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Deconstruction & the Daring Christian:

Infusing the Inconceivable into Church & Country

“If at first the idea is not absurd, then there is no hope for it.”
Albert Einstein

“Truth is whatever your peers will let you get away with.”
Richard Rorty

“No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived,
What God has prepared for those who love Him”
Isaiah 64:4

Some say the best place to begin is wherever you are. For me, life is stimulating enough without a
revolution. I’m in the twilight of a job teaching kids about man-made disasters (my cynical term
for Human Geography, but I’m moving on, thank God); in the chaotic-joyous morning of
marriage and fatherhood (one came close on the heels – or out of the womb – of the other); in the
tired dusk of a post-graduate business degree; and at the new dawn of Malaysian national
leadership (in which parliamentary sessions have become publicly ‘free for all’ in more than one
sense of the term).

Somehow God felt that was insufficient and proceeded to shake up my days with a group of
wonderful friends in Revolution of Hope (ROH) Malaysia1, whose lives and words have opened
my eyes to new takes on life, faith and community.

What follows is a stew of my thoughts from my interaction with ROH, as a) an amateur


theologian with a passion for all things unnerving to conventional theology, b) a beginner to
deconstruction and the faith-quaking promises it brings and c) a less-than-beginner to the
intrigues in the Malaysian socio-political arena and the shocks of which I, as a citizen, am part of.
I hope to introduce deconstruction and seek to link this (broadly) to the Christian faith, anchor it
(firmly) in Jesus, and spread it (thinly) on issues rather Malaysian.

Ultimately, the kingdom of God is the main thing; deconstruction isn’t. The latter, nevertheless,
feels like a great place to begin.

Deconstruction & the Christian: Daring A Method For Bedevilling Faith and Truth

Deconstruction is never being satisfied with what people (including you) tell you. It’s a method
for mutually assured disagreement. It’s a refusal to quit searching for alternative stories and
viewpoints. It’s the Matrix moment when you realise that what you’ve taken for granted isn’t
what they appear to be.

Originating in the work of French post-modern philosopher Jacques Derrida, deconstruction is


about ‘disabusing the Western tradition of its logocentrism’2i.e. the idea that there some ultimate
‘word, presence, essence, truth or reality to serve as the foundation for our thoughts, language,
and experience’3. In the speak of PWDs’4, logocentrism is the understanding that our words
actually refer to something ‘beyond words’, that there are trans-worldly references to what we
say.
Contra this position, deconstructionists view language as a social construct, a product of the
prejudices, power-plays, psyches and politics within the community. The line between reality and
language having blurred, deconstructive writing is thus always ‘paradoxical, double duplicitous,
excentric, improper…errant…(it) calls into question the very notion of propriety and it possesses
no final or proper meaning…deconstructive criticism constantly errs along the / of neither/nor.’ 5

Nothing is really basic, absolute or fundamental in the world. It’s what we do when we question
the polarities (some of) the world takes for granted. It’s when we find out that everything we
know as ‘natural’ to our universe required someone to say so (and, often, to even make it so).

Words (i.e. signifiers) do not really possess a corresponding reality (i.e. a signified) to which they
point or signify. This is to say that words, instead of referring to something ‘beyond’ words, tend
to refer to words which in turn point to other words which signal yet more words ad infinitum.
The notion of there being one ‘true’ meaning, or us being able to attain it, is thereby resisted6.

For example, take that thing from which you drink your morning coffee everyday. I think it’s fair
to say we’d all call that a cup. And a cup is just a cup, right? Not quite. People can see it as a
symbol of economic repression (think of all the workers slaving in sweat-shops or laid-off so
your ‘cup’ can be produced), some can see it as a weapon, some as a paperweight and so on. The
point is that the meaning of a cup is far from inherent, timeless and absolute! It requires at least a
moderate kind of ‘social construction’.

For Malaysians, Farish Noor takes this issue much further beyond a cup when he asks, as part of
a call to free ourselves from being historically trapped, ‘Are we finally going to admit to
ourselves that this nation-state of ours – Malaysia – is an invented construct and as such is also
open to deconstruction, revision, adaptation and subsequently evolution?’7

Deconstructionists undertake the creative disassembling of this view of the world, or the
‘dismantling the modern ideal that views philosophy as pure, disinterested inquiry and to
repudiate as well the common nation that there is some sort of straightforward correspondence
between language and the external world.’ 8

Whilst this view may understandably cause some angst for the faithful (see below), no one can
deny there is at least some value in taking apart language to expose the power-plays entrenched
therein, probing for (deliberately) hidden or silence voices/views.

For instance, the questionable usurping of terms by the ruling elite has taken fresh forms in
Malaysia recently. Farish Noor provides a helpful reminder, to give an example, ‘there was no
‘Malay race’ (or ‘Chinese race’, or ‘Indian race’ for that matter) before the Western colonialists
came over and stamped these labels on our heads’9. In the same article, Noor traces how the keris,
a universal symbol of racial unity and religious devotion (which included even tantric themes)
was over time twisted and exploited to become one about race-based politics10. What was once an
objective representing spiritual and even quasi-sexual bliss has been wielded (and waved) as a
sign of racial-political macho-ness.

