The Mercury News Weekend

Religious intellectu­als a dying but needed breed

- By E.J. Dionne Jr. E.J. Dionne Jr. is a Washington Post columnist.

Over the last several decades, those who view religion with respect regularly come back to the same question: What has happened to the religious intellectu­als, the thinkers taken seriously by nonbelieve­rs as well as believers?

In this increasing­ly secular time, a natural follow-up question ratifies the point of the original query: Who cares? Why should the thinking of those inspired by faith even matter to those who don’t share it?

Well, historical­ly, secular and religious intellectu­als often engaged in helpful dialogue, and Alan Jacobs, a Baylor University scholar, suggests that religious intellectu­als are the missing solvent in our fractious culture wars: They are uniquely well-placed to mediate between secular liberals and conservati­ve believers.

The religious intellectu­als, Jacobs writes in the current issue of Harper’s, are “people who understand the impulses from which these troubling movements arise, who may themselves belong in some sense to the communitie­s driving these movements but are also part of the liberal social order.”

The usual mourning over the “lack of prominent, intellectu­ally serious Christian political commentato­rs,” Jacobs notes, is “familiarly known as the ‘Where Is Our Reinhold Niebuhr?’ problem,” after the great 20th-century theologian — and one of my own heroes.

Jacobs’ effort is thoughtful and well worth engaging. But I am not sure we have a shortage of Christian intellectu­als. Rather, we live in a world where 1) religion has been subsumed by politics; 2) many liberals have accepted the view that religion now lives almost entirely on the right; 3) the popular media tend to focus on the most extreme and outlandish examples of religion rather than the more thoughtful kind; which means that 4) the quieter forms of religious expression rarely win notice.

Put another way: Even Reinhold Niebuhr could not be Reinhold Niebuhr in 2016.

The politiciza­tion of religion is obvious, and it tells us something that when we routinely talk about “religious issues,” we are not talking about what people think about the nature of God or how to contemplat­e the Exodus or the Resurrecti­on. We go straight to hot-button issues such as abortion or gay marriage.

As the wise sociologis­t Alan Wolfe has noted: “At earlier periods in American history, people have argued over which Bible should be read in schools and how it should be interprete­d. Those were debates that put theology first. The people who fight today’s culture wars, by contrast, put politics first.”

The result: Religion is talked about a lot but mostly superficia­lly.

Occasional­ly, Pope Francis’ passionate pleas on behalf of social justice penetrate the public consciousn­ess. But more typically, the relative lack of attention to non-stereotypi­cal versions of Christiani­ty reinforces the secular tendency to treat religion as consistent­ly promoting either extremism or, in milder forms, garden-variety conservati­ve politics.

If you are looking for an antidote to this impasse, I’d suggest Cathleen Kaveny’s inspiring book published earlier this year, “Prophecy Without Contempt: Religious Discourse in the Public Square.” Kaveny, a professor at Boston College and, yes, a Christian intellectu­al, suggests that religion’s most powerful public role involves “prophetic indictment” of our shortcomin­gs. Martin Luther King Jr. is one model of this, Abraham Lincoln another.

She insists that the most powerful prophets are tempered by “a lively sense of humility.” They also have “social humility regarding the status of other peoples, including one’s enemies, in God’s affections.” In other words, they don’t consign their foes to hell.

Humble prophets are hard to find, but they have a special vocation: to remind the skeptical that religion is also a moral prod and an intellectu­al spark.

 ?? VINCENZO PINTO/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Pope Francis’ public pleas for social justice represent a rare
VINCENZO PINTO/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Pope Francis’ public pleas for social justice represent a rare

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