Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Narcissics, Sociopaths, and Thieves......

Or Why the Church is the Most Dangerous Place on Earth

Lets talk about Bible College. 

1) The people who decide to go, can easily be split into groups.
     a) People who are forced by parental figures.  These usually take one year party programs, and if it wasnt that they are usually being trained to go to another country for half the year, would seriously never see the end of their programs.  They dont want to be there, so they have to make the programs as fun as possible, and in the mean time, try to get these people to see how "blessed" they really are - in other words "Behave, or youll end up like the people we are helping"
     b)  People who believe they are called by God.  You could argue that this is the most dangerous group, but I dont think so.  Most of these people might even *honestly* have a relationship with God.  They usually want to help people, and whether self-deluded or not, they work hard, and are sincere.  The problem here is that they (ok, us, I would put myself in this group) usually have some sort of agenda they honestly beleive is Gods, and push it - hard.  Unfortunately, this can be easily coloured by personal experience and values, and we have a habit of becoming fanatical.
     c)  People who have been *told* they have a calling - and believed it.  These people are *dangerous*.  They are power mongers, slightly psychotic, and usually excellent manipulators.  In the church, it can be hard to tell them apart from the first group, because these people are pros.  Unfortunately, they will be the ones who usually go on to become your Pastors.  They play the politics game far better then us earnest souls who just want to help.

So this is who you train to be your leaders - Party people, the self deluded, and the sociopaths.

2) Now, lets talk about the people who usually are *attracted* to church....
    a) Addicts.  These people probably make up the largest population.  They need something in control of thier lives, so God appeals to them.  As long as that God "wants them to be happy" they can then moralize any action they want.
    b)  People who like the manipulators... or are like them.  The people who want the "happy shiny people" to be them.  AS long as everything looks good, they are happy.  These people are to some degree, stuck in the 50's.  They want that "Perfect American Dream" and believe God can get them there.  They seem to forget that during the 50's while they lived in thier little bubbles of white supremacy, there was segregation, mental asylums to hide your unwanteds in, and rampaging alcohol and drug abuse throughout the female populations.
    c) People honestly seeking answers.  Unfortunately, these people never stay long in a "church" setting.  They are too self-aware.  They see the hypocrisy and they see the abuse and they flee.  And if they dont, they become the church scapegoat, the constant volunteer, and might well get kicked out of a congregation for being honest.
    d)  Gold diggers.  People who honestly believe that a ragged, homeless Galilean who held a faith that told us that wealth wasn't to be found on this earth, will make them rich.  In other words - the self-deluded and stupid.

Now, let me take this opportunity to tell you a bit about what church - should be?
A gathering of honest believers.
In any house. (this includes internet chat rooms, trust me)
SHaring, talking, singing - if the spirit moves them (and it might - Ive been caught up in that more then once unexpectedly)
Giving glory to their God, verbally, and in their hearts.
Thankful for the breath they share, the food they eat, and the small blessings and the everyday miracles - the divine ambushes, that let us know on a day to day basis, that there is a God who loves us.
there doesnt need to be a leader.  If its real, God will give wisdom as He sees fit, to whomever needs it.  (by the way, *real* "pastors" rise to the top in those situations - men and women so given to scripture and study and the Word, that they know a golden apple in a setting of silver when they see it)

People who are will hug, and cry, and sing, and laugh with you.  Not manipulate your emotions with carefully timed acting.
Yes, acting.

From a surviving believer - after bible college (Its where you go to lose your faith, trust me)
If you get through all 4 years, to emerge on the other side, you have a degree in manipulation, and how to professionally present yourself to *anybody*.  You are a consummate actor, able to talk and fit in with anybody.  The only theology you learn, is laced with lessons of how to indoctrinate and brain wash the addicts, and the weak minded.  this is why the drop out rate in Bible College is so extreme.  the ones who survive are not the ones who honestly want to help - its the ones who honestly believe they are better then anybody else, who want a little kingdom of their own, and watch it grow.

Looking back, I can see which of my Professors understood this, and which were converts themselves.  The ones who were warning us, and the ones who wanted to be "King of Kings" for themselves.  The ones who honestly were "survivors" of the church, compared to the professional, ragged actors, who were holding on to thier ambitions in a place where the line "those who cant do - teach" is a truism like no other.

You know why I like Boondock Saints, so much?
Because it alludes so strongly to the fact that these are modern boys, who understand what it takes, to be willing to die for thier faith.
They drink, smoke, get stoned, swear - and yes, they kill.
But they have *unshakable* faith in a God who accepts nothing less then thier whole beings.
They get it.
And so do I.

I will never go back to church.  Not the way it is now.
I know to much.

1 comment:

Angelia Sparrow said...

You might try a Quaker meeting. It sounds very much in line with what you think worship should be.

Also, segregation is a FEATURE for 50s fantasists. It's part of what they want, along with female subjegation.

I can see the types you talk about in every religious organization.
I can identify every pastor I ever had in that list, although some only went to seminary late in life.

We get more of the addicts, seekers and gold-diggers, with some manipulators thrown in over my way. The gold-diggers are looking for power, not money, in our case.

I hit a wall in my own minsterial training when I asked the vital question: How can I be called to this, when I don't believe there is anyone to do the calling? (nondeistic pantheism isn't a bed of roses sometimes)