Sunday, June 21, 2015

I look at Jerusalem and wonder, Is God Mocking our ‘Religions’?


These are some of my dominant thoughts as I reflect on the pilgrimage-research trip to Israel-Palestine on the cusp of my 50th birthday (June 7-18, 2015) 


Part I: I look at Jerusalem and wonder, Is God Mocking our ‘Religions’?

Jerusalem is one city but it is claimed as a (or better, "the") "holy city" by the three great monotheistic religions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Why? Because all of them believe that “a” (in the case of Islam) / “the” (in the case of Judaism and Christianity) crucial and foundational events on which faith is based happened precisely in Jerusalem. Jerusalem is, hence, made into a territorial and geographical LINK with the DIVINE itself. 

When humans attain such a faith-conviction (this is actually an oxymoron since "faith" by definition can never, for me, be a conviction because I think proper faith is more of a humble trust and hope that one can never conclusively prove) --- nevertheless, when such a "faith-conviction" is reached, humans then tend to want to "freeze" this faith conviction in some form in order for it to last forever and never ever be changed. This is done through, say, a colossal, seemingly indestructible monument (for example, a temple, a basilica, a dome) or through other means such as canonized (read: untouchable, unchangeable because of its sacred status) scripture or absolute, infallible dogma, or even through the positing of an absolute figure who is answerable to God alone (e.g., the Pope). 

Throughout history, Jerusalem has seen all these attempts to "freeze" and "solidify" and "eternalize" some faith-conviction: Jews built a temple that was the wonder of the ancient world; Christians built mighty basilicas; Muslims built breathtaking mosques ...

But, at the end of the day, Jerusalem ... actually, God (in my opinion)... laughs at all our misguided, puny, pathetic human efforts and actually mocks us for them! It is as if God were telling us, "Look, you can never catch me!"

It is opportune to reproduce here some reflections I have written elsewhere because they clarify what I'm trying to express here.

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From <http://www.catholica.com.au/gc4/jkk/002_jkk_280213.php>

Zion Theology in the Old Testament...

When I reconsider all of the above, it is as if I am swallowed up in a time warp and brought back to the age of Solomon's Temple in the ancient Southern Kingdom of Judah more than 500 years before the birth of Christ. Sometime during the history of ancient Israel before the First Temple's destruction by the Babylonians in 586 BCE, a clear and strong strand of thought traditionally known as Zion theology took shape. One can discern its dominant presence in various sections of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament, particularly in the historical and prophetic books and the Book of Psalms.

Zion theology can be described as the whole compendium of beliefs that centered on God's choice of King David's monarchical line and the importance of the city located on Mt. Zion—Jerusalem in God's scheme of things. These beliefs took the form of a firm conviction and at times even a smug confidence that God would make David's dynasty last forever [see it reflected for example in 2 Samuel 7:16] and that the city which David made the kingdom's capital and where his son Solomon built the temple [1 Kings 6-8] would always be under special divine protection [see e.g. Isaiah 31:5]. Of course, the major significance of the temple lay in the fact that it housed the "holy of holies," the very presence of God among his people [see 1 Kings 8].

Since Jerusalem was considered the special dwelling place of God, many were confident that it was impregnable and would not fall to any conqueror. In fact, the assurance of God's protection over the holy city is expressed in parts of the prophetic writings (such as in Isaiah 31:5). When the prophet Micah who lived in the latter half of the 8th century BCE, prophesied that Jerusalem would become "a heap of ruins" [Micah 3:12] on account of the glaring injustices committed by its leaders, this went completely against the prevailing firm conviction about the impregnable character of Jerusalem that it was apparently quite shocking to its addressees. One can perceive the immense shock value of Micah's prophecy because it was still remembered verbatim a century later during the time of the prophet Jeremiah (if we take Jer. 31:18 at face value).

Of course, it is also well-known that the prophet Jeremiah countered the dominant Zion theology of his time in a deep sense when he called the people to actually bow down before the Babylonian conquerors and accept that they were going to prevail over Zion because God had given sovereignty to Babylon in order to teach Israel a lesson [Jer. 27-28]. It is probably for challenging the deeply-held convictions of the guardians of Zion theology's orthodoxy of his day that Jeremiah was made to suffer much to the extent that he is known as the "weeping" or "heartbroken" prophet.

In the end, history went on to prove that this conviction about the Davidic dynasty and Jerusalem's special divine protection was an illusion because, with the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem and the Babylonian captivity of many prominent Judeans, David's line historically came to an end and the supposedly impregnable temple that Solomon had built lay in ruins. In effect, the whole theological thought system based on an everlasting Davidic dynasty representing God that ruled from an impregnable city in which God dwelt in a special way was, as it were, a "temple" of cards.

Theological Overconfidence – a Form of Idolatry...
How does one evaluate those who fervently believed in what came to be called Zion theology and tried to uphold it to the extent of persecuting prophetic voices that warned of Jerusalem's demise? Were they people of profound faith or were they hopelessly lost in delusion? The latter judgment can only be made in retrospect, with the clearer hindsight of history. There seems to be a very thin line indeed separating faith and delusion.
  
