Peter Rollins's Blog, page 36

February 19, 2013

How Could I Possibly Need Atheism For Lent? I Need God Like I need Air!

There was once a little bestseller called, Why do Bad things happen to good People.  The title captured that sense in which one can be perplexed by a situation that, at first glance, seems so strange that an answer is sought. In many ways this can be the initial experience when reading a Liberal or Progressive critique of the Radical tradition. Something that would almost inspire one to write a short book entitled, Why Do Bad Critiques Come From Good People.


After all those in the Liberal and Progressive traditions also seek societal reconfiguration, equality and emancipatory political activity. So why do their critiques miss the mark? A good example of the problem can be seen in a recent critique from Micah Bales entitled Should we Give up God for Lent? Bales is committed to social action and happens to be part of a denomination that I am personally attracted to (the Quakers).


On the surface the article is critical of a course I developed (after reading the work of Merold Westphal) called, “Atheism for Lent” (AfL). A course in which people read and discuss some of the greatest critiques of Christianity, faith and God, not to judge them but to let them judge us. The course itself is designed to help people interrogate their beliefs and discover how they function. As such it can be described as offering a critical lens through which to discover the extent to which ones beliefs operate in an instrumental manner. In short, whether or not ones beliefs operate as a type of psychological crutch required in order to find meaning in existence. To borrow Tillich’s famous distinction, the AfL course is designed to unearth whether ones religion is an artefact that a person grasps hold of in order to live, or whether it is a contingent means of pointing us toward the depth-dimension in existence itself.


Yet the piece is more a criticism of my wider project (of which AfL is a part) and its relation to societal transformation. So instead of responding directly to the article I wish to draw out and clarify the reason for the underlying misunderstandings that we find there, particularily when it comes to questions of the political. I will mention two that are pertinent before closing with a reflection on the directly religious element of the piece.


The perverse belief in action


Firstly, I wish to draw out how those in the Liberal tradition generally advocate a form of perpetual concrete action when faced with the injustices around them. In the words of Levinas, the face of the other issues a cry for help and the liberal is one who responds directly to that cry. The issue here is the nature of the response, one that can be termed “perverse.” The pervert is, psychoanalytically speaking, unable to say “no” to the desire of the other. The pervert’s desire is to be the object of the others pleasure. They are the one who always says “yes.”


In a similar manner the liberal experiences a cry in the concrete face of the other that always demands a direct response. Hence there is a dislike of critical theory, which involves a form of stepping back from that cry (attending university, reading, writing etc). In Micah’s piece this is classically played out in his use of words such as “intellectualism” and “elitism.” Because the liberal tradition always attempts to say “yes” to the call of the other any form of theoretical activity is viewed as oppositional to (or, at best a distraction from) the emancipatory project. The European tradition of Leftist theory is seen as divorced from the exigencies of actual action to eleviate inequality. Theory is seen as a type of second-order reflection on political activity rather than a form of political (in)activity. We see here, of course, the influence of American pragmatism.


From the Radical perspective however the perverse response needs to be avoided. This means that there are times when we should refuse to respond to the concrete cry of the other for the sake of wider and deeper transformation. This means having to take on a certain guilt while working toward real change.


To take an example, I remember hearing of a church that did a number of fund raising activities for the homeless, including helping out at a local soup kitchen. Over a ten-week course on homelessness they continually challenged those involved to respond to the cry of the homeless in their city. Yet never once did they ask why the homeless actually existed there in the first place. This was structurally similar to the Christian call, during the eightieth century, to be kind to ones slaves and treat them well. It was only as people actually began to attack the structures that enabled slavery (the economic and political systems that kept it in place) that things began to change.


The Liberal political position, as exemplified in Bales piece, rightly sees critical theory as a refusal to act. The difference is that the Radical tradition understands that this refusal is itself a form of political intervention, one that reads the signs and works out both when and where to act in order to find the Archimedean point where oppression can be cut off.


The point here is that the perverse response actually perpetuates the very injustice it seems to attack (helping the homeless live in a less painful way while not working out the base that enables that superstructure to continue unabashed).  This is why Marx was critical of what was taking place in 1870. He was worried that the revolution would happen before he had finished Capital. In other words, before the careful work of reading the signs was finished. In this way critical theory is vital to the emancipatory project rather than some mere past-time we might be able to indulge in once the work of raising up the oppressed is completed (this is one of the differences between the liberal and the left with regards to theory).


The failure to see inequality as stemming from a primordial antagonism


The second difference to mention between the Liberal and Radical traditions is that the Liberals focus on different concrete modes of oppression, oppressions that they see as betrayals of a deep non-antagonistic reality in being that can, if rediscovered, bring harmony between peoples (as well as between people and nature, etc.). In other words, the fundamental nature of the universe is a balance and harmony that has been disrupted.


