Monday, October 13, 2008

Rational Faith

Spirituality Column #101
October 14, 2008
Current in Carmel (IN) Newspaper
Current in Westfield (IN) Newspaper

Rational Faith
By Bob Walters

Bill Maher used to be a funny guy. I saw him 20 years ago when he was the hired entertainment at an auto racing banquet in Monterey, Calif. He did a nice job.

He turned up a couple years later on the ABC TV show “Politically Incorrect” and through the 1990s morphed from comic into a savvy political/cultural satirist/wise guy. Generally funny and irreverent, his nightly mix of four oddly-matched guests in group conversation about current issues seemed compelling, relevant and often surprising.

I remember one night his guests were hard-right G. Gordon Liddy of Watergate break-in fame, a verbose and passionate conservative African-American woman activist whose name I cannot remember, pleasant “Brady Bunch mom” actress Florence Henderson, and Satan-worshipping bilge rock musician Marilyn Manson, who by the way is a guy.

Surprisingly, the only guest who consistently made sense was Manson, speaking quietly of his desire, as an artist, to push the limits of what people believed. He didn’t bash Christ or defend Satan. His stage act is truly horrifying (I’ve seen clips and heard stories), but that evening he simply sounded like a thoughtful artist.

Maher moved on to no-holds-barred HBO and renamed his show “Real Time.” I lost track of him because I don’t have HBO. But he’s turned up now in the movies with his intensely anti-God screed of a film, "Religulous." It is a Christian-bashing, God-denying, religion-ridiculing atheist’s delight promoting the irrationality of faith.

Certainly some faith groups will organize boycotts, but it is so over-the-top I doubt many people take the film seriously.

Before its release, I spent quite a bit of time studying the film’s website which has several clips and plenty of explanatory background. I got the gist of the film and probably won’t bother paying to see it.

More than anything, I watch Maher and feel an intense human pang of regret, in a seriously prayerful way, that anyone is so distant from and intellectually hostile toward God and the saving grace of Jesus Christ. Maher seems like a scared kid trying to talk his way out of the principal’s office.

I’m happy, joyful and secure in my faith and see Christ as the most consistently rational, intellectually stimulating part of my being.

Rationality dictates that God’s existence depends neither on my saying He does, nor Maher saying He doesn’t. God just is. Faith is that simple.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) notes that so many people try to create God in their own image, and get so mad when God doesn’t cooperate.

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