Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Trump, Religion, and Religious Criticism: Why I'm putting this project on the side

Greetings all,

I have been slow to post as of late. I have been busy discussing politics and making arguments concerning the political system. 

This will only take up more of my time as Trump has now been elected. I don't have as much time for helping others understand religion when lives, livelihoods, and safety is on the line. I will continue my twitter @areligioncritc, so please follow me there. My Facebook is public, my name is Daniel Ansted, and this is where I have spent most of my social media time as of late. 

There will be updates here occasionally, as I have time, and I hope to resume this project in full in the future. But it is not the way to do the most good right now. I will likely finish my series on Islam (slowly). And make occasional updates as I go. 

I got out of academia, in part, because I wasn't doing all that much that was useful. The difference between governmental theories of atonement vs. penal substitution theories of atonement is not a useful distinction when more living people might suffer. 

Some of my friends and I are discussing what best to do in this aftermath. 

I don't have a strategy as of yet to do good. So if you have suggestions email me at areligioncritic@gmail.com or tweet me @areligioncritic. 

Hope to get back to this someday,

Dan


Thursday, October 27, 2016

Trumped up Religion


It is with hesitation that I write this article. Anytime someone tries to psychologize or explain the behavior or thought of another group of people, it is dangerous territory. Even historical explanations of contemporary events can be condescending. However, I feel like I am on solid enough ground to attempt an explanation of one interesting finding this election season.

According to polls, in five short years white evangelicals have flip-flopped on whether an elected official who commits an immoral act in their personal life can still behave ethically and fulfill their duties.




White evangelicals are, statistically speaking, more likely to vote for Trump. In a recent poll Trump leads Clinton 55% - 2% among likely white evangelical voters.

The obvious conclusion is the shift in the above graph benefits the 2016 Republican nominee more than the Democratic.

So how did we get to this situation? How did Republicans get such loyalty that they have changed their mind on the value of Presidential candidates personal morality so drastically in five years?

To tell the story we have to go into the history of religion and politics in America.

Kevin M. Kruse has documented a large portion of this history in his book One Nation Under God: How Corporate America Invented Christian America.

For the purposes of this post, he traces a trajectory from the 1930s to the Eisenhower administration till the 1970s of increasing ties between evangelicalism and conservative (Republican) economics.

But that is of course not the whole story. In 1973, the Supreme Court ruled that abortion was legal in all 50 states. Segregationists did use this to their advantage and racism was a catalyst, but the average evangelical cared more about the spike in legal abortions (at least eventually).

Morality, especially pro-life and pro-nuclear hetero-normative family values, became another corner stone of the development of conservatism.

No one was more instrumental in coalescing conserve values than Ronald Reagan, President from 1981-1989.

He spoke the language of the evangelicals better and more consistently than virtually any other President in American history. (Note: Possible exceptions, Eisenhower and Carter).

So much so that Falwell and Weyrich, the leaders of the conservative group the Moral Majority, declared in 1989 that the religious right is solidly in place.

The Republican party had solidly coalesced conservative economics, conservative morality, and conservative politics.

The failed campaigns by Pat Robertson and Mike Huckabee showed that America did not actually want a President who was from the religious right.

However, it took the formation of the The Tea Party in 2009 to expose cracks in the unity achieved during the Reagan era. The Tea Party was largely (but not exclusively) libertarian. They were subtly opposed to traditional Reaganesque conservative politics.

For example, Reagan was for amnesty; Trump is not. And Trump got Tea Party support partly because of his immigration policies.

Abortion is still a motivator for Trump supporters, especially as there is currently a Supreme Court seat empty. But personal morality was/is not a central concern for the Tea Party, nor as we see by the graph above is it for the average evangelical in 2016.

This was a relatively quick (and MAYBE unplanned) bait and switch from personal faith and morality a mix of libertarian and conservative policies.

Saturday, October 8, 2016

Spotlight on Islam I: The Study Qu'ran Part I

I received a copy of the Qu'ran from Kashif at the Islamic Society of Boston. But for further study, I was recommended The Study Qu'ran. I have only attempted one other review of a primary religious text and that did not go well as I mentioned in the prelude to this series. (I will attempt to learn from my previous mistakes).