To love the other as oneself is thus taken to mean that we ought to respect other people’s (cultural, religious and political) identities as equal to our own (insofar as they don’t themselves have a bias toward hatred and exclusion).


In contrast the Radical tradition asserts that the antagonisms played out in historical life (sexism, racism etc.) are contingent, historical reflections of a basic antagonism inscribed into subjectivity itself (that itself reflects an ontological condition) and that the way to traverse these is to address the basic scapegoat mechanism designed to obscure this antagonism (for the scapegoat mechanism is what reduces antagonism to a negative destructive force rather than a positive destructive one).


To love ones neighbour is not read as loving the others identity as one loves ones own (the ego reading in which we affirm the others concrete identity as we affirm ours), but rather as embracing ones own internal antagonisms in order to love the other in their antagonisms.


Here the point is to affirm the internal conflict which undermines our ego images. To love oneself is thus to cut against oneself as an ego. It is not a selfish call but rather a deeply selfless and painful one. It is an act of radical violence against ones own identity.


This is why the liberal strategy of opening up communities to previously scapegoated others is not, in itself, sufficient. In religious terms we can note how some conservative churches are beginning to open up to the possibility that gays and lesbians can be equal members of their community.  Just as they eventually learned to reject explicit racism and sexism now they are gradually learning to overcome heterosexism. But the problem is that the fundamental structure of scapegoating is not broken in the acceptance of the latest “other,” and if the underlying scapegoat mechanism is not decommissioned then new “others” will always arise to protect the group from its own internal conflicts.


There will always be an other as long as we refuse to face ourselves. For example in some of these groups gays and lesbians are now being accepted as long as they embrace the idea of lifelong monogamous marriage. This means that those, gay and straight, who don’t accept that lifestyle for themselves can be excluded as immoral, corrupt and a threat to the institution of marriage.


This is likely why Bales is unable to see my formation of ikon and ikonNYC as political interventions (he critiques me for not being interested in political action).


The formation of these groups are the most important part of my project (of which writing is only a small part) and are dedicated to breaking the scapegoat mechanism and thus undermining the libidinal pleasure received from the act of exclusion itself.


Also, when Bales writes that my work “is most attractive to those who enjoy privileged positions in society,” he not only misses the way that my theory arose from of my upbringing in one of the world’s worst conflict zones (being firmly rooted in reconciliation work in Belfast, N.Ireland) but at a deeper level, how this work is best received in other places of deep oppression. Recently, for instance, I was invited to a prison to talk with long term inmates about the work. It was here that my project made most sense, creating a space for real transformation (indeed the people on death row at that time, who I was not allowed to see, were reading The Orthodox Heretic). In addition to this, it was my work in Belfast with the Simon Community (a homeless organization) and in community development where I learned the power of these ideas. Indeed the irony is that he mentions how badly my work would go down in L’Arche, a community that many ikon people have worked with and whose founder (Vanier) has impacted my own thinking in a profound way.


Why Atheism for Lent


In closing the article moves from the political to the religious in a brief critique of the Atheism for Lent course. Here he writes, “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?”


In this quote he admits that he needs God in order to gain meaning and work for justice. I do not doubt this and I also do not think that he means to assert that other people also need religious belief. His claim is simply that without God (which we read as his belief that God is at work in his life) he would crash and burn.


I can empathise here in that there was an area in my life where I felt that I needed something in order to live. I thought that if I lost that thing my heart would burst out of my chest and that life would escape my body. However I would say that this is, while romantic, an ultimately destructive place to be.


Atheism for Lent is precisely designed for people like myself and Micah. For people whose belief in God (or other things) is not something that they can question without the sense that destruction would result. For people who approach the sacred as an object of depth rather than as simply the experience of depth in everything. It is for people who think they need some thing more than air because they think that there is no life outside that thing: that their lungs would explode if they lost it. The point of Atheism for Lent is that the loss of the God-object is precisely that which unfolds into Tillich’s experience of God as found in Ultimate Concern.


A healthy faith collective then is there to help people encounter this depth-dimension precisely by breaking the sense that there is some thing that is needed like air (for reducing faith to the affirmation of a thing renders the sacred into an object to be placed alongside other objects).


In Atheism for Lent we encourage people to face their doubts, to consider how the idea of God functions in their life and discover that faith is not connected with affirming some particular thing but rather of being taken up in the depth of life, a commitment that transcends theistic/atheistic distinctions and that results in real, material commitment to political transformation (through the valuation of life itself). As such I would invite Bales, and others like him,to give the course a go. To find out more visit here (new content added everyday at midnight).

