You might have predicted it. As more and more churches have placed their Sunday morning worship services online in video format, there is hardly an extraordinary moment in church not immortalized and watched by thousands, if not millions of viewers.
Not long ago, at least three church members sent me this clip of the young boy who was being baptized and decided to dive, instead of walk, into the pool. It gained enough notoriety to make it on America’s Funniest Videos.
Next, we witnessed the exhaustive replaying of the inflammatory rhetoric of Rev. Jeremiah Wright when he was pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago. Now, The Huffington Post has posted a clip of Alaskan governor and presumptive Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin while speaking to the Pentecostal Wasilla Assembly of God, a church where she grew up and was baptized.
In all of these examples, I have to admit being appalled. I’m taken aback by the blurring of the line between entertainment and reverence, politics and faith, sensationalism and spirituality.
In this most recent posting, Gov. Palin asks for and receives prayer. This was an admirable and appropriate part of the worship service. What disturbed me were the connections between faith and practice from the governor, and then by her pastor in the same service.
Referring to a $30 billion natural gas project, Gov. Palin says: Pray for that also, I think God’s will has to be done in unifying people and companies and to get that gas line built, so pray for that.
Then, mentioning the Iraq war and her oldest son’s pending deployment, she says: [Pray] that our leaders, our national leaders are sending them out on a task that is from God. That is what we have to believe, that there is a plan and they are sending them out on God’s plan.
Finally, near the end, the pastor, reacting to Alaska’s rich natural resources brought up earlier by the governor, says: I believe Alaska is one of the refuge states… [how]...in the last days, and hundreds and thousands of people [from the lower 48] are going to seek refuge [here] and the church has to be ready to minister to them.
This article continues with a review of other sermons from Senior Pastor Ed Kalnins, who has “preached that critics of President Bush will be banished to hell; questioned whether people who voted for Sen. John Kerry in 2004 would be accepted into heaven; charged that the 9/11 terrorist attacks and war in Iraq were part of a war ‘contending for your faith;’ and said that Jesus ‘operated from that position of war mode.’”
While I squirm at the content of these statements, my greater sense of angst resides in the way God and government become so enmeshed and undistinguished from each other. In an almost odd twist of fatalism, there seems this belief that if it is so, it must be the way God intends it. My side is God’s side and as long as I pray about it, I can rest assured God is honored and God’s will is done.
In this milkshake of theology and policy, past actions and limited self-assessments, future predictions and assumptions of doing God’s will, there is little room for critical reflection or objective questioning. It’s like taking our little bundle of ego and doing a “cannonball” right in the sacred waters of baptism. But as I said earlier, there’s already a video about that.