Guest guest Posted November 17, 1999 Report Share Posted November 17, 1999 --- Begin Forwarded Message --- Bruce Bawer, author of A Place at the Table has written a profoundly important book wherein he delineates how rigid fundamentalistic beliefs are shifting the political " center " within US politics. His book Stealing Jesus makes clear the central role played by " The Law " and its enforcement by fundamentalists. If they, as a determined minority, acquire power on a national level -- far beyond what we see in Kansas and in many school boards -- then many changes await sexologists and people who do differ from fundamentalistic either/or sexuality. Bawer's analysis provides background for critiquing the following news item: 11.6.99 in The Denver Post, p7a Suspect in slayings cites 'creators law' Redding, Calif -- One of two brothers accused of killing a gay couple in July told a newspaper he shot the men because he believed their homosexuality violated God's law. " I'm not guilty of murder. I'm guilty of obeying the laws of the creator, " , 31, told The Sacramento Bee in a jailhouse interview Thursday. (AP) >From http://www.amazon.com reviews of Bawer's book: Stealing Jesus : How Fundamentalism Betrays Christianity by Bruce Bawer Our Price: $11.20 You Save: $2.80 (20%) Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours. Paperback - (November 1998) 352 pages Reviews from http://www.amazon.com In 300-odd pages, Bruce Bawer has opened a floodgate of incisive religious criticism that will reverberate across the American political scene. He has put into eloquent and decisive language what many mainline Christians and non-Christians have quietly suspected but been unable to verbalize--namely that Fundamentalist Christianity is barely Christian at all. A Baptist theologian says he is " not interested in who Jesus was. " Pat on argues the Golden Rule as Jesus's justification that " individual self-interest is being a very real part of the human makeup, and something not necessarily bad or sinful. " In page after page, Bawer reveals a so-called Fundamentalist movement that readily displays a blatant disregard for the most salient message of the Gospels: selfless love and service to all. As for the significance of this revelation in the face of the ballooning presence of Fundamentalist Christians in American politics, readers will have to decide for themselves. The New York Times Book Review, Walter Kendrick Stealing Jesus may prove of value simply for its clear exposition of what today's American " fundamentalists " believe and want to do. Bawer's readers will no longer be able to greet that term with a condescending smile. The Church of Law, as he convincingly demonstrates, does not debate, and it takes no prisoners. [other reviews deleted but viewable online] eof --- End Forwarded Message --- ---------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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