Hi there! I haven't posted for a while because my health is not good. Am still writing and should be posting soon. Bear with me ....
Cheers!!!!
"Yes, I know what plans I have in mind for you, Yahweh declares, plans for peace, not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope." Jeremiah 29:11
Monday, 18 April 2016
Friday, 26 February 2016
There is a Season, Turn Turn Turn
Most people who view Christianity
and Christians, seem to have the idea that it is all about having and living
the quiet life, the easy life, kind of saying ‘we can’t make it in the real
world’ or ‘I’m a Christian because I’m a loser’ or ‘I’ve flunked out’ or some
such things, usually negative. Basically, those who can’t make it in the real
world, in one way, shape or form. However, in one sense, all Christians are
outcasts from the world, or should be.
‘15 Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the
world, the love of the Father is not in him.’ (1 John 2:15)
There is a balance to be made,
between trying to rehabilitate the world and seeing it as irretrievably lost.
And, although Christians should see the world as a harsh, unfair, divided and
deeply unjust place, we cannot take the weight of it on our shoulders. Nor is
our primary motive to challenge injustice in the world. It is to seek God, the
coming of God’s Kingdom and all His true values, not the passing fads and
fancies of the world, however important they may seem now. Rehabilitation
begins with us first. We cannot, even as Christians, go around preaching
against sin, or preaching for Jesus in any way, until we are rehabilitated.
Now, I know that we are all a work in progress, and not one of us will reach
perfection until Jesus does a final work in us all, but all of us who live out
the Christian faith in our lives will get to a point, perhaps in spite or
because of our struggles, where we are operating enough in Christian faith,
basically in an intimate relationship with Jesus, where we can correct people
in love and can preach the Gospel. I don’t just mean standing on a street
corner holding a Bible in your hand, or as a reverend in a church, I mean in
the course of your day, in your workplace, who you eat lunch with, where you
get your coffee (or tea, if you’re English, my dear!), and where God takes you
and places you. We don’t need to be officially religious or get paid by an
organised church to preach the Gospel, or simply just profess our faith, BUT we
need to live out our faith in obedience, well before we preach it, and perhaps
even before we just talk about it. We need to walk the walk, before we talk the
talk, brothers and sisters!
Boring Christians!? That’s the
image, right? Boring, staid, rather sensible, non threatening. Emasculated men,
placid women, and all rather torpid as lukewarm coffee (or tea, if you’re
English, my dear!). It never sounds very inspiring... church committees, jumble
sales, Tuesday meetings, etc etc blah blah blah! It isn’t like that, or it
shouldn’t be.
I wouldn’t change one thing about
my life, not the fact that right now I am suffering very badly with chronic
fatigue syndrome, literally can’t work and have bouts of depression, nor the
sadness of some of my past, either. Even if I wanted to, how could I anyway?
It’s wasting time going over things I can’t change. My Christian walk with the
Lord has had its ups and downs, in fact it’s been like a rollercoaster, but
that’s life. Trying to avoid the bad, does not enable us to enjoy the good...
because as sure as eggs is eggs, good and bad will come, and as someone said
somewhere at some time, sometimes they run on parallel lines. I have already
had a life of adventure with the Lord... I wait with bated breath, and hope
unending at what is to come.
‘There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under
heaven:
2 a time to be born and a time to die, a time to plant and a time to
uproot,
3 a time to kill and a time to heal, a time to tear down and a time to
build,
4 a time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to
dance,
5 a time to scatter stones and a time to gather them, a time to embrace
and a time to refrain,
6 a time to search and a time to give up, a time to keep and a time to
throw away,
7 a time to tear and a time to mend, a time to be silent and a time to
speak,
8 a time to love and a time to hate, a time for war and a time for peace.’
(Ecclesiastes 3:1-8)
Friday, 19 February 2016
What Has Right Wing Politics Got To Do With Christianity, Anyway?
