A few weeks ago, a 22-year-old man named Jefferson Bethke produced a video called Why I Hate Religion, but Love Jesus. The video shows Bethke standing in a courtyard rhyming about the purity of the teachings of Jesus and the hypocrisy of the church. Jesus preaches healing, surrender, and love, he argues, but religion is rigid, phony, and stale. “Jesus came to abolish religion,” Bethke insists. “Religion puts you in bondage, but Jesus sets you free.”Rico says that YouTube provides Rico's response, by this guy:
The video went viral. As of Thursday, it had acquired more than eighteen million hits on YouTube. It speaks for many young believers who feel close to God but not to the church. It represents the passionate voice of those who think their institutions lack integrity— not just the religious ones, but the political and corporate ones, too.
Right away, many older theologians began critiquing Bethke’s statements. A blogger named Kevin DeYoung pointed out, for example, that it is biblically inaccurate to say that Jesus hated religion. In fact, Jesus preached a religious doctrine, prescribed rituals and worshiped in a temple.
Bethke responded in a way that was humble, earnest, and gracious, and that generally spoke well of his character. He also basically folded. “I wanted to say I really appreciate your article man,” Bethke wrote to DeYoung in an online exchange. “It hit me hard. I’ll even be honest and say I agree one hundred percent.”
03 February 2012
Still too much
David Brooks has a column in The New York Times about religion:
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