Note: For the latest in this conversation, check out my reply to Peter Rollins' response to this piece, The Radical Within.
Some people give up chocolate, coffee
or movies for Lent, but
Peter
Rollins has a slightly more radical proposal: Why not try giving
up God?
Peter Rollins argues that real
spiritual courage involves fully experiencing the absence of God. He
warns that, as long as we allow ourselves to believe in a personal
God who intervenes in history for the sake of love, we risk
constructing a false god in our own image. Far too often, he says,
our belief is in a super-hero God who serves as a crutch for our own
inability to cope with reality.
As an alternative to this fairy-tale
God, Rollins encourages us to embrace Jesus' felt sense of
abandonment on the cross, presumably on an ongoing basis. His message
seems to be that
truly daring and courageous Christians aren't
afraid to abandon belief in God and experience the desolation of
atheism. To promote this message of radical doubt, Rollins has
developed an annual campaign:
Atheism
For Lent.
I have been following Peter Rollins'
ministry for some time now. Many people I respect find his writings
deeply inspirational. This has encouraged me to take his message
seriously. I have heard him speak in person,
read
his book and followed his online campaigns over the last
couple of years.
After
extended consideration, I now want to outline some serious
problems I see with the gospel he is preaching.
The Mystique of Elitism
As far as I am aware, Rollins has never
laid out exactly who his target audience is, but my observation is
that most people who are engaging with his message are either
seminary trained or have a serious commitment to theological study.
This is not surprising, given Peter's language and style of
presentation. Of all the popular Christian thinkers I know, Peter
Rollins is one of the most avant garde
and edgy. His mystique is the promise of something new and unique in
the 1st-world Evangelical/Protestant experience.
I wonder about the implications of this
mystique. When I read Peter Rollins, and when I follow the commenters
on his social media offerings, I cannot help but notice a theme of
intellectual elitism and a fascination with secret knowledge.
Ordinary Christians believe in a fairy-tale God-in-the-sky, but we
know the truth. Most believers
use God as a crutch, but we see
clearly and cast aside our beliefs with courage. Most people who read
the Bible think it is a story about God blessing the world, but we
know that it is actually a story about radical doubt and abandonment
by God.
I
encourage my friends who are big fans of Rollins to take a serious
look at what attracts them to his teachings. There is good stuff
there; I do not deny it. The dark night of the soul can be just what
the doctor ordered at certain points in our lives. But how does this
special knowledge
affect how you look at your fellow Christians who do not share your
radical doubt? Do you see their lack of doubt as ignorant? Weak?
Injustice and Intellectualism
Something else I find troubling is how
little Peter Rollins speaks about the need for social transformation,
peacemaking and justice in our world. Instead, he emphasizes the
personal experience and condition of individuals. He preaches
individual salvation through
an embrace of radical doubt. As Rollins presents it, the way
forward is through each individual's decision to embrace a reality in
which God is mute and uninvolved with the creation.
This sounds oddly familiar. Despite the
fact that Rollins is superficially at odds with mainstream
Evangelicalism, his message is one that bears great resemblance to
the personal salvation
narrative that is so central to Evangelical churches. Whether it is
accepting Jesus Christ as your personal Lord and Savior
or accepting the godless doubt of existential atheism,
the major push is personal transformation via intellectual belief.
The very fact that Rollins can ask us to give up God for
lent suggests that he thinks
that faith in an active, personal God is a preference, a chosen
belief system, rather than a conviction that grows out of long
experience and relationship with the Holy Spirit.
For
those of us who really have experienced a living and powerful God - a
God who intervenes in history and shows us God's true character in
the life, ministry, death and resurrection of Jesus - these
intellectual games do not cut the mustard. Whether offered to us by
mainstream Evangelicalism or the avant garde
of Peter Rollins, these head trips do not offer the whole wheat bread
of life that we need to survive, thrive and bring healing to this
broken world.
Safe Games for Comfortable People
I have a friend who spent years in the
L'Arche Community,
living alongside individuals with severe physical and intellectual
disabilities. He is also an erudite and astute theologian, and we got
to talking about Rollins'
Atheism
for Lent campaign. At one point in our conversation he looked at
me and said, "I would just like to see Peter Rollins come to
L'Arche and talk about this stuff. Let him explain to people
suffering from schizophrenia and learning disabilities why they need
to stop believing in God."
This statement drove home for me how
irrelevant much of Peter Rollins' message is to those who are the
most marginalized in our society. To those who are struggling under
the burden of grinding poverty, long-term unemployment or broken
homes, is atheism the answer? For the defrauded migrant worker, for
the dispossessed Palestinian refugee, for those who are imprisoned
for conscience - would Rollins prescribe atheism?
In my experience, a godless worldview
(whether it takes the form of explicit non-belief or functional
atheism) is most attractive to those who enjoy privileged positions
in society. Rich and middle class people have the luxury of doubting
God. But for those who face oppression, injustice and persecution,
the reality of God's leadership and presence is absolutely essential
for survival. While Peter Rollins purports to preach a
hard-core gospel of existential doubt, he has little to offer those
who are daily experiencing the reality of Christ's suffering.
We Really Do Need God
Tearing
down false images of God is an important task, but this cannot be the
end of the story. God does not leave Job sitting on ashes and picking
at his sores. After the night must come the dawn. Unfortunately,
Rollins seems unwilling to engage in the process of developing an
alternative vision. Rather than offering a positive understanding of
who God is, he seems solely interested open-ended deconstruction.
Leading
people into darkness and doubt and leaving them there is simply
irresponsible. We live in a deeply broken world that is in more need
than ever of the redemptive power of God's living Spirit. How can
someone ask me to give up God for Lent? I might as well give up
breathing! How can we give up God for almost six weeks? How would we
sustain our struggle for justice, truth, mercy and genuine love? What
could be the possible benefit of denying this healing, life-giving
power for forty days? We live in a world desperately in need of God's
presence and intervention. Will we dare to believe?