
Any individual who’s achieved the triumvirate of celebrity, power, and wealth has made enemies on the way up. By simple jealousy or calculated design, the chosen one is, in certain circles, detested and vilified. In some instances, however, the hated party and his detractors are not the usual suspects. Such is the case with the recently departed Steve Jobs and the Westboro Baptist Church.
If you’re unfamiliar with these worshippers and their motives, you’re about to be enlightened. Although only 71 strong at last official count, this small band of fundamentalist Christians from Topeka, Kansas has carved quite a name for themselves nationwide. Flying under the motto, “God Hates Fags,” the group tracks the battle-related deaths of U.S. homosexual soldiers for the express purpose of disrupting their funerals.
But “disrupting” is far too mild an adjective. The right to mourn a loved one in peace and privacy is an unwritten tenet of American society, a tenet ignored by the Westboro Baptists. Before and as the burials are conducted, they make vicious mockery of the deaths of those who have died in battle, pouring salt into the wounds of loved ones left behind. As heinous as their actions are, those actions are sanctioned by the Constitution of the United States, specifically, by a Supreme Court decision affirming the group’s right to exercise free speech.
“Give someone an inch and he’ll take a yard.” The Westboro Baptists typify that adage. No longer content to confine their vitriol to military men and women who have served their country honorably, the group recently struck out at techno-genius Steve Jobs, who passed from this Earth last week. “Thank GOD! Steve Jobs is Dead!” proclaimed their website. This message of hatred was then ferried to a much larger audience via Twitter.com.
Adding a new level of dementia to the mix, one of the group’s spokespersons chose to send her tweets via an iPhone: just one of the technological miracles envisioned and engineered by Steve Jobs. The Westboro Baptist Church, you see, blames Jobs for promoting the legalization of gay marriage. In the eyes of the fundamentalists, gay marriage is the downfall of our society. By that reckoning, the rat bastard robber barons in Corporate America and Congress, not to mention the murderers, rapists, and pedophiles cooling their jets in the slammer or still running around loose, have all earned free passes beyond the Pearly Gates.
I myself am not a techno geek. I don’t own much of the technology created by Jobs and his talented crew. And, on some level, I blame Jobs’ inventions for the death of music CDs, liner notes, and cover art. I blame him for enabling people to download single songs instead of buying entire albums — thereby losing golden opportunities to hear lesser known, but no less great, music. Had iTunes and the iPod been invented earlier, I may never have heard and fallen in love with gems such as James Taylor’s Blossom, Van Morrison’s St. Dominic’s Cathedral, The Pogues’ Thousands are Sailing, or Robbie Robertson’s Somewhere Down the Lazy River.
But I cannot argue Jobs’ gifts as well as his tenacity. He revolutionized the ways that human beings communicate, learn, and forge friendships; the way we share information, hopes, dreams, and losses with others across the globe. Steven Jobs shrank the world even as he expanded it beyond our wildest imagination. He had the most incredibly positive outlook even in the face of death. Steve Jobs had balls. He had vision. He had heart. And when he died, I cried for the immense loss suffered by us all.
Steve Jobs had what the Westboro Baptist Church members will never have. Or rather, he had what they have chosen to ignore, because they prefer, as do terrorists, to twist sacred scripture to their own ends. In their hatred and myopia, they have perverted the teachings of He upon whom all Christian religions are based. By deliberately bringing misery upon others, they have spit in the face of His message and indeed, the very core of His life.
“He,” of course, is Jesus Christ.
Yes, the fundamentalists have forgotten the words spoken by Jesus to His disciples. Awed as He performed one of miracles, Jesus allowed, “These things I do, you shall do them and greater.” Understanding that every human being is a child of an omniscient God, Jesus dropped an essential insight into our laps. And He used the Bible to communicate His message to generations upon generations of Christians yet to be born. He told us that the God-given gifts of creativity and greatness lie within all of us, as does an enormous capacity to love — if we choose to accept and access those gifts.
Clearly, Steve Jobs was a cherished child of God. What, then, are the Westboro Baptists? I suppose they’ll find out when it’s their turn to meet and answer to their Maker.