Zion theology is a biblical example of what I'd like to call theological over-confidence. I define this as an attitude of having a firm conviction that develops unhealthily into a smug confidence in a person or a group of people that "God" – or, by extension, "grace," "Jesus," or even "truth" – surely resides in a given form, a place or a particular entity. This over-confidence becomes even worse when it is held by persons of authority to which there are no effective checks and balances.

I strongly believe that theological over-confidence should actually be linked to the most important commandment God gives the chosen people in the Hebrew Scriptures: the injunction against idolatry. The text of Deuteronomy 5:8-9 [NRSV] reads thus:
You shall not make for yourself an idol, whether in the form of anything that is in heaven above, or that is on the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or worship them.

In the Old Testament, God is very stern about the making of images or, in popular parlance, idols. Israel, the chosen people, is not to make any concrete representation of God. Why, one may ask? There are many scholarly studies about the subject that one can readily consult but let me share here my personal theological reflections on the matter.

One of the most profound descriptions of God I've encountered in my life is still Karl Rahner's. Rahner spoke of God as a "gracious mystery." The human spirit, in its relentless pursuit of a greater something that could fulfill its most profound desires, can be compared to an ever-receding horizon that cannot be fully reached because its object is actually the gracious mystery that is God: mysterious because God is ultimately unfathomable, yet gracious because it is full of love.

Now idolatry is the complete opposite of this. Idolatry attempts to take away God's mysterious character and turn it into a form that humans can manipulate. At its core, the severe condemnation of idolatry in the Bible means that God cannot and will not be "boxed in" or limited. That is to say, one cannot make a mould and fit God into it as if one were pouring plaster into a pre-existing mould so that the plaster is formed into the shape desired. No, God does not usually fit into human "moulds." Idolatry is the most elementary expression of the human attempt to craft God into an image of one's liking.

By idolatry, humans, as it were, cut God down to size; through idolatry, humans turn an otherwise mysterious and ultimately unfathomable divine being into an easy-to-understand, easy-to-grasp, easy-to-control form. In the end though, the sobering fact is that God is not so facilely treated thus.

If the injunction against idolatry is primarily directed at physical images in the Bible, it is because physical idols serve as a concrete warning against the more insidious thing that humans can actually do to God: Humans can actually delude themselves into believing that they, as it were, “have God down pat,” that they hold God captive, perhaps in a temple, a basilica, a mosque or, by extension, in a set of theological ideas, in a church, in a liturgical style and so on and so forth. But if the Bible teaches us anything, it is that in moments when people think they have "cornered" God, the gracious mystery breaks free of the fetters humans have put God into and shatters whatever mould has been created to confine and control this profoundest of mysteries.

A Recurring Pattern in Christian History...

Zion theology is not the only instance where God can be seen to foil theological over-confidence. The Bible is actually replete with this pattern in its major and minor stories: God confuses the language of people who think they can build a tower that reaches to the heavens [Genesis 11]. Despite having been a powerful instrument of God to free Israel from slavery, God does not allow Moses to enter the promised land [Deuteronomy 34]; God chooses not David (despite his ardent desire) but his son Solomon to build the temple [2 Samuel 7]; after the return from the Babylonian exile, the hoped-for glorious restoration of Jerusalem is not realized [reflected for example in Malachi], among others.

Even in the New Testament, the theme is there. If the historical Jesus was something of an apocalyptic prophet-like figure (as a substantial number of biblical scholars think), one can make a case that Jesus initially believed that the Reign of God he proclaimed would break into history imminently and in a more dramatic way through his ministry. Only when it became clear that his main ministry consisting not only of healing, but also of meal-fellowship and preaching, would not be the catalyst for the inbreaking of God's reign into his immediate world did he become convinced that the way of the cross was what God expected of him.

After Jesus' resurrection, many of the earliest members of the Jesus movement (such as the early Paul for sure) were convinced that the Parousia, the second coming of Christ, was going to take place very soon, even in their lifetimes. This is evidenced in countless passages with an apocalyptic message which pepper the whole New Testament. Again this proved to be a gross misapprehension. Its delay vexed many in the earliest communities prompting some scholars to speak of a crisis about the delay of the Parousia. Christianity had to dig in for the long haul.

Finally, the whole history of Christianity can be viewed as a regular cycle of great expectations that were not realized or convictions about God, about Christ, about the Church, about truth that were ultimately proven to be incorrect. Humans are constantly trying to grasp the great and ultimate Mystery but end up reducing God simplistically into something like a—yes this is practically what it is—idol, a smaller, easier-to-handle "god."

Fortunately, as in ancient Israel, God is the iconoclast par excellence. God continually shatters our idols in order to make us grow, to make us enlarge our views concerning the vastness and uncontrollability of the divine mystery we continually try to control with our puny minds.