In the US, people in general, and
this is a generalisation, seem more
‘full on’ than people in the UK and Western Europe. At the same time,
obviously, people in the UK in general, and this is a generalisation too, are more laid back. This goes for Christians,
as well. American people seem to be on a quest, or some purpose, whereas I
would suggest that British culture and people lack a real sense of purpose, and
perhaps Christianity in the UK does, too. Americans always seem to be goal
oriented, whereas we Brits tend to amble along hoping everything turns out
right. We could definitely learn something from our American cousins, but
perhaps they could learn something from us, too. Life is both a journey and a
destination. We need a purpose in life, but we also need sometimes to take
stock, be content with what we have and just be glad to be alive. I noticed
that people who are too consumed by any purpose, particularly when that purpose
is not from God, seem to miss the blessings both large and small that God
scatters all around us, but I also noticed that when people don’t have any real
purpose in life they can deteriorate, not every person, but some people can
lose sight of what is important. We Christians need a purpose, but we also need to know that when we are seeking
God’s kingdom and putting God’s values into effect in our daily lives, He has
it all in hand. We can literally let go,
and let God take over. Didn’t you
know, it’s that simple?!
I’ve struggled to understand for a
long time what very hard right wing politics and Christianity have in common.
It’s not really an issue in the UK,
although it creeps in here and there, but in the US it seems that for many they
are inseparable. Why? On some level, perhaps superficial, my view is that
Christianity actually has more in common with a kind of communism, or more like
a communalism or kibbutzim in modern day Israel, where people live together
selflessly and work for themselves and
the common good as well. The very word socialism, let alone communism, seems to
send those on the political right in America into paroxysms of fear or hatred
bordering on the pathological. Yet the Bible says this:
‘44 All the believers were together and had everything in common. 45
Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need.’ (Acts 2:44-45)
Now, I’m no political theorist, but
that sounds as darn near communism in its basic form as anything could be. Is
the embracing of Christian faith by the right wing actually a pathological knee
jerk attempt to distance what they see as Christian faith from that biblical
description? Methinks the hard right wing doth protest too much. But by
aligning themselves with Christianity, the hard, perhaps even ultra, right wing
in America attempt to gain themselves a respectability they don’t really
deserve, they legitimise their political stance as if endorsed by God Himself,
and more worryingly refute the basic notion of Christianity, which is to love
your neighbour. Let me also note, I am not saying Christianity is socialism
either, because the left wing has deteriorated, too, but I do find it offensive
to presume that if someone has left wing or even left of centre politics, it is
rather bizarrely assumed to be at odds with a Christian faith. Not sure where
that comes from. I am firstly a Christian, and then have left of centre
political views. I can’t be bothered explaining why, but if someone wants to
know why, I will happily explain why. But it has nothing to do with wanting to
live in some socialist utopia. I believe they tried that back in Russia
onetime... Nuff said.
The Prosperity Gospel?
Ah, the ‘prosperity gospel’, that
gospel that says capitalism and the worship of money is actually what
Christianity is all about, which again rather strangely as in the case of
American right wing politics, seems to coincide exactly with the views of
wealthy and powerful Americans. God evidently likes wealthy and powerful
authoritarian right wing Americans, and dislikes left of centre ... er, well
basically anyone who doesn’t fit into the former category. Yeehaaaaa!!! It’s
obvious, being serious, that Christianity is incorporated into something that
is actually, more or less, the exact opposite of what lived Christian faith
should be. Say it long enough, loud enough and with as much sincerity as you
can muster, and add the magic ingredient ‘expedient convenient faith’, no doubt
bought from Walmart, and you too can convince yourself and many others that the
worship of money and materialism is sanctioned by God, especially if you are a
right wing conservative American. I did notice, rather strangely, that the very
wealthiest proponents of the prosperity gospel are against unions and workers
rights and no doubt a fair wage for the people doing entry level jobs. Isn’t
that strange, that prosperity is only for the very wealthiest, and not for
ordinary people doing ordinary jobs?
‘9 People who want to get rich fall into temptation and a trap and into
many foolish and harmful desires that plunge men into ruin and destruction. 10
For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil. Some people, eager for
money, have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs. 11
But you, man of God, flee from all this, and pursue righteousness, godliness,
faith, love, endurance and gentleness.’ (1 Tim 6:9-11)
Say goodbye to the ‘prosperity
gospel’, and hello to Jesus!
