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11
Aug/2008

Curmudgeonly Ramblings: Anti-D&D and Religion

OK, the recent talk of Chick tracts has brought my own experiences bubbling to the surface like some....big bubbling thing. Have a seat. This one's a long one.

Let's start with one fundamenal (pun intended) truth about me. I am a Christian. I believe in God, Christ as the Messiah, the Holy Spirit, the Bible being the Word of God, Satan, angels, and demons. I am currently not attending a church, for reasons that'll become clear once this blog is done. But I do pray, read my Bible, and do my level best to live as Christ mandated; sometimes I succeed, sometimes I don't. So, that should establish where this is all coming from.

Back when in 1974 when I was in High School, I was invited to attend this High School age Christian fellowship hosted by a very well known, mainstream, conservative Christian church in Boston. The group was a revelation (pun intended) for me, and it was while attending that group that I made a conscious decision to be a Christian, rather than just going along with what my Baptist dad had been constantly talking about. Call it being "born again", if you will, but I shy away from that phrase because of the combination of baggage it carries these days, and the fact that it's become a cliche.

Now, fast-forward to 1985. My wife at the time and I were attending that very same church, and I was at a point where I decided it'd be good to give something back to the church that had given me so much, in particular, the High School fellowship. Since they badly needed volunteers for staff, I volunteered to become a staff member. Basically, I'd help plan meetings, help run the group, co-ordinate Bible studies, be a good example, be a friend and mentor to the kids, stuff like that.

I took to it nicely, and the kids liked me a lot as well. False modesty aside, I was one of the "cool" staffers, and became friends with a lot of the kids. As time went on, I did what friends usually do with each other, namely share interests and hobbies. Role-playing games was my hobby, so I tried to start some gaming with the kids. Knowing that D&D was kind of controversial among some conservative Christians (and when it's all said and done, I was definitely a conservative Christian), I tap-danced around AD&D and instead launched campaigns of FASA's Star Trek: The RPG, TSR's Top Secret/SI, and Mayfair's DC Heroes. So far so good. No problems, no concerns.

At this time in my life, I actually worked at home as a full-time writer, churning out stuff for TSR, West End Games, FASA, etc. I did the Mr.Mom thing and wrote gaming stuff, and supported half our household with my gaming writing. Some of the parents of the High Schoolers held a sort of "get to know you" mixer at one of their houses. One conversation proved my undoing. The following is a pretty good recreation of it, though certainly not verbatim.

Nosy Parent: John, what do you do for a living?
Me: I'm a stay at home dad and a freelance writer.
Nosy Parent: A writer! That's wonderful! What do you write?
Me: Well, do you know that game Dungeons and Dragons? I write for them and other games like that.
Nosy Parent (pauses, gives that look usually reserved for people who say "Hi I eat babies for fun and profit"): Oh. I.....see. Well then. That's....nice.
(cue the Imperial March from Star Wars Episode IV)

A few weeks later, the Youth Pastor told me that a group of parents had "concerns" about me. While they had no doubts about my faith and sincerity thereof, they were "concerned" about my occupation, seeing how D&D had this bad reputation. The situation quickly escalated. Of the 40 families involved in some way with the High School fellowship, a quarter of them thought I was the greatest thing to happen to Youth Ministry since sliced bread, a quarter of them thought I was (knowingly or unwittingly) leading their kids down the Highway to Hell, and the remaining half had no opinions either way or just plain didn't care.

The negative parents asked if I'd at least be willing to listen to a man who gave lectures about the evils of D&D. Trying at this point to pacify these people, I went along with it. The guy was this earnest fellow who apparently went on tour around the country, preaching the evils of D&D, rock music, and other bad things. I was shown the Chick tracts (oh hey, it's comic relief!). I was shown the pamphlets and yes, even entire books, about the evils of D&D. This man not only told me that D&D was Satanic, so were Christmas trees, Christmas wreaths, and Disney (ok, in light of recent Disney practices over the last decade or so, he may have had something there! BWAH!), among other things. Everything had hidden symbolism and "meant something", and that something was your buddy and mine, Say-tun.

I looked at the pamphlets and saw stuff about fantasy gaming and dealing with stuff like demon summoning, human sacrifice, and sexually-oriented violence. "Hey!", I said. "This isn't even Dungeons and Dragons! It's the Arduin Grimoire!" "It's like Dungeons and Dragons!" was the reply. "No it isn't!," I insisted. "It's a different game, and besides, this pamphlet's actually saying it IS D&D, and that could be considered slander!"

