Privilege of Religion and Faith

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    In Reaction to the Passing of Proposition 8:

    A Conversation of Privilege around Religion and Faith

    Zack FordNovember 8, 2008

    My world has been so shaken by the results on four ballot measures on Tuesday that it hasnumbed me to so much else. After Tuesday night, I could no longer feel anything for how

    prolific and amazing Obamas election is. (The fact that his transition website, change.gov, has

    absolutely no mention of LGBT populations or any related issues doesnt help.) Despite myinterest in politics, I could not be glad to celebrate the gains Democrats made in Congress. A

    wipe of my brow as if to say Phew! was the best I could muster for the anti-abortion measures

    that did not pass. Gay and atheist are the two dimensions of my identity that are most salient

    to me, and I watched 12 million people vote in favor of discrimination against both. Themeasures, at first glance, attack only the gay dimension: preventing same-sex marriage in

    Florida and Arizona (helping bring the total to 30 states with such bans), removing the right to

    same-sex marriage in California (the first time a state constitution has been amended to remove a

    right already in place), and removing the right for same-sex couples to adopt in Arkansas. But,then one must ask how these measures came to be: fear, intolerance, ignorance,

    misunderstandings, and lies, all promoted exclusively by faith-based values and organizations.So, I also received the message you must conform to our beliefs. I have been seething with

    anger ever since, never more distraught than I can remember being in my entire life.

    I see massive issues of privilege at work here that I am trying to challenge; I feel I have aresponsibility to challenge them because I see them. Many have so far responded by taking

    personal offense and, in many ways, defending the privilege I am trying to challenge. This has

    only energized me further to pursue this discourse, because from my point of view, such aresponse only confirms the very privilege I am trying to challenge (as I plan to explain).

    I have composed this treatise to attempt to explain why Ive been saying the things Ive beensaying since Prop 8s passing. They may seem extreme, perhaps even polarizing. I openly admit

    this without much regret. In a way, Im taking on the world. I am trying to challenge systems of

    privilege more complex, entrenched, and hegemonic than any of the other identity-basedprivileges that are regularly discussed. Arguably these two interdependent systems of privilege

    propagate those we are more familiar with such as white privilege, male privilege, heterosexual

    privilege, and nondisabled privilege. There is currently no theory that supports what I shall

    describe, but the model for systems of privilege fits perfectly. What follows requires someintense critical thinking, so I request you do your best to separate out your feelings. Simply

    reading these ideas will likely challenge your own privilege. Despite the feelings that led me to

    these new courses of action and rhetoric, the following discourse is intentionally designed to bewithout regard for feelings, my own included.

    Allan Johnson talks about systems of privilege as being dominatedby privileged groups,identified with privileged groups, and centered on privileged groups. Positions of power tend to

    be dominated by members of the privileged group. Privileged groups are also usually taken as

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    the standard of comparison that represents the best that society has to offer. And, society focuses

    its attention on the privileged group, who they are, what they do and say, and how they do it.

    The result creates an imbalance of power, such that all other groups are in some way oppressedor taken advantage of. Affirmative Action and other equity-driven programs are designed to

    compensate for this imbalance of power. (These definitions have been paraphrased/excerpted

    from JohnsonsPrivilege, Power, and Difference.)

    Discussing issues of privilege can be very challenging. I know that when I teach my Gender

    Justice class, one of the most important things we have to do (especially for the men) is helpthem understand the difference between thesystem and ourselves as individuals. This is

    important, because in the class, many of the men feel that the topic of patriarchy attacks them, as

    if they are the individuals that use, abuse, and control women. They, as individuals, are not

    (hopefully). But, they still exist within a system that delivers that connotation. They should nottake it personally, for example, if a woman is afraid when walking alone at night. They are not

    personally responsible for that fear, but they do have a responsibility to resist the system that

    promotes that fear through their words and behaviors as individuals. This is where the

    conversation opens to talking about men becoming allies, realizing the privilege they have, andproactively addressing and being aware of the way that privilege affects the way they relate to

    society. This same notion is the same in all other systems of privilege: race, gender, ability,sexual orientation, etc., as well as the two I shall discuss. I think this concept of a difference

    between systems and individuals is important to keep in mind as you read on.

