Day of Silence. Tribute to a Few of the Fallen, Part 2.
Friday, April 25th, 2008 ![]() |
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The Freedom From Religion Foundation attempted to rent billboards in Grand Rapids, MI, as part of their Beware Dogma campaign. They were turned down.
“This is new, that a billboard company is censoring us,” said Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the Freedom From Religion Foundation. The Madison, Wis.-based group, dedicated to the separation of church and state, bills itself as North America’s largest group of atheists and agnostics with 12,000 supporters.
The billboard with the words “Beware of Dogma” and the group’s Web address has been used around the country, she said.
Gaylor said CBS Outdoor Advertising in Grand Rapids declined to rent a billboard to Freeedom From Religion, telling her it had been through controversy in the past and community reaction would force the billboard down within a day. She is working with other area firms, she said, but their locations are not her first choice.
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The billboard has been placed in such cities as Columbus, Ohio, and Atlanta as well as in Chambersburg, Pa., where it “created a firestorm,” Gaylor said. “The billboard company badmouthed us, but took our money and put it up.”…
“Community reaction would force the billboard down within a day”? How violent a community reaction did they previously experience that would cause them to turn down legitimate business? Or do they just consider atheist customers less important than their other customers? I get the impression that it’s a little bit of both.
As to the billboards I’m perplexed over the controversy. Churches and religious organizations put up billboards routinely with no opposition from atheists. Yet when atheists, in the interests of free speech, attempt to put their own billboards there’s a virulent backlash. Is it that believers cannot stand opposing views, or that they’re afraid minds might be opened?
I get the impression that it’s a little bit of both.
Religion has long been a tool of control–over individuals, groups and society in general. But some churches are taking it to new lengths. They’re now engaging in “shunning” and other forms of direct discipline of church members. What’s more is that church members sometimes consent to these practices.
On a quiet Sunday morning in June, as worshippers settled into the pews at Allen Baptist Church in southwestern Michigan, Pastor Jason Burrick grabbed his cellphone and dialed 911. When a dispatcher answered, the preacher said a former congregant was in the sanctuary. “And we need to, um, have her out A.S.A.P.”
Half an hour later, 71-year-old Karolyn Caskey, a church member for nearly 50 years who had taught Sunday school and regularly donated 10% of her pension, was led out by a state trooper and a county sheriff’s officer. One held her purse and Bible. The other put her in handcuffs.
The charge was trespassing, but Mrs. Caskey’s real offense, in her pastor’s view, was spiritual. Several months earlier, when she had questioned his authority, he’d charged her with spreading “a spirit of cancer and discord” and expelled her from the congregation. “I’ve been shunned,” she says.
Her story reflects a growing movement among some conservative Protestant pastors to bring back church discipline, an ancient practice in which suspected sinners are privately confronted and then publicly castigated and excommunicated if they refuse to repent. While many Christians find such practices outdated, pastors in large and small churches across the country are expelling members for offenses ranging from adultery and theft to gossiping, skipping service and criticizing church leaders.
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Watermark Community Church, a nondenominational church in Dallas that draws 4,000 people to services, requires members to sign a form stating they will submit to the “care and correction” of church elders. Last week, the pastor of a 6,000-member megachurch in Nashville, Tenn., threatened to expel 74 members for gossiping and causing disharmony unless they repented. The congregants had sued the pastor for access to the church’s financial records.
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Scholars estimate that 10% to 15% of Protestant evangelical churches practice church discipline — about 14,000 to 21,000 U.S. congregations in total. Increasingly, clashes within churches are spilling into communities, splitting congregations and occasionally landing church leaders in court after congregants, who believed they were confessing in private, were publicly shamed.
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Courts have often refused to hear such cases on the grounds that churches are protected by the constitutional right to free religious exercise, but some have sided with alleged sinners. In 2003, a woman and her husband won a defamation suit against the Iowa Methodist conference and its superintendent after he publicly accused her of “spreading the spirit of Satan” because she gossiped about her pastor. A district court rejected the case, but the Iowa Supreme Court upheld the woman’s appeal on the grounds that the letter labeling her a sinner was circulated beyond the church.
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Among churches that practice discipline, there is little consensus on how sinners should be dealt with, says Gregory Wills, a theologian at Southern Baptist Theological seminary. Some pastors remove members on their own, while other churches require agreement among deacons or a majority vote from the congregation.
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Since Mrs. Caskey’s second arrest last July, the turmoil at Allen Baptist has fizzled into an awkward stalemate. Allen Baptist is an independent congregation, unaffiliated with a church hierarchy that might review the ouster. Supporters have urged Mrs. Caskey to sue to have her membership restored, but she says the matter should be settled in the church. Mr. Burrick no longer calls the police when Mrs. Caskey shows up for Sunday services.
Since November, Mrs. Caskey has been attending a Baptist church near her winter home in Tavares, Fla. She plans to go back to Allen Baptist when she returns to Michigan this spring.
“I don’t intend to abandon that church,” Mrs. Caskey says. “I feel like I have every right to be there.”
This is a frightening phenomenon and I can’t help but wonder what is behind it. Is it a reflex caused by the RRRW’s failing grip on American politics? Is their need to control and manipulate people so dire that they’ll resort to turning their own congregants into pawns in some macabre chess game if that’s their only option? Whatever the impetus, those who allow themselves to be the victims of these megalomaniacal churches are pitiful fools.
May those people grow spines, rise up and tell their churches to go to hell.