Kosher Candidates
Sankara Saranam
September 16, 2008
Mixing the "milk" and "meat" of politics and religion is not kosher.
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Kosher-Candidates-by-Sankara-Saranam-080916-988.html





With the impending collapse of the US economy, you'd think evangelical 
Christians would face the fact that they banked on the wrong savior in 
George W. Bush. Think again.

McCain certainly has. John bore his cross for seven years in a Vietnamese 
prison camp, but in running for president, he quickly realized that being 
militarily crucified does not a savior make in the eyes of the evangelical 
electorate. In an age where Republican presidential candidates must look 
good with an airbrushed halo in order to win, McCain picked Palin to give a 
virgin birth to his candidacy.

It seems to be working, especially because Christians can be counted upon to 
pick the wrong messiah over and over again. McCain is counting on that too, 
which is ostensibly why he'd rather look all wrong to any sane political 
observer than alright.

The first messiah Christians got wrong was the first one of them all, Jesus. 
But even when Christians figure it out, they just un-figure it out. Bear 
with me through this.

A few weeks ago one Sunday morning, a right-wing conservative Fox News 
viewing Christian who writes to me from time to time -- coincidentally, her 
name is Sarah -- was quietly dozing during Bible study. Suddenly, she jumped 
with a startle and her eyes fell on a strange thing: Joseph was not the 
father of Jesus.

She read that earmarked page a thousand times before, but this time it hit 
her like a ton of congressional pork. If Joseph was not the father of Jesus, 
then Jesus's family tree--provided on the first page of Matthew, starting 
from King David and ending with Joseph--was as relevant to her as Global 
Warming science.

"I learned from a young age," she wrote to me, "that the coming messiah had 
to be a scion of King David. Well, I looked up the word 'scion' recently, 
and that was the missing link. Not that [cough] there is a missing link."

If Jesus was not the son of Joseph, he could not be the messiah because the 
messiah had to be a descendant of King David. But who was the messiah?

At first, Sarah was perplexed, and Lord knows it was a matter of life and 
death to the Iraqis.

"At first, I didn't know," she complained. "Maybe Joseph was. Maybe one of 
Joseph's sons born from Mary was. Whoever it was, it wasn't Jesus." She, 
like millions of other Christians, got the wrong messiah.

Could there be other false prophets in their midst? No time to ask, 
apparently.

Sarah went through a crisis of faith, but predictably rebounded with what 
she says her church calls "Extra Strength Conviction with Scouring Power." 
Sounds like a term out of Scientology's lexicon, but it was just good 
old-fashion denial doing its job of protecting an insecure mind.

The one thing keeping Jesus from being her savior was the virgin birth, and 
Sarah could take care of that as easily as banning a book from her house.

After all, the only thing that got in the way of her own sons being born of 
a virgin was unbiased observation.

But could she ban Matthew? In the throws of her Extra Strength whatever it 
is, she didn't have to. She simply banned any thinking from her mind.

Sarah privately pontificated in an E-mail: "King David's blood is probably 
everywhere by now, well, probably not much of it in Democrats. Whoever the 
next messiah is, he has to come through [lot's of] blood. That's why 
Republican presidents all want to be war presidents. That's also why no 
woman has the right to potentially abort the messiah and make the end of 
days not end on time."

Umm...

After McCain won the Republican nomination, I asked Sarah if she thought he 
might be the messiah. She felt certain of it, and doubly so after he picked 
Palin as his running mate.

"Even Ms. Palin's name is special. Our minister told us that her name, 
"Sarah," like my name, is the same as the Hebrew word "kosher." And is it 
just a coincidence that "deified" is a palindrome? Our next vice-president 
is going to be kosher saintly woman."

Well, that settles it!

Meanwhile, I wondered whether VP Palin would be as kosher as the meat coming 
out of AgriProcessors, of Postville, Iowa, kosher meat producers now under 
investigation for countless violations that somehow none of their 
kosher-keeping fundamentalist Jewish consumers noticed.

The kosher label in politics and on our plates appears to be a useful ploy. 
Either way, McCain's kosher-Sarah pick worked.

Then again, my Sarah was sure George W. Bush was the messiah too. Did she 
still think he was kosher?

She resented my asking of the question, and then became upset with me. 
Finally, she exclaimed, "Stop it! Us trying to figure out who might be the 
messiah is like building a bridge to nowhere!"

After hundreds of exchanges with true believers that ended like that, and 
worse, I always wondered why fundamentalist Christians were not very good at 
building bridges. At last, I know.

Why build a bridge when you live in the clouds?


www.godwithoutreligion.com
Sankara Saranam is a writer, philosopher, lecturer, and tireless proponent 
of pranayama, a technique of intuitive mysticism. He traveled extensively in 
India and Israel researching and writing on spiritual issues. His first 
book, Yoga and Judaism (Astrologue, 1997), showed that the Hebrew Prophets 
were practitioners of various systems of asceticism and pranayama 
(sense-introversion). His most recent work, the multi-award winning God 
Without Religion, seeks to balance the world's divergent and divisive 
cultural views of God with a scientific method of personal introspection and 
pranayama. An ascetic and mystic, Sankara Saranam founded The Pranayama 
Institute as an expression of his ideal to make pranayama techniques 
available worldwide at no cost to students. S. Saranam graduated from 
Columbia University magna cum laude as a student of religion. He has a 
master's degree in Eastern texts and Sanskrit from St. John's College. He is 
also a poet, composer, singer, and classically trained guitarist. S. Saranam 
currently lives with his wife and son in Albuquerque, New Mexico. 

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