    It is at this point that I wish to discuss two different kinds of privilege that I perceive. They arevery much intertwined, and yet I believe it is very important to distinguish them as two separate

    systems working together. I am going to call these systems religion and faith. Both of those

    words mean a lot of different things to a lot of different people. For the sake of this treatise, I amgoing to specify exactly what I mean and how I am using them, and will rely on those

    operational definitions consistently.

    The first system of privilege is based around religion. By religion, I am referring to the cultures,

    traditions, holidays, customs, rules and dogmatic beliefs that are specified or enshrined by a

    unified community. In the United States, it is easy to conclude that Protestant Christianity(Methodist, Lutheran, Episcopalian, Baptist, Presbyterian, Evangelical, etc.) represents the

    privileged religion. (Catholicism often benefits from this privilege by being under the umbrella

    of Christianity, but not to quite the same extent.) Using our operational definition of privilege,

    we see how our society is dominated by, indentified with, and centered on Christianity in thisway. Our elected leaders are predominantly Christian. Our calendar identifies with Christian

    traditions. Christian symbols are very visible throughout our culture. Our society focuses

    attention on the work and accomplishments of Christian organizations. Many cable channels arededicated to specifically Christian programming. As a result, all other religious groups are in

    some way oppressed or provided less power, including Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, and all other

    major and minor religions, as well as Agnosticism (indifference or indecision towards a religion)and Atheism (without religion).

    Last year, we saw a great example of Christian privilege play out here on the Iowa State

    University campus due to the presence of a cross in the Memorial Unions chapel. The cross

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    dominated the space and made it less welcoming to other religious groups who wished to use that

    space. Many resisted its removal or covering, and took offense that it could even represent a

    problem. Some were quoted as saying things like Well, like 80% of the campus is Christian, soit should get to stay. This majoritarian mindset is representative of the greater systemic

    privilege in our nation, captured by lines like, We were founded as a Christian nation, or even,

    We are a Christian nation. The former is quite provably untrue, while the latter unfortunatelydoes accurately represent the privilege Christianity has in our society.

    It is important to note that there is a lot of variety within Christianity. As many have pointed out,there are Christians who would not vote in favor of Proposition 8 or other such measures. This is

    a perfectly valid point. It is not my intent in this treatise to delve into complexities and variation

    within Christian privilege. I would offer, though, that the system of privilege around Christianity

    tolerates this variation because it actually amplifies the power of the consistencies that are foundthroughout Christianity. Consider, as examples, Christian-based holidays (Christmas, Easter,

    Halloween, St. Patricks Day), the ubiquitous expectations set forth by the 10 Commandments,

    or simply the wide distribution of Bibles (like the Gideons in every hotel room). Though there

    is variation within Christianity, its core consistencies still persist as the privileged religiousculture in our society.

    The second system of privilege I wish to discuss is the one centered on faith. By faith, I refer

    to beliefs or systems of belief that include a presence or being ofpreternatural or supernatural

    power, something unproven by science and not existing in the natural world as we know it. In

    very broad terms, this is known as theism, and I will interchange faith and theism as such.Very few examples of polytheism persist in our modern world, with one predominant exception

    being Hinduism, which is actually the third largest religion in the world, after Christianity and

    Islam. In the context of our society in the US, though, theism almost always means monotheism.Monotheism is a belief that there is one god or deity who has or continues to exercise power and

    control over our very existence. And, in our culture, monotheism almost always refers to a belief

    in the Abrahamic God, the one worshipped by Christians, Jews, and Muslims.

    So, in terms of privilege, monotheistic faith is privileged over polytheistic faith and atheism.

    Most examples of this privilege, particularly how it is dominated and centered, overlap with theexamples of religious privilege provided earlier. There are several unique examples that

    demonstrate how we theistically identify, such as God-given rights, In God, We Trust, One

    Nation, Under God, God Bless You! and God Bless America. In this recent election, we

    also saw Godless, being used as an attack on various candidates. This, I think, demands weconsider the definition of atheism.