In the case of khalwat11, too, what was previously understood as the very ‘state of private and
secluded meditation in the presence of the Divine…(which) points to its intimate connections
with the ideas of Love, contact and the bond between human beings and God’12, has been
transmogrified into something dark and meriting the breaking down of your house door by the
(Malaysian) police.
Malaysian leaders need scholars like Noor to keep them at the edge of their (parliamentary) seats,
to keep striking a quiet chord into the nation’s consciousness, to keep the questions flowing, to
help (re-)jog and recover lost memories (quite of a few which would’ve come in handy in the
Lingam affair, but that’s another story).

Yet not only those who rule the secular realm but also (especially?) those governing the domain
of the sacred, those who make it their business to understand the mind of God, would be blessed
(albeit uncomfortably so) by the realisation that Christian thinking is being invaded by the
inconceivable and it may help to not think we’ve got our theology all that absolutely right.

Some years ago, I brought up the topic of the ‘dark side of absolute truth’ to some evangelical
leaders. There were no takers. I wonder if it was an example of how evangelical theologians have
largely taken for granted the notion of truth13.

Robert C. Greer, a missionary-theologian in Mexico, however, shares his concerns about


‘absolute truth’, what he defines as ‘an encyclopedia collection of abstracted principles that are
understood to be timelessly valid and therefore immutable – not subject to change. Existing
independently from the specifics of any given culture and from any given historical moment,
these principles are transcultural and ahistorical…the person who has access to this encyclopedia
collection of truths is understood to possess God’s eye, enabled to see and assess reality with the
precision and exactitude of God himself.’14 (bolded emphasis his).

Beginning with Augustine and culminating with Rene Descartes, the search for ‘perfect
knowledge’ led to the creation of a system grounded in radical doubt (what Greer calls the
Cogito) which eventually launched the Enlightenment. The basis of the Cogito was that ‘finitude
was not good, that only when human beings successfully escape the constraints of finitude and
thus embrace and understand infinite truth can their knowledge be characterized as good.’15

Such a flight-to-infinity approach revealed the dark side of absolute truth in the form of :
evidential apologetics (the notion of fixed and guaranteed formulas for apologetics);
triumphalism (the creation of God’s self-appointed police force, guardians of truth who perceive
themselves as ‘wearing a “badge of divinity” upon their own theological systems’16); the doubting
of the historical creeds and confessions (and the subsequent loss of a confessional theology
divorced from the historic development within the church17); and the eclipse of the authentic
realistic narrative of Scripture (being replaced by an understanding of the Biblical narrative as ‘a
storehouse of data from which timeless and immutable principles are drawn – principles believed
to be transferable from situation to situation regardless of one’s historical setting, cultural milieu
and personal story.’18)

Greer concludes by observing that the fundamental problem is confusing finite with infinitude,
which is in effect what post-moderns consistently point out.

Deconstruction helps question the ‘finality’ of any particular interpretation of Biblical texts.
World-renowned hermeneuticist, Anthony Thiselton, cites positively the deconstructive work of
John Dominic Crossan (in particularly his writings on parable, aphorisms and inter-textual
traditions) and David Clines whose study of Job revealed otherwise unnoticed features in the text.
He says that ‘Mere interpretations of texts can themselves take on the status of controlling
paradigms in our lives, which, when they become both all-powerfully directive and
unchallengeably ‘for-ever fixed’ begin to assume a quasi-idolatrous role, as securities in which
we place absolute trust. Illusions need to be dispelled…The metaphor of the text as movement or
as growing texture, rather than a fixed and static entity, calls attention to the capacity of biblical
texts to lead us ever further on; not to let us rest in the illusion that by once reading them we
have completed a finished journey, as if we had ‘mastered’ them’.19

The Christian church has a great want of epistemic humility. Our theological traditions are no
exemplars of scholarly and doctrinal modesty. We are more likely to brand theological innovators
and path-breakers as heretics, more willing to burn, than listen to them20.

Perhaps, then, its truly good news that deconstruction ‘gives old texts new readings, old traditions
new twists… Deconstruction exposes them to the trauma of something unexpected, something to
come, of the tout autre (‘the other’) which remains ever on the margins of texts and traditions,
which eludes and elicits our discourse, which shakes and solicits our institutions. Deconstruction
warns against letting a discursive tradition close over or shut down, silence or exclude.’21

Deconstruction humbles us in our quest to know and talk about God. It reminds us that our
knowledge of God remains provisional, even as it grows in truth, clarity and consistency. This
reminder is essential for theology to be faithful to be both faithful to revelation and also pertinent
to things that matter in the here-and-right-now. ‘A theology that does not inquire after God’s will
for the present may be orthodox but is not really listening to God.’22 This constant inquiring
usually demands that we never be too sure of what we’re saying about God, never assume that the
Spirit will not be giving us negative feedback about our conclusions. For indeed, ‘revelation is
not a closed system of proposition truths but a divine self-disclosure that continues to open and
challenge.’23

