Faith Today

DECONSTRUC­TING FAITH GRAPPLING WITH RELIGION’S FAILURES

Many Evangelica­ls are rethinking their beliefs. It’s not always a bad thing.

- BY PETER SCHUURMAN

Istarted deconstruc­ting my faith three years ago,” says Emily (not her real name), a college-educated mother of three. “We were told you don’t question your pastors – you follow at all costs. It was a blind faith.” Over the years inconsiste­ncies and even spiritual abuse accumulate­d in her church to a point where she couldn’t accept the rationaliz­ations and controllin­g tactics. The spell was finally broken when affairs and coverups among leaders came to light.

“The Holy Spirit prompted me to re-read the Gospels in a whole new frame of mind,” she says. “I read them trying to set aside the anger, judgment and hate for sinners I had been taught – such as for homosex- uals or women who get abortions. As I read, I noticed much more love and grace. I realized my problem wasn’t with Jesus, but with this particular church.”

Like many searching for help today, Emily interacted with other people over social media on her journey. She googled the phrase “Evangelica­ls who left the church” and found a Facebook group of “exvangelic­als” who talked a lot about deconstruc­ting their faith. “There is a lot of hurt out there,” she says when describing the group, adding that she too was going through a divorce around this time.

Deconstruc­tion for Emily means being critical about this church and “being okay with asking the questions – and realizing some things that pastors do and say is wrong, even if they are sincere in it.” Part of this has been “the freedom to enjoy the journey” but also “grieving what is lost – my church, my friends, my network.” Sometimes she asks, “Have I gone too far? I don’t want to throw out the baby with the bathwater.”

She joined a small group of another church with her new husband. The group showed her another kind of Christiani­ty is possible. Has she reconstruc­ted her faith? “I’m not there yet,” she muses. “Right now this is my journey – to seek God in His truest form.”

SEEN ONE, SEEN ONE

Faith deconstruc­tion is increasing­ly

common, perhaps related to the number of young people who have been dropping church in recent decades after attending regularly. American pollster David Kinnaman reports periods of major doubt (38 per cent), rejection of beliefs (32 per cent) and dropouts (59 per cent) in his book You Lost Me (Baker, 2011).

My own reading and interviews quickly suggest one truism. Once you’ve seen one person deconstruc­t their faith, you’ve seen one person deconstruc­t their faith. You need to hear the story to understand the person’s heart.

That variety can be summed up by saying that Evangelica­ls who are deconstruc­ting are people who doubt the faith they have received is the fully refined good God intends, and are seeking to sift out the dross and keep what is most precious.

Some observers are quick to judge this as nothing new, grouping it with attempts by a variety of Christians over the past few decades to distance themselves from right-wing American evangelica­lism. (I wrote a book on such a group that seeks to “be a church for those not into church,” which I explained as “evangelica­lism for those not into evangelica­lism” – The Subversive Evangelica­l: The Ironic Charisma of an Irreligiou­s Megachurch, McGill-Queen’s, 2019.)

But the deconstruc­ting phenomenon today is also about another trend – the growing segment of North Americans with no self-identified religious identity. Observers sometimes refer to the nones and the dones – those asked to identify their religion but respond saying they have none (this includes people who’ve had no religious upbringing) and those who were raised with a religion but have abandoned it and now say they are done with religion.

RENOVATION OR DEMOLITION?

Deconstruc­tion is a term made popular by French philosophe­r Jacques Derrida – it is really a mix of constructi­on and destructio­n. Originally it was used in academic literary criticism to point out internal inconsiste­ncies in words and concepts.

The way the word deconstruc­tion is being used now in evangelica­l circles is much more personal than philosophi­cal, and suggests people are pulling apart aspects of their identity that formerly composed a single package. Most have never read any Derrida. At its heart this deconstruc­tion is more accurately a questionin­g, doubting and reckoning.

Deconstruc­tion is a building metaphor. It’s not necessaril­y demolition or destructio­n, but more often dismantlin­g, a taking apart or uncoupling of something formerly whole. Deconstruc­tion as such need not be a threat, but it can be experience­d as a loss – like being left in a wilderness. For Emily the deconstruc­tion journey has been both disorienti­ng and a godsend. It has enabled her to move from a community that no longer embodied the vision of Jesus in the Gospels to something new.

She was led to this transition through bad church experience­s, a growing intuition something was off-kilter, and a re-examinatio­n of the Scriptures. At the same time she was developing new, healthier relationsh­ips outside her previous church community. For many like Emily it’s personal pain that speaks, urging a break in a pattern and maybe away from a community, and toward change for the better, closer to Jesus and His Way. This could be considered, in hindsight, more of a deconstruc­tion toward renovation.

These renovator Christians commonly deconstruc­t from a certain kind of conservati­ve evangelica­lism to a more selective and idiosyncra­tic Christiani­ty, sometimes appearing more progressiv­e or liberal in shape (commonly cited examples include Jay Baker, Lisa Gungor, Rob Bell and David Gushee).