    Atheism has been interpreted in many ways. Because of the messages our privileged societyoffers about atheism, it is often interpreted by believers to mean anti-God. This does not

    accurately describe atheists. I believe most atheists would admit that they cannot prove that

    there is no god(s). They merely see no reasonable proof or evidence that there is a probable deitynor any personal value in believing in such a claim. They do not live their lives believing there

    is no God; they simply live their life withoutGod. Note also that many atheists still participate

    in religion, or traditions rooted in religion. (Similarly, some theists do not participate in a

    religion.) It is also important to note that atheists are no less moral than theists, and share many

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    of the same morals that are rooted in religion. Obviously, they cannot escape the norms and

    society (i.e. religious culture) in which they were raised. However, these morals can be and are

    constructed and rationalized without consideration for theistic faith or religious dogma. Just asan example, consider the Golden Rule: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.

    While this value is rooted in many scriptures, it does not originate there. It actually is

    responsible for our evolution as a species. Our survival as humanity depends upon our socialinterdependence. Though our complex reasoning skills now allow us to consider and define

    morals, this core guiding value is consistent across all cultures and belief systems because it is,

    in fact, biologically instinctual. Thus, atheists can interpret and apply morals through suchsecular philosophies as Buddhism and humanism.

    Atheists live in a society where those who do believe in God are privileged, andand heres

    where it gets trickysociety also privileges the beliefs of monotheists over other groups sets ofbeliefs. This notion is at the core of my argument, and I shall expand upon it in different ways

    shortly

    I say that this is where things get tricky, because beliefs are very personal. I think this is whymany have taken offense at my comments, but I want to try to explain why I think my words

    caused such reactions. Before I proceed, I want to reiterate how important it is to consider thedifferences and yet dependent relationship between privilege around religion and privilege

    around faith/theism. The privileged faith, monotheism, is incorporated by most of the religions

    in our culture. In fact, I would argue that religion itselfits culture and traditionsis a

    byproduct of theistic belief. It is impossible separate the two: the privilege of Christianitydepends on the privilege of monotheism, and is essentially the most privileged manifestation

    constructed around monotheism. Likewise, monotheism depends on the religions organized

    around it in order to be sustained through society over time. (If the conceptualization of thissounds interesting, I encourage you to read more on memetics.) Please keep in mind that when I

    refer to faith, I am talking specifically about theism, belief in something supernatural. For many,

    the customs and values of religion cannot be separated from the monotheistic faith, but I believeit is imperative to see the two operating separately.

    I know I left the tricky part hanging, but Im building up to addressing it. In a sociology class Itook in my undergrad, our professor was wholly dedicated to challenging us to critically think,

    and she spent a great deal of time explaining what exactly that means and how it looks. She

    offered that there are eight steps in approaching critical thinking:

    1. Purpose What is my goal or objective?2. Question What is the problem or issue Im addressing?

    3. Assumptions What am I presupposing or taking for granted?

    4. Point of view What is my orientation or frame of reference in approaching thisquestion?

    5. Data, Information, Evidence What facts, observations, and experiences have I

    collected?6. Concepts and Ideas What theories, definitions, axioms, laws, principles, and models

    do I have to work with?

    7. Inferences, Interpretation, and Conclusions What can I derive from the critical

    thinking process I have undertaken?

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    8. Implications and Consequences What impacts do these conclusions have? Or more

    simply, what now?

    She also offered four levels to consider: clarity, accuracy/relevance, depth, and significance.This seems like a lengthy process, but the more it is practiced, the more streamlined it becomes.

    This order of thinking could easily be applied to every decision we make in our entire day, but

    our minds are so incredible, we go through the process so quickly that we hardly realize it.When it comes to more complicated problems, especially issues with no easy right answer, it is

    important to slow down and consider all of the steps. If too much is missed along the way,

    critical thinking falters.