I feel more comfortable with the Qu'ran, mostly because I have been given very ample guidance; though any errors are my fault as I have had and continue to have very good instruction at The Islamic Society of Boston.


Hermeneutics:



The Qu'ran is the holy text for Muslims; however, like literally any text, we have to understand the context before we can understand the text itself. The ideas below are my presentation of many ideas presented in The Study Qu'ran.  

When we read a book we always come to it with a context. In our lives we have accumulated previous knowledge that effects our interpretation of any text. Sometimes the context hinders understanding. For instance, a complete unwillingness to question the context of my whiteness would make it difficult to understand a book like Zami: A New Spelling of My Name 

Hermeneutics is a term that implies: understanding your context as it relates to the text or object of analysis, that interpretation comes from a context, and that a text engages with and changes your context. 'Hermeneutics' is often used in scholarly discussions of holy texts especially the Bible. 

Texts can be analyzed with multiple hermeneutics (methods of interpretation). 

For instance, using the hermeneutic of intellectual history, Sense and Sensibility can be interpreted as a fictional representation of the struggle between Enlightenment and Romanticism. Alternatively using a different hermeneutic, such as social history, you could interpret Austen's novel through and with the mores of pre-Victorian England. There are obviously other hermeneutics as well. 

In case you think I am comparing the Qu'ran to fiction (I'm not, but more on that later) non-fiction texts can be interpreted in multiple ways as well. Hegel can be read as an example of theodicy (an answer to the problem of evil; evil is necessary to progress into a better society) or Hegel could be read as an influence on Karl Marx. There are obviously other ways Hegel could be read as well.

All of these examples are in English or German (that is to say Western) and are largely not that . I ask you to be willing to open your context a bit more to understand the Qu'ran. 


Qu'ran as Word of God:


According to Muslims, the Qu'ran is the verbatim Word of God, revealed to Muhammed through the Archangel Gabriel. It was revealed in Arabic and changed the culture of the Arabic world. Even the language and words of the Qu'ran are considered a miracle and holy. 

For Muslims, visual representations are not allowed as they are idols, especially in comparison to the actual holiness of the Qu'ran and God, who is one, infinite and all encompassing.  

How does this compare to other religions? In Hinduism, visual representations are very important. In fact Hindus often encounter the Ramayana and the Mahabhrata through television and other visuals. In Islam the sounds and words of the text is important; images are hindrances and are idolatrous. 


Image result for Krishna
Scene from the Bhagavad Gita part of the Mahabhrata. The god Krishna is counseling Arjuna.

Cultures that focus on language are going to have much different emphases in their preferred artistic expression. 

Calligraphy is a common art form, but painting is not; sculpture is very rare. And passages from the Qu'ran are often included as an ingredient of art. 


Image result for islamic calligraphy
An Example of Islamic Calligraphy
Almost everyone who is raised Muslim will have at least part of the Qu'ran memorized. Recitation of the Qu'ran is an important part of the Islamic community. Proper recitation follows specific rules and there are professional reciters called Qari. Thus, hearing the Qu'ran is an important aspect of Islamic culture.  

Hermeneutics of The Study Qu'ran:


Many of the introductory essays of The Study Qu'ran cover similar territory with one addition. 

The lead editor of The Study Qu'ran sought out Muslim scholars of their holy text who all espouse a version of traditional Islamic hermeneutics (methods of interpretation), against fundamentalist and modernistic hermeneutics.  

According to these essays, fundamentalists interpret the Qu'ran very literally, often neglecting the context of the Qu'ran (i.e. when it was revealed, lessons from the hadith (the sayings of Muhammad), and the Sunnah (the actions, approvals, and other sayings of Muhammad). These are often used to give specifics to sometimes vague passages in the Qu'ran. 

Modernists avoid traditional hermeneutics by using methods from the contemporary era. For instance, some modernists interpret the Qu'ran through contemporary science. 

Thus, The Study Qu'ran is a commentary from a particular context as it asks us to be mindful of our own context; this is not hypocrisy, but rather awareness. When you create a text you create it from a context. The Study Qu'ran is directed both to the Western reader and to the Muslim. 