Who Needs a Billion Dollars?
As the rights of workers, unions
and legislation on the side of employees has been seriously undermined in
Britain, and the price of university education has been tripled, there is more
and more the idea we should all move on and move up in life, just as any kind
of pretence to equality and fair play is itself removed. So, as things are made
harder for ordinary people to move on and move up, the propaganda machine has
gone into overdrive. We must all be rich, or else we only have ourselves to
blame for our poverty, not the rigged economic system we now live under. In America,
it seems everyone wants to become a billionaire, so they can then tell everyone
how much of a regular guy they are, and they still live in a rented house and
drive a good second hand car, and still eat at the local diner! You can do all
those things without owning a billion dollars. God does not command us to
become super rich. It is the worst folly of the Western world that the pursuit
of wealth makes people happy. It doesn’t. It makes everyone hard, callous,
selfish and in the end, empty and miserable. Take a look, take a real good look
at any number of billionaires and super wealthy people. Do you see what I mean?
Nobody needs a billion dollars. A million dollars might be nice, but I suspect
the majority of people reading this blog have got by most of their lives
without owning anywhere near that amount either. Where I’m standing, If I had $1500
(about £1000) that I didn’t owe anybody and it was all mine, I’d feel pretty
blessed with that at the moment. The world may tell you to be wealthy, the very
core of your soul may tell you that the whole vindication of your life might be
to be wealthy. But, what is God saying?
Friday, 12 February 2016
There is a God! Now Stop Worrying and Enjoy Your Life!
Religion binds and ties people up
into all kinds of complicated knots, whereas walking with Jesus releases us
from the religion that some people actually think is why Jesus was crucified in
the first place. And they couldn’t be more wrong. Dead wrong. So wrong it seems
that many people stay away from church, from the idea of a living God and won’t
go within a hundred miles of a Bible, and I notice that some of the biggest
critics of the Bible are almost always those who have never read it. It is
almost as if they fear they may become converts themselves...
Whatever someone believes, or
doesn’t believe for that matter, ultimately it all boils down to one completely
salient point: Is what they believe the truth? That’s it in a nutshell. For
Christians, the major point is whether God exists, or not. If He does, then we
have a God who is there for us. If He doesn’t, then all Christians are in
trouble, not to mention Orthodox Jews and Muslims. What I do struggle to
understand sometimes is the vehemence against God from some atheists when they
don’t believe in God, and how some atheists seem to spend more time thinking
about God and Christianity than even some Christians might.
The anger some atheists have towards
Christians, and I suppose all people who believe in an all powerful God, is
that in the name of Christianity many injustices, horrors, wars and genocides
and many other awful things have been committed. There is no way around this. I
am not as a Christian being blasphemous, because I am not for a minute accusing
God. But in the name of God and the
Christian faith many evils and atrocities have been carried out throughout
history. But, if God exists, is He to blame? And if God doesn’t exist, then people
were definitely to blame. I believe God exists, in fact I base my whole life
and my future and everything I am on Him. I stake everything on Him. Believe me
when I say that if God hadn’t proved He existed to me, I would not be writing
this blog. I just wouldn’t be. I would be writing about something else.
I’m not a professional religious
person, like one of those priests or vicars who earn a good living preaching a
sermon on a Sunday morning hoping they’ll impress someone and move up the old
chain of command and end up earning big bucks wearing a nice cassock, or
something. Not me, I’m just an ordinary bloke, have no interest in being a
professional religious person whatsoever because I feel that in some cases the
structure and the hierarchy has become far more important than having a living
and transforming faith in Jesus Christ. When I see the way many organised
churches have become, vast and sometimes impersonal bureaucratic organisations
with different doctrines emphasised, sometimes it is almost as if Jesus would
be an intruder in all of it. A simple carpenters son perplexed by multi million
pound/dollar budgets, a faith that sometimes seems above and beyond the
concerns of ordinary people, but He picked fishermen to be His disciples and not
the professionally religious, and turned His back on the professionally
religious and religious authorities of His day to move, live and be amongst
ordinary people. Religion even then had become the preserve of the rich and
powerful, really I suppose to manipulate and control and administer punishment.