    The two most important and challenging steps in the critical thinking process are considering

    assumptions and point of view. Time must be spent to sort out the biases in our approach,

    especially because humans are prone to egocentric thinking. Here are the five ways egocentricthinking often interferes with critical thinking:

    1. Its true because I believe it. (Innate egocentrism)

    2. Its true because we believe it. (Innate sociocentrism)

    3. Its true because I want to believe it. (Innate wish fulfillment)4. Its true because I have always believed it. (Innate self-validation)

    5. Its true because it is in my selfish interest to believe it. (Innate selfishness)In other words, in order to effectively critically think, we have to consider issues by setting aside

    our beliefs. This is the ultimate challenge to the privilege of faith! Faith is entirely constructed

    out of beliefs, so it could never stand up to rational critical thinking. The reason faith persists is

    because faith-based beliefs, themselves, are privileged in society.

    Let us consider things from the beginning of the cycle: How does faith come about? Nothing

    is more personal than ones beliefs. All individuals come to define their beliefs for themselves,but those ideas and that context have to originate somewhere. I would offer that theism depends

    upon the five variations of egocentric thinking I just listed, and takes advantage of our cognitive

    development to indoctrinate itself.

    Let us consider the five egocentric assumptions, beginning with the first: egocentrism itself.

    Jean Piaget, the educational psychologist, concluded that the cognitive function of youngchildren is naturally egocentric, meaning they do not have the mental ability to understand that

    other people may have different opinions and beliefs from themselves. During this stage of

    cognitive development (known as preoperational), children have imaginative minds and display

    animistic thought, which means they can assign emotions or living attributes to inanimateobjects. This is why to a young child, something imaginary (a monster under the bed, Santa

    Claus, etc.) can be believed to be quite real. It is not until childrens thinking develops into what

    Piaget called the concrete operational stage that they can appropriately apply logic and reason,such as through conservation and decentering. At this stage, such imaginary beliefs are

    eventually disproven.

    I challenge that theistic beliefs are promoted in much the same way. At the preoperational stage,

    a God makes perfect sense to a childs thinking. This is where the system of faith starts, or

    rather, starts over (where the chicken lays the egg). Theistic faith is taught as truth while, to

    the childs level of cognitive development, truth does not require rationalization (innate

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    egocentrism). As the child grows older, a society that privileges theism will continue to

    encourage that child to maintain those beliefs, even without concrete evidence to support it,

    which reflects innate sociocentrism. Faith itself promotes innate wish fulfillment as well asinnate selfishness by teaching young children the beliefs that faith is good, one should want faith,

    and faith makes one feel good. They all support each other and support faith itself. And,

    because the beliefs are set up at such a young age, grown adults cannot even remember whenthey first believed, thus fulfilling the innate self-validation. Consider the skeptic who is asked,

    What do you believe? and responds, Well this is what I was raised to believe or I was

    raised ____ (insert religion here). That person is still affected by the supernatural premises thatwere set up and supported so that they would resist concrete reasoning skills.

    I know the word indoctrinate has many negative connotations, but its definition seems quite

    appropriate for the phenomenon of how individuals learn to have faith. The definition I found isto instruct in a doctrine, principle, ideology, etc., esp. to imbue with a specific partisan belief or

    point of view. Because of the system of privilege around theistic faith (and only because of it)

    does faith pervade our society and persist. In essence, we are indoctrinated to support and

    privilege faith before we have cognitively developed enough to challenge its premise. Theultimate conclusion is that faith survives solely by supporting itself, which it can only do by the

    way it is privileged. Also, consider the disconcerting way we label children as Jewish childrenor Protestant children long before they would be ready to make up their own minds about

    religion. That is very different than calling someone the child of Jewish parents. This is an

    issue Richard Dawkins is working very hard to raise consciousness about.

    In conversations I have had with individuals in the week since Prop 8 passed, I have heard many

    examples of this privilege being challenged. Here are some of the things that have been said to

    me:

    I have challenged my beliefs and I do challenge my beliefs and I have already

    come to the conclusions I am at. Ihave studied my faith much more than youprobably have.