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Published on February 19, 2013 13:54

February 12, 2013

Eastern Mennonite University, Harrisonburg, VA

More information to follow

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Published on February 12, 2013 10:15

February 5, 2013

Hellish Pursuit of Heaven, Springfield, MO

The Hellish Pursuit of Heaven: An Evening with Peter Rollins

7pm – Thursday, April 4

Seating for this special pre-event (at Farmer’s Gastropub in downtown Springfield) is extremely limited. Tickets are $5 through February 28 (and $10 thereafter) and are currently available on a first-come, first-serve basis only. Once seating capacity has been reached no new tickets will be issued.


Today we are confronted with the demand to enjoy life and pursue what we desire. We are told that it is possible to possess what will make us whole and reach a place of fulfillment. Whether we are told to buy a particular product, look a specific way or say a certain prayer, a life of satisfaction is available to us. Join Peter for a pint as he explores the dark underbelly of this demand, its religious expression and how the Christ-event signals an apocalyptic freedom from this pursuit. A freedom that does not drain life of pleasure, but rather helps it to blossom by inviting us to discover a sense of depth and beauty in existence.


To purchase a ticket click here


 

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Published on February 05, 2013 08:53

February 3, 2013

On the Problem With Agreement and Disagreement

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One of the things that I often see in discussions concerning some thinker is the use of the phrases “agree” and “disagree.” For instance, in relation to my own work I often see phrases like, “I agree with much of what says,” “I don’t agree with everything” or “I disagree with…”


These terms can initially seem like evidence of critical thinking (i.e. someone is willing to critically affirm or question what they are reading), yet these terms are actually more symptomatic of uncritical thought. The reason lies in the way in which these terms imply that the individual is taking the material and simply comparing it with what they already believe is correct. Insofar as what is heard or read corresponds with the persons own position they affirm it and where it differs they reject it.


Something that one learns quickly in a first year philosophy class is the need to suspend this attitude of agreement and disagreement so that we might enter into the world of the philosopher we are reading and let their vision impact our own.


While reading a thinker the question, “where do I agree or disagree with them,” effectively domesticates them and acts as a defense against the possibility of their work actually vacillating our existing paradigm. By vacillating our existing paradigm I mean the experience where one remains within ones intellectual frame, while experiencing it as a frame.


This is a vital experience in the critical process for we need to be exposed to other thinking in order to gain a vantage point over our own way of seeing the world; all the while avoiding the fantasy of being able to step outside of it.


To understand the process we can compare it to being immersed in watching a movie on an old TV set. Imagine that, half way through the film, the screen shakes. At such a moment we gain a distance from the movie while still watching it. We are then reminded of its status as a movie. In the same way the intellectual process involves allowing another to vacillate our paradigm (something apologetic courses are fundemantally set up to avoid). This process involves entering the others world and asking, “where would this thinker agree and disagree with me?”


By doing this one enters into a properly antagonistic relation with the thinker, a relation that is more likely to lead to a development and deepening of ones own thoughts.


 


… Here is my invitation :) …


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Published on February 03, 2013 09:00

I Hide the Truth From You so That I Can Hide it From Myself

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Hegel provides a theoretical frame that enables us to understand why State apparatus can continue to operate effectively even when few, if any, of the people participating in it actually believe in it. In other words, going through the rituals (marches, services etc.) without subjective connection with the ideology. As Zizek would say, the State is treated here as a subject supposed-not-to-know, a subject who has to be shielded from the truth of our disbelief. This then helps those who participate to avoid directly confronting their disbelief and undergoing the difficult work that would need to be done in the aftermath (revolutionary reconfiguration). It thus enables us to maintain the status quo.


A good way of understanding this structure is to go to a nightclub at the weekend and watch how the club becomes a subject supposed-not-to-know (about our loneliness, broken hearts or lack of fulfillment etc.). How many of those in the room enact the rituals expected enthusiastically without actually subjectively embodying them in order to avoid the difficult work that would need to be done if enacting the disbelief. Or to take a different example, we can see this in the way that God functions for many within the world of contemporary worship music. Here God is treated as a subject supposed-not-to-know about our doubt, brokenness etc. By singing songs that claim we are happy, fulfilled and utterly devoted we protect the Big Other from seeing the truth of our inner antagonisms  The more frenetically we sing the more we attempt to conceal the truth from this Big Other. In this way we are able to avoid the difficult work that would be involved in directly confronting the tensions in our subjective world. As such, churches and nightclubs can offer the same psychological support for us and thus can both be considered as a form of religious activity: an activity designed to sustain a subject over and above us who protects us from our own conflicts.

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Published on February 03, 2013 04:12

February 1, 2013

Book Launch Party, Belfast

The Idolatry of God


Join me to celebrate the launch of my lastest book, The Idolatry of God. The format for the evening is simple: I will give a short talk about the content and you will appear to look interested. Then we can drink and I can try to sell a few copies, hoping that the more alcohol in you consume the less resistance you’l have to getting one.


