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Peter Civetta
The Performance of God -
Religious Discourse in the Aftermath of 11 September
"God is being sought out with a fervor I have never seen in my
lifetime."(1) These words, spoken by Episcopal priest Terry White
in his sermon on September 16th, 2001, echo sentiments expressed across
faith traditions in the aftermath of the events of 11 September. In
the following days and weeks, people clamored for answers, and many
turned or re-turned to their local religious institutions. Although
politicians made speeches and television provided endless coverage and
analysis, much of the task of trying to deal with these events fell
squarely on the shoulders of the world's clerics. Therefore, Christian
and Jewish sermons as well as Islamic khutbahs played an important role
as people processed, responded, or, in many cases, processed how they
might respond.(2)
This
paper examines four such addresses delivered in the immediate aftermath
of September 11th. Certain methodological issues require clarification
before commencing. First, these sermons appear as discrete examples
of preaching/khatabah and not necessarily as representative of some
greater tradition that may or may not have existed. The four sermons
[page 2] are exactly that, four
sermons. Second, while this study will explore all of the material,
the sermons do not appear as equivalents or even parallels. Unique circumstances,
only partially knowable now, conceived and created each of the sermons.
The preachers/khateebs' personalities and congregations further individuate
them from each other. However, each example remains related, a unique
performance event dealing with a single experience affecting, in varying
degrees, people around the world.
Using
performance paradigms to examine phenomenon such as sermons marks the
ever-expanding curiosity of theatre and performance studies. No longer
tied to the disciplinary focus on traditional theatre and drama, the
study of preaching/khatabah represents just such a new area for exploration.
I believe much may be gleaned about sermons through performance exemplars.
I also believe religious addresses, in their creation, delivery and
reception, have much to offer our field. To that effect, this paper
uses a dramaturgical model, exploring the context and history surrounding
the presentation of a performed text.
As
with any complex event, the historical and theoretical foundations for
religious addresses frame each event before it takes place. An examination
of the oratory traditions of each faith, their homiletics, remains in
order to fully contextualize the four addresses I have chosen. The discipline
of homiletics serves as the dramaturgical foundation for this study.
Whether a sermon gets received as radical or conventional lies only
in marking it against the established homiletical norm. Homiletics offers
a macro-model from which to view each individual event.
Khutbahs,
religious talks given by an Imam, occur during a communal performance
of Jummah (Friday prayers). Jummah, as part of Salat (prayer), remains
one of the five pillars of the Islam; therefore khutbahs retain major
significance within the practice of the faith. [page
3] However, the performance of Salat need not be corporate,
for as long as a person completes their prayers, even alone, they fulfill
their commitment. Therefore although strongly encouraged to attend,
listening to khutbahs is not a required element of the faith.
Structurally,
a khutbah consists of two consecutive speeches with a short break taken
in between for prayer. A khutbah generally begins with praise of Allah,
the declaration of faith, peace and blessings for the Prophet, and a
quote from the Qur'an. They usually cover only one main topic, supported
by quotes from the Qur'an or Haddith, the sayings of the Prophet Mohammed.
The khutbah's goal lies in instruction and/or reminding the assembled
congregation about their religion, serving, according to the European
Counsel for Fatwa and Research, as "a call, a guidance, and a means
of education" for a particular community.(3) Khutbahs, in this
sense, not only espouse the tenets of the faith, but also assist in
the binding of the people together. Khutbahs serve as unity mechanisms
for the community, connecting them as they confront any religious or
secular challenges.
While
enjoined to make their khutbahs inspirational, khateebs must also steer
away from controversy. In a fatwa (religious legal opinion) offering
guidelines for the performance of khutbahs, Saudi Mufti (religious leader
and scholar) Sheikh Muhammad Al-Gazali states:
The Khutbah should never discuss controversial
issues
The mosque should unify and not divide people. The Ummah
(people) should be gathered around the fundamentals of Iman (faith)
that every person agrees upon versus matters that are subject to personal
opinion. There are numerous principles that can make good topics.
Muslims have suffered enough from divisions among themselves, and
it is time that the mosques provide unity and harmony.(4)
[page 4] The
key factor in understanding the importance of khutbahs lies in their
connection to the specific community hearing them. Khutbahs strive to
raise God consciousness, to borrow a phrase from New York Imam Kasim
Kopus. They may speak to theological or historical issues, but must
remain relevant to the gathered community's present and daily life.
The intent of a khutbah lies in bringing the beliefs of Islam into direct
connection with the praxis of its individual adherents.
Jewish
homiletics reflects a similar focus on the community addressed. However,
Jewish sermons often embrace controversial issues, seeking to challenge
the congregation. Rabbi Abraham Cohen delivered one of the only explicit
discourses on Jewish homiletics in his 1936 lecture series at Jew's
College in London. He highlights the importance of sermons as cooperative,
both with the congregation and the synagogue itself. He states, "Only
by holding a clear conception of the scope and purpose of the synagogue
and its services can one secure a true understanding of the nature and
aim of Jewish preaching".(5) Later he adds that the aim of a sermon
is "to influence the thought and action of [its] listeners. In
Judaism 'knowledge' is not just something connected with the mind, an
abstraction. It alone has value when translated into action, particularly
ethical conduct".(6) A sermon, in his conception, emerges as a
performative, collaborative event. Never truly passive to begin with,
the congregation gets recognized as active participants. This active
collaboration reflects Cohen's purpose for Jewish sermons, to instruct
the people on issues they need to hear and in ways they can readily
understand. He [page 5] states,
"The instruction is a means to an end, that end being the hallowing
of life by the ideals and precepts of Judaism. 'To learn in order to
do' is the true Jewish principle".(7)
Christian
homiletics contains similar echoes. Episcopal priest and homiletician
Reverend Barbara Brown Taylor offers a three-part model similar to Cohen's.