Such things always fall to those who are rich, powerful and influential.
Part of the Gospel, the Good News,
of Jesus being born, was to challenge power structures, particularly power
structures that were supposed to be for the good of all people involving
religion, and even way back when had become the preserve of the affluent, the
powerful and the connected. What started out as good and liberating became more
and more bureaucratic, hierarchical and more and more the preserve of a
professional religious elite and other groups like the Pharisees who took the
truth and the freedom it was supposed to bring and turned it into suffocating
rules and regulations, which nobody could keep and which made them focus on
other people in frustration. It became a religion of judgement and punishment,
instead of being a faith of justice and mercy.
I believe Jesus specifically picked
fishermen, common ordinary men, and not the professionally religious, men who
were intimately involved with their trade because they simply had to earn a
living, because He wanted to say ‘you don’t have to be involved with religion
to know me, and know me intimately’. I think some of the anger towards Jesus
was just because He didn’t go to the chief priests and temple authorities, the
religious authorities, and instead lived amongst and right in the midst of the
chaos, struggles, every day ups and downs, fears, tears, joy and pain of the
ordinary people, because He was an ordinary and common man Himself. Yet He is
also creator of everything. What does that tell you about God? If Jesus had
been born in a palace, in luxury and comfort, paid for by the taxes of poor
people, what message would that have given out? It would have been ‘relax
folks, it’s just business as usual’ like when a new political party takes over
from a very unpopular one, or a new president is voted in promising changes for
the better for everyone, and inevitably leaves most people feeling let down and
cheated somehow.
Jesus coming to earth was not ‘just
business as usual’, it was a cataclysmic and seismic shift in the way our
Creator wishes to relate to us, the operative word being ‘relate’ as in
relationship! Religion is one thing, but believe me, relationship with the Son
of God is something else! Nah, don’t believe me, believe God. Because there is
a God, and He has heard your lonely cries in the wilderness.
There is a God, so stop worrying
and enjoy your life!
Saturday, 6 February 2016
In Praise of the Unique, the One Offs and the Oddballs!
That title sounds quite funny,
but really the subject for me is not particularly funny at all. You see, I have
always felt different from other people, and I am not really sure why. But
coupled with that has been this feeling for most of my adult life, and probably
when I became a teenager that somehow I wasn’t worthy enough, or not good
enough, or not worth bothering with. It’s akin to low self esteem, but its more
than that. I never felt I was good enough for any woman I met, but I could look
at another guy and no matter how unattractive he might be, I would think he had
a better chance than me, and more going on for him. Next to people who were or
appeared confident, no matter who they were, I would feel inferior and lacking
in confidence. This actually went right to the core of my being. I never
thought I was good enough for a normal life, never thought I had anything to
offer, and I truly felt for a long time that I was ugly. People tell me often that
I am not, in fact some women (and some men!) have told me I am handsome, but I
still have issues here. I’m not sure why this is, I mean the whole thing of
feeling worthless for so many reasons, but I can guess at why.
I grew up quite poor in an inner city
part of a big Northern English city, and am most definitely from a working
class background. My mum worked as a shop assistant and got a reasonably good
education and my dad worked various jobs, including as a labourer, fixing
street lights, a chef and cleaning buses, no doubt amongst other jobs I never
knew about. I would not say we were poverty stricken by any measure, but we
were poor as were most of the people around us. In fact, I had a pretty idyllic
childhood even though the area was run down. It was the early 70s when most
people had a job. The problems for me came as I started to become a teenager.
I know that when I was a kid, I
had no pressure on me, no push to succeed, no future fears or stresses of any
kind. I was hermetically sealed in my own little bubble and in my own happy
little world, which was essentially a number of streets, a park which I went
with my parents and a holiday to Wales each year and days out here and there on
school holidays paid for by my Nan. What a small world it seems now, but it was
happy. A long time ago, in a galaxy far far away... Anyway, back then I had
peace, and now and since then I have felt for a long time that I am running
from something, but what? The fact I am a loser? The fact I have wasted my
life? The fact that so far I have been a failure with women? The fact that I am
just making time till something else bad happens? The thing I am running all my
life from, I think... is me.