Problem with arguing with a fanatic, is that you just can't win. So, that meeting was a bust. I remained unconvinced that I was damning myself and scores of innocent teenagers. But at least it seemed that we'd reached a stalemate.  We agreed to disagree. I attended their ridiculous meeting, and that was that.

WRONG!

First, I had a meeting with the Senior Pastor of the whole darned church, because these parents weren't dropping the matter. We talked for an hour. Afterwards, he told a group of parents and other staff that he was convinced that I was a "devoted, faithful young man of God who is clearly not being misled or anything of the sort." Clean bill of health, off the hook, right?

WRONG!

See, this church is Congregationalist. Congregationalism is a flavor of Protestantism whose main tenet is "a small organized group of hateful nutjobs can derail things and push through their own agendas, even if 90% of the church and staff disagree with them". OK, so I'm being facetious, but that's pretty close to the mark.

There was a large meeting held about li'l ol' me. Parents and staff were invited. I wasn't invited because, as the Youth Pastor explained, it would probably prove to be embarrassing for me. My response was that I couldn't possibly get more embarrassed about this than I already was! Nevertheless, I wasn't in attendance, and from what I heard, it was basically a shouting match. When the dust settled, neither side budged. The parents who were dissenting said they intended to keep making this an issue until I stepped down. The kids were getting caught in the middle of this, and it was tearing the Youth Fellowship apart. So, since I was so evil and possessed and such, I "did the right thing" and stepped down.

The only thing I didn't yield on was when there was some item written up about my departure, I made them change "resigned the group" to "was forced to quit the group". Hey, when you're not getting any victories, you relish even the tiniest one!

The kids were livid. The kids whose parents were causing this trouble were embarrassed and resentful of them. Ironically, this group of over-protective parents may have done more to drive their kids away than anything else. In an attempt to keep their kids under their thumbs, they accomplished the opposite.

We stayed at the same church for a little while longer, then eventually decided to attend a church closer to home.

The whole affair pretty much shattered my Fundamentalist tendencies. I had been above reproach, done everything by The Book (pun intended, yeah why not), and all it took was ten parents to point their fingers at me and shout "Unclean!", and I was gone. I had been taught for years that the Church was my family and my refuge, and that "the world" was out to get me, and yet the biggest knife in my back came from the very church that was ostensibly here to help me!

It took a few years for me to not only get over this, but to sort out my exact feelings on the matter. I decided that the matter didn't shake my faith in God, but it sure made me suspicious of His people. I still believe, and do consider Christianity to be an excellent way of life, when it's not being contaminated by personal agendas. My flip assessment of the matter has usually been: "Jesus is cool, it's His people that suck!" Yeah, a blanket statement, I know. There ARE decent churches out there, I know this. I don't dismiss the notion of organized religion, and in fact find it to still be a useful tool for worship; a means to an end, not an end in itself. But let's just say I'm wary now. God didn't let me down; some of His people did.

So yeah, I'm between churches, and have seen first-hand how ignorance can ruin lives and cause unnecessary pain and problems. As for Chick, I hope there's a very special place in Hell reserved for people who knowingly lead others astray (hint: D&D isn't the only thing he's slandered).

Tags: Religion Anti-D&D Nutcase Christianity

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Viewing 1 - 10 out of 12 Comments


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08/12/2008 23:14:26

Hey, 

 

Great article. All us middle age gamers make the best youth pastors. We are creative, we are on their level, we know what it''s like to be picked on, left our and abused. We may be the most empathetic sub group on the planet. Great article. As a minster (not currently a pastor) I find great opportunities to live out Christ mostly because I am just there. I'm not anyone special. i am character like anyone else. This is also true because most gamers who might be inquisitive about God or other stuff can't talk to pastors or Christians for that matter because they have been shamed. I just want to game along and and if I can encourage others along the way then so be it. I don;t know if Jesus would be playing but I know he's be around the table eating our chips and drinking our mountain dew   



08/12/2008 07:47:23
Sphynx:
Exactly! Even if some of those outlandish allegations were true (and that would be a stretch), that meaning's long gone!

