"Let's meet at my house Sunday before the
game." "Keep using my name in vain,
I'll make rush hour longer." "My way
is the highway." "You think it's hot
here?" "Don't make me come down there."
These and other inspiring messages have appeared
on many large billboards throughout the United
States during the last couple of years. They are
all signed "God." I maintain that they
are among the most offensive and insensitive signs
a driver is forced to look at on our highways,
and the people who should be most offended are
Christians themselves.
See, as a secular humanist, I can react in two
ways to these stern divine admonitions written
in large white letters on a stark black background.
I can get irritated, in which case I switch the
cassette player on to listen to my favorite Kurt
Vonnegut novel and have a laugh. Or I can laugh
directly at the signs. My favorite one is "We
need to talk." I keep looking for God's email
or voice mail, but can't find it anywhere.
But a good Christian should be much more disturbed
than I am. I should know. I used to be one. Where
I grew up, I was told that it is a sin of incredible
arrogance to pretend to speak in God's name unless
He has directly given authorization to you via
personal revelation. To have the gall not only
to speak on His behalf, but to actually sign His
name, is as bad as falsifying a signature on a
cosmic check drawn at the Bank of Infinite Wisdom,
and the consequences for the perpetrator of the
misdeed might be eternal bad credit.
If I were still a Christian, I would be outraged
at this cheap publicity stunt, which is unlikely
to lead anybody down the path of eternal salvation
or spiritual enlightenment. If I were not a Christian
but still believed in some kind of God, I would
be doubly offended by the profanity of the advertising
campaign and by the fact that the signature at
the end is clearly the one of an impostor.
Please understand that I am not calling for a
boycott, censorship or legal action. Unfortunately,
in this country money can buy you anything, regardless
of your lack of taste. If you are powerful enough
you can afford to insult anybody and still be
admired by a large portion of the public. After
all, George W. Bush Jr. insulted his chief opponent
for the Presidential elections of 2000, Al Gore,
by "accusing" him of being a "point-headed"
intellectual. Routinely people who want to sell
a product to the American public air commercials
in which rather than telling you why their latest
creation is so good they waste millions of dollars
attempting to depict the competition as a bunch
of morons. And now it is time for God to get on
the publicity bandwagon. I suppose that if Jesus
were alive today he would have to do the rounds
of talk shows.
What I am calling for is simply a minimum of
self-imposed decency. If you want to believe in
whatever supernatural entity tickles your fancy
and makes you feel better about what-after all-is
a pretty meaningless universe, fine. If you want
to brainwash your children into following suit
to practice your particular version of nonsense,
that is also your right (unless you withdraw medical
care from them as a result, in which case you
are culpable of murder). If you wish to witness
the glorious power of your particular make and
model of god, you have plenty of opportunities
to do so. But why is it that you need to force
other people into having part in your fantasy
world? That is what happens when you put signs
on the highway, because people cannot avoid looking
at them. That is also what happens when you wish
to force a prayer at a graduation ceremony. Have
you ever stopped to think that you may have suddenly
transformed what was a routine (in the case of
driving) or fun (in the case of graduation) activity
for everybody into your own special pulpit, with
the consequence of unnecessarily making other
people feel like outsiders, unwanted, undeserving?
Is that really the Christian thing to do?
When you open a "Christian" retail
store, have you thought about the fact that immediately
a good percentage of your potential clients feel
alienated and unwelcome? And incidentally, What
Would Jesus Do if He found out that you use His
name to sell cheap merchandise for personal profit?
I have an idea of what He would do, but you don't
need to trust a heathen: just check Matthew 21:11-13
in your own Holy Book to find out.
The problem, of course, is that religion-to be
successful and spread-has to be obnoxious, overbearing,
always ready to take advantage of any opportunity
to make converts or to stigmatize enemies. When
it doesn't, as in the case of Judaism, it confines
itself to a small group of practitioners, which
significantly augments its chances of going extinct.
But the practitioners of such aggressive religions
need to keep one fundamental distinction in mind:
the message is true or false independently of
how good your advertising agent is. It is common
practice in this country to (probably justly)
criticize politicians for governing by opinion
polls and spin doctoring. But we don't think this
is good. How do you think God is reacting to the
continuous twisting of His message in the name
of more proselytizing? Are you sure that you shouldn't
have a private talk with Him before putting up
another sign on the highway?
Back
to Article Index | Home |