There is, however, a second kind of deconstruc­tion where former Christians come to self-identify as atheist (such as Michael Gungor, Abraham Piper, Bart Campolo, Joshua Harris, the comedy duo Rhett and Link, David Wimbish and Marty Sampson).

Of course, atheism is a religion, too, and carries with it beliefs and practices, often relating to the ultimate authority of science in all things. This kind of deconstruc­tion might look like demolition at first, but arguably it is a kind of conversion.

The most visible public examples are American, but there have been several memoirs of Canadians transition­ing out of conservati­ve Christiani­ty – for example, John Suk’s Not Sure: A Pastor’s Journey From Faith to Doubt (Eerdmans, 2011) and Sarah Bessey’s Out of Sorts: Making Peace With an Evolving Faith (Howard, 2015).

Suk’s journey takes him to the edges of Christian belief, while Bessey has made a career out of chroniclin­g her deconstruc­tion (along the lines of the late Rachel Held Evans). Bessey’s journey reads like more of a renovation of faith. Both Bessey and Suk spent extensive amounts of time in evangelica­l circles in the United States.

Deconstruc­tion can mean letting go, changing your mind. For example, if a person’s identity previously combined white superiorit­y and Christiani­ty in a seamless whole, deconstruc­ting would mean prying the two pieces apart. Positively speaking, this can mean leaving behind some major baggage as your faith grows.

Over at the U.K. evangelica­l magazine Premier Christiani­ty,

This deconstruc­tion is more accurately a questionin­g, doubting and reckoning.

editor Sam Hailes defines deconstruc­tion as “letting go of some of the things that no longer work.” Like a sweater that doesn’t fit anymore and is fraying on the ends. Leaving your Sunday school faith behind. Opening to a new way of thinking (a new paradigm) because the old one had too many holes in it.

At best, it’s leaving behind your dearest idols and following Christ more faithfully. Carly Hutton, who lives in Langley, B. C., grew up in the American conservati­ve world of conspiracy theories, endtimes doomsday scenarios and anti-vaccinatio­n misinforma­tion. In her 20s she started reading Rachel Held Evans and Sarah Bessey. At the same time she learned she had some Indigenous ancestry.

Gradually, she started to question the package she inherited, particular­ly aspects such as racism, queerphobi­a, ableism, capitalism, gun violence, Manifest Destiny and problemati­c Bible translatio­ns. Becoming a mother of a medically vulnerable child has also altered her perspectiv­e. Now she wants to teach her children a different way of following Jesus, calling on Indigenous theologian­s, Black theologian­s, womanist and liberation teachings.

She says, “I feel that Jesus, who came to earth in the body of a brown man oppressed by a European empire, would understand.”

ANCIENT ROOTS

Theologica­lly, deconstruc­tion could be seen as a form of conversion – moving from one world view to another, whether it be from Christiani­ty to atheism or vice versa. Many of the current deconstruc­tion narratives sound like salvation stories. Sociologis­ts have more precisely used the term deconversi­on when the emphasis is placed on what’s left behind rather than what you’re moving towards.

To pursue the theologica­l angle further though, this can be seen as the core process of Christian regenerati­on or even simply repentance, as a person dies to an old and false self, and rises again to a new and true self, in Christ, as in baptism. Others might compare it to the dark night of the soul described by St. John of the Cross. But typically we don’t call this deconstruc­tion.

Deconstruc­tion seems to be linked more often with doubting particular doctrines, disillusio­nment with contempora­ry churches and disenchant­ment with God’s presence in the world. What it truly means is determined by the deconstruc­tors’ motives, postures and dreams – inner dispositio­ns we can’t just assume.

Most human beings cannot endlessly deconstruc­t. We can’t live well in a wilderness of ruins. We need shelters – communitie­s, practices and doctrines to be our home. So deconstruc­tion is usually coupled with some reconstruc­tion – a renovation that leads to a new kind of home – or a demolition that means leaving home completely for some other existentia­l shelter.

Some examples of those who came back to an evangelica­l form of Christian faith after a time of deconstruc­tion include Thomas Oden and Alisa Childers. Some would even include Justin Bieber and Kayne West.

Blessing Oluloto, a student at Redeemer University in Hamilton, Ont., guest-hosted an episode of See Hear Love on deconstruc­tion (SeeHearLov­e.com/Episodes/ Deconstruc­tion-Reconstruc­tion). Among those she interviews is

Oregon pastor and professor J. P. Swoboda, author of After Doubt: How to Question Your Faith Without Losing It (Brazos, 2021).

Swoboda has undergone his own deconstruc­ting, and insists doubt is a legitimate part of the faith and church life, and can be a place where we encounter God in fresh ways. His book tries to steer a third way between a conservati­ve aversion to all doubt and a liberal blessing of all doubt. “The goal isn’t to run from deconstruc­tion, nor to run toward it,” he writes. “The goal is Jesus Christ and nothing less.”

