Log in

View Full Version : Glenn Beck and Liberation Theology



Bud Struggle
1st September 2010, 23:56
Of course, he did not call it Moral Majority at his revival on Sunday, but that is basically what it is -- using religion, even calling for a "Black Robe Brigade" of clergy, to use for conservative political purposes. What Beck does is distort Christianity and use it for his particular purpose. I realize most of you people here aren't Christian--but you should at least get a fair understanding of the trick Beck is trying to pull.

A response to Mr. Beck's attack on true Christian principles.

From America (a Catholic) Magazine:

Glenn Beck and Liberation Theology
August 29, 2010
Author: James Martin, S.J.

On Sunday, after his colossal “Restoring Honor” rally in Washington, D.C., Glenn Beck took aim at one of his favorite targets, Barack Obama, but in a novel way. Beck regrets saying a few months ago that President Obama was a “racist.” What he should have said instead, he now realizes, was that he didn’t agree with Obama’s “theology.” And what is Obama’s theology, according to Beck? Liberation theology, of all things.

Here’s Beck’s definition:

I think that it is much more of a theological question that he is a guy who understands the world through liberation theology, which is oppressor and victim….That is a direct opposite of what the gospel is talking about…It's Marxism disguised as religion

As Ronald Reagan used to say, “There you go again.” A few months ago, Beck decided that he would demolish the idea of “social justice,” by telling Christians if their priests, pastors or ministers use that buzz word on Sundays they should leave their churches. As he may or may not have known, the tenets of “social justice” encourage one not only to help the poor but address the conditions that keep them poor. He called that “communist.”

That approach didn’t work all that well for Beck since so many Christian denominations, particularly the Catholic Church, espouse social justice explicitly. But liberation theology? Really?

A little history: Liberation theology began in Latin America in the 1950s and 1960s, and was later was developed more systematically by Catholic theologians who began to reflect on experiences of the poor there. The term was coined by the Rev. Gustavo Gutierrez, a Peruvian priest, in his landmark book A Theology of Liberation, published in 1971. Briefly put, liberation theology (and there are many definitions, by the way) is a Gospel-based critique of the status quo through the eyes of the poor. Contrary to what Beck implies, the liberation theologian doesn’t see himself or herself as victim; rather proponents call us to see how the poor are marginalized by society, work among them, advocate on their behalf, and help them advocate for themselves. It has nothing to do with seeing yourself as victim. It is, like all authentic Christian practices, “other-directed.”

Perhaps more importantly (at least in my reading), it sees the figure of Jesus Christ as the “liberator,” who frees people from bondage and slavery of all kinds. So, as he does in the Gospels, Christ not only frees us from sin and illness, Christ also desires to free our fellow human beings from the social structures that keep them impoverished. This is this kind of “liberation” being espoused. Liberation theologians meditate deeply on Gospel stories that show Christ upending the social structures of the day, in order to bring more—uh oh—social justice into the world. We are also asked to make, as the saying a “preferential option for the poor.”

It’s not hard to see what Beck has against “liberation theology.” It’s one of the same reasons some people are opposed to “social justice.” Both ideas ask us to consider the plight of the poor. And that's disturbing. Some liberation theologians even consider the poor to be privileged carriers of God’s grace. In The True Church and the Poor, Jon Sobrino, a Jesuit theologian, wrote, “The poor are accepted as constituting the primary recipients of the Good News and, therefore, as having an inherent capacity of understanding it better than anyone else." That’s pretty threatening for any comfortable Christian. For not only do we have to help the poor, not only do we have to advocate on their behalf, we also have to see them as perhaps understanding God better than we do.

But that’s not a new idea: It goes back to Jesus. The poor, the sick, the outcast simply "got" him better than the wealthy did. Perhaps because there was less between God and the poor. Maybe that’s why Jesus said in the Gospel of Matthew, “If you wish to be perfect, sell all you have, and you will have treasure in heaven, and follow me.” Like I said, pretty disturbing, then and now.

In its heyday, liberation theology was not without controversy: some in the church, and some in the Vatican, thought it skirted too close to Marxism--including Pope John Paul II. On the other hand, John Paul didn’t shy away from personally involving himself in direct political activism in Poland. It was the Latin American version of social action that seemed to bother him more. But even John Paul affirmed the notion of “preferential option for the poor,” as did Paul VI before him. “When there is question of defending the rights of individuals, the defenseless and the poor have a claim to special consideration,” John Paul wrote in his great encyclical Centesimus Annus, which celebrated 100 years of—uh oh--Catholic Social Teaching.