End of part from <http://www.catholica.com.au/gc4/jkk/002_jkk_280213.php>

*****

Back to Jerusalem

We come back to the city in which the most ardent hopes of the three great monotheistic religions have been concentrated and expressed very materially in a geographical area.

Jerusalem today seems to be at times by and large a cacophony of many discordant religious voices. Sometimes it is so confusing that it grates annoyingly on one’s nerves! I often experience this in the church of the Holy Sepulcher where different Christian denominations are perpetually jostling and even quarrelling with one another for a share of what is deemed Christianity’s holiest spot. After 20 centuries of Christian history, its internal frictions and disunity are all too painfully reflected in its holiest shrine in which a “status quo” (sometimes imposed by outside powers – Muslims are still the “guardians” of the Holy Sepulchre to this day) has to be maintained. Yes, Jerusalem laughs at us … (through such an unfortunate situation) God and Jesus also seem to be laughing at our petty quarrels. This pathetic state of affairs is actually God’s way—I think—of mocking us into doing something to remedy the situation! But we never learn … We just want “our share of the pie,” so to say …

The holy “old” city of Jerusalem itself is divided into different quarters – Christian, Armenian, Jewish and Muslim, again, perpetually jostling and quarrelling with each other for each one’s status. Order in the form, again, of a status quo has to be imposed by a now militarily strong State of Israel so that the different competing groups in Jerusalem don’t end up again (as has happened in history) at each other’s throats. Yes, Jerusalem laughs at us … God and Jesus seem to be making fun of our pettiness and meanness with each other. The unfortunate situation is another instance—I believe—of God mocking us into doing something to break down the walls we have built in order to protect our turfs and keep the ‘Other’ out! Yes again, we never learn … We unfortunately repeat the hardness of heart evidenced by God’s people again and again in the Hebrew Bible.

On the temple mount stand two magnificent mosques, expression of a Muslim conquest in history which showcases to us, however, the different powers that have controlled that sacred space. That is, the mount has gone from Jewish temple to garbage dump (during the Byzantine area) to Islamic holy site to headquarters of the strongest Crusader military order (the Templars) and then back to Muslim holy site. However, now the original ‘Temple Mount’ area is just part of a Jerusalem that is squarely under the control of the State of Israel which, as mentioned, has to police the place and maintain an uneasy status quo that could erupt into violence and chaos at any time. So, although Muslims go to the Haram El Sharif (“Noble Sanctuary”) to worship, in a sense, it is no longer truly theirs. In a sense, worship is being allowed … maybe just tolerated by the Jewish State that controls the area. Meanwhile in the Kotel below (the Western Wall), devout and not-so-devout Jews go to worship in what is the only remnant of the Second Temple, hence, it has become the holiest site in Judaism. In short, the situation is, in a sense, a comedy, something that is actually laughable – Jews control Jerusalem but, in a sense, they don’t have the Temple Mount because of the presence of Islamic holy buildings. Muslims have the mosques on the Haram El Sharif but, in a sense, they really don’t completely control it because Jerusalem is in Jewish hands now. What a complex, complicated, oxymoronic, paradoxical … frustrating but, in another sense, already funny state of affairs.

And again, Jerusalem laughs at us … God and Jesus also laugh … more like shake their heads and let out a sad laugh that is more of a sigh … at the pettiness and meanness with each other of those who are supposed to be their worshippers. The paradoxical and oxymoronic situation at the Temple Mount or Haram El Sharif is another instance—I am convinced—of God mocking us into—what God hopes—a kind of Enlightenment. What Enlightenment? In the end, I have to say that our ideas about God, the divine, holiness, religion—although they may contain many valid and even brilliant insights—are still very much characterized by meanness and denigration of those who are considered to be not in our “tribe,” petty narrow-mindedness, failure to see the “big picture,” and, most importantly, still characterized by idolatry as defined above --- the simplistic reduction of God  into something like an idol, a smaller, easier-to-handle "god."

I see in Jerusalem’s very complex and problematic history and present reality a “revelation” from the true, Bigger God, that the forms of our so-called “religion” are ultimately false (because they are idolatrous) and more divisive. The concrete forms which our religions have taken in history and present reality actually have failed big time to reflect what is supposed to be the reality of unity-in-diversity that monotheistic religious faith is supposed to foster (in fact this was one of the deepest reasons why I felt years ago that I could not anymore represent institutional religion as a presbyter) …. If this is not ridiculous, in fact, quite preposterously and therefore already funnily ridic, then I don’t know what ridiculous is!

What would be a better form of religion then, one may ask. This is not the place to discuss that topic. I’ll try to deal with that in another future reflection but I’ll say now that a better form of religion might be one that is more “integral” and intentionally “non-tribal.”

The above thoughts seem to be quite negative as I review them. I’d like to add now that ‘Negative’ is not the only thing I experienced. But these thoughts are the dominant ones that come to mind first as I reflect on my experience after the trip. I’ll share other thoughts in the coming reflections that I will continue to make on this blog.


/jkk