*This essay was first published as a guest post at The Wild Hunt Blog, courtesy of Jason Pitzl-Waters.
Rob Kerby, Senior Editor
at beliefnet, wrote a recent article titled “What can the Third World teach us about
witchcraft?.” This has resulted in
the concern of and critique by Pagans, but it should also interest those in
other religious communities. We are practicing Evangelical Christians, and we
are very interested in what Christians and Pagans have to say about one another
in hopes of light being shed on our respective spiritual pathways.
Unfortunately, misunderstanding, misrepresentation, and hostility have been
characteristic traits of our exchanges throughout history. In our minds,
Kerby’s article only intensified this problem.
After reading the Kerby
article, we are left wondering what the piece teaches us about witchcraft.
While we did not necessarily learn anything about witchcraft from his essay, we
did learn that he believes witchcraft in all its forms does great damage to
civilization in the “Third World” and elsewhere, and that strong measures
should be taken to eradicate it from the West. In addition to other problematic
features, we were deeply concerned that Kerby claims that witchcraft is a
capital offense in Saudi Arabia, punishable by beheading. Why did he make this
claim? Is this something the “Third World” can teach us about witchcraft, or is
this one of many sensational claims by Kerby?
Those in Pagan circles
have responded strongly to the piece, and with good reason. Kerby provides no
solid substantiation for his claims, demonstrates a lack of familiarity with
the spiritual practices and beliefs he critiques, and as a result, the piece
creates fear and suspicion of witchcraft (and broader Paganism as well). While
Christians have often accused Paganism of superstition, the irony is that the
Christian community has often approached Paganism superstitiously. Kerby’s
piece only adds to the superstition and suspicion, made worse by the
stereotypes and fears that often underlie such representations.
What
we learned from reading Kerby’s essay and the responses to it from Pagans is
that we have a long way to go in pursuit of charity and sound argumentation in
our post-Christendom and pluralistic public square. We are charter members of
the Evangelical Chapter of the Foundation for Religious Diplomacy. Our chapter aims to develop interreligious
relationships and conversations in civility and without compromise with those
of other religious and spiritual traditions. Our work in the chapter represents
a new movement in Evangelicalism. The chapter seeks accuracy and fairness in
understanding, and embodies a relational and dialogical approach, while
addressing substantial differences in practice and belief between various
religious and spiritual communities. Two examples of this approach are the
books Beyond the Burning Times: A Pagan and Christian in
Dialogue (written by Philip
Johnson and Gus diZerega, and edited by John Morehead; published by Lion, UK,
April 2009), and Connecting Christ: How to Discuss Jesus in a World
of Diverse Paths (Paul Louis
Metzger; Thomas Nelson, May 2012—this work includes an article on Paganism and
a response by Gus diZerega). We have been very grateful for our charitable and
constructive engagements in reasoned argumentation with Dr. diZerega (who
mentioned our exchanges in his beliefnet post
on Kerby’s article). We welcome other
opportunities for such collaboration. We also encourage Evangelicals to get
involved in our FRD chapter and for Pagans to form their own FRD chapter so as
to have a place at the table with other religions and spiritual paths. Over
time, such collaboration may help mitigate against depictions like Kerby’s.
In our post-Christendom, pluralistic public square,
Christians must learn to show respect for other belief and praxis systems by
substantiating our claims and criticisms and arguing for the cogency of our own
convictions on level ground also occupied by others. We must also seek to
demonstrate that our Christian convictions promote the common good and pursue
conversations with others from varying viewpoints who would do the same. One
person self-identified as “unap” wrote in a comment posted in response to the
Kerby article: “Crimes against humanity - death, torture, sacrifice, grave
robbing and mutilation - are crimes pretty much everywhere. They need no
special pleading for more punishment because you think those crimes are belief
based.” Solid argument on level ground in civility.
We
encourage both Evangelicals and Pagans to enter into sustained dialogue, with
the former through our chapter, and the latter through the formation of a FRD
chapter. The only way we will move beyond witch hunts and superstition is if we
enter into public square discourse with level heads in search of charity and
sound arguments.
Paul Louis Metzger, Ph.D. is
Professor of Christian Theology and Theology of Culture at Multnomah Biblical
Seminary/Multnomah University; Charter Member, Evangelical Chapter of the
Foundation for Religious Diplomacy. John W. Morehead is Director, Western
Institute for Intercultural Studies; Director, Evangelical Chapter of the
Foundation for Religious Diplomacy.
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