Thus, the commentaries that appear in The Study Qu'ran argue from and with traditional Islamic hermeneutics, while presenting the translated text of the Qu'ran. 


For the Western Reader:


This series is directed at the Western reader. First, if you are reading an English translation you are not reading the Qu'ran, just a translation of it. Again it's the actual Arabic words that matters, though many of the ideas are able to be translated into English. 

The editors take care to mention that they are considering the 'fields of meanings' of the Arabic and English words as they translate the Qu'ran. What makes the translation more difficult is that the Qu'ran is considered to be an infinitely deep text that encompasses everything.   

So how do you read a translation of the Qu'ran with commentaries (i.e The Study Qu'ran)? Well, there are multiple ways. 

It could be read straight through or by starting with the Surahs in the end. You could use one of these methods while reading the commentary. Finally, you could follow the internal citations of The Study Qu'ran to attempt to understand the Qu'ran as a whole or what it says on a particular topic. 

If you are familiar with the Bible you will notice a few differences in their shared stories. The essays in The Study Qu'ran argue that these discrepancies come from older oral traditions that continued to exist at the same time as the Bible.


Final thought:

Many holy books are actually a library. The Bible has various poems, wisdom literature, and legal pronouncements. The Bhagavad Gita, just one section of the Mahabhrata, has moral pronouncements, family rivalry culminating in a civil war, and metaphysics.  

Holy texts, in my opinion, are neither fiction nor non-fiction. They don't fit into modern classification schemes. They are poetry, reflections on the natural world, parables, a look into our past, for some, a guidance to our future, and more, all in one binding. 



Tuesday, September 27, 2016

The Satanic Temple: Sitting on the Lap of a Demon

Greetings all, 

I have made my blog 18+ so I could repost this piece and just in case I ever wanted to talk about tantric sex, hell houses, or lingam yoni.  

Some of you may object to The Satanic Temple because as Westerners, we have been taught to fear Satan and even his name as a representation of transcendent evil. However, The Satanic Temple does not believe in transcendent good or evil. They only view Satan as an exemplar of personal authority and responsible hedonism. In lore Satan is against the ultimate authority, God. 

Some of you may object to The Satantic Temple because of their admittedly grotesque displays of art and some of their more lewd antics. I do understand this objection and it is a bit much for myself; however, the grotesqueness of the displays and other antics are virtually always in private areas. 

If you are squeamish I recommend turning back now as I will be describing some of the art on display 

_________________________________________________________________________









The international headquarters in Salem, MA is a smallish white house in the residential section of the typically sleepy Massachusetts town. The building has bars and cameras in multiple locations with a relatively non-descript sign saying "Salem Art Gallery". There was a sign that said they could refuse service to anyone. As you enter there is a gift shop featuring various books on Satanic topics.

One piece of art in this gallery was a twist on a Christian theme. 'Mermaid Christ' featured a half-Christ, half mermaid statue of Jesus on the cross with over-sized penis and balls. This particular piece I thought was distasteful; a Christian who saw this would have a right to get upset. It is inappropriate to appropriate other religious symbols for your art. 

There were other sculptures that were social commentary. One such piece featured a black woman with bare breasts with a KKK member on all fours and on a leash. 

Even others were of purely a Satanic nature, such as a smaller sculpture of Baphomet that featured breasts, as is traditional, with a large penis, and a vagina on this penis. This is not dissimilar to the lingam-yoni in Hinduism; though Baphomet has different origins. Another was a fetal Baphomet that had a detailed umbilical cord.

There were also articles and comics distributed throughout the exhibit. One was an article by Lucien Greaves that argued that though Satanists do not believe in a literal Satan, they are nonetheless religious. They have a community and they do have affirmative beliefs. 

A comic on the other wall pictured a young woman and a young man having a discussion. The young man is urging the Satanist woman to a party. She said that she had work to do. The young man complained that she was a Satanist and thus should be hedonistic. She responded that Satanists condone responsible hedonism, not irresponsible hedonism. The remainder of the comic shows the young man's life go into a tailspin, ending with him in front of a judge saying 'Satan made me do it.'