 


 



Click here for more information and to confirm attendance


 



 


Here is the blurb on the back of the book:


In contrast to the usual understanding of the “Good News” as a message offering satisfaction and certainty, Rollins argues for a radical and shattering alternative. He explores how the Good News actually involves embracing the idea that we can’t be whole, that life is difficult, and that we are in the dark. Showing how God has traditionally been approached as a product that will render us complete, remove our suffering, and reveal the answers, he introduces an incendiary approach to faith that invites us to joyfully embrace our brokenness, resolutely face our unknowing, and courageously accept the difficulties of existence. Only then, he argues, can we truly rob death of its sting and enter into the fullness of life.

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Published on February 01, 2013 08:16

January 31, 2013

Homebrewed, Torrance, CA

The Homebrewed Christianity Podcast is ready for another LIVE show.  Tripp & Bo have a nerdy spectacular planned that will tickle your theological funny bone & unravel your thinking cap.  Rob Bell, author of Love Wins, will be making his first appearance at a live HBC event.  The most radical philosophical duo of Peter Rollins Barry Taylor will also be in the house.


But wait… there’s more… throw in some great tunes, a gourmet food truck & put this entire shindig in the South Bay’s best brewery and you got a little taste of heaven’s library programing.  Plus Rob Bell is going to be there at Monkish Brewing Co.


This is a podcast recording at a brewery.  Seating is limited & you need to at least be 21.


For more information click here


 

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Published on January 31, 2013 03:33

Book Launch, Greenwich, CT

We will be having a small party to celebrate the launch of my lastest book The Idolatry of God in a Book Shop located in the beautiful Christ Church 254 East Putnam Avenue. More information to follow.

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Published on January 31, 2013 03:27

January 22, 2013

Idolatry of God: Special Guest Katharine Moody Confirmed!

Katharine Sarah Moody photo


As we continue to work on The Idolatry of God Retreat we realized that we needed someone who could address the wider cultural, political and religious significance of Pyrotheology. Whoever we invited would not only require an expert knowledge of the radical movement in general, but also an in-depth understanding of my own project and the new collectives that it calls for.


As the curator of the event I knew immediately that we needed Katharine Moody. A few emails later and I’m pleased to say that she said “yes.” With two books set for immanent release (Post-Secular Theology and the Church: A New Kind of Christian is A New Kind of Atheist and Radical Theology and Emerging Christianity: Deconstruction, Materialism and Religious Practice) Katharine is a writer, speaker and academic who is making a name for herself as one of the new generation of critical religious thinkers. Working at the intersection of philosophy, theology and religious studies, as well as possessing a deep understanding of lived religion, she is a leading interpreter of my theological project (along with that of John Caputo and Slavoj Žižek) and is thus perfectly placed to bring an added depth and direction to the retreat.


 



To find out more or book your place at the retreat please click here

 


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Published on January 22, 2013 06:01

January 18, 2013

William Crawley to Interview Jay Bakker at Idolatry of God Event

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I’m excited to announce our first special guest for the Idolatry of God event taking place in Belfast over four days in April. He has been a close personal friend to me for many years and is someone I respect deeply. This is also the first time he has done anything in Europe, so this makes his appearance in Belfast even more significant. The picture will have already given the game away, so without further ado it is none other than the writer, speaker, equality activist and general troublemaker Jay Bakker.


Jay stands in the civil rights tradition of Martin Luther King Jr with his commitment to social justice, especially in his outspoken critique of sexual prejudice. Indeed he was recently the first person of faith to win a PFLAG award. Jay initially gained the spotlight because he was the son of TV evangelists Jim and Tammy-Faye Bakker, but has now come into his own as a writer and speaker committed to the themes of grace, justice and love for all.


Over the years he has stared in the six-part documentary One Punk Under God been a guest on shows such as Larry King Live and The Joy Behar Show and featured in Rolling StoneThe New York TimesTimeThe EconomistFHM and New York Magazine.


His highly anticipated new book – Faith, Doubt and Other Lines I’ve Crossed – is due to be released shortly before the event (February)


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Jay will be interviewed by the award winning television and radio presenter William Crawley. William is a leading journalist and cultural critic in the UK having received the Andrew Cross Award for speech broadcaster of the year (2006) and being bestowed a Doctor of Literature from Queens University for services to broadcasting (2012). Over the years William has presented a vast array of radio programs for the BBC as well numerous television documentaries, interviews and current affairs programs.


 



To book your place click here
(tickets are anticipated to sell out soon)


 


 Jay in action


 







 

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Published on January 18, 2013 05:52

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