|
Ladies
and Gentlemen and
adolescents of all
ages everywhere,
good wishes for the
year and for
carefully filtered
memories of past
years. My sermon
today is not a
reflexive spurt
resulting from Neil
deGrasse Tyson's
recent surgical
witty-twits. I wrote
this a while back
and planned to print
it at the end of the
year. In a way,
Tyson pre-empted me
with some keen and
nifty remarks,
especially elevating
Newton above the
golden halo of a
possibly fictional
ex-carpenter.
Nevertheless and
without any remorse
and begging your
peace-laden
indulgence, I'll
print my mercifully
brief homily here
and now.
Jesus of Nazareth
was not a Christian,
he was a Jew, a
Hebrew. He was
raised as a Hebrew,
practiced the Hebrew
religion (Judaism
didn't coalesce
until many centuries
after Jesus), and he
was a rabbi, a
teacher. His mother
was Jewish (so was
his father) which
means he has the
right of return
(which so many
Christians anxiously
wait for) to Israel,
where, if he can
prove his lineage
from a Jewish mother
he will
automatically be
issued a permanent
visa, an id card and
a mitzvah
guide-book.
Jesus, as described
a 100 years after
his alleged death
and not during his
alleged life, was a
Hebrew when he
promoted rebellion,
when he was
crucified, and when
he reappeared after
burial in a cave. He
became a Jew when
Isabella of Spain
ousted the Hebrews
on the day Columbus
sailed off to
discover Florida and
the ousted ones
dispersed up into
Europe, invented the
latke, and merged
their Hebrew
language with Middle
High -German,
Russian and Polish
to produce Yiddish,
which produced
"Juden"
which popped out the
label
"Jews." I
say unto you:
alleged, because
there is no
empirical evidence
that he ever
existed, which
matters not...
it's the effect,
not the cause that
shapes our
understanding in the
future. Christianity
is a product of
post-Jesus history.
Muhammed was not a
Muslim. He was a
Saudi Arabian
merchant who had
visions and became
self-described as
the last prophet of
"god" in
the line of Adam,
Abraham, Moses and
Jesus. Which means
he was a Hebrew and
a Christian.
There seems to be
empirical evidence
that he existed
though the first
biographical
accounts of his life
and leanings
didn't appear
for 100 years or so
after his death.
Like Jesus, his
faith-building
journey generated
much struggle and
strife but he lived
long enough to see
the population of
the Arabian
Peninsula turned
toward his
"teachings."
He died at 62 and is
buried in Saudi
Arabia, not
Jerusalem. Islam is
a product of
post-Muhammed
history.
Siddhārtha Gautama
was not a Buddhist.
Allegedly, he was a
prince who was born
around 2500 years
ago long before
Jesus, Muhammed,
priests and popes,
mullahs and imams,
abbots and monks,
mohels and grand
rabbis. Apparently
he was an atheist,
not even pagan gods
for him. There is no
empirical evidence
that he existed
since the first
historical
descriptions
didn't appear
until a few 100
years after his
alleged death. Again
it matters
not... effect, not cause.
As described, before
he crossed that
psyche-shaking age
barrier of 30,
Gautama became
severely disturbed.
He could not
reconcile his lush,
hedonistic life in
the palace with the
suffering he saw
outside its walls.
So he left the
palace on a journey
of asceticism,
meditation, and
personal bondage. He
traveled to a way of
life completely
opposite from his la
dolce vita. He
discovered that this
extreme was as
self-destructive as
the extreme he had
left. So he quested
on until his
enhancing
self-awareness led
him to the middle,
the "Way of the
Center"... the
way of Gautama
Buddha. As
described, he
attracted followers;
he described his
journey, recounted
what he had learned.
He was not a
Buddhist. He was a
teacher. Buddhism is
a product of
post-Gautama.
Ah me... and ah
you... Gautama,
Jesus and Muhammed
never experienced
the comfort of the
religions that were
founded in their
names, that grew
into huge, tribal,
power- wealth
collecting,
people-oppressing,
people depressing,
people suppressing
self-justifying
institutions.
And pray tell, what
is that comfort that
all religion
factories
manufacture and sell
to their customers?
It is the comfort
for the fear of the
unknown, the unseen,
the presence in the
dark. It is the
comfort that there
is an answer to the
perceived futility
of living and then
dying. It is the
comfort that there
is life in death,
life after death,
life without death.
That there is a
"heaven."
And there is.
Not the
boob-in-a-box,
thoughtless faith,
40 virgins and a
pair of wings heaven
of religious
corporate marketing.
Nope. It is simply
this:
Eventually,
eventually,
eventually you will
come back. There
will be people or
beings or entities
who will be able to
restore your life
just as it was and
you will be aware
that this has
happened. You will
be aware that you
have been
non-existent for all
of the time until
you were restored.
You will be alive
again
What lives once lives forever.
Amen. Thank you
Ladies and Gentlemen
and adolescents of
all ages. Now sing a
hymn, better, make a
hymn and sing it to
yourself.
|