The Hamilton Spectator

White Christiani­ty’s biggest threat appears to be itself

Sorry spectacle to see Evangelica­l Christians back Roy Moore in Alabama

- CHARLES MATHEWES Mathewes is a professor of Religious Studies at the University of Virginia, and a senior fellow at UVA’s Miller Center.

It’s that time of year again, when we hear about the profanity of “Happy Holidays” instead of “Merry Christmas,” and about Starbucks’ covert “war on Christmas,” run through their seasonal coffee cups. Inevitably, American president Donald Trump has intervened, insisting that stores everywhere “don’t have Merry Christmas. They don’t have Merry Christmas. I want them to say, ‘Merry Christmas, everybody.’ ” Once again, Americans are awakened to the terrible assaults on the Christian heritage of our nation.

This year, however, it’s increasing­ly difficult not to notice that the main threat to Christiani­ty in America comes from American Christians themselves.

Earlier this month, the Supreme Court heard a case from a baker who argued his Christian conviction­s led him to refuse to bake a wedding cake for a same-sex couple. Last week, we witnessed the spectacle of white Christians in Alabama who convinced themselves either that the man they hoped to elect as their senator was not so creepy around young girls as to get himself banned from a mall (fact check: he was), or that the behaviour that got him banned is actually biblical in character, and therefore OK (exegesis check: it isn’t). In the end, 80 per cent of white evangelica­ls voted for Roy Moore.

When we’ve reached a place where good Christian folk think it’s a matter of major theologica­l principle not to sell pastries to gay people but are willing to give pedophiles a pass, I think it’s safe to say that American Christiani­ty today — white American Christiani­ty in particular — is in a pretty sorry state.

It’s not just that a vocal segment of white Christians can’t tell righteous leaders from sexual predators and overestima­te the power of baked goods to communicat­e spiritual messages; American’s failures are wider and deeper and more foundation­al than that. We’re remarkably ignorant of the history and the current state of the world we inhabit, and no better with scientific knowledge either. We don’t believe the media, but we’ll believe the most incredible Twitter rumour or Facebook post, curated for us by Vladimir Putin. We are surprising­ly ignorant about religion, not only other people’s, but even our own.

But perhaps most importantl­y, white Christians seem unwilling to be guided by the plain truth of our shared faith. Instead of forming judgments about how to live our lives based on how our religious conviction­s interact with real-life circumstan­ces, we pass off irascible reactions as theologica­l principles. White evangelica­l Christians like guns, for example, and do not especially like immigrants. Compared to other demographi­cs, we’re excited about the death penalty, indifferen­t to those who are impoverish­ed or infirm, and blind to racial and gender inequaliti­es. We claim to read the Bible and hear Jesus’s teachings, but we think poor people deserve what they (don’t) get, and the inmates of our prisons deserve, if anything, worse than the horrors they already receive. For believers in a religion whose Scriptures teach compassion, we’re a breathtaki­ngly cruel bunch.

Indeed it’s hard to know who we do feel pity toward, except ourselves — for we believe that we are the real victims in today’s world. Those among us who are evangelica­l Christians are especially paranoid: While Americans overall are twice as likely to say there is more discrimina­tion against Muslims than against Christians, the numbers are almost reversed for white evangelica­l Protestant­s. And apparently things are getting worse: The percentage of evangelica­ls who said that religious freedom in the U.S. declined over the past decade rose from 60 per cent in 2012 to 77 per cent in 2015.

There are many factors — historical, social and political — that have helped shape white American Christiani­ty into what it is today. But when it comes to keeping us away from the core truths of our faith, I suspect this one error is key: Christians today seem governed by fear. Theologian­s as well as psychologi­sts will tell you that there is a spiritual peril in acting out of fear and a sense of danger. Fear drives us into patterns of “reasoning” that are far from reasonable, but more akin to reactionar­y patterns of cause-and-effect. And fear moves us away from the core of Christiani­ty — love. “There is no fear in love; but perfect love drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment, and whoever fears has not reached perfection in love,” says the first epistle of John.

The tyranny of fear in white Christian life is especially visible among white evangelica­ls, who stand out in their opposition to pluralism in America. While all other religious groups, like Americans overall, oppose letting small business owners refuse to serve gay and lesbian people — by margins of roughly two to one — white evangelica­ls, by 56 per cent to 39 per cent, say shopkeeper­s should be allowed to so discrimina­te. And Christians’ defensiven­ess is increasing: In 2012, 54 per cent of white evangelica­ls supported giving preference to “traditiona­l Judeo-Christian values”; that number rose to 76 per cent in 2015. What’s true of white evangelica­ls is a leading indicator for white Christians as a whole. The fear of the future makes us, in Jesus’s words, strain at gnats while we swallow camels (Mt 23:24).

This is disastrous because, from the perspectiv­e of hope, in many ways our age represents an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y for Christians. The collapse of Christendo­m over the past few centuries has created a potentiall­y more egalitaria­n, authentic and pluralisti­c religious world. Serious relationsh­ips with members of other religious traditions, as well as atheists, teaches believers more about their faith than we would ever have otherwise known. Religious and secular human rights activists uncover the depths of our world’s suffering and pain and display more of God’s care for the oppressed, the marginaliz­ed, and the abused. The incredible tumult among ordinary churchgoer­s increases theologica­l literacy in the pews, so that 500 years after the Reformatio­n, Luther’s dream of a “Priesthood of all believers” is potentiall­y closer than ever.

Ironically, it may well be that it is Christians’ fears about losing control of the culture that have accelerate­d the rise of secularism itself. (This has been an open secret in the sociology of religion for almost two decades.) Consider the rise of the “Nones” in American public life — those adults, especially younger adults, who when asked about their religious affiliatio­n, say “none.” For decades that number was very low, but then it began to increase rapidly in the 1980s. Why was that? It seems to be caused by the tight alliance of Christiani­ty, especially conservati­ve white Christiani­ty, with conservati­ve politics over the past several decades — an associatio­n itself driven by prophesies of a rising tide of godlessnes­s in America after the 1960s. Those prophesies about the 1960s were wrong; but they fuelled the alliance of white Christians with right-wing politics from the 1980s forward, and that alliance has repelled many younger people from religion out of a distaste at seeing religion so eagerly bend the knee to short-term political gain. That is to say, Christians’ response to a misperceiv­ed crisis has become, in fact, a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Pope John Paul II, who most American Christians (even Protestant­s like me) would allow was a pretty good Christian, said in his first homily as pope, “Do not be afraid!” This remains useful theologica­l advice.

If we are Christians, we must believe that we are safer in God’s hands than in our own. We should take no care for the morrow, but preach compassion and mercy to all, without distinctio­n. If we do that, they’ll know we are Christians by our love — rather than our fear.

 ??  ?? Top, a man poses in front of a nativity scene at a church on Dec. 19. With all that has gone on in the United States, is the greatest threat to Christiani­ty in America from American Christians?
Top, a man poses in front of a nativity scene at a church on Dec. 19. With all that has gone on in the United States, is the greatest threat to Christiani­ty in America from American Christians?
 ?? AUDRA MELTON, NYT ?? Above, supporters of Roy Moore, the Republican candidate for U.S. Senate, pray at an election night gathering in Montgomery, Ala., on Dec. 12. The sight of white evangelica­l voters giving overwhelmi­ng support to Moore has troubled many conservati­ve...
AUDRA MELTON, NYT Above, supporters of Roy Moore, the Republican candidate for U.S. Senate, pray at an election night gathering in Montgomery, Ala., on Dec. 12. The sight of white evangelica­l voters giving overwhelmi­ng support to Moore has troubled many conservati­ve...

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