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How You May Have Gotten Religion Wrong

Hell hath no fury like religious people getting religion horribly wrong, and what’s worse, we usually don’t have a clue that we’ve lost the plot when we have.

There are lots of reasons for our blunders of belief: an insular church culture that naturally resists difference, a rigid theology that tends to mark out a hard line between those who are in and those who are out, or plain old-fashioned ego that insists on being right in matters of faith.

But regardless of the reasons, the bottom line is that it’s difficult to detect our blind spots, and this makes it really easy for we who claim faith to fail miserably. When we do, our religion can become weaponized and we can totally jack people up in the name of God and feel fully righteous in the process.

So if you fancy yourself a religious person and you want to know if you may be getting it wrong, here are a few possible clues:

If you believe that God’s pigmentation, gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, and personality exclusively mirror your own.

If you find yourself invoking God’s name to deny other people healthcare, food, safety, marriage, or basic human rights.

If your religion requires that others share that religion in order to have proximity to you.

If you believe God values your child, more than a child across the street, across town, or across the world.

If you find yourself continually separating people into either the saved or the damned—and you somehow always wind up in the former.

If your God leads you to respond to people with a closed fist more often than an open hand.

If the voice you have in your head for God seems to miraculously always align with your preferences and prejudices—if God loves who you love and hates you who hates.

If your religion results in you surrounding yourself with less diversity, not more.

If you believe God favors you above anyone else.

If your religion enables you to revel in the suffering of others, the shedding of blood, the waging of war, or the ending of life.

If you believe God blesses your country, votes for your political party, or roots for your football team.

If your religion can justify more money for the military than for healthcare.

If you’re certain that your religion is the only right one, your holy book is the only right one, and that your interpretation of that book is the only right one. 

If you feel like God is out to squash you.

If you are sure you’ve gotten religion fully right.

This is the essence of faith: that none of us have it all figured out, that there are always gaps in our understanding, and that unless we continually guard against it, we will always default to creating a God in our own image and crafting a religion that makes us comfortable. Relentlessly pursuing a posture of humility in matters of spirituality is the only way to get it right more than we get it wrong.

At the end of the day, it doesn’t really matter how convinced you are that you’ve gotten religion right, or how certain you are that you’re hearing God correctly, or how fervently you believe what you believe. If you claim faith, and your presence here on the planet doesn’t leave it more decent, more generous, more compassionate, and more loving than when you got here—there’s a problem. As preacher Billy Sunday once said, “If you have no joy, there’s a leak in your Christianity somewhere.”

Likewise, if your theology leads you to animosity or hatred or pride or malice or superiority, it’s probably not worth holding onto and it probably doesn’t reflect the truth of whatever and whoever God is—it probably just resembles you. So cling tightly to the pursuit, but hold your conclusions loosely.

Religion at its best can be a beautiful thing; it can be a path to experiencing God, to doing life better, and to becoming the kind of person the world needs—but it can also be the source of profound violence against people that we can come to believe God sanctions, so do all that you can to make sure yours is yielding something worthy.

Try like hell to get religion right.

 

 

 

 

 

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