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By Ed Vitagliano
| AFA Journal News Editor
For Christians in America who believe their faith can and should
have an impact on their culture, it has not been a good year.
In less than a 12-month span: The Supreme Court struck down state
sodomy laws, in effect invalidating both natural law and the Judeo-Christian
foundations of our nation as a sound basis for our society; The
Episcopal Church consecrated an openly homosexual man as one of
its bishops; The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court legalized
same-sex marriage; and a halftime show on the Super Bowl
in which a pop singers breast was exposed shoved in
nearly everyones face just how debauched our pop culture has
become.
Nothing that Christians or pro-family groups have done has seemed
to stop American society from rushing headlong down the tracks to
moral oblivion. It appears that secularism and postmodern relativism
have successfully teamed up to overthrow Judeo-Christianity as the
dominant philosophical force in our culture.
Evangelical Christians have long operated under the belief that
sharing the Gospel is an important part of their faith, and that
their faith was meant to serve as salt and light in
the culture in which they lived.
However, evangelicals in America are a numerical minority, with
the best studies putting them anywhere between 7% and 25% of the
population. More importantly, they are a distinct cultural minority
as well, as American society continues to reposition itself on a
post-Christian foundation.
Engaged yet uncorrupted
Such facts are true, but may not necessarily be that significant,
because since the first-century, Christians have often lived their
faith in circumstances that defied the odds. What may be a more
important question, however, is whether or not the church can avoid
becoming irrelevant as the culture comes to grips with monumental
social issues.
Certainly what worked for evangelicals and other Christians over
the last 30 years doesnt appear to be working now. Changes
in the moral and religious beliefs of the American people have occurred
with breaktaking speed all within virtually a single generation.
American culture is now dominated by a rather mushy morality that
eschews principles of black-and-white truth and lives in an always-grey
world where truth is individually determined and relativistic.
In The Public Interest, University of Toronto professor of
political science Clifford Orwin said that, in America, moral
laxity is a way of life, having mysteriously emerged as the fundamental
principle of morality itself. Not only do they treat the sinner
with charity, but theyve become curiously indifferent to the
sin.
Over the last generation, this moral laxity has, understandably,
led to a growing cultural decadence that alarms many Christians.
Everywhere they look, the triumph of hedonism and, simultaneously,
both secularism and paganism, seems at hand.
For the first time in the nations history, said
Orwin, religious opinion does not inhibit society as a whole
.
Christianity, which once pervaded the one culture practiced by the
one nation, has slipped to the status of a subculture we
might even say a counterculture. And the other subcultures, having
shaken off Christianitys hegemony, go their own riotous ways.
Such epochs have, in the past, led evangelicals to distance themselves
from societys corruption. As religion writer Jefferey Sheler
noted in a U.S. News & World Report article, in such
circumstances evangelicals created their own parallel institutions
schools and colleges, music, books, movies, and magazines
to preserve their biblical values.
In Shelers opinion, evangelicals do not seem to be abandoning
the culture as in times past. Nevertheless, this may bring with
it the opposite danger: entanglement.
Sheler said that the question remains: What will be changed
more by their continuing engagement in politics and pop culture
evangelicalism or the culture?
In order to be salt and light, the church must stay engaged in American
culture without being corrupted by it. Thats not easy to do,
as evidenced by the mainline Protestant retreat from a more orthodox
perspective.
Since the late nineteenth century and the emergence of the
Social Gospel, the typical response of the mainline churches to
the challenge of secularism has been to capitulate to it,
said Orwin.
Thus, instead of being salt and light in the culture, some mainline
churches have completely adapted themselves to the spiritual darkness
which surrounds them.
Moreover, many of these churches seem only too happy to have yielded,
said Gertrude Himmelfarb, professor emeritus of history at the Graduate
School of the City University of New York, in her book One Nation,
Two Cultures. She said that many mainline churches fit quite comfortably
in the prevailing culture, priding themselves on being cosmopolitan
and sophisticated, undogmatic and uncensorious.