Some of the sculptures were a bit too grotesque for my personal taste, but if you are not squeamish about this kind of art you should pay it a visit. After the art gallery we went to see the main attraction, the nine foot tall Baphomet statue that was originally designed to be placed along side The 10 Commandment at the Oklahoma statue, until it was removed. 

As we were waiting to see the statue there was a family getting a portrait in front of Baphomet. There was a child probably around 1 year old with them. The woman taking the picture sweetly said: "Little baby Satanists are my favorite." When it was our turn we took turns sitting on the demon's lap.

As we were leaving the statue area, none other than Lucien Greaves the spokesperson for The Satanic Temple entered into the area. And we were asked if we wanted to have our picture taken with him. If I was quicker in my thinking I would have said Hell Yes!!! But alas. 
Me on the far right, Lucien Greaves in Center Right in front of Baphomet

After the picture we were able to have a relatively short conversation with Lucien. Most of this conversation was about his various antics including: his attempt to place the Baphomet statue alongside of The 10 Commandments monument or remove it from the Oklahoma Capitol Building, distributing coloring books in Florida where Christians were passing out the Bible, and the After School Satan programs to be put into place only in locations where there is already a Good News Club.

In each of these cases The Satanic Temple is helping to make sure that all religious groups have equal opportunity to participate in their chosen religious identity according to the 1st amendment.

I disagree with Lucien on how the Bible should be read. He said that he believes that groups like The Westboro Baptist Church are reading the Bible correctly when they say "God Hates Fags." There are many ancient ways to interpret the Bible that are not literal or legal. 

During this discussion, he said that he would be happy to take the blame for the next natural disaster, instead of the gays.

There were no protesters on the scene during my visit and Lucien said that there were very few local protesters; there was one conspiracy theorist and a woman who accused him of being a pedophile with absolutely no evidence. 

According to Lucien, The Satanic Temple is religious, despite no belief in the supernatural. Lucien said this doesn't typically matter in legal settings. But not viewing Satanism as religious would privilege supernatural belief systems over natural ones.

Bottom Line:

I do think The Satantic Temple is religious and I think it does good work to protect the first amendment. Some of the art on display was in bad taste, particularly 'Mermaid Christ'; however, I support their right to sponsor and put this type of art on display, according to the first Amendment. 

The Satanic Temple gives us an occasion to check our religious privilege and make sure that everyone is equal under the constitution.  


Sunday, August 21, 2016

Prelude to Spotlight on Islam: Islam 101 at the Islamic Society of Boston


It is with humility that I write this prelude. I am currently learning about Islam from Kashif, a wise young man, at the Islamic Society of Boston, located in Cambridge, MA. He cautions me wisely that it is difficult to write about a religion without extensive knowledge. He is concerned that the comparatively little knowledge that I am gaining with him may do more harm than good. And, during our first meeting, he complained about the portrayal of Islam in the media. 

I have avoided Islam for sometime partly due to its controversial nature. I felt it would be good to have more experience and reflect on my methodology before I engaged in research about Islam. 

There are some lessons I have learned in this process that will be applied to the current investigation. I've learned how to more thoroughly do my homework. In my interview with Greg Epstein I failed to reread his book to ask better questions. This was probably my biggest wasted opportunity to date. I made mistakes in my treatment of Christian Science, as well. Some of these mistakes were corrected in later posts.

Readers may think that I am not selling myself well, talking about my mistakes. However, I am trying to advocate for a methodology where we learn, instead of sticking to the same talking points our entire lives. Specifically, to talk to religious people and adjust your conceptions of them as you go, but critically. You can't, or at least shouldn't, take everything a believer says at face value.  

I have no room to make basic mistakes with Islam. The controversy is too great, lives may depend on accurate analyses. Thus, I have been taking more time and being conservative. 

In regards to Islam, every Tom, Sue, Dick, and Harriet seems to have an analysis. In God is not Great Sam Harris quoted a long segment of a translation of the Qu'ran that, at first glance, advocates violence.