For many Christians, deconstruction is disturbing, because deconstruction doesn’t pull punches
with the questions and probing, even with regards to the faith. There’s an affinity with the event
we call Christmas: Its good news to anyone crying out for hope and positive change and bad news
to all who love the status quo (love it so much, in fact, that alternatives tend to be put down rather
quick). Whilst granted this may appear aberrant and anti-traditional, many Christian thinkers have
come round to the (by no means certain) conclusion that deconstruction (and post-modernism as a
whole, if one could think of the movement thus) is healthy for the church24.

For if nothing else it is ‘the thought…of an absolute heterogeneity that unsettles all the assurance
of the same within which we comfortably ensconce ourselves.’25 There is an irreducible pluralism
in deconstruction which provides, ‘the condition for any determinable faith (and the same is true
of art, of architecture, or law, or whatever you need), but only a quasi-condition, not a full-
fledged condition like a classical a priori…deconstruction exposes faith to indefinite
recontextualixation substitution, and translation. It does not so much surround faith with a
horizon, or protect it with a shield and crossed arrows, as it leaves it vulnerable and exposed to
multiple interpretation, to a multiplicity with which it is the business of faith to cope.’26

Faith, to be faith, cannot rely on absolute knowledge or certainty27. If you are 100% sure, then
what space/place is there left for faith? Isn’t faith a kind of un-knowing, a kind of hoping? And
who hopes for what one already has (or knows for sure28)? In a word, the believer must ‘keep the
faith, fight the good fight, and that faith must be its own shield, fend for itself, and save the name
of God.”29
But that’s not all. Even for an atheist (albeit a very religious one 30) like Derrida, deconstruction
was never meant to be destructive. Instead the practice sought to ‘tear things down’ in order that
something new/improved may emerge.

Likewise, in relation to the kingdom of God, Caputo highlights how deconstruction is related to
the ‘bursting in’, the advent, the in-coming of God, how the kingdom disturbs us everyday lives,
exposes our hypocrisies, challenges our presuppositions and prejudices and in so doing adds life
to our often anaemic existences. He views deconstruction as the hermeneutics of the kingdom of
God. Such a way of reading and understanding is an ‘interpretive style that helps get at the
prophetic spirit of Jesus – who was a surprising and sometime strident outsider; who took a stand
with the ‘other’…Deconstruction is good news because it delivers the shock of the other to the
forces of the same, the shock of the good (the ‘ought’) to the forces of being (‘what is’)’31.

Such a view of faith, of theology, of the other, coupled with a seriousness about the surprising
significance and breaking-in of the God’s justice into our worlds, leads naturally to a
‘hermeneutics of charity’ that recognizes how much we don’t know and how the only thing we
know is that we need to listen and learn in love.

This would entail the patient listening to and/or reading of an opponent’s work (as opposed to not
bothering); the giving of the benefit of the doubt, ‘suspending judgment’ until more
data/arguments are in (as opposed to instantly/hastily concluding they’re in error, illogical, etc.);
acknowledging the value in their ideas (part of being fair is giving credit where credit is due);
searching for value in their ideas (something we would truly appreciate if done to our theories);
and when the occasion is right provoke a rethinking (and thereby a re-embracing) of conventional
symbols and institutions in the renewed light of amazing grace which mazes its route into our
hearts, in quite unexpected ways.

This brings us to the master deconstructionist Himself, Jesus.

Deconstruction & Jesus: Daring an Ethic of Astounding Love

There is much to learn from Jesus about the how and why of deconstruction. He above all knew
that to savour the new wine, the old wineskins had to go.

Jesus deconstructed the Sabbath by reminding its (self-appointed) ‘guardians’ that the day of rest
was constructed for man, and not the other way round32. In so doing, our Lord reconstructed the
role of the Sabbath and the Jews’ relation to it. Demonstrating that something is a product is
usually the first step towards redeeming it for its right(ful) purpose and something akin to
reconstruction and restoration. Needless to say, the guardians of orthodoxy weren’t happy with
such spiritual reverse-engineering.

Jesus’ temple-action juxtaposes deconstruction with symbolic destruction. His external actions of
(relatively mild) violence embodied God’s judgment against the violence done to God and the
world by Israel’s failure to be one’s servant and the other’s light. Instead, Jewish nationalistic
pride had usurped the nation’s political praxis, manifesting itself in ideological compromise,
community-wide oppression and spiritual darkness. Jesus’ half-destroyed the fixtures and props in
order to fully deconstruct the exalted status of the Temple and show that because the ruling Jewish
regime had been unfaithful to God’s plan, God was about to ‘break-in’ and break-up the old order,
and out of the former covenant to reconstruct a new covenant 33. It is not without some post-
modern irony that Jesus then boasted that He could build (read: re-construct!) the Temple again in
three days should it be destroyed.