But evangelicals have not escaped this tendency, either, she said.
Even evangelicals are divided between those practicing a classical
spirituality derived from earlier Protestant and Puritan traditions,
and those partial to a postmodern or existential
spirituality, which is more therapeutic and individualistic.
If the church is going to avoid irrelevance in American culture,
it must, as Orwin put it, have something distinctively Christian
to bring to the table.
Finding common ground
How does the church address a culture that has, in Orwins
words, shaken off Christianitys hegemony? How
does it speak to the moral debates under way when American society,
by and large, no longer speaks the same language as Christians?
Brian Fahling, senior trial attorney and senior policy advisor for
the AFA Center for Law & Policy, said, It is an unhappy
circumstance that Christians are left to persuade others on moral
questions in a culture that lacks common philosophical assumptions,
let alone common theological beliefs.
Christians, therefore, need to develop the intellectual capacity
to argue for moral solutions that are not explicitly rooted in theology.
Fahling said that if religious conservatives continue to talk
in the language of their true feelings, that is, the
language of the Bible, they will never find ground for agreement
with non-Christians on societys great issues.
In order to find such common ground, believers must be able to present
practical and rational reasons why a traditional moral solution
to a problem is best. On the subject of homosexuality, for example,
Christians can oppose the gay agenda by appealing to
the fact that the homosexual lifestyle exacts both a physical and
emotional toll on those who practice it.
Trying to find that common ground between non-Christians and
Christians is not easy, and whatever agreements could be reached
would be fragile, Fahling said. No doubt it would be
better if Christians could cooperate with other groups on such issues
if they could base that cooperation on biblical theology. But that
is not an option available to us today. Christians tilt at windmills
when they require that non-Christians accept [biblical] justifications
for action as a condition to agreement.
If Christians cannot develop or refuse to develop
this common ground approach, there may be little hope
of anything else beyond a political and cultural stalemate. The
possibilities of cooperation in our divided culture are few,
Fahling said. We reject them at our own peril.
Fire on the earth
This is not to suggest that the church is to cease its prophetic
witness within American culture in order to facilitate a dialogue
with non-Christians. Fahling insists that the Christians
ultimate [biblical] reasons and justification for participating
in the political life of the culture must remain intact and vibrant.
In fact, the spiritual awakening for which many Christians are praying
will require what Himmelfarb called a dissident culture,
which she defined as a culture distinct from the dominant
one in important respects, while still part of American society
as a whole.
In other words, something must exist outside the prevailing culture
to challenge its suppositions and its actions. This has always been
the place of the Christian church in America at least when
it has heard its prophetic calling and answered.
Joseph Bottum, an editor for The Weekly Standard and First
Things, said that there is something in the Scriptures that
has no patience for political compromise, or moral casuistry, or
conventional prudence, or philosophical judiciousness.
Bottum said in an article for The Public Interest, Throughout
our history, biblical America has stood outside political America:
the wayfaring stranger far away from the public man, however much
the political world echoes with the words of a public God.
Orwin said this is a perfect role for evangelicals, because evangelicalism
offers a timely and focused response to the current situation.
It adeptly fills the void left by its secularists and mainline rivals.
[They] stand as an impressive reproach to the gross defects
of rampant secularism. That evangelicals are increasing in number
does not make them any less a counterculture; it attests to their
success as one.
The further American society lists toward
the secularist subjectivist side, the larger the minority that will
peel off to shift to the opposite rail.
That there is compromise in American politics and common ground
among groups from different philosophical perspectives, Bottum said,
is good. In part, that is what defines our culture.
But America is also not America unless, underneath it all,
a small voice whispers that the nations are as a drop in the bucket
and are counted as the small dust on the balance. America is a triumph
of political philosophy because it is not entirely political
because it also hears, even in these days, the murmur, I am
come to send fire on the earth; and what will I, if it be already
kindled? [Luke 12:49]
It may be time to find out if the church can still speak in that
small yet potent voice. Perhaps it is time to discover whether the
church is worth its salt.
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