Commentary Oregon Daily Emerald Thesday, April 26, 2005 NEWS STAFF (541)346-5511 JEN SUDICK EDITOR IN CHIEF STEVEN R. NEUMAN MANAGING EDITOR JARED PABEN AYISHA YAHVA NEWS EDITORS MEGHANN CUNIFF PARKER HOWELL SENIOR NEWS REPORTERS MORIAH BAUNGIT AMANDA BOLSINGER ADAM CHERRY EMILY SMITH EVA SYLWESTF.R SHELDON TRAVER NEWS REPORTERS CLAYTON JONES SPORTS EDITOR JON ROETMAN SENIOR SPORTS REPORTER STEPHEN MILLER BRIAN SMITH SPORTS REPORTERS RYAN NYBURG PULSE EDITOR AMY LICHTY SENIOR PULSE REPORTER JOSHUA UNTEREUR PULSE REPORTER CAT BALDWIN PULSE CARTOONIST AILEE SLATER COMMENTARY EDITOR GABE BRADLEY ANNEMARIE KNEPPER CHUCK SLOTHOWF.R JENNIFER MCBRIDE COLUMNISTS ASHLEY GRIFFIN SUPPLEMENT FREELANCE EDITOR DANIELLE HICKEY PHOTO EDITOR LAUREN WIMER SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER NICOLE BARKER TIM BOBOSKY PHOTOGRAPHER KATE HORTON ZANERrrr PART-TIME PHOTOGRAPHERS BRET FURTWANGLER GRAPHIC ARTIST DUSTIN REESE SENIOR DESIGNER ELLIOTT ASBURY WENDY KIEFFER AMANDA LEE JONAH SCHROGIN DESIGNERS SHADRA BEESLEY (FANNIE EVERS COPY CHIEFS KIMBERLY BLACKFIELD JOSH NORRIS SPORTS COPY EDITORS GREG BILSLAND AMBER I.INDROS NEWS COPY EDITORS JENNY GERW1CK PULSE COPY EDITOR ADRIENNE NELSON ONLINE EDITOR WEBMASTER (541)346-5511 JUDY RIEDL GENERAL MANAGER KATHY (ARBONE BUSINESS MANAGER LAUNA DE GIUSTI RECEPTIONIST JERED NAGEL PATRICK SCHMERBER HOLLY STEIN JANA SWANSON ROB WEGNER CAROLYN ZIMMERMAN DISTRIBUTION ADVERTISING (541)346-3712 MELISSA GUST ADVERTISING DIRECTOR TYLER MACK SALES MANAGER MATT BETZ HERON CAL1SCH-DOLEN MEGAN HAMLIN KATE HIRONAKA MAEGAN KASER-l.EE KEL1.F.E KAUFTHEIL MIA LE1DELMEYER SHANNON ROGERS SALES REPRESENTATIVES CLASSIFIED (541)3464343 TR1NA SHANAMAN CLASSIFIED MANAGER KORALYNN BASHAM ANDO KATY GAGNON KER1 SPANGLER KATIE STRINGER CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ASSOCIATES PRODUCTION (541)3464381 MICHELE ROSS PRODUCTION MANAGER TARA SLOAN PRODUCTION COORDINATOR IEN CRAMLET KRISTEN DICHARRY CAMERON GAUT SABRINA GOWETTE JONAH SCHROGIN DESIGNERS The Oregon Daily Emerald is put> lished daily Monday through Fn day during the school year by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc , at the University of Ore gon, Eugene, Ore. The Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union The Emerald is private property. Unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law ■ In my opinion Following the Word It seems to be open season on “Christian fundamentalists” because of their so-called narrow-minded and unsophisticated practice of tak ing the Bible literally. One myth I want to clear up first is the notion that Christians who take the Bible literally are dangerous wackos, com pletely out of touch with mainstream Christianity. In a special episode of “The West Wing” made in the immediate after math of the 9/11 attacks, Bradley Whitford’s character resists an at tempt to compare Islamo-terrorists to fundamentalist Christians. The character makes a good point when he argues that comparing main stream Islam’s relation to Islamic ex tremism is more like comparing Christianity to the Ku Klux Klan be cause that’s how badly these people have to distort scriptural integrity and sound theology in order to justify their horrific actions. People who interpret the Bible liter ally are not the same people who bomb abortion clinics and kill in the name of religion. The domestic terror ists who claim to kill in the name of God are drastically distorting the Bible, not taking it literally. What really shocks me, though, is that people write off those who take the Bible literally as uneducated rubes who don’t approach the text with any sophistication. In broad strokes they paint those who take the Bible literal ly as if they leave no room for inter pretation, which couldn’t be further from the truth. Taking the Bible literally is not im mune to interpretation. In fact, pure literalism makes interpretation an ab solute imperative. Think about it. To take the Bible literally means to real ize, for instance, that the Pentateuch is God speaking through Moses to the Hebrew people at a specific time and GABE BRADLEY THE WRITING ON THE WALL a specific place in a particular social, cultural and historical context. Liter alism also means to realize that the Gospels are God speaking through particular people, to particular people, in unique circumstances. Taking the Bible