Well, that’s a happy little tale
all told, isn’t it?! I am a selfish person, naturally selfish, not even
maliciously or purposely, just a naturally selfish person. Yet, it’s always
been about other people, fearing them, walking on eggshells around them, making
time for them when they couldn’t care less about me, chasing people, wanting
them to like me, trying to find a woman to love me, trying to impress people,
but somehow never seeming to get real friends. Essentially, I have been a
people pleaser, and at times I have felt an extremely lonely person, too. I
have bouts of self hatred and large doses of cynicism, as well. You wouldn’t
think so to look at me though. I am generally very smart, and even when I dress
in a hoodie and jeans and trainers (sneakers), I tend to look quite sharp, and
I look very sharp in shirt and pants! Really. And I am an articulate and well
educated kind of guy, too, and generally friendly and chatty. I like being out
and about and making conversation with regular ordinary people, and having a
laugh and a joke. But, still something
eats away at me.
It’s all an act. But slowly and
surely, through the pain and suffering I have endured, I see that God is
forging my character. Who I am, intrinsically, the person who never saw
anything in myself, that thing deep inside that has always felt uncomfortable
meeting people and being around people and being any kind of focus of attention,
that has felt empty, left out, crippled inside and left on the shelf... My
social awkwardness, my unwanted uniqueness, my complex and complicated nature,
I now see as a strength. God hasn’t told me that I should stop being me, He has
actually told me to start being me, and to stop worrying. To stop trying to
live my life, and just actually live it.
I am a ‘one off’ for Jesus, there is no one
quite like me. I am glad of that. Just as well God only has to deal with one
person like me! God hasn’t finished me with yet. That’s all I know, and all I
need to know. All the rest is propaganda.
Friday, 29 January 2016
Political Correctness HAS Gone MAD!!! (Part 2)
I don’t think that turning pointed
anger and discrimination against any group is acceptable at all, perhaps
because it supposedly goes against the PC ideals I would have thought, and also
because most white working class men, and the broad mass of working class
people in general, are, and have been historically, the victims of injustice
and bear the brunt of economic downturns. In short, two wrongs don’t make a
right. Promoting one prejudice as acceptable, under the guise of challenging
many others, is also unjust, anti Christian, and actually perniciously is
playing economically marginalised groups off against each other and getting them
to blame each other, and accept in the end that one group prospers at the
expense of another, which whether true or not, is disgusting and unfair and
borders on a kind of fascism, rather than left liberalism which many of those
who are PC would earnestly claim to be. Any intelligent and honest person can
see that PC has taken on a life of its own and is merely giving very vocal
groups, and the political establishment, the self righteousness to challenge
everyone else’s right to free speech and a difference of opinion and actually
to close down any kind of debate. That is anti democracy, anti free speech,
anti freedom and dividing people up. Again, the very opposite of what the PC
thought police would claim. We all know the reality of it though, I suspect. At
least, those of us who think for ourselves.
PC Positives and Negatives
The Positive Aspects of PC:
·
Promotes equality
·
Anti racist, anti homophobic, anti sexist
·
The acceptance that affluent white people are not the
only people with needs
·
There are other opinions
·
Many contentious issues should be beyond mainstream
politics
·
Left wing politics have as much credibility as right
wing politics
·
An acknowledgement that the white male dominant culture
has been oppressive.
The Negative Aspects of PC:
·
Doesn’t ever seem to accept that class discrimination
against poor white people is also a problem
·
Claims to be liberal and tolerant but has increasingly
become fanatical and almost fascistic in nature
·
Has increasingly devolved into ‘rights’ for very small
minority groups which though might be acceptable is missing the point
·
Has ended up turning minority groups against each
other and the poor white working class and effectively playing them off against
each other
·
Is silencing free speech in the very name of tolerance,
diversity and acceptance which is a complete contradiction in terms
·
Can be rather white and rather middle class in outlook
The Silencing of Dissent & Debate, the End of Democracy?
