how does one stage a coup in such a tightly-held organization?
**Hi Anonymous, and welcome back. You are referring to what I called a "coup" in 2004. I was speaking almost figuratively. Two distinct factions had sprung up over the previous ten years. The newer one might be called "liberal," which held that the church needed to tear down the walls of exclusivity and let new ideas, people and programs come in to invigorate the church. And the other was, well, pretty much the opposite. They liked walls because they believed that any change from what the founder had done, prescribed or thought about would cause the fragile structure of the denomination and belief system to fall apart. As it turned out, both of them were right. A lot of big money from the heyday of Christian Science was still around and able to finance programs like the website I was involved with. The old guard raised countless squawks about how the religion was being watered down, but their objections were overruled by the new leadership, which had the cunning and force of will to hedge itself about with the wealth and ingenuity of several key players. I was part of that new guard, recruited for my rebel nature, willingness to be led and the flattery of being brought to some level of prominence in a new venture.
The reason both factions hastened the demise of the "movement" is that both were based on magical thinking, which couldn't withstand the ever-increasing prevalence of more realistic views of the world. The old guard believed that Mary Baker Eddy had invented something so radical that it was unique, and that its uniqueness - and therefore its very life - was preserved only by keeping it unadulterated, i.e. unchanged in the least degree. The new guard had believed that with just a few tweaks, Christian Science would become popular again. People would look past the nineteenth-century world view and see that it was basic christianity for the modern era, heedless of the fact that christianity itself was dying out because of its fundamental irrelevance and corrupted institutions. At the same time, it believed that many of the central tenets and systems should be preserved. So, for instance, it published Eddy's foundational book, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, word for word as she had left it 150 years before. The problem is that the book was prohibited from ever being revised after her death - regardless of new information about how the world works. Her view of evolution, for example, was to ultimately blow it off even while admitting that Darwin had a reasonable explanation. Welcome to the two-mindedness of Christian Science. You can call Darwin a perceptive thinker and at the same time deny his validity because ultimately he was talking about the material world, which Eddy taught was essentially unreal. The liberals failed because they really weren't all that liberal, and all the lipstick they could trowel onto the pig of an outdated world view couldn't convince very many people that here was something they could reliably believe in and practice. Especially when it involved abstinence from the health care practices that have become the standard throughout the world.
So the "coup" came about because there were some other well-financed and savvy people (today we would call them tea-baggers) who were willing to take advantage of the succession system in the church and put a couple of its people on the Board of directors. These, in turn, raising the specter of fiscal irresponsibility (the church had squandered millions in its camouflage efforts) worked on enough of the remaining new guarders to turn on their liberal leader and throw her out. Once she was gone it was easy to undo all the innovations she had put in place. The walls went up again and there was universalrecognition that if the movement was going to die out, life for the old guarders should be kept comfortable to the end. We're talking about a very elderly population here, people generally not inclined to change anyway, and fierce about protecting their comfort. So, the world stopped hearing about Christian Science in either its new or its old form, and never missed it.
Safely inside its cocoon, the members congratulate themselves on their purity and go about their rituals as always. And Christian Science continues to die with each of their deaths.
I hope you see my point in the last several posts. It's not that anybody did anything wrong that caused the demise of Christian Science. Its basic premises cannot stand up to the realities that the physical sciences reveal. It's old. It's creepy. It's delusional. It's not only snake oil, it's snake oil that has far exceeded its expiration date.
4 comments:
That was a different "anonymous"! I'm the old "anonymous". Anyway ...
"... fierce about protecting their comfort ... " Ain't that the truth. Cultural Christian Science is collapsing under the dead weight of its own hypocrisy -- no doubt about it. They know "it's over" in Boston, and they're circling the wagons to protect their perogatives (i.e., $$$) while the "movement" collapses around them. It's such a vicious environment there right now.
Then again -- let's face it, the vicious environment didn't do Ginny in. Ginny did herself in. You know it. I know it. Sure, the "tea-baggers" were looking for an excuse to take her down, but she was felled by her own financial shenanigans (her maid on the church's payroll -- omg).
Having said that, may I suggest that you have merely abandoned one blind faith system for another? "God," after all, is the ultimate non-falsifiable hypothesis, and -- with all respect -- your confident endorsement of the "realities that the physical sciences reveal" smacks of belief more than genuine understanding. Physics, as we know it, ceases to exist as we asymptotically approach the moment of the "Big Bang" -- leaving cosmologists with a big existential question mark they may well never be able to answer. Look, I've read just about every piece of paper in the MBE Library and, yeah, the ol' girl had her moments of delirium ("mental assasins," etc.), BUT ... there's sober-minded reason to think that Mary Baker Glover Patterson Eddy may have been onto something. Maybe a lot. Maybe not. But maybe ...
(cont'd)
(...cont'd from previous comment)
I would urge you to leave your mind open to that possibility. I know that may be asking a lot. Those people in Boston, a lot of them are raging assholes. I gather a few of them were pretty shitty to you -- and, for what it's worth, you're in good company there. More than a few, I suspect, don't even believe what they're preaching. (I've been in a meeting or two with Tom Black where I wondered whether he was one of them. But then I decided, no, he's just senile.)
The paradox, is that the assholes, in their own way, may be more open-minded then you are. I really hate to say that because you're a thoughtful, sensitive man, a nuanced thinker, a good soul, and they're ... well, they're assholes. And, in a number of cases (cf. Thos Black), just plain dumb. But the fact is, your categorical categorization of Christian Science as "delusional" is, well, thoughtless -- and by thoughtless, I don't mean "rude," I mean "facile" and, because it's unprovable, unjustified. And beneath you.
Bottom line: You may be right. But you may not be. In a world of unending uncertainty, humility's just about all I've got.
I too was wondering how a coup is ever possible in that organization. I'm still not certain it is possible. Then I thought of the way some sports universities fire a coaching staff. Someone, somewhere has to offer bags of cash to the out going crew (the overthrown). If the offer is generous enough, the parting is amicable and publicly smooth. So I'll presume that the wealthy people you mentioned made a sensational golden parachute for Ms. Harris. In the end, almost all of us are for sale, irrespective of our religious beliefs.
Surely you don't begrudge others from all organized religions from feeling content, even happy because of their beliefs? You can't be that bitter?
It's not all that hard to oust someone in a closed off little group like TMC - all you need is patience and time to convince like-minded conservatives that someone has to go. I doubt there was any extraordinary parachute involved with the ouster - whatever it was was probably arranged well in advance by the oustees. In this kind of organization all you've got to do is "pray over it" in order to justify anything. And of course have the right people on your side - and tell them you prayed.
Surely you don't begrudge others from all organized religions from feeling content, even happy because of their beliefs? You can't be that bitter?
Got nothing to do with being "bitter." Just as I don't begrudge someone from getting drunk or high in the comfort of their own home or among friends, people can take comfort in their religious delusions. It's when they foist it on others - children and non-believers - that makes them begrudge-able.
Any bitterness is sweetened by the clear fact that this organization and its influence in the world is rapidly sinking into impotence.
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