“Liberation theology” is easy to be against. For one thing, most people don’t have the foggiest idea what you’re talking about. (It even sounds vaguely suspicious, too.) It’s also easier to ignore the concerns of the poor, particularly overseas, than it is to actually get to know them as individuals who make a moral claim on us. For another, there are lots of overheated websites that facilely link it to Marxism. My response to that last critique is to read the Gospels and count how many times Jesus tells us with should help the poor and even be poor. In the Gospel of Matthew, in fact, Jesus tells us that the ones who are to enter the Kingdom of heaven are those who help “the least of my brothers and sisters,” i.e., the poor. After that, read the Acts of the Apostles, and read about the apostles “sharing everything in common.” Then let me know if helping the poor is communist or simply Christian.

I have no idea if President Obama subscribes to liberation theology. But I do. And for me, it’s somewhat personal. Between 1992 and 1994, I worked with East African refugees in Nairobi, Kenya, and participated in Catholic parishes who tried to help poor parishioners (i.e., all the parishioners) reflect on their own struggles through lens of the Gospel. And those Gospel passages that spoke of liberation for the poor were a lifeline to me and to those with whom I worked. Oh, and it’s not only Jesus. His mother had something to say about all that, too. “He has filled the hungry with good things,” says Mary in the Gospel of Luke, “and sent the rich away empty.” And more: "He has brought down the powerful from their thrones and lifted up the lowly."

Liberation theology has also animated some of the great Christian witnesses of our age. Several of my brother Jesuits (and their companions), some of whom wrote and taught liberation theology, were assassinated at the University of Central America in 1989, by elements of the Salvadoran military--precisely for their work with the poor, all as Christ had encouraged them to do. Archbishop Oscar Romero, the archbishop of San Salvador who was martyred in 1980, also heard the call of Christ the Liberator. So did the four courageous Catholic churchwomen who were martyred that same year in El Salvador.

These are my heroes. These are the ones who “restore honor.”

It’s hard to ignore the fact that Jesus chose to be born poor; he worked as what many scholars now say was not simply a carpenter, but what might be called a day laborer; he spent his days and nights with the poor; he and his disciples lived with few if any possessions; he advocated tirelessly for the poor in a time when poverty was widely considered to be a curse; he placed the poor in many of his parables as over and above the rich; and he died an utterly poor man with only a single seamless garment to his name. Jesus lived and died as a poor man. Why is this so hard for modern-day Christians to see? Liberation theology is not Marxism disguised as religion. It is Christianity presented in all its disturbing fullness.

Glenn Beck’s opposition to “social justice” and “liberation theology” is all the more difficult to understand because of his cloaking of himself in the mantle of believer. “Look to God and make your choice,” he said on Sunday.

If he looked at Jesus more carefully he would see someone who already made a choice: for the poor.

James Martin, SJ


http://www.americamagazine.org/blog/entry.cfm?blog_id=2&entry_id=3224

Skooma Addict
2nd September 2010, 00:24
The vast majority of people who believe in God are in a way similar to Glenn Beck. There is just no way they could believe some of the things they do without purposely deluding themselves, or they are simply unaware of any of the facts which go against their beliefs.

RGacky3
2nd September 2010, 08:04
What Beck does is distort Christianity and use it for his particular purpose. I realize most of you people here aren't Christian--but you should at least get a fair understanding of the trick Beck is trying to pull.

I consider myself a christian, and yeah, its such a slap in the face and insult to christianity, the stuff that he does and people like pat robertson are discracefull.

Bud Struggle
2nd September 2010, 11:47
Well, while it's not in fashion around here at RevLeft, Christian Liberation Theology is as legitimate a form of Communism as any other and certainly has more adherents than all of the Trotslyists and Stalinists and Maoists combined.

It may well do with some consideration.

That being said--as a belief it is loosing ground in South America to Pat Robinson style Christianity. People seem to like the Born Again/Capitalistic form of Christianity better.

RGacky3
2nd September 2010, 12:23
That being said--as a belief it is loosing ground in South America to Pat Robinson style Christianity. People seem to like the Born Again/Capitalistic form of Christianity better.

I don't know if thats at all true, socialism, although always popular in latin America is on the upswing, and it seams like the liberation theology (perhaps not in its origional form) is more popular than ever.

When it comes to Pat Robinson, thats not a form of christianity, its a form of religious jingoism.

Bud Struggle
2nd September 2010, 12:24
When it comes to Pat Robinson, thats not a form of christianity, its a form of religious jingoism.

I agree there.

Dean
2nd September 2010, 15:02
The vast majority of people who believe in God are in a way similar to Glenn Beck. There is just no way they could believe some of the things they do without purposely deluding themselves, or they are simply unaware of any of the facts which go against their beliefs.
How pretentious.

Kiev Communard
2nd September 2010, 21:24
The vast majority of people who believe in God are in a way similar to Glenn Beck. There is just no way they could believe some of the things they do without purposely deluding themselves, or they are simply unaware of any of the facts which go against their beliefs.

The same can be said of the proponents of "free market" delusions.