One thing that we should all be
concerned about is the reality that those espousing a claim to be tolerant
liberals are becoming dangerously more and more anti democratic, anti free
speech, almost regardless of whatever is said, and there seems to be in the air
the feeling that that mob mentality, which it is, is almost waiting for someone
at any time, at any place and in any way to say something, even in a slip of
the tongue or an off the cuff joke, who is then to be pilloried and tried by a
jury of those hungering for a victim in the most unfair and nasty way by a
baying mob that sometimes sounds like it wouldn’t be out of place in
revolutionary France, or acting like the worst kind of racists and ‘gay bashers’
and ultra right wing and ultra left wing reactionaries. Ironic really. Some of
the PC faithful are acting as intolerantly, obviously in speech, as the
racists, homophobes and the sexists they claim are utterly intolerant. It can
be the classic mob mentality. It is not about equality where I’m standing from,
it is merely in some cases all kinds of nasty and unprincipled individuals
jumping on a bandwagon to hate, despise, offend and hound off the air or out of
jobs anyone who says anything that is deemed unacceptable, and perhaps someone
who says something that secretly some of the PC faithful wish they could say
but wouldn’t get away with. It is classic censorship of the unfocussed, the
unprincipled, the angry and those who want their day in the sun, but in all the
wrong ways and mostly for all the wrong reasons. It all started so well, how is
it now ending so badly?
Economic Inequality Has Got Worse
What’s probably the most ironic of
all, is that in all the cries for equal rights, equality, racial equality,
women’s equality and so on, the economic divisions in the UK particularly have
widened to levels not seen since the dreadful and desperate economic hardships
of the 1930s and as reported perhaps even as bad as it was a about a hundred
years ago. The economy seems to work very well for the very richest, fairly
well for the affluent middle class, and not very well at all for those at the
bottom of the economic pile, be they white, black, Asian, the broad mass of the
working class and immigrants. So, for all the talk of equality, and it getting
louder and more urgent, there has been a reverse in economic equality, educational
opportunities for poorer people, a rise in insecure and low paid employment,
austerity imposed on those who can least bear it and it’s now almost impossible
for aspiring working class people to pull themselves up and move on. So, is PC
just a smokescreen for destroying working class communities, tea and sympathy
in effect, but no real concern for anyone or from anyone who could do something
about it? I do truly wonder.
The Totalitarianism of ‘The People’
One of the problems that is perhaps
less obvious with the whole PC movement, is just exactly what the definition of
equality really means. On the surface, the vast majority of people would
assume, I assume, that equality means just exactly that, equal rights before
the law, equal access to educational opportunities, equal access to jobs, equal
treatment in all ways that iron out the differences in a divided society.
Because, of course, if there is a push for equal rights and often in such a
vociferous and vocal way, we are of course saying that the UK is very far from
equality? I would assume so, anyway. Well, that would be the argument for
equality, of course. But more sinisterly, the idea of equality has become
confused with the idea that we should all be the same in some unexplained way,
and that the loudest and most aggressive group will dominate. So, simply put,
‘equality’ begins to become everyone having to think the same thoughts, be the
same, accepting the same things, disagreeing with the same things, and where
all original thought and particularly independent honest opinion is derided,
denounced and clamped down on, obviously if it is seen as Non PC. This is
similar in principle to how right wing fascism works and also totalitarianism
communism, where a person subsumes their individuality to some notion of a collective
political ideal and the individual doesn’t really matter anymore. Such enforced
conformity eventually needs an outlet and a target to attack, to strangely
enough give vent to peoples anger at having to conform in the first place. It
is why we need to replace PC extremism with the democratic right to free
speech, so we can criticise and healthily debate with whoever wishes to censor
anything which is seen as unacceptable, starting with the increasingly nasty
and intolerant and unacceptable notion of PC itself. The biggest irony is the
intolerance of tolerance and the fascism of the majority against those who
refuse to fit in, or just don’t fit in or have a difference of opinion. Isn’t
that what PC was originally challenging in the first place?
The Christian Response
This is far more than an appendage
to the whole argument presented here, but I can tell you straightaway that
Christianity, and the practise of Christian faith, is really in no way
compatible with PC. It may seem to be, with the PC stress on anti racism, anti
sexism, anti homophobia and so on, but there are irreconcilable differences.
