Obama is Buddhist?

 

“God has taken them home.”

So U.S. President Obama accounts for the wanton killing of grade schoolers in Newtown, CT.  But does this view sit well with us?  Does it ease our pain or explain the unthinkable?  And does it present God in a way that encourages trust or hope?

My answer: e) None of the above.

Situations like Sandy Hook are so terrifying that it can be tempting to think that God must be pulling the strings.  We want to believe that someone is in control and that somewhere there is good to be found in it.  Yet ironically, by diminishing human agency and responsibility for evil we likewise strip ourselves of our agency and responsibility for good.

For if this is all God’s will, then really we can do nothing about it: who can resist God?

No.  Far from rekindling hope or even allowing fuller expression of our grief, at best this view results in complacency.  At worst, I reckon it results in despair.

Complacency because taking what is evil and “sanctifying” it (through ascribing it to God) subverts our most natural human responses: should we grieve or feel upset about God’s will?  At best the implication is that our grief and rage are really misplaced—the result of being too limited (or if you theology is more heavy-handed, too sinful) to understand that this is all for some “greater good.”  Ironically again, such a view has more in common with Buddhism than Christianity.

Despair because, faced with this perspective, we must necessarily understand our emotions, goals, and even our children as insignificant—unimportant before the lofty designs of God.  For a god who “calls home” little children via such murderous and seemingly purposeless action is, like a maleficent version of Zeus, a fearful entity indeed.  Before such a God we cannot but despair.

Many reject this god.  And those that accept it?  Well, is it any wonder that so much of evangelical Christianity seems based on fear and rule-following rather than on love and truth?

In reality Obama’s view denies us the very substance that the Psalmist would have us rely upon, both in coming to embrace God and as that which fosters and furthers right relationship with God: the created order, within which we are called to “taste and see” God’s goodness.

Now hear me rightly: I see no goodness in this situation.  It is not something “in light of which” I believe in God but something “despite which” I still believe.  But neither is this a situation where Christians should encourage complacency or despair.  Rather, I think the first step is to recognize that the problem of evil is not simply an issue or even a big issue.  To my mind it is the issue.

And if my personal experience with evil is any guide, the second step is for Christians to stand against it and—in evil’s overwhelming shadow—to tell our tales of how God has acted in our lives to heal and mend us.

And this, I think, is where goodness can possibly be found amid evil: not that God solves our issues or addresses all our concerns, but that in place of evil God offers Godself.  Not through the historical work of Christ or theological explanation, important as these are.  But rather as acts of healing and liberation within our everyday existence that convince our minds, inspire our imaginations, and win our hearts—acts of knowing us more truly than we know ourselves and loving us more deeply than we love ourselves.

So against the view that God’ goodness is invisible or, at best, unfathomable, Christians must not only claim with their words but demonstrate—and attest to how God has demonstrated—in their lived existence that God is good.  And we do so not because of but despite the wanton evil that we are able (and clearly, all too wiling) to inflcit upon each other.

1 thought on “Obama is Buddhist?

  1. Hello Mr. Monteith,

    Very interesting commentary here. I am curious about this topic. This is a topic that seems to have some very challenging interpretations. I am curious about what kinds of events are attributed to God and what kinds of events are not… I am curious about all the ways in which atrocities are deemed the responsibility of God and at times are not… I wonder about how and why Christians try to explain them away… or ways in which non Christians try to make sense of it all. This desperate attempt at “control” seems to consume the mind as one fervently seeks to make sense of such incomprehensible acts. And… well… I really have no idea even where to begin on this topic. God… where do we go from here… really?

    What does challenge me is if God is good and he is responsible for goodness… Is that all he is responsible for? How can he be responsible only for the “good” and not for the “bad”? How do we define good? How do we define bad? And as humans can we ever truly understand the will of God… can we understand the repercussions of our actions or any actions to the extent of which God may understand them… Is God actually responsible for anything at all that happens on the earth? Is he? How do we know? Who can decide where his hand may lie and where it may not? Hmm…

    I am not some well read intellectual spiritual leader… I cannot quote scripture to answer the above questions or prove anything one way or another… I do not have that kind of knowledge. I cannot speak to whether or not God had anything to do with this horrific occurrence. I cannot determine whether God was responsible for the fact that it was 20 children and not 120. I cannot foresee how this event could change history in regards to gun control and therefore further protect children in the future… I have no idea about any of this… All I know for sure is that God works in my life and in other’s lives. God is mysterious. God is all knowing. God is love and divine order is different than human order. I am NOT saying… oh well, God took these innocent and lovely daughters and sons in this horrific manner for a really good reason we will never understand… but I am not saying he did not do this either…

    I am only wondering about the possibilities of our inability to truly understand the will of God. I am challenging the idea that God only does “good”. What the eff is that anyways? And who decides what good is? There have been a number of things in my life I may have deemed “good” in the past that I learned were not actually “good” in the long run. If God is good and is committed to demonstrating that goodness in our lives, how is it that evil still exists… Doesn’t God have control over all of that sh*t anyways? Why would he allow it to continue? I don’t know. Well, I do know… at least sort of… I do remember some story about Satan… and the earth… and Jesus… and… whatever…

    I do admit that my core belief is that God is LOVE. LOVE and God are pretty much the same thing and this event does not seem loving in the least. At least not to me, it doesn’t… but I am not about to judge whether or not God took these kids “home”. What do I know about such things? Really… What do I know about these things? All I pray for is peace and healing for these families. I pray for peace and healing for this nation. And I pray for peace and healing for the planet. That is all I can do. That is the best I have at the moment… and the rest will just have to take care of itself.

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