Brown Taylor likens the preaching dynamic to a three-legged stool, asserting
sermons as the mutual creation of God, the preacher, and the congregation.
She writes, "All three participate in the making of it, with the
preacher as the designated voice. It is a delicate job for the one in
the pulpit, a balancing act between the text, the congregation, and
the self".(8) The three-legged stool image works so well because
of its emphasis on balance as well as authority. While the Bible may
seem to dominate Christian preaching, her model reminds that too much
emphasis on one leg of the stool will cause it to topple.
Harry
Emerson Fosdick, one of the 20th century's most celebrated American
preachers who for decades he had a weekly radio show with over three
million listeners, described the overall purpose of sermons in the following
way: "every sermon was to start with the real problems of the people
and was to meet their difficulties, answer their questions, confirm
their noblest faiths and interpret their experiences in sympathetic,
wise, and understanding co-operation".(9) While current homiliticians
may dispute the need to provide complete answers in their sermons, Fosdick
highlights the necessity of connecting with the congregation and remaining
relevant to their lives. Both of these attributes appear repeatedly
within Christian homiletics.
[page
6] Sermons, in all three traditions, focus on the relationship
to a specific group of people at a particular time. Each of their homiletics
expresses the need to connect the religious talk with the congregation
addressed, offering this insight as the heart of understanding the nature
of the sermonic moment. Sermons are therefore not interchangeable, but
inextricably linked to the communities that created them. A study of
the performance of sermons should not, then, focus on abstract theological
discourse, but rather should offer opportunity to learn about and explicate
the community from which the sermon came. In other words, to learn about
a community, look at the sermons they hear, and vice versa, to learn
about sermons, look to the communities that created them. The delivery
and reception of sermons functions as a construct. Sermons assist in
the constitution of the identity of the community. Sermons both show
and tell a community about itself. Sermons may respond to a crisis,
such as 9/11, but they do so for and to specific communities in a precise
context.
The
four sermons I have chosen each reflect the different communities that
heard and also helped to create them. The Reverend Billy Graham addressed
a televised audience from the National Cathedral.(10) Rabbi Scott Glass
delivered a Rosh Hashanah sermon to his congregation in Ithaca, New
York.(11) Imam Arshad Gamiet spoke in a London mosque,(12) and Reverend
Peggy Bosmyer preached at St. Margaret's Episcopal Church in Little
Rock, Arkansas.(13) These four, culled from over one hundred and fifty
surveyed, communicate a wide spectrum of responses, providing fertile
ground for exploration. Outside of Graham, the [page
7] preachers/khateeb remain relatively unknown outside of
their communities. This obscurity represents the work of so many clerics
forced to deal with the extraordinary pressure to create meaningful
sermons after 11 September. Rabbi Glass expressed sentiments echoed
by numerous others, "Never before have I felt more ill-prepared
to stand before the congregation." However their sermons showcase
the astonishing responses created and delivered within the first few
weeks after 11 September.
As
with all choices, my selections were subjective. I focused on two elements
in my search: a diversity of people and locations, and for a sermon
that seemed, at least to me, to encapsulate a type of response. With
regard to diversity, I have chosen across gender and geographical lines
as well as showcasing a response from outside the United States. Diversity
also played a part in my decision to include Graham. Many famous orators
and speakers weighed in after 11 September, and so I wanted to include
a response given from a position of power, in addition to those voices
projected from smaller communities. With regards to encapsulation, I
feel each of these sermons characterize certain types of responses.
However, I do not view these sermons as representative, a reductionary
move. Each sermons stands as a testament of each community, but taken
within the context of a larger faith tradition. Copies of all four are
available upon request.
Evangelist
Billy Graham, according to his web site, "has preached the Gospel
to more people in live audiences than anyone else in history -- over
210 million people in more than 185 countries and territories -- through
various meetings, including Mission World and Global Mission".(14)
He has counseled many U.S. presidents and spoke during the National
Day of Prayer and Remembrance at the request of President Bush. Bush
and many other political [page 8] leaders
attended, and the content of the sermon reflected this powerful and
influential community. In many ways this sermon appears as much a political
address as a religious one. References to the President, Congress, and
the nation almost outstrip direct references to God. Graham states early
on "some day those responsible will be brought to justice, as President
Bush and our congress have so forcibly stated." It appears that
justice, then, gets decided and dictated by Bush, not by God as one
might expect in a religious address.
The
sermon contains many violent images (backlashed, disintegrate, implode,
backfired) and none of these referred to the events of 11 September.
Graham's martial tone reflects a sermon constructed and delivered for
political purposes. For example, given all the powerful experiences
around that time, Graham singles out when Congress "stood shoulder
to shoulder the other day and sang, 'God Bless America.'" Graham's
sermon directly supports its governmental audience, while constructing
a nationally televised audience dependent upon that government. Near
the end Graham says, "We also know that God is going to give wisdom
and courage and strength to the President and those around him. And
this is going to be a day that we will all remember as a day of victory."
The question remains: is that victory God's or the military victory
of the U.S. government led by President George W. Bush, the sponsor
of the sermon itself?
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