Christianity is a complete lifestyle, where the emphasis is getting yourself
right with the divine help of an infinitely wise, all seeing, all knowing and
all powerful God. Instead of trying to change the world, we are really
transforming ourselves first. PC is really the opposite. It is assuming that by
saying continually you are non racist, non sexist, non homophobic and so on,
that you then have the right to persecute others who are not demonstrating the
same zealousness as yourself. It has now become a persecutors charter, to
supposedly challenge the persecution of others! It is then, a muddle of
contradictions like most human secular faiths become sooner or later. I may
add, that when PC is on its way out, or a massive backlash finally sees it off,
the majority of those voraciously clinging to it now and the power it gives
them, will be the first to disown it by saying something like “I was never
really into it, I stood out from the crowd, whereas all my friends were so PC,
and so intolerant!”, but they will know the truth of it.
14 The
entire law is summed up in a single command: "Love your neighbor as
yourself." 15 If you keep on biting and devouring each other, watch out or
you will be destroyed by each other. (Galatians
5:14-15 NIV)
Thursday, 21 January 2016
Political Correctness HAS Gone MAD!!! (Part 1)
In many ways, society in Britain in
the early 21st century would seem to be a more enlightened one,
certainly from the dark days of the 1970s. Those of us who can remember things
like the Black and White Minstrel show, rampant sexism, casual homophobia and
the casual racism of some comedians like Bernard Manning, and many other
accepted intolerances, may well cringe at how unenlightened society was back
then. It perhaps wasn’t all that bad, but it certainly wasn’t that good either.
It was, as some clever people might say, unreconstructed prejudice, that is,
prejudice coming from general ignorance and not so much a vicious
maliciousness. Some may disagree, and by the end of the 70s fascism was
beginning to rear its ugly head in Britain again, in a more extreme and more vocal
and violent way. So, too, did the anti fascists. Most decent people accept that
whatever they believe, one of the primary goals of living in a peaceful
society, is to live peacefully in that society and to respect other people, and
respect their right to live peacefully as you also want to live in peace. All
good so far.
But, as is the way with human
beings and human systems, it never quite works out the way people hope it will.
At this time, early 2016, political correctness and the virulent faith in
equality, diversity and even multiculturalism are still in full swing, although
there are pockets of rebellion and some instances of healthy honesty and truth
breaking out here and there. But, by and large, it is still very trendy to very
quickly point fingers at anyone who may say anything at all not acceptable to
the PC thought police. The one problem is, no one knows exactly what is
acceptable or not acceptable anymore. War is Peace, indeed. So, everyone is
scared of saying anything at all controversial. Problem is, no one knows what
is controversial or not controversial anymore. So no one says anything unless
it has been approved. But, approved by whom?
I equate political correctness with
movements like Puritanism, where a kind of faith has very strong political
overtones, with different strands, different people, different groups and varying
degrees of virulence and fanaticism. At worst, I would also equate it with the
Spanish Inquisition. Yes, seriously, the 21st century versions of
those two politico/religious movements. And although there are many
differences, the real point I am making is that political correctness
(hereafter abbreviated to PC) is coming from a supposed unassailable position,
the same as those two historic movements, and that those who espouse the PC
position or claim to be PC are automatically in the right, so no one better
contradict them, or argue with them, often on any point, or say anything which
they just don’t like. PC tends to have an anti racist, anti sexist and anti
homophobic agenda in the main, that people who are not white and women and
those who are gay and lesbian should be protected and have their rights
enshrined in law. Now, please let’s get one thing clear: the protection for
people against racism, sexism and homophobia is a good thing, indeed the
protection of everyone’s rights and genuine equality for all, or could I say
equal opportunities and equal fair treatment for all, sounds to me a very good
thing indeed. But, is this what even the most PC person really wants? Do they
actually want equal rights for all, or do they want equal rights for some, or
do they actually want special rights for some?