literally means re alizing that when God told the Da vidic Israelites to kill the Philistines, he meant just that; he wasn’t telling you to kill anybody. In an e-mail that’s been forwarded countless times over the last several years, an anonymous author lam bastes Dr. Laura for her use of Scrip ture to support her controversial op position to homosexuality. Now don’t get me wrong, I hate Dr. Laura just as much as the next guy, maybe more, but this e-mail demonstrates a shockingly inept reading of Scrip ture. The e-mail points out and ridicules certain portions of the Torah that seem to be out of place if applied in today’s culture. Few would be so foolish as to read a few sentences from Aristotle and claim to know exactly what he says about motion. Few would be so fool ish as to read a paragraph from Adam Smith and claim to understand the breadth and nuance of his classical capitalism. Why, then, do so many people — Christian and non-Christ ian alike — approach the Bible with a narrow-minded, totalizing point of view? The literalist understands that these laws were not prescribed for us. They were prescribed to a certain people in a certain set of circumstances. The laws and rules are not what count. Understanding the underlying princi ples given the specific social, cultural and historical context is what counts. Taking the Bible literally means going way beyond face value. It means employing exegesis and hermeneutics in order to mine the text for its original meaning in its original context so that the transcen dent personality of God can be re vealed throughout. Though the per sonality of God doesn’t change throughout the Bible, the rules that he plays by do change — a lot. This is why so many lazy Bible readers shy away from the Old Testa ment. The cultural context is so far re moved from our own that it requires even more interpretation than the New Testament in order to access the underlying truths. Taking the Bible literally is not the dull-witted, unsophisticated ap proach to scripture reading. It is an almost unrivaled intellectual chal lenge that requires an intense aca demic rigor and a highly sophisticat ed textual reading. Bending and breaking the text to make it mean whatever one wants in current so cial circumstances and political real ities is the unsophisticated approach that ignores academic rigor and intellectual honesty. I’m not worried about the Chris tians who take the Bible literally; I’m worried about the ones who don’t. There’s nothing more dangerous than someone who claims to believe the Bible is the word of God without knowing what it says. These are the ones who substitute their judgment for God’s and commit ter rible atrocities. gadebradley® daily emerald, com ■ Guest commentary Playboy applicants recharacterize the meaning of being a feminist I would like to express my appreci ation to all of the women who had a little pride in their image, themselves and their power for applying to be in the Playboy layout. As a student in this extraordinarily protest-happy stu dent body, wading through the pick eters and speakers espousing ludi crous and often contradictory messages gets pretty old. I would also like to offer my con gratulations to the current feminists on campus for recognizing the prerog ative of women to model their bodies however they choose. In his guest commentary last week ("University activists fail to react to pornography,” ODE April 14) Mr. White argued that pornography objectifies women and degrades them into objects of lust. That is in herently incorrect. Men (and more of ten than not, other women) objectify, label, and degrade women. It is not the nudity that does it. A huge nude statue stands in the window of Moth er Kali’s Bookstore on Hilyard and East 13th Avenue; art books teem with nude paintings, breasts have fre quently adorned the cover of National Geographic; characters in the fresco on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel are naked. No one is protesting them. Why? Because it’s intent, not content. The difference between the ceiling of the Sistine and the pages of Play boy is the intent with which one looks at them. What is degrading is the insistence that women should feel bad about choosing to take pride in their beauty. One of the great failures of the American feminist crusade is its failure to encourage women to recog nize and