See what’s happened: The old Temple has become the site for language about the raising of a new
glorified one, a temple which isn’t a temple but nonetheless a temple beyond temples; a true
temple to the Holy Spirit which (whilst not a recognizable temple) is more real and more
universal than the original. Jesus declared that what’s possible is of much greater worth than
what’s actual.

Again, not unlike in modern times, God’s self-assigned faith-police weren’t pleased.

Of course, whilst Jesus himself wasn’t pleased with people like the Pharisees, He nevertheless
loved them. His command to ‘love our enemies’34 deconstructed the meaning of enemy because it
first deconstructed the meaning of ‘love’, ‘perfection’ and what becoming a member of God’s
kingdom entails. By turning one’s cheek for the second strike, you reveal the evil behind the
striker and the willingness to bear more strikes and stripes for his sake. By walking the second
mile, you show (literally and otherwise) how far you’re willing to go for the other person to take
the journey of redemption.

And then there is the Cross.

On those three hours, Jesus took apart everything the world previously understood. Even today,
we remain dumbfounded with the love and power demonstrated on Golgotha 35. We’re not sure
what happened but I would venture that the Cross was a supreme act of deconstruction. By
suffering and dying (and then rising) Jesus exposed the violence of humanity and mankind’s
addition to it36; He embodied a sacrifice more real and powerful than anything that went before37;
He gave new meaning to the word love because He showed there was no escaping the most
powerful kind of all, that of giving one’s life out of love 38; He redefined victory; the Cross - for
all intents and purposes - deconstructed what it meant to be God.

N.T. Wright attempts a summary of the Cross, which he says is, ‘the place where paganism's great
desire - to find something in the created order that one can worship, from which one will gain
strength to be human in a new way - is fulfilled, and so subverted, once and for all. Here at least
is a human being, a creature within the world of creatures, who can be worshiped without
detracting from the worship of the one true God. Here, on the cross, is the one whom to worship
is to worship the living and loving God Himself. Here, on the cross, is the one whom to worship
is to find a true and full humanness. Here, on the cross, is the Creator God taking, once and for
all, the place that the pagan gods had usurped.’39

Calvary has both God and Man caught up in an act of pagan torture yet also the source and crux
of true divine obedience40. The Cross of Jesus Christ is an event of paradox, 'irrationality',
contextualisation, absolute authenticity, a Mission calling forth missions, systemic in more than
one sense, a divine act of power and love. Perhaps it’s more awe-inspiring by its act of solidarity
with (and thus deconstruction of) paganism and one of its worst manifestations, human sacrifice.
What does the career of Jesus tell us about God’s aversion to risks, to His willingness to be ‘in the
wrong’, to His courage in ‘exploring options’, to His love for the weak and hated and to His
penchant for deconstructing the sacred? He’s started it. Are we not called to build upon it?41

*
The May 13 tragedy notwithstanding, Malaysians should be relieved that the violence index is far
lower compared to, say, Pakistan or the Middle-East. I don’t personally recall anything more than
virtual bombs and cyber-bullets exploding throughout the streets of Kuala Lumpur (although
water-cannons did make their debut).

Having said that, our politically charged words continue to kill. In the name of justice, political
revival or even a ‘new dawn’, Malaysian voters accused, mocked, complained, criticised and
berated politicians on both (or all) sides, with the ruling regime taking the brunt of the heat.
Powerful bloggers like Raja Petra Kamaruddin42 have made a name for themselves by tearing
away at top government personalities, parties, plots and projects everyday online. Things reached
a fever pitch earlier this year when Kamarudin was arrested and charged with sedition for
implicating the Deputy Prime Minister in a (rather gruesome) homicide 43. Whilst I cannot speak
about the accuracy (or lack of) of the evidence Kamarudin has presented (or will be) and whilst I
certainly must give him the benefit of the doubt that all he wants to do is tell the Malaysian public
the truth (he is, after all, a rather fine deconstructor), and with due respect (and sympathy) to him
and his fans (including his Christian ones) I cannot avoid wondering – if you’ll forgive my use of
a clichéd t-shirt slogan – what would Jesus do?

Thankfully we don’t have to guess. Kamarudin declared (cyber?)-war on the government44; Jesus
could’ve declared victory45, but didn’t. Kamarudin cursed his captors, Jesus prayed for them.
Kamarudin would have certain murderers be sent to hell 46; Jesus faced hell’s greatest fury for love
of the very worst of mankind.

Because if loving our enemies is a command, shouldn’t love be an overriding priority in our
political actions and discourse (and isn’t a constant stream of angry, unkind and threatening
words a mark of the opposite?). Kamarudin is, of course, not a Christian but a (very learned and
sharp-minded) Muslim47. Still, it is perhaps all the more urgent why the church and Christian
politicians should choose our models carefully as we work to emulate the radical trans-political
love of Jesus to the major voices in the country’s political arena48.