Where does Christianity fit into all
this? Well, some might think, and erroneously, that PC is the same as
Christianity, in that equality in all things is synonymous with a loving
Creator. I do believe that God sees us all as equal before Him, and that unjust
political and economic systems based on race discrimination, class
discrimination, sex discrimination, religious discrimination, gay
discrimination and many other things that divide humans up unfairly, and allow
some people to prosper unfairly at the expense of others are abhorrent to God,
but that the world is so riven with injustice and deep unfairness, that God,
rather than change everything, has to work in and through the chaos and
division that most human societies create, and work through the chaotic and
disordered lives most people lead, at some time or other, including many
Christians! PC has an air of respectability attached to it where people proclaim
their non racist, non sexist and anti homophobic ‘credentials’ so to speak
(rarely, if ever their hatred of class discrimination, curiously enough) but
the reality inside may be something completely different. Anyone can claim
anything about themselves after all, but who really knows anyone merely by what
they say they are? A PC person proclaims they are perfect and that everyone
should submit to them, and then can condemn others who are not going around
proclaiming non racist attitudes and so on. Christianity is very different. A
true Christian knows that deep down, and without God’s grace and mercy, they
are sinful and without true redemption. I cannot be good on my own, no matter
how much I tell other people I am good and kind and so on, because I NEED Jesus
to forgive me, heal me, purify me from sinful thoughts and negative and even
self destructive attitudes of all kinds, which can lead to negative behaviour
if not checked, or I just internalise the negativity and beat myself up. PC,
then, is like putting the cart before the horse, and without actually looking
at yourself first and working on your own faults with the help of a merciful
God, you are saying you are already, perhaps egotistically and self righteously,
good enough to point fingers at others and condemn them, sometimes and often
for very spurious reasons, and ironically enough in a very prejudiced and
intolerant manner, the very thing the PC movement claims to be against. In this
way, PC and Christianity are in actual fact almost polar opposites in practise.
God does not want us to perfect ourselves by condemning others, that is in fact
what the Pharisees did and were condemned by Jesus for, because we cannot
perfect ourselves without God, and when we try, as some of the PC faithful do,
we tend to end up pointing fingers at others in frustration at our own faults,
and simply because we are very good at pointing fingers at and judging others
but almost pathologically and certainly naturally loathe to examine our own
many and myriad faults. That then is the first fault of PC. It is not
Christianity and comes nowhere close. It is false respectability, and
intolerant of others views, and certainly not Christianity in lived experience.
I can also pick fault with the way
PC has also deteriorated and how in effect, rather than in the theory of the PC
faithful being believers of equality, it merely promotes prejudice against the
white working class, as if this is in
some way a payback for the depredations and injustices of Western imperialism,
the British and Spanish empires and many others, and the continuing economic
domination of the world by America, Britain and Western Europe. My biggest
problem with that approach is ultimately saying that the same actions, though
largely on a social scale, towards another group is an acceptable substitute
for the economic poverty of black people, working class women, poor Asian
Muslims and immigrants who have come here for various reasons. White working
class prejudices and negative behaviours are discussed in minute detail and
often with a fine tooth comb whereas the prejudices of the Middle class and the
affluent are virtually completely ignored or sidelined and prejudices and
misconceptions against the white working class have become acceptable, whereas racism
is regularly castigated. So, one small minded prejudice takes the place of
another. Why can’t all prejudices be equally challenged? And why isn’t the real
issue, the economic divisions, being discussed? Too close to uncomfortable
reality? I do wonder. Far safer to further victimise those already victims of
the system, it seems.
For
me, I have to be honest in this situation, and I don’t point my fingers at
affluent people or middle class people in return, my point here is that PC and
its whole credo, whoever proclaims it, and there are working class groups and
middle class groups who are PC in nature and I have experienced both typically
middle class and working class people who were virulently PC and found I didn’t
like them very much, has deteriorated into the worst kind of intellectual
fascism, whoever espouses it and wherever it comes from, whether from working
class people or middle class people, white or black or other, left or right
politics, and it closes any form of real debate, free speech and so an
essential part of what a democracy is. Also, is it just me, or has anyone
noticed that some PC pronouncements are getting more and more absurd, and
divorced more and more from any common sense or reality? Or that those claiming
to be tolerant liberals can sometimes be the most intolerant and illiberal if
anyone disagrees with them in any way?
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