However, most Muslims don't care about an interpretation unless it is traced back through a chain of scholarship. In short, the Qu'ran is interpreted through tradition. I will talk more about this later; but, for now, suffice it to say that Sam Harris did not do his homework well and fueled fear of Muslims based on this faulty analysis.  

There is absolutely no way you can critique a religion without knowledge. And, given the history and the cultural context of Islam, I may never be able to offer anything resembling a full critique. What I can offer is my experiences at the Islamic Society of Boston, interspersed with some independent research.  

This will follow in future posts. 

Sunday, August 14, 2016

Book Review: The Case for Christ


The Case For Christ was first published in 1998 and was the first of many in a line of books by Lee Strobel using a legal methodology to assess the historical nature of Christ and His resurrection. It won the 1999 Gold Medallion Book Award from the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association. 



Strobel has 139k twitter followers and given Strobel's popularity and series of books based on similar methodologies, I have decided to act as an opposing attorney to his book The Case For Christ


Five Bullet Point Summary:


  • In the quest for truth pertaining to Christ you should treat the evidence as an impartial juror. 
  • The biographies of Jesus can be trusted, and is the same as the Jesus of faith
  • Jesus claimed to be the son of God and fulfilled exactly the identity of the Messiah
  • Jesus really died and was really resurrected. 
  • After reviewing the evidence presented in this book you should conclude that the case for Christ is at least reasonable and perhaps even conclusive.


Extended Summary and Analysis:


The assumption of this book is that you should be like an open minded juror when assessing the evidence (pgs. 17-18). Almost every chapter opens with a legal analogy. In this book review I will take the role of opposing counsel. But before I officially start this role, I want to analyze the overall methodology. 

A legal methodology should not pretend to be nuanced enough to ascertain metaphysical truths. Thus, this methodology is inadequate to prove the metaphysical identity of Jesus the Christ. Similar to Lang below I object to a legal approach to settling questions of religion or metaphysics.



Second, and the main reason I am acting as opposing counsel is that Strobel has not done his job of presenting both sides. Only the case FOR Christ is presented, for instance the further reading sections almost without exception support the case for Christ and virtually every chapter ends with at least one leading question favoring the case for Christ. 

If readers are supposed to be an impartial juror, the other side should be presented. I will offer specific objections along these lines. However, I do not have enough space in a blog post present an entire defense.

I will assume the defense for a few reasons. First, Strobel uses analogies mostly from the prosecution side of American criminal trials. 10 of 14 chapters use a legal analogy from the side of the prosecution, and only one uses an analogy from the defense.  

Second, there are passages that suggests he is assuming the prosecutorial burden of proof:

Having been a legal affairs journalist who has covered scores of trials, both criminal and civil, I had to agree with the assessment of Sir Edward Clarke, a British High Court judge who conducted a thorough legal analysis of the first Easter Day: 'To me the evidence is conclusive and over and over again in the High Court I have secured the verdict on evidence not nearly so compelling. As a lawyer I accept the gospel evidence unreservedly as the testimony of truthful men to facts that they were able to substantiate.' (Case for Christ pg. 320)

This seems to indicate that he is accepting 'beyond shadow of a doubt' burden of proof. Thus, I will consider it a win if I can offer only a shadow of a doubt.     


Defense:


My defense starts with specific legal objections to various quotes 
from the book.

The two main objections I use are the Best Evidence Rule and Counsel is Testifying. Both are actual objections a lawyer can use in court. 

The Best Evidence Rule means that when submitting something as evidence you need to present an original document instead of a copy when possible. 

In an actual trial, I would simply provide the evidence or the witness when making my case. However, to do that adequately would require me to write a book, instead I use this objection to note when he is not giving equal time to the other side. 

The other main objection is mostly self-explanatory. In court of law, counsel cannot testify; only witnesses can. 

These objections will form the basis of one of my counter-arguments. But except for documentation purposes these individual objections only matter in aggregate. 

Please feel free to skim the following section. 

Partial List of Objections:


Pg. 33: "That, I mused, was apparently what Matthew did with Mark--although Matthew had his own recollections as a disciple, his quest for accuracy prompted him to rely on some material directly from Peter in Jesus' inner circle.