MC:
Yup, and thanks!  The minister of the Youth Group who was around when I attended it as a highschooler graduated from Harvard and is one of the brightest, most educated men I know. He said "Being a Christian doesn't mean committing intellectual suicide". Never forgot that (as is evidenced that I'm quoting him  34 years later! Heh!).


08/12/2008 07:11:29

I read through this yesterday and shook my head at the nonsense you were typing about their views. I agree with you 100% (in case the previous sentence didn't make sense), that some people are just ignorant and will attack anything that they think goes against what they believe in. As a religious man myself, I find that I am on the fence about a lot of things, both being an avid gamer and a science major. While the ties between science and faith aren't exactly taboo, there are still some of the old scars from when Darwin first published his theory on evolution.

I think it's important, as you said, to just believe in what you believe, even if the others try and fight against you. I commend you on your response to all this, and I hope that you can continue to believe in everything, despite, simply put, really stupid people.



08/12/2008 03:20:45
On the Christmas tree thing....  I think the history of it should have nothing to do with current when making decisions.  The Christmas tree may have meant all sorts of other things, but right now, it means a tribute to the birth of Christ. The origins of the item do not change what its purpose is for.  It's like refusing to drive because the first wheel was created by a pagan.


08/11/2008 22:49:45
To Loneshark:
If that post is directed at me, then thanks!

To Mordbid:
Yeah, it's called tunnelvision....and it's not only common among religious folks....many people choose to see things through one filter alone, and it's scary.

To Bane_Star:
It's amazing how many of us have stories like this, eh? Zeal, whether religious, political, diet-related, etc., if misplaced, is at best an annoyance and at worst a dangerous thing indeed!


08/11/2008 21:38:05
It's a shame that so many people who presume to study and follow a faith, can't study or research anything else. It's good you stood up for yourself. Also, I find it humorous, that even though I myself do not have these beliefs, I find that the christian bible (as well as others) are a great source of ideas for campaigns.


08/11/2008 21:06:08
In all seriousness, you are Badass.  I don't believe anything else needs to be said.


08/11/2008 16:18:24
Sphynx: Oh yeah. That guy said that Christmas trees were symbolic of Druids gloating over the crucifixion of Christ. My response of "Well, even if in some bizarre way that was true, He came back!" But apparently, I was missing the point.

Veez: Thanks! My wife and I are in the process of checking out different ones to see what fits. I've always been the "join a church and then, if you want to get closer to some of the people there, join a Bible study" kind of person. But you're right...Christianity works better in groups (and come to think of it, so do a lot of other things!)

TGB: Are you familiar with the quote "Those who start off burning books, end up burning people?" I may be paraphrasing there. Yeah, there were a few former friends of mine in the church who were into D&D, then suddenly sort of went off the deep end, and pitched all of their stuff in the trash. My response to one of them was "AW man! You should've given your gaming stuff to ME!"  And yeah, I would've fought this more, but the well-meaning pillars of the church who were doing this had no compunctions about being divisive and poisoning the atmosphere of the group as long as I was there. Whether they realized it or not, or meant to do it or not, they were in essence holding the group (and consequently their own kids) hostage. I couldn't bear that, so I backed down even though I did absolutely nothing even remotely wrong.


08/11/2008 16:09:35

I used to get the dissaproval from my grandparents based on what the church had said, so I too challenged their beliefs, they put me in touch with the local pastor, and I had to explain.

 I remember trying to compare it to things that people have been doing for years, and the closest I got was; Its just storytelling, like jesus used to do with the disciples, and if they interjected with questions, to try and understand the point of the story, they did so. If they talked about demons in order to understand the light, whats wrong with that.. I dont remember the guy getting offended, but he did ask me if I felt that as 'gamesmaster' was I qualified to give advice about demons.. 

 At the end of the day, its the combination of Ignorance + Religeous Zeal which is dangerous to ALL groups which oppose the religeon, be they gamers, gays, murderers, goths, muslims or holywood. 



08/11/2008 15:59:39
I've never seen one of these D&D experts that the Churches find actually know anything about the game.  You just have to stare in disbelief at some of the stuff that comes out of their mouths.  I'm pretty sure that the D&D experts achieve expert status through conjecture and hypothetical belief in what the game might entail.  Times like these you just wish there was a bit more chlorine in the gene pool.



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