Che a chara
8th September 2010, 03:31
Glenn Beck as of late has tried to hijack the meanings of social justice and civil rights and use his own interpretation to gain support for his totally flawed outlook. Alveda King's speech at the 'restoring honour' rally totally smacked of social justice. From what I hear, it's the same kind of social justice championed by Obama, the liberals and the progressives, but Beck's cronies deliberately and hypocritically reject this. This is a strategy to just draw a line and distinguish a difference between them and theirselves.

When Beck speaks of his own kind of social justice he makes a point of not saying the term 'social justice'. But when Obama speaks of social justice, Beck implies that he's promoting 'Marxist liberal communist socialism'.

I'm sure Obama studied Liberation Theology, as it espouses the kind of social justice that he has promised, but it is a total and epic fail to say that he is a Liberation theologian as it plays into the hands of those who thinks he is transforming America into a "Marxist dictatorship", hence the creatures of the Tea Party and the neo-cons latching onto it.

What you wont see is Beck implementing his or Avelda King's 'restoring honour' social justice to real life as it would give credence to the Liberation Theology he and his robot sheep have slandered for the past few months.

Raúl Duke
8th September 2010, 05:14
I think one has to consider the cultural context Beck is coming from: a White Anglo-Saxon Protestant one. It's known that Protestanism seems to (culturally) focus more on work-ethic/individual than the more socially and communitarian-minded Catholics (which includes things such as Liberation Theology, etc).

synthesis
8th September 2010, 07:16
...yet Glenn Beck was raised Catholic and practices Mormonism.

Che a chara
8th September 2010, 14:13
Don't get me started on the madness of Mormonism. This is why Beck is completely obsessed with trying to place Obama in some sort of Muslim and marxist religion, as it diverts attention away from his own beliefs.

Super underpants much ?

Revolution starts with U
8th September 2010, 17:44
wait... Beck is a mormon?

Bud Struggle
8th September 2010, 21:38
wait... Beck is a mormon? Big Time.

synthesis
9th September 2010, 01:00
Yup. It's funny because a large portion of the Protestant fundamentalists with whom Beck has associated himself consider him to be nothing less than a full-fledged Satanist, due to his membership in such an "aberrant" Christian doctrine. The cynicism on both sides would be pretty comedic if it weren't so potentially terrifying.

Raúl Duke
9th September 2010, 01:09
...yet Glenn Beck was raised Catholic and practices Mormonism.

Yes, but if he were to speak out against charity and stuff in a Catholic-majority country one could expect a large backlash due to Catholicism's focus on universal social welfare.

synthesis
9th September 2010, 01:31
Where has Beck spoken out against charity? A key tactic of the right is to try and dissociate "charity" from "welfare," making the case for "voluntary contributions" and thereby ignoring the presence of necessity.

Bud Struggle
9th September 2010, 01:33
Yup. It's funny because a large portion of the Protestant fundamentalists with whom Beck has associated himself consider him to be nothing less than a full-fledged Satanist, due to his membership in such an "aberrant" Christian doctrine. The cynicism on both sides would be pretty comedic if it weren't so potentially terrifying.

Actually, I happened today on some born again preacher on the radio that read a open letter to Beck asking him to find Jesus and quit his low diwn ways when it comes to religion but to keeo on doing what he's doing when it comes to politics.

The fellow was really torn by Beck.

synthesis
9th September 2010, 01:40
It's a pretty tough balancing act, I must say. Much like the left, the right is constantly addressing the divisions between its economic and social/religious-focused sectors. When the gap is bridged, it is usually by an especially charismatic personality. The fact that Beck still struggles to do so gives me a slight measure of hope that we're not going to be protesting against "President Beck" in 2013.

Bud Struggle
9th September 2010, 14:10
Well Beck would be double the threat if he really was a Fundamentalist. His Mormonism is really a very lucky thing for the nation.

And who says that America isn't a blessed country. :)

Conquer or Die
9th September 2010, 23:24
Glenn Beck seems to be initiating a religion around himself. The great contribution of the Hebrew tribes was to codify laws that applied to all equally - setting forward in motion the beginnings of a progress not linked to an individual's power, but what is necessarily right and wrong. Glenn Beck is a modern day Machiavellian prophet - perhaps linked to his conversion to that Mormonism from which he sold out to against the church.

The Mormons set forth themselves as a new tribe of Israel - not linked to a set of laws of equality and justice but rather a personal conquest that guarantees pilfering and profit and inequality. It is the continuation of their personal, individual interest with which to dominate the flock that has become the full realization of the negative aspect of Manifest Destiny.

This crass deviation; a solely conquistador religiosity grounded in personal animosity and self satisfaction was nearly crushed by the Federal Government in 1861. It was only the outbreak of Civil War that stopped the elimination of this perversion.

Glenn Beck is Joseph Smith resurrected for a new age. A warrior-cretin formed from a combination of irrationality, blind greed, and emotional conniving. Glenn Beck is an enemy of the people, and more importantly, an enemy of justice.

Bud Struggle
9th September 2010, 23:37
^^^That is a very interesting analysis.