Maybe the Church could embody the ‘mad’ and ‘nonsensical’ marching orders of the kingdom to
love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us. Perhaps, in addition to organising
conferences and persuading people to vote for the Opposition (let’s not keep this in the closet,
shall we?), Malaysian Christians could best live out the kingdom by, ‘speaking with self-
sacrificial actions more than with words…(by) speaking not as moral superiors but as self-
confessing moral inferiors.49’

How can Malaysian Christians replicate Calvary to the Islamic religious authorities who would
care less (a lot less than the non-Muslims at least) about the Constitution’s Article 1150? How can
Malaysian Christians show sacrificial love to those who plunder indigenous land for
development? How can we model the love of Christ to politicians from both the new dawn and
the old dusk?

Deconstruction & the Other: Daring a Community Beyond Itself

The ‘other’ is an important term in post-modern deconstructive thinking. The ‘other’ is


synonymous with the neglected, the marginalised, the silenced, the oppressed, the ‘bad guy’.
The ‘other’ is the truth (or truth-bearer) we’d rather not see or hear or smell. The ‘other’ is the
subject of questions we don’t want asked, the queries we’d prefer to stamp out. And yet
deconstruction ‘incites discourse to inflame our passion for the impossible, (the inconceivable?),
for the incoming of something absolutely surprising. Deconstruction is trying to inflame the
passion of faith, to incite a riot, to drive us made with passion, not to neutralize exciting and
inflaming discourses.’51

If nothing else, deconstruction is an on-going conversation which never rests until ultimate justice
and goodness is manifested, which is to say it’ll never cease. (The reader by now would’ve
guessed that an explanation for deconstruction can never be given, only attempted).

Institutions and individuals are kept on their toes with this kind of thinking and rethinking, for
there’s always another side to throw the best meta-stories off guard and knock chips off even the
most impregnable positions. There’s always something I’ve missed and my heart is kept open to
the voice of those we’d rather keep silent. I find that deconstruction can be turned into an agent of
love because it forces me to never cancel out, never put down, never permanently erase and
always care for the worst of the ‘bad guys’ in society (plus some imaginary ones in my mind).

Deconstruction pushes me towards the margins, the boundaries. By reflecting on how conceptual
boundaries and community walls have been erected, by seeing that they have been constructed
(as opposed to eternally present because absolutely desired by God), I also see how my notions of
‘enemy’, ‘outcast’ and ‘unloved/unloveable’ could themselves be nothing more than products of
the darkness of our times.

Wheatley & Kellner-Rogers wrote about boundaries becoming ‘the place of meeting and
exchange…we usually think of these edges as the means of defining separateness: what’s inside
and what’s outside. But in living systems, boundaries are…the place where new relationships take
form, an important place of exchange and growth as one individual chooses to respond to
another.’52

Deconstruction forces us to embrace any and all along the margins.

If being open to the other is a sure (albeit risky and discomforting) way forward, if alterity (i.e.
the exchanging of one’s own perspective for the other’s 53) is a must for the community, if meeting
at the margins of one’s revered horizons is to be a habit for deconstructing bad habits, then the
issue of Christian ecumenism cannot be ignored.

Christian denominations, for all their value, have been the source of much angst and ungodly
rivalry and hostility. Like many of us, I have had more than a few friends ask me about the
existence of so many Christian denominations and why are there so many disagreements between
Christians, to the point where not just mud, but stones, are hurled. I usually give the ‘standard
evangelical’ response which is that denominations exist because of different emphases and
priorities in worship but – “Don’t worry”, he adds with smiling assurance – we are all united in
the most important things. I usually stop here and hope (by sheet act of will) that my questioner
will move on to more palatable issues. I hope I won’t be asked about the anathemas, the burnings,
the drownings and other unpleasantries.

Yet if the Church is to be an effective voice for the oppressed, we do not have the option of
keeping each other at arm’s length on account of the variations in our creeds. If we are to
champion putting food on the tables of the indigenous people, we cannot refuse fellowshipping
on the same table as the very people of God. If we are to preach and practice socio-political
justice, we cannot continue perpetuating the injustice of denominational supremacy54.

Commenting on the doctrine of ‘justification by faith’ which has so greatly divided Protestants
and Catholics, N.T. Wright states, ‘The doctrine of justification is in fact the great ecumenical
doctrine…Justification declares that all who believe in Jesus Christ belong at the same table, no
matter what their cultural or racial (or denominational) differences. Because what matters is
believing in Jesus, detailed agreement on justification itself…isn’t the thing which should
determine eucharistic fellowship…If Christians could only get this right, they would find that
not only would they be believing the gospel, they would be practicing it; and that is the best
basis for proclaiming it.’55

(Wright goes on to quote an Anglican divine Richard Hooker who said that one is not justified by
believing in justification by faith – one is justified by believing in Jesus56. How’s that for a
Reformation Day message?)