I OBJECT: Counsel is testifying. 

Pg. 40: "Again I picked up Armstrong's popular book A History of God. "Listen to something else she wrote..."

I OBJECT: Best Evidence Rule. There is not enough of Armstrong's original material submitted into evidence. Nor is there an interview of Armstrong. 

Pgs 57-58: "Ironically," I pointed out, "if the gospels had been identical to each other, word for word, this would have raised charges that the authors had conspired among themselves to coordinate their stories in advance..."

I OBJECT: Counsel is Testifying

Pgs 87, 142-172, 188-190: References to the Jesus Seminar, a minority group of liberal Bible scholars.

I OBJECT: Best Evidence Rule. Rarely is their methodology discussed,  and they often summarily dismissed

Pg. 91 "Metzger had been persuasive. No serious doubts lingered concerning whether the New Testament's text had been reliably preserved for us through the centuries. 

I OBJECT: Counsel is testifying

Pg: 106, 133, 287-289, 291, 304, 312, 323, and 336: References to Michael Martin, professor and critic of The Bible. No interview, mostly casual mentions.

I OBJECT: Best Evidence Rule. Should submit large sections of his thought or ideally conduct an interview with Martin. 

Pg. 141: "John Marco Allegro's absurd book in which he theorized that Christianity emerged from a fertility cult in which adherents tripped out on hallucinogenic mushrooms!"

I OBJECT: Best Evidence Rule AND Counsel is Testifying. 

Pg. 185: In the context of determining whether a Messianic Jesus can be found in Gospels other than John, Strobel offers: "Immediately I thought of the famous exchange, recording in Matthew, in which Jesus asked his disciples in a private meeting, 'Who do you say I am? Peter replied with clarity, "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God." Instead of ducking the issue, Jesus affirmed Peter for his observation. 'Blessed are you,' he said, 'for this was not revealed to you by man, but by my Father in heaven.' " 

I OBJECT: Counsel is Testifying. 

Pg. 200-201: Briefly describes Ian Wilson's theory that Jesus was a master hypnotist. 

I OBJECT: Best Evidence Rule

Pg. 300: "In the face of the facts, they have been impotent to put Jesus' body back into the tomb."

I OBJECT: Counsel is Testifying. 

Pg. 305: Mentions Anthony Flew, but does not mention any of his books except the one with Habermas, who he is interviewing. 

I OBJECT: Best Evidence Rule

Pg. 320: "Without question, the amount of testimony and corroboration of Jesus' post-Resurrection appearances is staggering."

 I OBJECT: Counsel is Testifying. 

Pg. 333: JP Moreland is 'on the stand' talking about the motivations of the disciples."For what? For good intentions? No, because they were convinced beyond a shadow of doubt that they had seen Jesus Christ alive from the dead."

I OBJECT (expecting to be overruled): Argumentative, witness is drawing a conclusion. 

Pg. 361: "After a personal investigation that spanned more than six hundred days and countless hours, my own verdict in the case for Christ was clear."

I OBJECT: Counsel is Testifying. 


Counter Arguments:


I only have to show that there is a reasonable doubt that Jesus was not the Christ who arose from the dead. Given the context of the debate I am restricted to historical arguments, as metaphysical or scientific arguments are precluded in this methodology.   

First let me make my concessions. I concede that Jesus existed, I concede that he was crucified, I will even concede the tomb is empty.  My arguments will center around the resurrection. 

Remember all I have to do is show reasonable doubt based on the methodology of the book.

1) People can be convinced to die for various causes true or not. There was not a significant difference enough presented between the Early Church and Jonestown.

2) Reports of his post resurrection appearances could have been fabricated.  

3) The list of objections provide sufficient evidence to suggest that the content of this book does not mimic a fair and impartial trial, thus a verdict from this book is impossible. Thus, you should side with the defense.

First, the link between people being convinced about something and its truth is emphasized in many of the later chapters. Often the argument is made that what else besides the literal resurrection could convince people to sacrifice their lives. 

But everything from Hale Bopp, Jonestown, and the Manson Cult have had their followers greatly sacrifice for the cause. None of these are believed to be true by a significant number of people. 
News of Heaven's Gate mass suicide.

