In a
bleary-eyed opinion article in the Sunday Boston Globe (11/8/09),
Harvard divinity professor
Harvey Cox denounces religious "fundamentalism." In doing so, he
places mass-murdering Muslims from the Middle East on the same playing
field as conservative Christians from the United States. From Cox's
article:
As the 20th century ended and a new one began, fundamentalism has
taken on more formidable shapes, both politically and religiously.
Though most of its adherents work through spiritual and educational
channels, the small minority that turn to violence have caught the
media’s attention. If some seem ready to die for faith, others
are ready to kill for it, gunning down abortion doctors in church,
hijacking planes, and exploding bombs at weddings. For plenty of
thoughtful people, fundamentalism has come to represent the most
dangerous threat to open societies since the fall of communism.
Cox's passage reveals a number of egregious errors. Gunning down
abortion doctors is not a practice of fundamentalist
Christianity. A deliberate murder of an abortion doctor is a direct violation
of Christian teaching. (Fifth
commandment, anyone?)
Second, Cox 's caricature of Christians "[gunning] down abortion
doctors in church" is an incredible smear. Although any murder of
an abortion doctor is unacceptable, exactly one abortion doctor
has been "gunned down in church" (Dr. George Tiller, 2009). And since
Roe v. Wade passed over thirty-six years ago in 1973, a grand total of
eight abortion doctors and workers have been murdered in the
United States and Canada. (Tiller's murder was the first of an American
abortion doctor in the 21st century.)
By comparison, while reportedly shouting "Allahu Akbar," Nidal Malik
Hasan brutally annihilated far more individuals in a matter of seconds at Fort
Hood this week. Do the math, Harvey. Then there's September 11th, the
2004 Madrid bombings, the 2005 London bombings, almost-daily homicide
bombings ... You get the picture. Cox's comparison is awfully warped.
Surprise! A Harvard professor doesn't recognize his own muddled
thinking.
-=-=-=-=-=
There's a lot more to critique about Cox's piece, but he is
correct in one notable passage. In opining about modern "spirituality,"
Cox writes:
The plethora of emerging new spiritualities has its own problems,
of course. They are often intellectually incoherent or melt into a
self-centered narcissism. They can become vacuous and faddish.
(Madonna and other Hollywood celebrities are now “into Kabala,” the
ancient Jewish mystical tradition.) They can become highly
individualistic, lacking any vision of social justice. Esoteric and
snobbish at times, they often fail to reach the poor and
dispossessed people for whom Jesus, the Buddha, and the Jewish
prophets had such concern.
Exactly. But isn't Cox criticizing the exact same thing that
Christian fundamentalists rail against? Hmmm.