Thursday, January 29, 2015

Welcome to Mississippi: The Jesus State


Desperate times call for desperate measures, at least if you’re a bible-thumping Mississippi politician. When it appears no one is taking your religion seriously, rub it in everyone’s face by introducing legislation to make your holy book a permanent part of the state’s heritage.
A bill has been placed before Mississippi’s legislature to make the bible the state’s official book. Precisely which version has still not been determined. Will it be the Catholic, King James, Coptic, New Standard, Greek Orthodox, New International, Jehovah’s Witness, Mormon, or some other translation? This is an important point since you don’t want the people of the state reading the wrong account. As any True Christian ® will tell you, only their version is the right version, all others will lead you to hell, so this issue will need to be addressed.

Tom Miles and Mike Evans

One of the bill’s sponsors, Democratic State Representative Tom Miles, claims that the Bible “provides a good role model on how to treat people. They could read in there about love and compassion” which proves Representative Miles hasn’t read it yet, or is encouraging people to just cherry-pick from it. Does he mean the good role models provided by: God as he deals with Adam and Eve, Lot and his two daughters, Jehoram of Judah, King David, Abraham, Saul, or just about anybody in Deuteronomy? And that love and compassion business; is it the love shown for Jephthah’s daughter, Job’s family, the Amalekites, the Midianites, the Canaanites, the first-born of the Egyptians, all the children aged two and under in Palestine when Jesus is born, or everything down to the fish and insects in God’s worldwide flood? Nowhere does the bible say why every living thing was sentenced to death. What did the chinchillas do to piss God off? Neither love nor compassion seem high on God’s list.


But a bigger issue is, why pick the bible? Why immortalize a book that divides people and treats woman as property, a book that is laced with genocide, blood sacrifice, slavery, misogyny, fables, inaccuracies, and submission to a celestial tyrant?  And that’s just in the first two chapters. Why not choose William Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury, Willie Morris’ My Mississippi, or Shelby Foote’s Follow Me Down? These writers were all born in the Magnolia State and their books drew heavily on their experiences of growing up there. Larry Wells, whose wife is a descendant of Faulkner, said of the bill, “It’s impossible to conceive of a state abandoning its literary heritage like that...what would Faulkner, Welty, Shelby Foote and Richard Wright think? I think they would collectively link arms and say, ‘Go back to kindergarten, Legislature.’” What an insidious thing to say…about kindergartners. They usually display greater common sense than these members of the state legislature. The bible was written by semi-literate men in a small area of the Middle East and was intended strictly for the Hebrew people. Very few of their descendants live in Mississippi, so it doesn’t make sense to propose the bible, unless you have a sneaky agenda to coerce people into following your religion.


In an effort to evade the establishment clause of the U.S. Constitution, the bill’s other sponsor, Democratic Representative Michael Evans says, "the bill doesn't force anyone to read it.” No one is forced to use U.S. currency which includes “In God We Trust” on it, but what alternative is there? Evans is more up front when he admits “the bill will encourage people to pick up the Bible.” Encourage. How long before encourage becomes compulsory? There’s the real reason people like him want it declared the ‘state book’. He wants everyone to remember him as Mississippi’s Numero-Uno-Christian and the guy who made recognition of his religion obligatory. Because what’s good for Mike Evans has to be good for the rest of the state, otherwise, why else would God have given him the idea to push this bill when it is clearly unconstitutional? The separation of church and state? Not in his state. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof? Mr. Evans or Miles would retort “Well, it ain’t a law now…see here…people’s jus’ ‘posed ta see the bible is highly regarded by people lahk me at the govumint level, an’ take it more serious-like, read it, an’ put it ta use in they’s lives.” I don’t live in that state, but I do have a bible, and I've found an excellent use for it.

There may be a bible in most Mississippi homes but few of the residents there have actually sat down and read all the way through it, even Mr. Miles and Mr. Evans. I would bet the people in Mississippi have read more of the Harry Potter series of books. They are much better reads, too.

