ESSAYS & REVIEWS
Review: The Hijacking of Jesus
October 7, 2006

The Hijacking of Jesus: How the Religious Right Distorts Christianity and Promotes Prejudice and Hate, by Dan Wakefield.

It’s become commonplace, in recent years, to describe religions as ‘changing,’ or ‘being hijacked,’ or – in a lovely bit of irony – of ‘evolving.’  Yesterday’s Hindu sweetheart of the New Age set is today’s Hindutva BJP fascist; former CIA darlings like the Dalai Lama wrap themselves in the colorful cloaks of sappy benignity (while sometimes slipping up, citing “karma” for disasters like Katrina).  Religious Jewish scholars like Dr. Marc Ellis speak of the emergence of a “Constantinian Judaism” – a formerly stateless religion invoked in service to the Israeli government.  Everyone from George Bush to left-leaning Muslims will tell you that Islam has been taken over by the Wahabi fanatics. 

And, speaking for progressive Christians, author and journalist Dan Wakefield uses his new book, The Hijacking of Jesus: How the Religious Right Distorts Christianity and Promotes Prejudice and Hate, to remind us that less than fifty years ago, America’s best-known religious political figure was the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr.  As these religions “change,” though, their foundational texts remain conspicuously static.  It seems fair to assume, then, that there is no “essential” Hinduism/Buddhism/Judaism/ Islam/Christianity.  What we have, instead, are texts and traditions, deep (sometimes too deep) wells from which political actors across history can draw whatever it is that they’re thirsty for.  During the death squad era of Latin American politics, for instance, Liberation Theologians quoted the same bible as the conservative Catholic hierarchy that acted to defend the continents elites, as well as their Northern benefactors.

Wakefield’s book is an interesting exposition of Church dynamics in America, amassing a wide array of interviews with mostly Protestant Christians, both “mainline” as well as hardline Evangelical.  Taking the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and movement he led as the apotheosis of active, progressive Christian activism in recent American history, Wakefield helpfully delves into the world of inter- and intra-Church politics to explain how it is we got from the gospel according to MLK to the depths of James Dobson, Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson (though unlike the biblical Noah, Wakefield’s narrative doesn’t have much of an arc; the vicissitudes of the story can therefore sometimes be hard to follow).

Wakefield is an experienced journalist and practicing Christian, and the engaging quality of his prose can be just as impressive as his access to religious figures on both sides of the mostly-Christian religious debate in America.

Nevertheless, the essay doesn’t quite work.  The biggest problem isn’t its arc-lessness, nor is it the author’s irritating penchant for passively-aggressively deriding we secular atheists for our condescension towards the religious (as though we weren’t reacting fairly reasonably to the condescension we’d received over the years from those unable to accept a Godless moral code as coherent, or else convinced that we’re saps for believing in fossils).

Instead, it’s Wakefield’s naïve insistence on a “true” Christianity (epitomized, for him, in the proto-socialist Sermon on the Mount) that grounds The Hijacking of Jesus; the piece works in terms of the second component part of its “How the Religious Right…” subtitle ( “…Promotes Prejudice and Hate”; yes, all that is certainly made very clear) but it’s first element, how they “Distort Christianity,” is an unwinnable proposition, as unattainable as some sort of Grail.

I can’t remember which verse it is in Proverbs that said “Lo, and if ye roll in the shit with pigs, ye shall both get dirty, but the pig likes it.”  Megalomaniacs such as Falwell and Dobson want nothing more than to engage in a debate over the “true” nature of Christianity, because it feeds the notion that theirs is a politics borne of religion, and not the religion borne by politics we’re truly dealing with.

The spirit that animates Wakefield’s book is clearly one of good faith, some sound historical insight and useful reminders about the role that religion has played in American politics.  In short, he clearly has the best of intentions.  But we all know where that sort of paving leads to, don’t we?

This review originally appeared in TheTyee.ca.

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