I normally don’t pay much attention to televangelist Pat Robertson of 700 Club fame. However, just when you don’t think he could stoop to more be more of an ass, he proves to be a far bigger ass than you previously thought possible.
The statement that got my dander up this time was this bit quoted in a Yahoo News story:
During the portion of the show where the one-time Republican presidential candidate takes questions from viewers, Robertson was asked what advice a man should give to a friend who began seeing another woman after his wife started suffering from the incurable neurological disorder.
“I know it sounds cruel, but if he’s going to do something, he should divorce her and start all over again, but make sure she has custodial care and somebody looking after her,” Robertson said.
I’m sure this comment from Robertson is very reassuring to his wife.
Fortunately, there are real Christian leaders that can point out just how totally wrong Robertson is. Dr. Russell Moore is the Dean of the School of Theology at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Over at his blog, he had one of the most well written repudiation of Robertson and his ilk that I think I have ever seen or could have hoped for. The whole thing is worth the read, but this bit is outstanding:
Pat Robertson’s cruel marriage statement is no anomaly. He and his cohorts have given us for years a prosperity gospel with more in common with an Asherah pole than a cross. They have given us a politicized Christianity that uses churches to “mobilize” voters rather than to stand prophetically outside the power structures as a witness for the gospel.
But Jesus didn’t die for a Christian Coalition; he died for a church. And the church, across the ages, isn’t significant because of her size or influence. She is weak, helpless, and spattered in blood. He is faithful to us anyway.
If our churches are to survive, we must repudiate this Canaanite mammonocracy that so often speaks for us. But, beyond that, we must train up a new generation to see the gospel embedded in fidelity, a fidelity that is cruciform.
I find the politicization of faith in this country as espoused by Robertson and other caricatures to be so troubling, and so un-Christlike that it has almost caused me to walk away from the faith on more that one occasion. To use a quote often attributed to Ghandi:
“I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ.”
What could be more un-Christlike that to tell someone that it’s OK to break your vow “to love, honor and cherish in sickness and in health” because their spouse’s sickness is “kind of” like being dead?
Of course, sometimes when people age and start to get dementia, they say outlandish things that often don’t make sense. I wonder if Mrs. Robertson will use this as an excuse to take her husband’s advice?