Alterity begins among God’s people, after which this new-creation community can affect
kingdom alterity wherever they are. We proclaim the Gospel best when the love of Christ trumps
creedal (and other kinds of inter-church) conflicts57. This book itself is an attempt to bring
representatives from two traditions together to focus on higher kingdom issues which impact our
worlds58.

In Malaysia, the issue of other-ness is almost the defining issue of the nation. Like other fallen
communities, we tend to define ourselves over against the other, as per a form of tribalism 59. The
racial riots of May 13, 1969, remain the non-pareil of racial tension and continue to haunt the
Malaysian national consciousness (though very few personal memories, this author included)60.
Much debate continues as to whether it was a manifestation of racial frustration, a natural
eruption in a multi-racial country, a Communist plot (or an Imperialist or Government or
Opposition one – take your pick) or, as most recently claimed, a coup d’état organised by the
United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) to topple the then-premiere Tunku Abdul
Rahman61.

As I am less than a beginner in matters of Malaysian politics and as this issue has and will
continue to be analysed ad infinitum, I’d best keep silent on proposed ‘solutions’, at least the
national ones (and leave that to the ‘new-er dawn’ politicians). But not for the first time, maybe
resolving a public crisis begins with personal reformation of a prickly nature and I suppose (yet
again) one needs to start wherever one is.

And so I ask myself:


• How many times have I as a Chinese poked and threw ridicule at the ‘laziness’ of the
Malays (whom I felt conveniently put off their sloth when it came to eating) and failed to
curb my own hedonism and fishing for rewards?
• Could my stereotyping of the backwardness and alcoholism of the Indian community be a
chief cause for my hesitation in standing up for them whenever they are ridiculed unfairly
by my fellow Chinese?
• Is my frequent (though hidden) hatred for (what I see to be) a system celebrating kulit-
fication for the Malays62 a distraction and an excuse to look away from the Chinese
addiction to gambling, over-eating, over-spending and over-working? (Is this unfair
stereo-typing of the Chinese?)
• Moving across the causeway, do I instinctively label my Singaporean neighbours ‘kiasu63’
because it’s easier to flog another publicly than to face and correct my own insecurities
and ‘fear of losing’?

Who knows, maybe it’s time Christians from specific races worked together to offer public
confession and forgiveness for the sins of the fathers (and uncles and everyone else), in service, in
symbol and what-not? Maybe Chinese families should tell stories of heroic Malays to their
children spotlighting what’s honourable in the tradition (and vice-versa; seriously, when’s the last
time an elder told the young ones in his care about the noteworthy goodness of another race?).
Maybe each race should publicly confront the unspoken pain and injustice dealt towards the
other. Even as I write this, my mind tells me it’ll be impossible to hear regular coffee-shop chats
in which another race is sincerely commended and offered up as a positive model for emulation.
But then aren’t all things less than impossible with God?

The future suffering-for and suffering-with each other can serve to reverse the historical
suffering-by each other. May 13 can be thoroughly deconstructed and redeemed.

The prophet Jeremiah’s internal turmoil was deconstructed by God when the weeping servant was
challenged, ‘If you're worn out in this footrace with men, what makes you think you can race
against horses? And if you can't keep your wits during times of calm, what's going to happen
when troubles break loose like the Jordan in flood?’ 64 The church is in a race against fiery steeds
of nationalistic ideology and power-plays. A flood of ethnic unrest always threatens. We need to
keep running (though always willing to stop to give a helping hand), to keep our eyes fixed
(though not so rigid we can’t see anything beyond our dogmas) and to keep proclaiming God’s
good news (and use fresh words, if we want).

We can then, like the psalmist, end up feasting in the presence of our enemies65 at the finishing
line. God dares us.

End Notes
1
Visit the website at http://www.rohmalaysia.net/

2
Stanley Grenz, A Primer on Postmodernism (Wm. B.Eerdmans Publishing Co. 1996), p.147-8

3
Ibid. p.142

4
Brian McLaren’s cute acronym for People Without Doctorates.

5
Mark C. Taylor, Erring: A Postmodern A/Theology (University of Chicago Press, 1984), p.10-11

6
Leonard Sweet and Brian McLaren (quite literally) spell it out for us in ‘D is for Deconstruction’, see Leonard Sweet, Brian McLaren &
Jerry Haselmayer, A is for Abductive: The Language of the Emerging Church (Zondervan: Grand Rapids, Michigan, 2003), p.87-90.
7
Farish Noor, CMs’, 17 March 2008 DPMs’ and PMs’: Time to go Beyond the Old Taboos, The Other Malaysia viewed 6 April 2008,
http://www.othermalaysia.org/content/view/167/1/
8

Grenz, Primer on Postmodernism, p.148.


