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Entries from April 2009

“A Christian Mistake”

April 26, 2009 · 2 Comments

I have a lot on my mind, but this article by Jim Wallis, covers a few thoughts of mine more coherently and with more punch. I added the bold part at the end. More from me later.

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In ominous red and black, last week’s Newsweek cover carried the headline, “The Decline and Fall of Christian America.” The magazine’s cover story by editor Jon Meacham provoked a wide array of reactions from across the spectrum. Whether Meacham is ultimately correct in his observance of these trends and his interpretation of their meaning is yet to be seen. The 1966 Time magazine cover that asked “Is God Dead?” could not have foreseen the development of religion in American public life over the past 40 years, and we shouldn’t expect any more from Newsweek. What the latter cover has accomplished is to raise questions vital to both the health of the Christian tradition and for the public discourse of our nation.

The question that struck me and the one I began to address in a short piece for Newsweek was that of the role of religion in public life and politics. Here’s what I had to say:

The Religious Right was a Christian mistake. It was a movement that sought to implement a “Christian agenda” by tying the faithful to one political option — the right wing of the Republican Party. The politicizing of faith in such a partisan way is always a theological mistake. But the rapid decline of the Religious Right now offers us a new opportunity to re-think the role of faith in American public life.

Personally, I am not offended or alarmed by the notion of a post-Christian America. Christianity was originally and, in my view, always meant to be a minority faith with a counter-cultural stance, as opposed to the dominant cultural and political force. Notions of a “Christian America” quite frankly haven’t turned out very well.

But that doesn’t mean a lack of religious influence — on the contrary. Committed minorities have had a tremendous influence on cultures and even on politics. Just look at all the faith-inspired social-reform movements animated by people of faith. But Martin Luther King Jr. did not get the Civil Rights Act passed because he had the most Bible verses on his side but because he entered into the public square with compelling arguments, vision, and policy that ultimately won the day. Those faith-inspired movements are disciplined by democracy, meaning they don’t expect to win just because they are “Christian.” They have to win the debates about what is best for the common good by convincing their fellow citizens.

And that is best done by shaping the values narrative, as opposed to converting everyone to their particular brand of religion. Rather, they are always looking for allies around their moral causes, including people of other faiths or of no religion. The story of Christianity in America in the coming decades will be defined by a multicultural shift as well as a generational one. “New” evangelicals and Catholics, along with black, Hispanic, and Asian churches will now shape the agenda. But also included are the millions of Americans who say they are “spiritual but not religious,” finding homes in non-traditional churches, mega-churches that teach that true religion is found in care for “the least of these.” Making a real impact on the values and directions that a democracy will choose is, perhaps, a more exciting kind of influence than relying on the illusory and often disappointing hopes of cultural and political dominance.

Barack Obama stirred the pot around this exact question recently with his comment at a press conference in Turkey that “we do not consider ourselves a Christian nation.” This statement is not a new one for Obama. He expressed it clearly during a 2006 speech to a Sojourners/Call to Renewal conference. He explained his position this way:

Democracy demands that the religiously motivated translate their concerns into universal, rather than religion-specific, values. It requires that their proposals be subject to argument, and amenable to reason. I may be opposed to abortion for religious reasons, but if I seek to pass a law banning the practice, I cannot simply point to the teachings of my church or evoke God’s will. I have to explain why abortion violates some principle that is accessible to people of all faiths, including those with no faith at all.

Now this is going to be difficult for some who believe in the inerrancy of the Bible, as many evangelicals do. But in a pluralistic democracy, we have no choice. Politics depends on our ability to persuade each other of common aims based on a common reality. It involves the compromise, the art of what’s possible. At some fundamental level, religion does not allow for compromise. It’s the art of the impossible. If God has spoken, then followers are expected to live up to God’s edicts, regardless of the consequences. To base one’s life on such uncompromising commitments may be sublime, but to base our policy making on such commitments would be a dangerous thing.

Categories: Politics · Religion · Society

Unreal Parenting

April 19, 2009 · 1 Comment

I’m not sure if what I just saw really happened.

I was on a train with a friend going to eat dinner, when nearby there’s this little commotion going on. I didn’t pay much attention (I’ve learned to mind my own business in big cities where everything happens), but thankfully my friend did. Apparently a mother was sitting across from her maybe 6 year-old son, chewing him out. And once the train made it’s last stop, she charged right past us and out the door, leaving the kid behind.

“Did that mom just leave her kid behind?” my friend asked me.

We figured that would be impossible. They must have had no connection and what my friend probably saw was just a woman chewing somebody out on a phone.

Until we hit the gate where you swipe a card to exit the station. And the kid starting yelling, “Mom!” The woman was already gone.

We exited, but stuck around to see if the kid got any help. After a couple minutes we went downstairs outside of the station to see if this weird woman was there. Well, she was there, but she wasn’t waiting. Apparently she had gone somewhere else, and was walking back to the station, and then just stood there outside, downstairs, waiting for her kid who she couldn’t see.

My friend and I went upstairs to talk to the security guard, who was attending to the kid, and we told them there was a woman waiting downstairs.

Almost end of story, until the security guard took the boy to his mom. We watched from far off to avoid getting into trouble, and then the security guard took the boy back up to the station. Because apparently the mom had the boy’s ticket card and he still needed to pay to exit the station. And she stood there. Waiting. She didn’t go back up with them.

Really? Did she just scar this 6 year old? I mean I’ve never parented a kid myself but I’m gonna go out on a limb and say…what the hell woman?

*shakes head…

Categories: Musings · Society

Generation Moore’s Law

April 7, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I have no evidence to back this up, no hard facts, no studies, I can’t even say this is a substantial theory based out of personal, first-hand experience.

But I have to say it really feels like that in America, my generation and the generation after, seems to forget things very rapidly. I don’t mean we forget things as in they actually disappear from our memory, I mean that the impact of relatively recent events, events that should still have a lot of meaning to us, is almost muted.

Take 9/11. This year will be the 8th anniversary. The 8th. Not 58th, 108th, or some otherwise distant number. Perhaps it’s just me, but I feel like in 8 years, the impact I felt on that day has already passed. Yes, it’s still sad, enraging even for those who were there or lost loved ones in that incident or the war that followed it. I have a feeling that there are quite a lot of others who feel this way about significant events too. Columbine? VA Tech?

On each of these events I’ve heard someone say, “this is the event that happens in every generation where everybody remembers where they were at the exact moment they heard about it.”

Maybe it’s because we have such widespread media now, that we here so many things that we become numb to it and just await the next “big thing.”

I wonder if it also has to do with our culture, specifically technology. Everything moves so fast, technology grows by leaps and bounds within months. We have instant messaging, cell phones, instant emails on iPhones. I wonder if our memory just can’t keep up with it too.

Categories: Musings