revel in the great power they have by simply being female. The great triumph of that crusade, however, is in the manipulation of American women into believing they are catering to men (which is appar ently bad) should they choose to live their lives as wives, mothers or per haps Playboy models. So thank you to all the women who applied to appear in the magazine, for redefining what it means to be a feminist. Allie Sender, junior OREGON DAILY EMERALD LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor and guest commentaries are encouraged, and should be sent to letters@dailyemerald.com or submitted at the Oregon Daily Emerald office, EMU Suite 300. Electronic submissions are preferred. Letters are limited to 250 words, and guest commentaries to 550 words Authors are limited to one submission per calendar month. Submissions should include phone number and address for verification. The Emerald reserves the rigit to edit for space, grammar and style. Guest submissions are published at the discretion of the Emerald. ■ Editorial Fabricated news damages journalistic credibility Imagine this: former Michigan State players Mateen Cleaves and Jason Richardson at the April 2 Michigan State-North Carolina NCAA semifinal, sitting in the stands, in their Michigan State clothing, “rooted on their alma mater.” That’s exactly what Detroit Free Press sports columnist Mitch Albom did — except his imagination got carried away. When Cleaves and Richardson never showed up to the game, Albom’s April 3 column stating that they did was quickly revealed as fiction. Journalists have no right to tell the future as though it is fact. So when Albom decided to depend on interviews about what the play ers were planning to do at the game and write a piece about what happened at the game be fore it occurred, he disappointed many. Not only fans of his two decades of Detroit Free Press work, but also fellow journalists, still reeling from large-scale accuracy foul-ups in The New York Times and USA Today, to name a few. However, we have to note Albom’s circum stances: According to The Associated Press, the Detroit Free Press required Albom to file the column the day before the game, a Friday, even though it was due to hit print on Sunday, because the section was printed before the game. We have to wonder if this schedule made Albom feel pressure to fabricate a story that would be “current” when printed. Albom, and the four other Press employees who were responsible for catching the errors, will continue to work at the Press after facing unspecified disciplinary action, according to the paper. Albom apologized to his readers in an April 7 column, and rightly so. Unfortu nately, all it takes is one fabrication to discred it years of work and cast a shadow of doubt over others in the profession. We deeply re gret yet another breech in what is, overall, an ethical profession. Media should remain wary of frivolous speculation The recent fiasco at a Wendy’s restaurant in San Jose, Calif., where suspected con artist Anna Ayala claimed she bit into a finger in her bowl of chili, has underscored the dark side of the litigious society in which we live and the often detrimental effects of certain types of media. Primarily, this situation shows how easy it has become to manipulate the whistle-blow er’s role, twisting it from virtuous to vicious. The Editorial Board sees great value in the interaction between whistle-blowers and the media, but the abuses of these frivolous charges by citizens, and the media outlets’ subsequent sensationalism, are too much to handle. Cable news channels saw the events in California as a sunny day, and shamelessly made hay for hour after hour and day after day. After police and Wendy’s investigated, the inconsistencies in Ayala’s case proved more suspicious than convincing, eventually leading to her arrest Thursday. The San Jose Mercury News has now re ported that following the initial publicity from Ayala’s scam, Wendy's received “about 20 complaints in the last month — much more than usual — from diners about foreign ob jects in their chow.” In these situations, media should aspire to give the American public solid information, not speculation. EDITORIAL BOARD Jennifer Sudick Steven R. Neuman Editor in Chief Managing Editor Ailee Slater Shadra Beesley Commentary Editor Copy Chief Adrienne Nelson Online Editor