Is reality televangelism wrong?
AT ISSUE: A Southern California production company has begun casting
for a new reality TV show titled “Pulpit Masters.” Contestants will
participate in a 10-week competition designed to determine “America’s
next inspired leader to make a positive difference in millions of
people’s lives,” according to the company’s website. Critics have
said that the show, which doesn’t have a network yet, will cheapen
the art of preaching, reducing it to a popularity contest. Does the
proposed show exploit religion, generally speaking, and religious
leaders specifically?
“Pulpit Masters” does not sound attractive to me, either as an
educational or entertaining program, but depending on the inspiration
and intentions of its producers and the participating ministers, it
may turn out to be a worthwhile show. I continue to be amazed at the
variety that has surfaced in reality television in the last few
years, and there is nothing about religion that need be off limits.
If “Pulpit Masters” does make it to show time, the audience will
have to judge whether it is exploitative or not.
The reason I do not look forward to watching the show is that I
don’t think it is important to “find the next Billy Graham,” or
someone like him. This is not to say his work wasn’t vital to the
spiritual lives of millions of people, but in the Zen Buddhist
tradition, the hard work of each individual is what finally results
in salvation and liberation.
Whenever Bodhidharma, the founder of Zen, was asked a question, he
answered by facing the wall. His silent preaching spoke volumes. His
main point was that we cannot rely on words and that we must learn to
see our lives directly. For this purpose, he advocated meditation, a
practice to be learned and continually refined.
I think it is partially the avoidance of personal responsibility
in the development of our spiritual lives that makes for the huge
successes of televangelists and large churches. It is very attractive
to be told how things are and what we should do. It is much more
difficult to listen carefully to our life as it unfolds and to
respond as only we can.
It is also very attractive to be part of something that is big and
successful. I can just see the excitement engendered by showing the
long lines of preachers in four major cities vying for the coveted
title of number one. Rather than passively watching a program such as
“Pulpit Masters,” it may be much harder to participate in our local
faith community and find the time for regular prayer or meditation.
But only each person can decide whether “Pulpit Masters,” Billy
Graham or Zen meditation is the most skilful means to allow me to see
for myself what all great spiritual teachers speak of and manifest.
REV. CAROL AGUILAR
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
Religion as reality! Preaching as entertainment! Initially, I feel
like an ecclesiastical John McEnroe and want to shout, “You can not
be serious!”
But when “Pulpit Masters” co-executive producer Tom McMahon said
to Star-Telegram writer Bud Kennedy, “I’m looking for someone who can
wow the pants off an audience,” I know the producers are serious, if
on dangerous ground, and sadly mistaken. What they really want are
the wallets in the pants of sponsors. I wonder if they will have
sponsors.
A preacher must grab and hold listeners’ attention. Preaching
should be an “engaging public performance,” so, in that sense, it is
“entertainment.” Mastery in a pulpit demonstrates how the clear and
practical resources of our spiritual heritage offer us relevant and
useful guides for our daily lives and the personal challenges we
face.
A good sermon/homily sets out to answer the fundamental question
of every listener, “Well, what’s it all about, and what does it have
to do with me?”
I was taught that preaching is public pastoral care, and I think
that all good preaching arises out of the lives of those who will
hear it. I do not understand how a contestant on a television show
will be able to do this.
I think the best such a person can be is the kind of preacher I do
not want to be, one who would say, “I humbly feel that my success, my
power of attraction, is mainly due to following this golden rule: Use
others’ eyes to see the lowest common denominators, and never preach
what anyone could ever disagree with.”
Real religion comprises beliefs, values, symbols and practices we
hold sacred, that focus us on questions of ultimate meaning. Such
questions include relationships, joy and fear, holiness and
risklessness, wholeness and frustration, health and anxiety,
empowerment and entitlement, hospitality, patriotism, nationalism,
stewardship, and thanksgiving.
TV church has been showbiz for decades. I doubt it has helped many
confront their most basic curiosities. I can’t imagine “Pulpit
Masters” being real religion.
Yet, it might be OK -- but only OK -- if it entertains some and
encourages others in their relationship with God.
(THE VERY REV’D CANON)
PETER D. HAYNES
Saint Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
In this case, the only people who are exploited are the ones who
want to be exploited. This show cannot truly meet its objective for
several reasons.
The first is that it is open to any faith group. A great Muslim
preacher is not the same as a great Rabbinical preacher or Christian
preacher or Buddhist preacher. They may meet on equal ground and
determine which one is a better communicator, but that does not
necessarily mean they will be successful in their own particular
faith.
The second is that the show does not take into consideration the
supernatural nature of “the call.” God often calls those who are
fools in the eyes of the world to accomplish his tasks. Often, even
those close to God find it mysterious the people he chooses to use.
The great Hebrew King David was the last one the prophet Samuel
expected God to choose. He was the youngest son in a small family in
an obscure town in a small tribe. He was not made king by popularity,
but by the hand of God himself.
This is diametrically opposed to having a call-in program based on
popularity.
Most of the people watching probably won’t be people of faith
because the thought of the show smacks of pride and exhibitionism,
neither of which are highly respected in faith circles.
So that leaves nonreligious people voting for a religious leader.
The promising thing about this process is that it is the nonreligious
we are called to reach. So maybe this has some promise in it, after
all.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE PASTOR
RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
I would prefer to see more religious values expressed in the
entertainment world and less emphasis on entertainment in the
religious world.
This program, “Pulpit Masters,” demonstrates that the vulgarians
are no longer at the gates -- the barriers have been breached and
prominent among the hordes are pulpiteers.
It seems to me that anyone who would audition to be identified as
the next Billy Graham is not likely to become the next Billy Graham.
Sermonizing is not about winning a contest in oratorical declamation,
but about achieving a victory for truth.
Preachers vying to outdo one another will no doubt resort to
pathos, bathos, eyes rolled to Heaven, overwrought verbiage, stage
strutting, inappropriately lengthy pauses, stretching two-syllable
words into six syllables and pseudo-sincere facial expressions.
A program of this ilk will probably attract the sermonic
equivalent of professional wrestling: the Billy James Hargises, Benny
Hinns and Jimmy Swaggarts of the sermonic circuit who profess to be
smart, but are simply smarmy; who are perceived as charismatic, but
are more truly caricatures and charlatans. Such pretenders would sell
pieces of the original Burning Bush to a gullible flock.
As for the producers of the program, they should make the effort
authentic by requiring that no male aspirant should appear in a suit
costing less than $5,000 and make it complete by presenting female
clergy in swimsuit and heels. And let’s not forget the pinkie rings
for the men and Tammy Faye eyelashes and mascara for the women.
In the 12th century, an around-the-bend mystic named Tanchelm came
to believe he was God’s Anointed. He ordered his disciples to drink
his bathwater, which he hyped as especially holy after contact with
his body. Not only did his followers eagerly seek out the
opportunity, but they paid handsomely for the privilege. The moral?
Some people will swallow anything.
Human beings have an eternal need for succor and human nature has
an eternal need to be suckered. The producers of this show, these
latter-day Tanchelms, are simply offering bathwater to a public so
thirsty for spiritual sustenance that it will swallow sham and scam.
This program is simply another American Idol(atry).
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
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