The difference between these according to J.P. Moreland:

"...this [the Christian] revelation was not done in a publicly observable way. So they could be wrong about it." Pg. 333.

That's it, that's the difference. So you have to demonstrate that the revelation was done in a publicly observable way. Which is a separate argument.

Second, the post-resurrection appearances break in nature from the earlier appearances. We have reliable witnesses to the existence of Jesus before death, but fewer after his resurrection. 

A lot of emphasis is placed on corroborating evidence of Jesus' existence in the early chapters of Strobel's book (see especially chapter 4). But once we get to the post-resurrection appearances this type of evidence is minimized or not invoked.

Granted the the presentation of Gary Habermas' analysis of 1 Corinthians 15, where Jesus appears to the 500 is not a lynch pin of his argument. It is interesting that we see a mild dismissal of the type of argumentation seen in chapter 4:

"...when you have only one source, you can ask, 'Why aren't there more?' But you can't downgrade this one source that way." (Pg. 313).

Furthermore, all the appearances listed on page 316 are followers of Christ. Thomas the only potential skeptic among them. Most were either original disciples or later apostles.  

Of course that is not all that damaging. According to the Gospels he returned for approximately two weeks post-Resurrection. And non-believers could have just thought these people were crazy. 

To convince you that there is at least reasonable doubt, I will propose an alternate scenario for the resurrection.  

First, Joseph of Arimathea moves the body. Perhaps he didn't really want the trouble of having Jesus' body on his land, perhaps he was politically motivated to cause chaos in the Jewish religious order for personal gain, or perhaps he was a secret follower and wanted the prophecy to appear to be fulfilled. He was at least sympathetic agreeing to bury Jesus in the first place. 

Second, some followers of Christ find this empty tomb and report back to the other followers. After hearing about this one of the followers claim to have seen Christ. This continues until he allegedly appears in front of 500. Each perhaps not convinced that they themselves have seen Christ and bolstered by the empty tomb believe in his resurrection.  

And if historians, other than Luke, did not have time to document his reappearance the amount of this public observability should be questioned. 

My third and final argument has to do with how this trial was conducted. The objections I raised earlier point to a systematic tendency to present the evidence in a favorable light for the case that Jesus died and was resurrected. 

In addition, virtually every chapter ends with Deliberations and Further Evidence that has leading questions and books that support the main claim. There is no balance. I argue that this trial is unfair and should thrown out at least until the second half of this case is presented.  

Bottom Line: 


The Case For Christ is one sided. And if Strobel is assuming the prosecution the defense would win. If he took the defense, I would advise his client to sue for incompetency. He would still likely win, but his burden of proof would be so minimal as to be virtually meaningless in the real world.

He could have simply presented these interviews without the gimmick of mimicking a trial and I likely would not have even bothered. But this book is fundamentally dishonest, asking us to be impartial for a case that is presented very partially.  

All of his other books that use a similar methodology will necessarily have very similar issues and thus, should be summarily dismissed until the other side of the case has been presented. 

Tuesday, August 9, 2016

Pokemon and Fundamentalist Christianity

What Pokémon Go Can Teach about Fundamentalism

With the smash hit release of Pokémon Go, a small number of fundamentalist Christian critics have complained about its demonic nature. These reactions against Pokémon can tell us about the nature of fundamentalism.

The most prominent of these current critics is Rick Wiles from Trunews, a fundamentalist Christian radio program and blog. On this program he complains that virtual demons are being placed in churches. He believes the game is a magnet for demonic powers and that Pokémon masters may tell the demons to kill Christians. 

As far-fetched as this may seem, he is not the only current critic that believes in the potential demonic power of Pokemon.
Another current critic, Erika Dawson, wrote a blog post titled “Is Pokémon Safe for Christian Kids.” In this post she quotes Rebecca Woodson’s Let Our Children Go: Steps to Free Your Child from Evil Influences published by the fundamentalist publisher Charisma House:
We must not assume that our children are not a threat to darkness. The enemy’s purpose is to grip and blind every generation, establishing strongholds in the lives of our children from a very young age. – Rebecca Greenwood

Continuing she offers the following introductory questions to determine whether should let your child play 
Pokémon and other games:·

· What does this game teach you?
· Are supernatural powers involved?
· Does the show, character, story, etc. go against or line up with God’s Word?
· Does the game or toy have symbols, characters, or other characteristics that link it to New Age or occult powers?
· What influence does the game exert?


