Bad Company Corrupts Character

Posted September 27, 2007 | 01:39 PM (EST)



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I don't recall where I heard this, but someone once advised -- I believe in connection with the theologian Paul Tillich -- that if you want to know what a theologian really thinks, read his (or her) sermons.

Though it sounded good at the time, that hasn't always been true of my own experience as a preacher. I'm no theologian, but I've found that we priests are often just a bit more declarative in sermons than we might otherwise be (how do you explain to parishioners that sometimes you feel strange even uttering the name "God" with the degree of certainty often expected in sermons?).

On the other hand, sermons, particularly if the setting is right, can also invite transparency. Which brings me to Archbishop Peter Akinola's sermon given at last Monday's (required) chapel service at Wheaton College.

In the interest of full disclosure, Wheaton is my alma mater, which, while not exactly a point of pride at this moment, made it easy to get the scoop on his visit from some insiders there. Those I talked to insisted (even as their own sympathies, quite unlike mine, lie with Akinola) that his chapel address was benign -- as in, not touching on anything that has made him one of the most controversial figures in the Anglican Communion. Someone at the chaplain's office called it nothing more than a "fatherly address to the students." So I decided to give it a listen.

After comparing his humble beginnings with his current exalted status -- the primate of all Nigeria means leading 20 million people in the pews every Sunday, and presiding at meetings over 24 other primates (perhaps many of whom might find that surprising) -- he launched into three Scripture passages, the second of which was I Corinthians 15:33: "Do not be misled: bad company corrupts character."

This led into a rousing group-chant of the verse -- "Bad company corrupts character!" -- followed by this revealing commentary:

"In this college, thank God you are Christians. You know the Lord Jesus Christ, Halleluiah. But even here - among Jesus' disciples was Judas Iscariot. What company do you keep? ... Out there in the world there are so many good people like your professors here ... But out there in the world are very many bad guys, very many of them - out there. The evil people, the wicked people [pause and groan]: the arsonists, the murderers, the rapists, the cheats ... they're all there, and I pray God may you never fall prey to any of them. But they're there."

Finally, he concluded this point with a litany of places you might find such people: "When you go to San Francisco, or to New York City, to London, to Lagos ... there you see the real world." As a New Yorker, I certainly didn't appreciate this jab at my hometown, which I happen to find one of the most spiritually uplifting places on the planet -- if you count as spiritual a place that, unlike Wheaton, IL, actually forces you to rub elbows with people unlike and far less coddled than yourself day in and day out. But I digress ...

At any rate, this was obviously a moment of homiletic transparency for Akinola. I'm dismayed that the smart people I spoke with didn't seem to grasp the connection between remarks like these and his insidious name-calling and power-grabbing in the Anglican Communion.

And, speaking as a disheartened alum, it's too bad that Wheaton has become the kind of setting where Archbishop Akinola feels so comfortable letting down his guard and saying how he really feels.

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- OtayPanky See Profile I'm a Fan of OtayPanky

Rev. Astrid Storm: I don't recall where I heard this, but someone once advised -- I believe in connection with the theologian Paul Tillich -- that if you want to know what a theologian really thinks, read his (or her) sermons.

===

If you want to know what Paul Tillich really thought, check out his wife's memoirs. Very tasty stuff! Inspiring, even, in a Kraft-Ebbing sort of way.

Listen Astrid, all kidding aside.

You're just not a Christian in the same way as the Nigerian Bishop. He's a fundie, and you're not.

You're each living inside your own personal meme-set aka belief system. And those systems are in conflict. His memes says that homosexuality is an abomination before God; yours says it's cool.

Anyone with half a brain would recognize that he's not going to change, and neither are you.

He's gonna want to "purify" his church, and you're gonna want him to shut up and sit down.

And Wheaton is on his side, because it's a fundie school.

Y'all are just gonna have to agree to disagree, and recognize you're not reading from the same hymnal.

And the people said...OTAY!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:01 AM on 09/29/2007
- nebulus See Profile I'm a Fan of nebulus

Always beware the "Us vs Them" mentality--very off-centered.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:34 AM on 09/28/2007
- realitytrumpsbull See Profile I'm a Fan of realitytrumpsbull

Talking about bad company, what do you do if you're in the situation of confronting a bible-
wielding panhandler? I had this unfortunate
experience, this guy was a social engineer from
hell, walked around saying his 'amens', and
hitting people up for money. Is there like a
Jesus hotline to call to report this kind of stuff?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:35 PM on 09/27/2007
- NCGigi See Profile I'm a Fan of NCGigi

Thank you for this post. I agree, this sounds like an interior conversation spoken outloud, almost like a battleplan. Very enlightening. And ultimately, it is very good that the Bishop felt free to really tell us how he feels and what he plans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:33 PM on 09/27/2007
- Hattie See Profile I'm a Fan of Hattie

Much more of this kind of nonsense from the pulpit, and religion will become totally irrelevant.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:39 PM on 09/27/2007
- maddogbitesback See Profile I'm a Fan of maddogbitesback

Religion is evil but not irrelevant. It creates feelings of smugness, superiority and hatred. It makes people judge other people and judge them unfairly. It leads people into the madness of knowing they will go to heaven so they do not need to worry about those who are damned. It is madness and 9/11 is a tiny example of it. George Bush who believes God wanted him to be president is an example of how insane religion can become.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:55 PM on 09/27/2007
- Ben Dixon See Profile I'm a Fan of Ben Dixon

So bad company corrupts. I hope Columbia university is taking note of that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 PM on 09/27/2007
- wondering See Profile I'm a Fan of wondering

Okay, so I'm trying to follow Akinola's rambling quote that you have high-lighted.

First, we are told "bad company corrupts character". Then he says, "... among Jesus' disciples was Judas Iscariot. What company do you keep?"

Is he saying Jesus' character was corrupted by hanging out with Judas?

Of course it's foolish to expect a True Believer to recognize an obvious logical contradiction.

Because religion is irrational, it serves as a tool to justify ANY insane notion.

Even the most innocuous of religious belief systems inevitably leads to a Tower of Babel.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 PM on 09/27/2007
- mommadona See Profile I'm a Fan of mommadona

I would suggest the devil was standing at this man's shoulder and was nodding in agreement, pointing at this 'transparency' standing right there behind the pulpit.

From a true sage, this would also apply to the patronizing Archbishop....

"We have met the enemy and it is us."

Now, THAT would have been a divine revelation.

Why are Americans even listening to this obviously backward person anyway? Just because he wears a miter????? Goooood grief.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:10 PM on 09/27/2007
- fferret See Profile I'm a Fan of fferret

I lived in Wheaton as a child, it's getting to be a smaller world every day. Even back then, we were, as non-Christians, subject to pressure from the community over religion. I guess there are divergent points of view, but since 'faith' counts for more than observable facts on the campus of Wheaton College, it's not that big a surpise.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 09/27/2007
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