Mississippi has been ranked as the most religious state in the country but it also ranks dead last of all 50 states and the District of Columbia…in areas such as health, educational attainment, seat belt use, and median household income. Is it any surprise? This idiotic bill isn't going to help Myth-iss-ippi-ans improve their reading rank either. They are listed last in that category too.

Monday, January 19, 2015

Cold-Cocking for Jesus


Nothing speaks to the veracity of religion better than a good, solid punch. Cold-cocking someone into having faith or as a way of getting them to question their non-belief is just what God wants. Otherwise, why would He have said in Exodus 21:19 that “the one who struck the blow will not be held liable if the other can get up and walk around outside with a staff…”. People are convinced of a supernatural being’s existence if someone bloodies their nose or sucker-punches them as proof.
Eric Dammann, a pastor at Bible Baptist Church in Hasbrouck Heights New Jersey, discovered a surprisingly successful knuckle-ministering technique. Last month his church posted a video of him bragging before his congregation about leading a young man to Christ by punching him in the chest “as hard as he could”. The video shows him demonstrating just what kind of blow he dished out on the unsuspecting youth, a short clip of which you can see at this YouTube address: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eu7o6l1YAt8


Seems while Eric was visiting a youth group in Calgary Canada years earlier he met Ben who he describes as a nice, bright kid, but a smart aleck, which in Eric’s mind made him dangerous. Throughout Eric’s proselytizing and preaching, the young man didn't seem to be taking “the Lord serious” [sic]. (What he meant was Ben wasn't taking him seriously.)This apparently enraged Eric because he said he then “walked over to him and went BAM, punched him in the chest as hard as I could. I crumpled the kid, I just crumpled him.” He then claims he leaned over the young man and said “Ben, when are you going to stop playing games with God?” (He meant stop playing games with him.) and this kid willingly converted right then and there.

I’m sure he did. I’ll bet Eric doesn’t think the kid did it out of, say, duress or to keep from being slugged again. Instead of God convincing the wayward youth, Eric decided it was up to him to show Ben that he may be a man of peace with the love of Jesus inside…it didn't extend to his fist. That’s where his God abided. And that God spoke to smart-alecky kids by being balled up and slammed into their chests. God loves a cheerful giver.

  I wonder what the kid's parents thought when they heard some American preacher came to their town and, in order to convert their son, he beat him to the ground. Hopefully, Pastor Dammann has a good lawyer in his congregation because he is going to need him now that he's admitted to child abuse.
I was surprised when researching this story that there have been numerous recent incidents of ministers who applied Eric's method in their own churches. They just didn't post anything on a webpage or on Facebook afterward. Many lawsuits have been filed as a result and there were several photographs of kids with split lips, swollen faces or black and blue marks on their chests, but none of the preacher-suspects used the opportunity to say they did it for God. Most admitted they just lost their temper.



  For me, this story was not a new one. In the 1950s and '60s my grandfather, a Disciples of Christ minister, preached about his youthful memories of a tall, brawny and very combative preacher who used to go into taverns, barrooms and hotels in West Virginia in the late 1800s and challenge men to a fight. He would then beat them senseless after eliciting a promise from them that, if he won, they had to attend services while he was at the local church or his tent revival was in town. Grandfather never seemed to grasp the irony of talking about Jesus who supposedly said ‘Turn the other cheek’, and then in the same sermon he all but gushed about this preacher slugging and pounding people until they were streaming blood, covered with bruises (and in some cases needing immediate medical attention), in order to get them to accept the preacher's religion. Jesus was always portrayed by my grandfather as the complete antithesis of this supposed man-of-God who was nothing more than a bully with a bible. Terrorists use fear as a way of achieving their aims, and fear was this preacher’s technique, but instead of using the fear of hell, he used the fear of his fist and another thrashing. I often wondered if grandfather secretly wished he could have put the fear of God into people the same way. It confirmed to me that fear is man-made...and religion is fear.