Houston Chronicle Sunday

How different are we, really?

Sadly, Garrison Keillor’s on-air search for the answer is over

- Jacob Lupfer is a contributi­ng editor at RNS and a doctoral candidate in political science at Georgetown University. By Jacob Lupfer

Religion experts perenniall­y complain that mass entertainm­ent culture is ignorant about organized faith and portrays it badly.

But there’s one show they often overlook.

For 42 years, Garrison Keillor’s deep, soothing voice brought a slice of Americana into our homes and cars through his popular weekly radio program “A Prairie Home Companion.”

Keillor, who ended his run as host on July 2 in an episode taped at the Hollywood Bowl, also brought a healthy dose of religion to the show.

For church people, the stories and songs had a familiar and humorous ring. They also transmitte­d a bit of education and an accurate portrayal of American Protestant­ism to the religiousl­y uninitiate­d.

Keillor was reared in Plymouth Brethren churches but attended Protestant mainline churches most of his life. Indeed, he was so immersed in these churches he could critique and satirize them without betraying his own obvious appreciati­on and devotion.

Best-known for his comedic portrayals of Lutheranis­m in his native Minnesota, Keillor had a deep understand­ing of the entire American Christian landscape, from literal-Bible fundamenta­lism to Dutch Calvinism.

His show, which broadcast mostly from the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, is surely the most widely known portrayal of Lutheran cultural strength in the Upper Midwest.

It was one of the only programs to air on NPR member stations in which listeners could hear hymns. Keillor and his musical guests sang hymns throughout the year, often in keeping with the liturgical calendar.

The fictional hometown of Lake Wobegon, which seems as real to me as any imaginary place could possibly be, is well-known for its two churches: a Lutheran one, of course, and a Catholic parish named Our Lady of Perpetual Responsibi­lity.

The Catholics in Lake Wobegon worship with Father Emil and some dedicated German nuns. The Norwegians are Lutheran. The townsfolk seem very much alike, in spite of their different confession­al and national heritages. Yet they imagine themselves quite different from one another.

Religious difference in Lake Wobegon serves as a microcosm for Keillor to opine on a great question for Christians and for all Americans: How different are we, really?

Church people, especially mainline Protestant­s, found something whimsical, comforting and, yet, very real in Lake Wobegon Lutheran Church and its longtime pastor, the Rev. David Ingqvist.

And Keillor masterfull­y chronicled contempora­ry challenges and changes in both churches’ traditions through the pastors’ successors, Father Wilmer and Pastor Liz.

A stalwart liberal, Keillor generally resisted the temptation to intertwine religion and politics, both on the show and in his own life. But when religious conservati­ves dismayed by the leftward tilt of the mainline denominati­ons wonder what makes those pew dwellers tick, Keillor embodies the answer.

He is the consummate churchman of his place and time, a synthesis of his evangelica­l childhood, his fondness for sacred music and his progressiv­e politics. Even the uneasy tension between Keillor’s traditiona­lism and his tolerance resonates with generation­s of liberal Protestant­s.

It is fitting, then, that President Obama, a fellow traveler of Keillor’s liberal Christiani­ty, called in to the final show.

“One of the reasons I miss driving is that you kept me company,” Obama told Keillor. “‘A Prairie Home Companion’ made me feel better and more human.”

I rarely made a point to tune in on Saturday evenings to hear Keillor. But if I was in the car driving any distance, I almost always tuned in. As a profession­al observer of American Christiani­ty, I was often struck by the depth of Keillor’s own religious literacy and his admirable skill in transmitti­ng religious culture.

Over four decades, Keillor showed what is good, endearing and enduring about his brand of Protestant­ism.

His final night at the Los Angeles stadium, Keillor and his onstage singers led the Hollywood Bowl in singing the chorus of the great old hymn “We’re Marching to Zion.”

No one but Keillor could have done such a thing. And it seems likely that no one will again.

 ?? Jim Mone / Associated Press ?? In his more than 40 years as creator and host of “A Prairie Home Companion,” Garrison Keillor generally resisted the temptation to mix religion and politics.
Jim Mone / Associated Press In his more than 40 years as creator and host of “A Prairie Home Companion,” Garrison Keillor generally resisted the temptation to mix religion and politics.

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