan, Christians should learn to more fully embrace “secular space.”

According to Sullivan, “The crisis of Christianity is perhaps best captured in the new meaning of the word “secular.” It once meant belief in separating the spheres of faith and politics; it now means, for many, simply atheism. The ability to be faithful in a religious space and reasonable in a political one has atrophied before our eyes.” I agree with Sullivan that we as Christians need to be more reasonable in our interactions with those outside the church. However, Sullivan’s assumption that for Christians there is such a thing as “secular space” is fundamentally flawed. And turning to St. Francis of Assisi, a man who lived during a time in which the government was understood to be appointed by God, doesn’t help his case.

As John Milbank would say centuries later, once there was no “secular”. For Francis of Assisi, the idea that one’s faith would not influence what we understand today as politics  would be unintelligible. For Francis, there was one Kingdom and any earthly kingdom was subject to the true Kingdom’s rules and way of life. This was true for everyone in his era. The idea of a secular space, as Milbank correctly points out, is a modern creation.

Certainly, the current religio-political atomosphere is unhealthy, but Sullivan has doesn’t have the historical support for secular space that he thinks he does. We should never try to force our faith and ideals onto others, but for the Church there is no space in the world that does not belong to God. So, to suggest that Christians should operate as if there is, is simply unintelligible. This, though, doesn’t mean that Christians should believe that they can establish the kingdom of God through vote either. 

Sullivan argues that this intermingling of politics combined with an imperfect church results in “the crisis of our time”.  For Sullivan, the church must be abandoned because “Christianity itself is in crisis.” This is nothing new. Christianity has always been in some sort of crisis as she has tried to understand and live out what it means to be the hands and feet of God when the Church is filled will imperfect people. In spite of that, the Church ahs managed to survive and thrive over 2,000 years. Despite Sullivan’s message of gloom and doom, I have no doubt that it will continue to thrive.

Ultimately, Sullivan tries to argue that his article “doesn’t imply, as some claim, the privatization of faith, or its relegation to a subordinate sphere.” He’s right, but what it does lead to is a personalization of the faith. When we separate Jesus from his Body he becomes unintelligible and is able to be manipulated into a Jesus formed in our own image.

By stripping away everything that he perceives to be extraneous to the faith, in order to emphasize the fundamentals of the faith and thereby leave us with a more “pure” form of Christianity, Sullivan is participating in the very same behavior he condemns in this article: he’s becoming a fundamentalist. Granted, his fundamentalism is of a different flavor, and at least on the surface appears to be less hateful, but it is in fundamentalism nonetheless: a hyper-focus on the “essentials”, coupled with rigid interpretation of the faith that makes no room for anyone who might disagree.

While Sullivan tries to offer a more “pure” form of the faith, ultimately what he leaves his readers with is something quite different from Christianity. Like Jefferson, Sullivan creates a god who conventionally loves and hates all the things he loves and hates. Sullivan, like Jefferson, follows a Jesus who, when he turns around, looks exactly like Sullivan. This is a God made in our image, rather than the other way around. It is nothing short of self-worship and as a theology it is lazy and self-serving.

Stripping away what we don’t like from the Gospels doesn’t leave us with a “pure” form of Christianity. It leaves us with the most perverse form of Christianity, one which we create to serve our own wants, tastes, and desires. Worse yet, it leaves us with our own personal Jesus who looks suspiciously just like ourselves. Following that Jesus is not the act of worship which is constitutive of the Christian faith. Following that Jesus is an act of idolatry.

 

Grace and peace,

Zack Hunt

Zack

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  • http://www.nathanmorgan.com nathan morgan

    Hi Zack,
    As you should know, I love your site. As it turned out your favorite line you quote in the beginning was also mine. Gotta say that your rebuttal here is not what I expected from this article. It seems that you’re looking for fights to pick a bit. Granted he has some significant misleadings….but overall I think he calls us to question and consider some big ideas. It seems like your main criticism is making Jesus to be a version yourself…which I can see some points in the argument but considering how he emphasized Self-sacrifice….”But I do know it won’t happen by even more furious denunciations of others, by focusing on politics rather than prayer, by concerning ourselves with the sex lives and heretical thoughts of others rather than with the constant struggle to liberate ourselves from what keeps us from God” …how do we liberate ourselves, by going low: “It is as meek as it is quietly liberating. It does not seize the moment; it lets it be. It doesn’t seek worldly recognition, or success, and it flees from power and wealth. It is the religion of unachievement. And it is not afraid.” Maybe I misinterpreted his tones but I think it’d be more fitting for you to draw comparisons in this unique case, than pages of differences.
    in peace this Easter wkend!
    nm

    • Stephen Morrison

      I agrgree whole-heartedly with Nathan’s critique of your article, Zach.

  • franklin

    Any “Jesus” you worship is a Jesus of your own creation.

  • nazani14

    If you follow Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and Paul you are following the wants, tastes, and desires of 5 different people. People who never dreamed of democracy, the germ theory of disease, or a dozen other things that are at the heart of today’s ethical questions.

    I’m deeply disappointed that Newsweek chose to lend its pages with this woolgathering.

