"Someone up there is looking after me," he says with a
conspiratorial nod. I smile and censure my words but not my thoughts. There
have been times when, feeling cheeky or rebellious, I have replied: "Oh,
someone on the sixth floor?" But that leads to confusion and a hurried
retreat in order to save a potential relationship. I also think: "If He
is looking after you what are you doing here in the first place?"
God
is an underachiever who saves the patient in the nick of time after letting
things go on to a dangerous precipice. When the chaplain comes in the room
it is time for religious notions to emerge from their hiding places. The
people who profess faith when the chaplain turns up may not have been to
church in their life but they still identify themselves as persons who
believe.
The extreme of this phenomenon occurs when it seems that some kind
of unexpected medical miracle has occurred that has puzzled the doctors. The
event is understood as the almighty intervening in the creation to rescue
someone who often dies months later. Then human hubris is at its most
irksome. God has chosen my mother (saint that she is) to rescue from certain
death. She was at death’s door and all of the machines had been turned off
and we awaited the final breath. But then, her colour returned and she sat
up and exclaimed; "what are you doing here?" The presumed
intervention of God becomes a personal talisman confirming how precious the
saved one and her loved ones are in the sight of God. And all this trotted
out with the usual rejoinder that all of this has happened outside of the
church and without the help of clergy.
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On such occasions bile rises in my throat and I become very quiet, wait
for them to have their say, and escape with the usual good wishes and
"God bless". Our capacity for self justification and deception
seems to be unlimited. Do they not wonder why their tired old body was saved
while down the road at the children’s hospital the innocent die without
aid? Do they not wonder what is so special about themselves that God has
revoked the laws of nature to give them a few more years on this earth while
millions die of starvation and war and hazard?
What masquerades as faith is
superstition and over-vaulting ego and stupidity. In the face of this the
chaplain can only fake it by pretending to agree with their conclusions. For
what else can you do when hired by a secular organisation who expects you to
comfort and pacify but never to confront? Just think of the havoc we would
cause if we told the grieving that their loved ones were dead, bound only
for the grave and never to be seen again! Or show our apparent lack of faith
by telling them that their miraculous recovery was really down to medical
science and not the intervention of God. Such is the misunderstanding about
what the chaplain believes and what his role is that such things are
unthinkable. So we fake it.
The church has been faking it for hundreds of years. It has pretended and
often sincerely believed that it held the secret of the survival of death.
It has allowed the misunderstanding to persist that the good news of the
gospel is that we will see our loved ones again in face of evidence from the
evangelists that the kingdom of heaven/God is an earthly reality to be
enjoyed by the living. There is more to this than the church protecting its
own life and power by playing on the fears of its congregations. That
religion is understood to be about the nexus between morality, death and the
supernatural has deeper roots than our fear of death. It lies in the way our
minds are structured.
The unchurched patient who aligns himself with what he
thinks the chaplain believes can do so easily because his mind is receptive
to these ideas. There is increasing evidence that our minds contain
unconscious mechanisms that deal with social exchange (morality), expect
agency in an ambiguous environment (the acts of God) and are snagged by the
idea of death. These mechanisms attract a kind of folk religion; many
aspects of which are shared by religions the world over. As the mind is
attuned to language it is also tuned to other social domains and it is these
domains that are important in religious ideation. That is why these notions
persist in the culture long after church attendance has fallen away and
after religious instruction has disappeared. These ideas do not need an
academic structure to maintain them, they maintain themselves.
The point to be made is that these ideas have little to do with the core
ideas of Christian faith even though many of those ideas may be read in
terms of automatic folk religion. Gospel passages that appear to confirm the
ideas of folk religion have been given more authority than those that do
not. How many remember the words of the Lord to Adam and Eve: "By the
sweat of your face you shall eat bread until you return to the ground, for
out of it you were taken; you are dust, and to dust you shall return."
(Gen 3:19)
But many do remember the words of Jesus to the thief on the cross
even though they appear only in Luke: "Truly I tell you, today you will
be with me in Paradise." (Luke 23:43)? The interpretation of this saying
is complex when the Old Testament background and the central thrust of the
gospel writers is taken seriously. But it is this verse that draws our
attention. We may explain this, obviously, on the grounds that we all fear
death and this verse seems to change death (for those who believe) into a
transfer to a more beautiful room. Cynics have accepted this explanation and
have indicated how transparently self interested it is. Is this a complete
explanation or do we need to probe further?
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The interchange between Jesus
and the thief has been interpreted as a simple social exchange. If you pay
the price then you get the reward. If you believe in Jesus (as personal
saviour or as worker of miracles) then you will get the reward of paradise.
The evolutionary psychologists Leda Cosmides and John Tooby have shown that
we are especially attuned to such an exchange. They hypothesise that these
mechanisms are evolutionary adaptations that came about to produce the
advantage of co-operation. These mechanisms are triggered when we find
ourselves in any situation that entails social exchange. Politicians
instinctively know this. All they have to do is to assert that those on
welfare get the reward while not paying the price and they elicit a gut
response of outrage in the electorate. This is the origin of moral
intuition. Such responses may be countered by rational argument but our
moral feelings of fairness are automatic.
The church has bought into religion as social exchange because it works
so well. People do not have to be educated to be snagged by the proposition,
indeed, it is better that they are not. All the church has to assert is that
Jesus died for our sins and we find ourselves in the domain of social
exchange: are we beholden to him? It is clear that religious ideas that
persist in a population without the support of a community of faith or of
religious education persist because our minds are receptive to them in the
same way they are receptive to the learning of language or respond to snakes
or spiders. It is the task of the teaching ministry of the church, supported
by academic theology, to examine such notions in the light of critical
theology so that religious ideas are not just automatic; produced by the
mechanisms of mind that have been produced during human evolution.
Christian faith is revelation because it subverts intuitive folk
religion. It is revelation because it is unnatural, counter intuitive and
surprising. Grace subverts strict social exchange that would have had the
prodigal son continue in exile in the far country, removed the tax
collectors and sinners from the company of Jesus and extracted vengeance for
his murder. The gospel does not save us for the afterlife but transforms
life in lived time by opposing the automatic thinking generated by our
evolved minds. Rather than affirm nature, the gospel actively opposes it
when it suffocates love and dehumanises the neighbour.
This is yet another
reason why natural theology must be opposed, because it asserts the order of
loveless evolution, of the beast in us. To be created in the image of God is
to be created as reflective, critical beings that are able to transcend
their biological determinism by countering the impulses that arise in their
minds. So when the politician of the right plays into our intuitions about
social exchange or coalition formation by suggesting that we are being
robbed or that other races or cultures are not of us, then we are free not
to respond as programmed.
This is the freedom for which the gospel sets us
free. Faking will not help. By faking popular belief we fail to bear witness
to the freedom of the gospel and we support folk religion which is not
freedom but bondage, bondage to nature.