Jim Taylor's Weblog

3/28/2007

Trivializing God

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Wednesday March 28, 2007



Trivializing the divine



My computer crashed last week. I was writing a column when the screen suddenly went blank. The box containing electronic components emitted a faint, high-pitched, wail of misery.

        My service guru took away the metal coffin of what used to be my computer.

        I felt helpless. I couldn’t write. I couldn’t even get e-mail until I got my laptop connected.

        To my credit (I hope) I didn’t blame God. I didn’t treat the crash as punishment for procrastination. I didn’t say, “It must be God’s will.”

        Perhaps I think of computer malfunctions as beyond even the authority of the Almighty.



Overheard on the radio

        But then, almost like divine intervention, I received an e-mail message confirming my unwillingness to attribute the computer failure to a God who micro-manages human affairs. The e-mail contained an article by Elayne Clift, a writer from Saxtons River, Vermont. She described driving south to Florida.

        “There was a lot of God-talk on the radio,” she noted. God helped this person pass an exam, gave that one a raise, made this team win, saved that person from an accident…

        “God,” Elayne wrote, “is so busy micro-managing millions of lives that I wonder how He ever rests on the seventh day.”

        She called it, “the trivialization of a higher being—a presence that we collectively call God regardless of our cultures, belief systems, and religions…”

        “Even as a youngster, I bristled at the sight of athletes crossing themselves before stepping to the plate… I cringed at platitudes like the ones uttered by our neighbors when a child on our street died of leukemia. ‘She’s with God now,’ they said, while I wondered what in the world God would do with a two-year old who missed her mommy. I lost patience with kids who told me they’d prayed for a bike at Christmas, or adults who asked God to make the sun shine for their Sunday picnic.

        “I never got mad at God when things went wrong, but I did wonder how a loving God could let so many bad things happen if He had such enormous control over everyone and every little thing.”



Childish wishes

        Listening to the car radio, she wrote, “brings back my inner child. So much of the talk is itself childish. It’s full of magical thinking, worn out clichés. And those awful platitudes—just pray harder and your impoverished life won’t be so hard to bear. Ask God for forgiveness and all will be right with your world… Forgive me, but that kind of tripe drives me nuts.

        “Not because I don’t believe in some kind of higher order. It’s precisely because I strongly suspect there is something much bigger than anything we mortals know that I resist trivializing it. If there is indeed a God, then what extraordinary disrespect we pay to such a higher being by expecting Him (is God really gendered?) to care who wins the ballgame…

        “So pardon me if I get upset when people treat God as though He were right up there with the Easter Bunny, Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy. To me, God—whatever that word means—is too big even for adult minds to grasp with certainty, too important to be dumbed down.”

        Amen.

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Copyright © 2006 by Jim Taylor. Non-profit use in congregations and study groups permitted; all other rights reserved.
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PROMOTION PLUGS

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If you want to order my books, you can call 1-800-663-2775 in Canada, 1-800-328-0200 in the U.S., or order them on-line at the Wood Lake Books website.

For a lighter look at ethics, faith, and life, I recommend Ralph Milton’s weekly e-newsletter Rumors. You can subscribe to it at the Wood Lake Books home page in Ralph Milton’s Site, or by sending a note directly to ralphmilton@woodlake.com.

It’s also worth pursuing Richard Fairchild’s United Online site. Another site worth visiting is David Keating’s “SeemslikeGod” page.


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