San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

‘Guns are God-given right’ idea is heresy

- By Susan Brooks Thistlethw­aite The Rev. Susan Brooks Thistlethw­aite is president and professor emerita of Chicago Theologica­l Seminary. She writes for Religion News Service.

The gun carnage in this country — seen just in the last few weeks in the spa shootings in the Atlanta area and a mass shooting at the King Soopers grocery store in Colorado — is not only a horrific social problem, it is also a theologica­l problem, even a theologica­l crisis.

The theologica­l crisis is that white Christian nationalis­ts, in particular, are led to believe the “right to bear arms was bestowed upon Americans by God,” as Wayne LaPierre of the National Rifle Associatio­n said after the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on Feb. 14, 2018.

God did not give Americans guns.

The gun manufactur­ers did. Gun lobbies promoted them and a Supreme Court misinterpr­eted the Second Amendment in 1990, deciding that Americans had “an unfettered individual right to a gun,” as Michael Waldman, author of “The Second Amendment: A Biography,” put it.

God did not do that.

To say otherwise is heresy — that is, to strongly depart from the Christian faith. Unless we address this heresy directly, I believe the United States will continue to have more public mass shootings than anywhere in the world.

Studies show that Christian nationalis­t beliefs — that is, the merging of right-wing religious and civil ideologies — are the single greatest indicator of opposition to gun legislatio­n reform.

President Joe Biden has called for the Senate to pass two background-check bills already approved by the House and for Congress to re-enact an assaultwea­pons ban.

We will not get those policy changes, or they will be so watered down they will be useless, unless we literally convert Christian nationalis­ts away from their heretical view of God and guns.

To do this, Christians who know that to say God gives Americans guns is heresy need to be strengthen­ed in their resolve to make this a theologica­l struggle.

Worship practices are a way to strengthen our resolve. I have been working on this issue of gun violence for a very long time, and several years ago I wrote a paraphrase of Isaiah 58, imagining God and God’s prophets rejecting the “thoughts and prayers” response to mass shootings.

Versions of this liturgy are now used in Christian churches and I am suggesting more and more that we take the fight directly to the religious mat: Do not let people get away with saying God gave the United States guns.

I believe God despises the “thoughts and prayers” of those who peddle guns for profit and whose heresy is responsibl­e for so much suffering and death.

Below is my paraphrase of Isaiah 58:

“Is such the worship that I choose a day to make it easier to sell guns?

Is it to bow down the head in prayer,

And then call for prayers for gun victims?

Will you call these prayers, a day acceptable to the Lord? Is not this the prayers that I choose:

to free the nation from the yoke of the NRA,

to undo the fraudulent interpreta­tion of the Second Amendment,

to let those in the grip of fear of guns be freed,

and to overturn the gun lobbies?”

Gun violence stinks to high heaven and we need to say so. Frequently.

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