  • Dan

    Hey man. I think you misread the article. Sullivan never said he disowned his family, but rather that he rebuked them, and called his followers to disown their families. That seems pretty accurate with “who are my mother and brothers?” bit, and about “he who doesn’t hate his father and mother for me” or whatever it was. And I’m pretty sure one of us has misunderstood the paragraph on secular space, because he seems to think the definitions are problematic, too. I’m not sure, though. If you responded to exact quotes in your piece, I really think it would be more helpful to see what he said wrong, and then counter with your thoughts/bible verses.

    Finally, and this is the big one, Sullivan never called anyone to leave the church. The title may have, but authors don’t write the title. Andrew Sullivan is a devout catholic, who still considers himself such despite the fact that his church denies him communion for being gay. He would never encourage people to abandon the church, but rather it is a call to radical action of Christians to reclaim christianity from charlatans. I think if you reread this article knowing that the title was not his doing, you’d write a significantly different piece. I hope you do so.

    • Stephen Morrison

      Well-said, Dan.

  • http://trippingstumblingwhilefollowingjesus.blogspot.com/ Joe

    OUTSTANDING!

    (No further comment needed)

  • Karen

    Thanks for bringing this article and your thoughts to our attention, Zack. Good food for thought. Dan’s comments make it more clear how important it is to understand the context of what someone is saying. In terms of context, two things stand out to me. Number one, Sullivan is a devout Roman Catholic engaged in the institutions of his church. Secondly, he is gay and is being denied communion in that church, which implies that he embraces some form of sexual engagement consistent with his sexual orientation that is considered active sin traditionally in that church. Someone please correct me if RC communion is also denied to the faithful who struggle with homosexual temptations (but do not willfully and consistently act on those impulses). I would not expect excommunication to be the appropriate practice in the latter instance.

    The first context is laudable from the perspective of the example of and teaching of Jesus. The second requires some clarification in the respects I mentioned to know how to understand where Sullivan is coming from. It is clear that the Church of the NT embraced in love and forgiveness people from every background, from every form of sin, and every social category. Accordingly, it is not consistent with NT Christianity to single out any form of sin above others for special shame, persecution or ostracism! On the other hand, real change in lifestyle practices was required of repenting sinners entering the Church (regardless of ongoing inner temptations, inclinations, and falls). The Christian life was understood to be a battle against the sinful passions. Sinners were baptized and embraced; their sins were not!

    It seems to me there is major confusion–I might even suspect obfuscation on the part of some–and blurring of this distinction among modern Christians. Issues of sexual morality and the meaning of Christian marriage as only between one man and one woman (marriage being, by orthodox Christian definition, a sacramental relationship that is an icon of Christ and His Church) are not the only area this is true, but are definitely among the more obvious and hotly disputed areas. That the RC Church is known to have a problem with hypocrisy in this area among certain of its celibate clergy, and that the Fred Phelps of the world garner so much more media coverage than the Christopher Yuans and Andrew Marins only helps muddy the issue and keep the fires of controversy stoked.

  • Zack

    As always I appreciate everyone’s feedback. I have read and reread this article several times. While I don’t understand how you can read an article entitled “Forget the Church, Follow Jesus” which then goes on to malign the church and suggest rentrenching into personal acts of kindness as not calling the reader to forget the church, that is not my main criticism.

    As I said in the post, I do agree with Sullivan on many points. However, these do not cover up or negate the fundamental problem with his article. Despite the very valid points about social justice, through his employment and support of Jefferson and his cut and paste Bible/Jesus, Sullivan is unequivocally advocating the sort of “have it your way” American Christianity that this blog was created to critique. Thomas Jefferson’s Jesus was quite literally “the American Jesus”. Sullivan is clearly calling on us to follow in Jefferson’s shoes. That is simply not something I can support, regardless of what other noble ideas he may attach.

    Sullivan may be well intentioned in his call to focus more on social justice, but he seems to be blind to the logical conclusion of his argument. While he may cut and paste a Jesus who does the things most of us would agree are Christ-like, in establishing this as a legitimate form of theological interpretation he is opening the door for anyone to do the same which will inevitably result in tragedy, i.e. anytime in history in which the same gospel has been cut and pasted to support things like slavery, oppression, persecution, genocide, etc.

    There are may helpful ways to call the church back to the heart of the gospel. This, however, is not one of them.

    • Stephen Morrison

      Why not? Your Jesus could be as picked-and-chosen as Sullivan’s. He, on the other hand, seems to advocate for an open and transparent critical reading of Scripture that actively engages our lives with its story and content. Why would you take issue with this process because some people have gotten it wrong in the past. I like Sullivan’s process of picking over the more common suppressed one, where Christians pick-and-choose as blithely as anyone ever has, yet deny that they do so, even to themselves. I’ll take the liberal openness’s mistakes overt the conservative willfully-blind one of denial. I wish, as has been said above, was more of a conversation than a blithe dismissal of Sullivan’s (whether you agree with him or not) deeply considered meditation.

      • Stephen Morrison

        Apologies for the typos. I blame the iPad I’m using for the first time.