Both of these commentaries appeared after Pokémon Go was released, but fundamentalists have been critiquing Pokémon since its initial popularity. In 2001, Phil Arms published a book called Pokémon and Harry Potter a Fatal Attraction, where he also complains about the demonic nature of Pokémon. The above referenced book complains about the magical power of Pokémon and lists it alongside World of Warcraft and Dungeons and Dragons as games to be avoided. 

Jigglypuff, an example used by Phil Arms in a sermon about the demonic nature of Pokemon

Berit Kjos in his article “Pokemon: A Christian Commentary,” argues that Pokemon is a gateway into other spiritually dangerous games such as Magic the Gathering and Dungeons and Dragons. And these games are ways to teach children formulas for summoning spirits and gives children a sense of personal power:
Children everywhere are learning the pagan formulas for invoking “angelic” or demonic spirits through multicultural education, popular books, movies, and television. It’s not surprising that deadly explosions of untamed violence suddenly erupt from “normal” teens across our land. Occult role-playing games teach the same dangerous lessons. They also add a sense of personal power and authority through personal identification with godlike superheroes. Though the demonic realm hasn’t changed, today’s technology, media, and multicultural climate makes it easier to access, and harder than ever to resist its appeal. 
In this conception of reality, true power can only come from God and any other apparent power is from the enemy. These examples all emphasize that the spiritual world, populated with literal angels and demons, is an essential part of reality. So much so that even the more mainstream fundamentalist Christian organization Focus on the Family references potential demonic influences: “some of the claims of demonic influences in Pokémon seem overblown.”

This emphasis of the physical world being intertwined with and affected by the spiritual world can give us insight into fundamentalism. George Marsden is one of the most respected historians of evangelicalism and fundamentalism and he defines fundamentalism as:

…an evangelical who is militant in opposition to liberal theology in the churches or to changes in cultural values or mores, such as those associated with ‘secular humanism.’ --George M. Marsden, Understanding Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,1991), vii.

In my proposed conception of fundamentalism the opposition to changes and liberal theology/culture will center on instances where their conception of reality is opposed or denied. Their conception of reality is one that combines the moral, metaphysical spirituality, and physical reality in a whole that cannot be separated. 


Pokémon arguably have supernatural powers and representations of supernatural powers allow real spiritual beings to interact with the physical world, but any fictionalization of spiritual reality will be opposed. From their perspective, Harry Potter, Dungeons and Dragons, Magic the Gathering, and others are mistakenly treated as fictional by most of contemporary society; whereas, for the fundamentalist these books, movies, and games both call into being real unwanted spiritual realities and are an actual representation of an unwanted spiritual reality. And thus a beacon for demonic activity. 

According to fundamentalism, this tendency of contemporary society to fictionalize the spiritual is based on a profound misunderstanding of the metaphysical nature of reality. It is as good as saying the spiritual world does not exist; in other words, there is a large component of reality that most of us are simply unware of. Thus, from the fundamentalist’s perspective, we are unaware of the spiritual warfare happening all around us.

This tripartite conception of reality predates modernity. Natural historians and natural philosophers of the 1800s, such as Newton, saw the empirical ‘scientific’ world and the spiritual as deeply connected, much like contemporary fundamentalists. Morality was not viewed as quite as essential to reality, but it was still common to suggest that people under demonic influence committed immoral acts.

Contemporary conceptions of reality separate or deny these aspects of reality. Morality is separated from spirituality when atheists say you can be good without God. Morality is separated from reality when people deny objective moral truths by espousing various form of moral relativism. Spiritual reality is outright denied by scientists who espouse metaphysical naturalism, that everything is potentially explainable through natural explanations. And since fundamentalists are at war, the rest of us are, at best, innocent bystanders in the most epic war in all of history.