Spiritual But Not Religious: Anne Rice, Christianity, and Wild Goose Culture

The Wild Goose Festival seeks to be a place where people of faith and people who struggle with faith (which might be all of us?) can wrestle together with what it means to be people who live at the intersection of justice, creativity, and spirituality in the 21st century. This is a conversation our larger culture is having, involving artists, authors, blue collar workers, ministers, and more.

Last summer it spilled onto Facebook, as best-selling novelist Anne Rice announced that she was quitting Christianity:

“For those who care, and I understand if you don’t: Today I quit being a Christian. I’m out. I remain committed to Christ as always but not to being “Christian” or to being part of Christianity. It’s simply impossible for me to “belong” to this quarrelsome, hostile, disputatious, and deservedly infamous group. For ten years, I’ve tried. I’ve failed. I’m an outsider. My conscience will allow nothing else.”

She elaborated:

“I remain committed to Christ as always but not to being ‘Christian’ or being a part of Christianity. It’s simply impossible for me to ‘belong’ to this quarrelsome, hostile, disputatious, and deservedly infamous group. I refuse to be anti-gay. I refuse to be anti-feminist. I refuse to be anti-artificial birth control. I refuse to be anti-democrat. I refuse to be anti-secular humanism. I refuse to be anti-science. I refuse to be anti-life. In the name of Christ, I quit Christianity and being Christian. Amen.”

What Ms. Rice has shared has hit a nerve. Wild Goose contributor Brian McLaren responded inMy Take: Why I Support Anne Rice but Am Still a Christian, and Festival team member Mike Morrell interviewed Rice directly for the Homebrewed Christianity podcast, where she acknowledges “I am still obsessed with Christ…[but] some of us don’t want to be thrown down the stairs by the followers of Christ

The biggest dividing point between people of faith today is not liberal versus conservative – it’s SBNR (spiritual-but-not-religious) versus the happily-religious (who are also, we presume, spiritual too). But need this be a dividing line? In the wake of seismic religious change in the past century, coupled with increased awareness of the very real injustices perpetuated by institutionalized faith, it would seem that many are drawing this line in the sand. There are no easy answers to the sea change indicated by voices like Rice. But we hope we can find them with each other.

This is very much a conversation we’re interested in continuing as the Wild Goose Festival takes place in just twelve days. If you haven’t purchased your tickets yet, please do so as prices go up at the door. We hope we’ll be in conversation with you, creating something beautiful together.

Goose Around the Web

In recent weeks we’ve had a flurry of friends of the Festival (trying saying that five times fast!) sharing their Wild Goose anticipations via blog and video. Here’s a taste:

We are very aware that it will not be the perfect gathering of people that will solve the entire cadre world’s problems and bring ultimate cosmic transformation, where candy cotton flowers will bloom and angels will be putting us to sleep with holy lullabies. But because we know the Sacred have this way of seeping through the crevices of our broken humanity and ill treated nature, we’ll be wide-eyed looking for bright manifestations of joy and hope.

Because of the reality of Creation and Incarnation humans are able to bring a sense of transformation that honors “placeness” in the world. In the light of such reality human response must not be a private one, but one that intervenes and makes public God’s presence in the world.  With this understanding, human activities and relationships in particular localities have the blessed opportunity to be sacraments pointing to God’s loving relationship and activity in the world. Therefore, for Ricci and I, the Festival can be a humble and fragile but vibrant sacrament of God-space (a.k.a. God’s Kingdom).

- keep reading Why Are We Going to the Wild Goose Festival? A Practice on Sacramental Living by Eliacin Rosario-Cruz!

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- see more videos from Callid Keefe-Perry at The Image of Fish!

Wild Goose exists at the intersection of justice, spirituality and art; we’re aiming to become a space for serious engagment with issues of justice and injustice that face us from those in our own neighborhoods to global issues. We’ll host conversations with some of the leading figures and organizations working at the cutting edge of promoting peace, equity, and the “re-humanizing” of the world.

Those who wish to live as Christians, Jews, Muslims, agnostics, (fill-in-the-blank) or atheists by following the humble thread of what I’ll call divine uncertainty – as opposed to those who wish to force others to be like them by using Christianity, Judaism, Islam, or doctrinaire secularism as a weapon – must shift from unquestioning faith in their religions to a life-affirming message of transcendence.

- Continue reading Changing What the Word “Christian” Means Into Something Good by Frank Schaeffer

…and last but not least, listen to Chad Crawford and Gareth Higgins discuss peace, reconciliation, and learning to not kill your enemy (when they’ve been trying to kill you) on The Goose Is Loose – on Homebrewed Christianity!

Have a great weekend. And while you’re enjoying this weekend, why not tell three friends that the Wild Goose Festival is only 33 days away! (See our handy day counter to stay on top of this.) If they haven’t yet reserved their tickets, they should – Limited Advance tickets are going fast!