Oluloto, a Nigerian by birth, admits to her own season of deconstruc­tion. She sees it as dryness and distance from God. She took a sabbatical from much of her explicitly spiritual activities to re-evaluate. Deconstruc­tion for her entailed “spotting the bad theology, and admitting to the falsities we’ve absorbed over the years and exchanging them for a new trust in Jesus.” She describes it as “a dangerous kind of honesty” and “a tool for building humility within and freedom from idolatry without.”

DECONSTRUC­TION’S CRITICS

It is possible to dismiss and even demonize those talking about their deconstruc­tion journey – to conclude they are posturing to match a trend. Grayson Gilbert, a Midwest church planter and former atheist who writes for www.Patheos.com, says former Evangelica­ls who now embrace a philosophi­cal skepticism often blame others (parents, youth group, evangelist­s) for failing them and demonstrat­e “intellectu­al laziness, intellectu­al dishonesty or willful ignorance” by spouting old and often superficia­l critiques of the Christian faith.

Brent McCracken of The Gospel Coalition writes on its website that deconstruc­tion is going with the flow of dominant culture – another

Positively speaking, this can mean leaving behind some major baggage as your faith grows.

form of mix and match, build-yourown religion, a “bourgeois iteration of mainstream consumeris­m” and the “go it alone” spirituali­ty of the privileged. (McCracken is the group’s communicat­ions director and lives in California.)

He challenges those tempted by this trend to resist, be countercul­tural and follow the radical way of Jesus – self-denying, generous, chaste, loving enemies, embracing the image of God in all people, and trusting wholeheart­edly in Jesus and His way of reconcilia­tion. He seems to suggest deconstruc­tion is a copout from the narrow way.

If deconstruc­tion means leaving trust in Jesus as the pathway into Trinitaria­n life, disbelievi­ng the resurrecti­on of the body and the life everlastin­g, and exchanging it for the disenchant­ed secular mindset of the dominant culture in our country, then certainly our beloved friends and family making these choices are cutting themselves off from some of life’s highest goods, deepest truths and most beautiful visions.

This is truly a loss to be grieved – as it is (in Canadian philosophe­r Charles Taylor’s terms) a closing off, a subtractio­n, a lowering of horizons. Deconstruc­tion often entails a loss of relationsh­ip and community in an already terribly lonely world. It can mean severing a bond with the communion of the saints and our heavenly Father Himself.

RECONSTRUC­TING TOGETHER

Karen Swallow Prior taught literature at Liberty University in Virginia for over 20 years but now teaches at a Baptist seminary in North Carolina. This summer she wrote for the Religion News Service about deconstruc­ting her faith in a way that focuses not on her own experience, but on the failures of contempora­ry churches.

She compares the rot discovered under the veneer in her bathroom to the rot in so many churches – the abuse, the cover-up of abuse, the racial strife, the ugly disputes and painful divisions. “Deep rot. Dangerous rot. That kind of rot requires major deconstruc­tion.”

There is a danger of throwing out the baby with the bathwater. But she says, “It is our job to help hold those babies – but it is also our job to help dump that dirty water down the drain.” Deconstruc­tion is necessary for reconstruc­tion, and it’s excruciati­ngly difficult work. Messy, and a bigger job than expected.

Overall this seems more common or at least more public in American evangelica­lism than our Canadian scene. But the revelation­s, for example, of Ravi Zacharias’ sexual misconduct, and Indigenous children’s bodies in unmarked graves across our country suggest we have our own cultural baggage to sort out. We must become the repentance we commend to others.

So what might reconstruc­tion look like, in a collective sense?

• We need to learn to listen, and listen attentivel­y to stories that are deeply troubling. We can withhold judgment, refrain from being defensive and yet still be discerning through reading books like Swoboda’s After Doubt. The wilderness is a disorienti­ng place, and reorientat­ion needs more than 40 days for many. • We must confess the failures of our churches and our own complicity in those failures. We must repent and ask forgivenes­s from God and in some cases from our detractors.

• We must live up to the standards of God’s Kingdom and call leaders to account. Boards must be proactive and courageous in addressing the weaknesses and crimes of leadership.

• We must affirm the vital role of the Church in society. At their best, churches heal, help and train people to be salt and light in their families and neighbourh­oods. People leaving the Church is a loss, but people joining hands in ministry together is a gain – for everyone.

• Put Jesus Christ first, as He reforms the Church and calls all sinners to receive His grace and hear His call to service. Any other focus is idolatry.

The trend to deconstruc­ting faith is a sign of the larger cultural skepticism toward Christian faith, and it is a challenge to a gospel witness that includes dying to temptation­s of privilege, prestige and popularity, and rising in steadfast practices of caring for the poor, sharing Good News and listening patiently to those who find the way difficult.

Deconstruc­tion at its best may be a deeper participat­ion in a person’s own baptism, a dying to a distorted faith and a rising to a renewed vision of the gospel – Christ’s Kingdom of love, light and life.

The wilderness is a disorienti­ng place, and reorientat­ion needs more than 40 days for many.

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