The Atlantic

How Politics Poisoned the Church

The evangelica­l movement spent 40 years at war with secular America, Tim Alberta wrote in June. Now it’s at war with itself.

-

I have been in full-time ministry for more than 20 years in churches around the U.S. Now I am winding down even though I am just 44. I am due to preach in a couple of weeks, and I have nothing to say. I have wrestled with why and have concluded that I am so disappoint­ed and frustrated with modern Christiani­ty that all I want to do is rail against it. It has taken a toll on my faith for many years and has left me empty. The Church has fallen prey to propaganda and a lack of critical thinking, resulting in an ever-weakening witness and a nearsighte­d worldview. We contradict the very essence of the teachings of Jesus.

Thank you for your research and article. You give a voice to those who will never be heard by more than a small audience. Michael Rhodes

Belpre, Ohio

I appreciate­d Tim Alberta’s clarity about what is really at stake with the rise of far-right evangelica­ls. The unholy alliance between radically conservati­ve Christiani­ty and radically conservati­ve politics doesn’t seek the kingdom of God; instead, it wants to impose a theocracy on the United States of America. Such a theocracy would cheapen the foremost requiremen­t of the Christian faith: humbly carrying one’s cross daily.

Early Christians believed that following Jesus Christ transforms a person into a well of compassion, humility, kindness, and generosity. They put the needs of others before their own.

Theocracy does not require such an inner transforma­tion; the evangelica­l-right base and its prophets are quick to condemn cherry-picked sins. Jesus, by contrast, said that the important matters of God’s commands are “justice, mercy, and faith.” I don’t think Jesus himself would fit with today’s evangelica­l base. Reverend Vanessa J. Falgoust

Natchitoch­es, La.

The fact that Tim Alberta “didn’t see a single person carrying a Bible” at Floodgate is not at all surprising. Just as a disturbing percentage of evangelica­l Christians find science, democracy, and journalism inconvenie­nt, so too, it seems, do they find the New Testament inconvenie­nt. That’s because its main message is not freedom, but responsibi­lity. How else would we categorize the Golden Rule and the parable of the Good Samaritan?

Evan Bedford Red Deer, Alberta, Canada

Tim Alberta laments “How Politics Poisoned the Church.” Unfortunat­ely, the current predicamen­t of American evangelica­lism started long ago, when it opened itself up to various poisons by cutting itself off from the deep spiritual, liturgical, and intellectu­al roots of the Church. Matters worsened when evangelica­ls hitched themselves to American capitalist culture and its growing pile of social detritus: celebrity, power, success, and narcissism. Having severely

limited their theologica­l diet to a single book, the Bible, they forgot that though it is a rich and powerful book, it is also almost infnitely malleable when atomized into single verses. It’s a recipe for captivity to whatever cause or enthusiasm catches fre at the moment. The result is a bizarre caricature of Christiani­ty. Arland D. Jacobson

Moorhead, Minn.

Thanks for Tim Alberta’s thoughtful and heartbreak­ing reporting on politics and American evangelica­lism. I grew up attending a small Southern Baptist church in rural Kentucky. I haven’t visited in several years, but I hear it hasn’t escaped the politiciza­tion that Alberta writes about. The pastor—a conservati­ve, by any normal standard— has been branded a liberal for bucking right-wing orthodoxy on race, gun violence, and other issues. Relationsh­ips have been strained or broken.

Politicizi­ng the Gospel has human consequenc­es. My dad, a Focus on the Family conservati­ve in the great tradition of the ’90s, felt alienated by COVID skepticism on the right. The message he heard from antimasker­s and vaccine skeptics was this: Only healthy people matter. Dad was at high risk for several reasons and feared that he would die if he caught the virus. He was right. I watched COVID stop his heart last October.

As I grieve my dad, I’m also grieving evangelica­lism like another loved one. My faith journey is complicate­d enough already. It’s even harder having to realize that the tradition I come from is committed to political victory at all costs.

Joel Sams Frankfort, Ky.

Tim Alberta’s analysis of the current evangelica­l movement’s struggles seems based, at least in part, on the separation of the spiritual and religious from the earthly and human, as he states in his interpreta­tion of Paul’s second letter to the Corinthian­s. Yet Paul’s encouragem­ent to set one’s sights on the “unseen” does not indicate that his followers should move “away from the fleeting troubles of humanity.” If politics refers to the power dynamics that shape and influence how a society sees and defnes itself, claiming that the earliest Church writings, including the Gospels, were apolitical seems a gross misinterpr­etation of their content and message.

When Christ tells us to feed the hungry and clothe the naked, he implies that there’s something inherently wrong with allowing others to starve or freeze to death. Preachers encouragin­g greater inclusion of the marginaliz­ed, generosity to the poor, and welcoming of the outsider are offering messages that have not just spiritual implicatio­ns, but political and economic ones as well. The churches vilifying those who support science by stressing the importance of wearing masks during a pandemic or those who accept the truth that the 2020 election was not stolen are divisive and toxic, yes, but more important, they’re not preaching the Gospel. Pastors need to be courageous enough to support leaders and government policy that make manifest what it means to live up to Christ’s teaching. Jonathon Huber

Atlanta, Ga.

To respond to Atlantic articles or submit author questions to The Commons, please email letters@theatlanti­c.com. Include your full name, city, and state.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States