    Never question my faith; you project a message of people being wrong when

    they have faith.Clearly you do not have the capacity to see any other view but your own.

    which is ironic considering the fact that youre asking the very same of your

    debate opponentsthat which you do not, yourself, provide.

    No, I wont defend my faith to youfaith is a very personal thing and I wontdefend that to anyone. My faith does not give me privilege in our society,

    identifying as a Christian does. These are two very distinct things.

    I hope, given the context I have created for my perspective, it is clear to see how these statements

    avoid the kind of critical dialogue I am trying to engage in, and actually reflect a dualistic

    perspective. These statements, along with the defensive emotions that accompanied them,represent to me the very privilege I am trying to bring to light. Because our society supports

    privileging theistic beliefs, it has become a societal norm to not question them. In fact, it is

    impolite and disrespectful to even suggest they could be open to question. Douglas Adams

    (author ofHitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy) once said the following that sums this up well:

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    Religion has certain ideas at the heart of it which we call sacred or holy

    or whatever. What it means is, Here is an idea or a notion that youre notallowed to say anything bad about; youre just not. Why not? because youre

    not! If somebody votes for a party that you dont agree with, youre free to argue

    about it as much as you like; everybody will have an argument but nobody feelsaggrieved by it. If somebody thinks taxes should go up or down you are free to

    have an argument about it. But on the other hand if somebody says I mustnt

    move a light switch on a Saturday, you say, I respectthat.Why should it be that its perfectly legitimate to support the Labour party

    or the Conservative party, Republicans or Democrats, this model of economics

    versus that, Macintosh instead of Windows but to have an opinion about how

    the Universe began, about who created the Universe no, thats holy? We areused to not challenging religious ideas. Everybody gets absolutely frantic

    about it because youre not allowed to say these things. Yet when you look at it

    rationally there is no reason why those ideas shouldnt be as open to debate as any

    other, except that we have agreed somehow between us that they shouldnt be.

    I think it is clear to see that what Adams was getting at was what we define as privilege.

    I have reached the end of my rationale and shall now offer my reaction. The words I choseearlier in this week perhaps did not accurately represent the point I was trying to make. I had

    said, I fear people of faith. This is not untrue, but could be perceived as me challenging

    individuals as opposed to the system. Those who I have quoted above all responded in apersonal way, and I will own that my words did not communicate the message I intended. My

    fear is specifically of faith/theistic belief itself because of how it is privileged in our society.

    This is why I specified the importance of separating individuals from the system. Not allindividuals who represent the privileged group are responsible for propagating it, but if they wish

    to be allies to the oppressed, they must be able to recognize their own privilege and consider

    ways they can resistthe system.

    This past Tuesday, many ugly decisions were madedecisions I hope our society looks back

    upon shamefully in the history books. The voters who supported these ballots were motivated by

    fear and ignorance, all of which were enshrined in the ideological privilege of theistic faith. Iknow there are many people who have a rational understanding for same-sex sexual orientations

    that does not conflict with their faith; however, it is the privileging of faith that maintains the

    way our society tolerates intolerance that cannot otherwise be justified.

    I say to you, if you are unwilling or unable to challenge, question, debate, or see past the beliefs

    with which you have been raised, how can you begin to engage in critical thinking about largeand complex issues with which they might intersect? My conclusion at this time is that you

    cannot. I stand by my decision to push forward with these challenges and these questions,

    because I feel it is vital not only to our learning and growth but also as citizens of humanity on a

    greater scale. Note that it is not my expectation that people forsake their beliefs. My goal is to

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    deconstruct the privilege around those beliefs so individuals beliefs no longer have power to

    control society.

    Consider the scope of history. Almost every great war or conflict (if not all) have been motivated

    by conflicts between theistic beliefs. Faith can be used to justify anything, because of its

    privileged freedom from rationalization, and it has repeatedly been used in just this way. Thisweek, it was used as a weapon against me and two of the communities to which I belong,

    resulting in pain and despair I did not know I could experience. I cower pondering what it could

    be used for next. We can stand against the irrational discrimination that has plagued our societythroughout history or continue to enable it. Those are our only two choices. Wont you join with

    me to make the world a better place for all of us?

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