9
Farish Noor, Pity the Poor Keris: How a Universal Symbol Became a Tool for Racial Politics, 27 November 2006, The Other Malaysia,
viewed 14 May 2008 http://www.othermalaysia.org/content/view/56/65/
10
Manifested by the keris-waving song-and-dance by Hishamuddin Hussein, Malaysia’s Education Minister at the time of writing, see
Hishamuddin Hussein: Keris Controversy, Wikipaedia, viewed 13 May 2008
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hishamuddin_Hussein#Keris_controversy (Hussein has since offered a public apology; perhaps it’s time for
some to offer public forgiveness?)
11
The crime of non-married Muslim couples being caught ‘in close proximity’ and committing ‘immoral acts’. This is the simplistic
definition. For greater depth and some advice for Muslim women in Malaysia, Know Your Rights: Caught in Close Proximity for
"Immoral" Acts (Khalwat) Women’s Aid Organisation, 2000, viewed 13 May 2008,
http://www.wao.org.my/news/20030104knowrghts_khalwat.htm
12
Farish Noor, Khalwat, Anyone? Moral Liabilities in Malaysian Politics, Off The Edge (May 2008, Issue 41), p.13

13
Although this is not to say nothing good came out of the conversation, see Alwyn Lau, November 21 2005, NECF-EMO Chat, blog
entry at alwynlau.blogdrive.com, http://alwynlau.blogdrive.com/archive/88.html
14
Robert C. Greer, Mapping Postmodernism: A Survey of Christian Options (Intervarsity Press, 2003), p.25

15
Ibid. p.33

16
Ibid. p.41

17
The situation with the historical creeds is less straight-forward, as emerging church leaders have not shied away from spot-lighting the
‘humanness’ (and the politics) of the early Church Councils, to their exclusion at various high-profile theological conferences. E.g., Tony
Jones, National Coordinator of Emergent Village (USA), had a paper rejected by the 2007 Wheaton Theology Conference. In his words,
which are quite representative of kingdom-like deconstruction, IMO: ‘Ultimately, I was told, I did not treat the Fathers and the Councils
as normative to the life of the church today. I argued that we're in conversation with the Fathers today, just as they were in conversation
with one another in their day. I also posited that the victory of one theological position over another was as much a matter of politics and
context as a matter of divine providence. Finally, the lack of marginalized voices in all of the ancient (and medieval and modern)
theological debates should give us all pause.’ See Tony Jones, June 29 2007, Rejected by Wheaton, blog-entry at Theoblogy.blogspot.com,
viewed 13 May 2008, http://theoblogy.blogspot.com/2007/06/rejected-by-wheaton.html
18
Ibid., p.43-4

19
Anthony C. Thiselton, New Horizons in Hermeneutics: The Theory and Practice of Transforming Reading (Zondervan Publishing
House, 1992), p.124
20

For a short account of the Church and her heretics, see David Christie-Murray, A History of Heresy (Oxford University Press, 1989)
21

Caputo, Prayers & Tears, p.18.


22

Clark H. Pinnock, Flame of Love: A Theology of the Holy Spirit (InterVarsity Press, 1996), p.215.
23
Ibid. p.221.
24
See Stanley Grenz Primer on Postmodernism, Brian A McLaren, JKA Smith, Joihn Caputo, Keith Putt, John Caputo, Bryan Walsh

25
John D. Caputo The Prayers & Tears of Jacques Derrida: Religion Without Religion (Indiana University Press 1997), p.5.

26
Caputo, Prayers & Tears, p.48.

27
Caputo puts it delightfully, ‘The spiritual journey on which we are embarked is…a journey of faith. That means that those who insist
they know the way have programmed their lives, have put their lives on automatic pilot. They are knowers (gnostics) who have taken
themselves out of the game. They are like vacationers eager for an adventure, to set forth into the unknown – but not without an air-
conditioned Hummer with four-wheel drive, an experienced guide, and reservations as a five-star hotel.’ (emphasis in the original), see
John D. Caputo, What Would Jesus Deconstruct? The Good News of Postmodernity for the Church (Baker Academic, 2007) p.41.
28
Romans 8:24

29
Caputo, Prayers & Tears, p.48.

30
In Prayers and Tears, Caputo tries to show the spiritual/religious side of Derrida and deconstruction. It seems that Bruce Ellis Benson
has followed suit with regards to another of anti-Christianity’s most famous philosophers, Frederich Nietszche in Pious Nietszche:
Decadence and Dionysian Faith (Indiana University Press, 2007).
31
Caputo, What Would Jesus Deconstruct? p.26-7.

32
Mark 2:27

33
See N.T. Wright, Jesus & the Victory of God, Christian Origins and the Question of God II (Fortress Press, 1997),

34
Matthew 5:43-48.

35
Joel Green and Mark Baker helpfully seek to recover the ‘scandal’ of Calvary by revisiting the New Testament images and metaphors
behind the atonement of Jesus and by sharing contemporary retellings of the Cross, see Joel B. Green & Mark Recovering the Scandal of
the Cross
36
Girard, Violence and the Sacred, B.Keith Putt has summarized Girard’s thesis and compared with John Caputo’s work in B.Keith Putt,
Risking Love and the Divine 'Perhaps' : Postmodern Poetics of a Vulnerable God (Perspectives in Religious Studies 34, Summer 2007)
p.193-214.
37
Hebrews 9:12-14

38
John 15:13

39
Tom Wright, Bringing the Church to the World (Bethany House Publishers 1992) p.94-95

40
Phil 2:5-8.

41
1 Corinthians 3:12-15.

