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Austin's Atheism Blog

By Austin Cline, About.com Guide to Atheism since 1998

Politics of Christianity

Friday March 10, 2006
Elaine Pagels is a well-known researcher into early Christian history and beliefs - her book The Gnostic Gospels (1979) has become a standard work on early Christian Gnosticism. Her ideas are not, however, just limited to early Christianity. She also has a lot to say about Christianity as it has manifested today, not all of it positive.

In an interview with Edge, she said:

The kind of Christianity that pervades the religious right in this country divides the world between the saved and the damned, between God’s people and Satan’s people, between good and evil. We have all seen how this is played out in our politics. I used to think that President Bush was using this language as a political ploy. I still think he is, but I also think—to my disappointment—that he also believes it. His conviction that he is God’s chosen one to “rid the world of evildoers” blinds him to the evil that he—and we, as Americans—are capable of doing. The conviction that we are on the side of good—of God—is, however, an ancient one—enormously powerful.

Christians invoking terms such as “evil-doers” read the bible, as anyone does, selectively. They choose the parts they like and they leave out the parts they don’t. In this case the parts they like are the parts about an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, that is—and a life for a life. If someone’s taken a life, then their life is required. And that’s certainly a biblical tenet. Of course, it’s from the Old Testament. You don’t hear much about forgiveness and turning the other cheek from our President and his administration. The Old Testament is what they choose for this occasion because it suits their purpose.

What I’ve learned through studying the Gospel of Thomas and the context of the politics of early Christianity, is that anyone who participates in Christian tradition without having learned anything about it—and that’s most people who participate in it, because it’s not taught in public or private schools for the most part—often think of their traditions as immutable, as if they’ve just come down from God.

And that’s not all! I encourage everyone to follow the link and read the full text — it’s very interesting.

 

Christian Right & Christian Nationalism:

 

Christian Nationalism & Dominion Theology:

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