42
Kamaruddin blogs at http://mt.m2day.org/2008/

43
Blogger Raja Petra taken to prison after declining bail on sedition charge, The Star, 7 May 2008, viewed 8 May 2008
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2008/5/7/nation/21167472&sec=nation
44
MALAYSIA: Blogger Raja Petra Charged with Sedition, 7 May 2008, Asia Media, viewed 9 May 2008,
http://www.asiamedia.ucla.edu/article.asp?parentid=91893
45
Presumably, Pilate’s human troops would have been no match for twelve legions of super-human ones. Matthew 26:52-53.

46
The title of Kamarudin’s blog-post which started the process leading to his arrest was entitled, Let’s Send the Altantuya Murderers to
Hell, Malaysia Today, viewed 8 May 2008, http://www.malaysia-today.net/2008/content/view/6604/84 (since made
available only to members of Malaysia Today)
47
When all is said and written, it is heartening to witness Kamarudin unclench his fists (somewhat) and accept bail for the sake of his
family. See Raja Petra to be Freed, 8 May 2008, The Sun (used with permission by Malaysian Bar)
http://www.malaysianbar.org.my/legal/general_news/raja_petra_to_be_freed.html
48
Kamaruddin was detained a second time in September 2008 and released two months later. He continues writing against governmental
injustice to this day at http://mt.m2day.org/2008. Christians in Malaysia remain divided as to how much support the Church
should grant to figures like ‘RPK’, although to be fair it’s likely that a majority consider him worthy role-model.
49
Gregory A. Boyd, The Myth of a Christian Nation: How the Quest for Political Power is Destroying the Church (Zondervan Grand
Rapids, Michigan, 2005) p.141. Boyd’s contends that when the Church takes up the ‘sword’ of national politics it necessarily puts down
the ‘cross’ of God’s kingdom. In contrast to many among the American ‘Christian Right’ (and more than a few Malaysian Christians too,
one suspects) Boyd doesn’t see voting as a Christian duty. That is reserved for living such self-sacrificial and self-giving (and, obviously,
non-violent) lives so people (including our enemies) are transformed by the Calvary love of God.
50
Lina Joy’s Despair, 31 May 2007, The Economist, viewed 8 October 2007,
http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9262452
51
Boyd, Myth of Christian Nation, p.59

52
Margaret J. Wheatley & Myron Kellner-Rogers, ‘The Paradox and Promise of Community’, in The Community of the Future, ed.
Frances Hesselbein, Marshall Goldsmith, Richard Beckhard and Richard F. Schubert (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1997), p.12

53
See the origins of the word in the philosophy of Emmanuel Lévinas at Alterity, Wikpedia, viewed 19 May 2008,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alterity
54
One such attempt to justify and thus maintain the schism between Protestantism and Rome is R.C. Sproul’s By Faith Alone: The
Evangelical Doctrine of Justification (Baker Books, 1999). It is a cheerless book as it doesn’t acknowledge Catholic and Protestant
developments since the Reformation and offers no hope for unity.
55
N.T. Wright, What Saint Paul Really Said: Was Paul of Tarsus the Real Founder of Christianity? (Lion Publishing, 1997), p.158-159

56
Ibid. p.159.

57
John 13:35

58
In this sense, it follows in the footsteps of books like Chuck Colson & Richard J. Neuhaus, Evangelicals and Catholics Together:
Toward a Common Mission (Dallas: Word, 1995)
59
What Gregory Boyd identifies is a key element which fuels the violence of the tit-for-tat kingdom of the world. See Boyd, Myth of a
Christian Nation, p.24-26.
60
One of the most recently published articles on the May 13 incident is the deconstructive write-up by Mark Disney who talks very much
Derrida when he says that, “The truth…will always be out because history does not belong to the past; it shifts and changes as we shift
and change; ‘facts’ emerge, disappear and re-emerge; and the lesson one draws ultimately depend upon the questions one asks. One
measure of Malaysia’s putative post-election political maturity is the extent to which such questions can or will be asked.’ Mark Disney,
In Search of the Real May 13, Off The Edge (May 2008, Issue 41), p.63

61
Kua Kia Soong, May 13: Declassified Documents on the Malaysian Riots of 1969 (Suaram Komunikasi, 2007). Kua drew heavily on
foreign diplomatic dispatches and foreign news reports released about a decade ago.

62
This home-grown Malaysian term refers to advancement by the colour of one’s skin, for which kulit is the Malay word.

63
The word even merits its on Wikipadia entry, fabulous. See Kiasu, Wikipedia, viewed 19 May 2008 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiasu

64
Jeremiah 12:5-6, The Message

65
Psalm 23:5

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