But, I read on, and was surprised, at least partially pleasantly. Especially in the latter part of the column, with this:
Having popularized the term “culture war” two decades ago, (University of Virginia sociologist James Davison Hunter) now argues that the “war” footing has led American Christians into a cul-de-sac. It has encouraged both conservative and liberal believers to frame their mission primarily in terms of conflict, and to express themselves almost exclusively in the “language of loss, disappointment, anger, antipathy, resentment and desire for conquest.”
That said, Hunter is, as Douthat notes, a social conservative.
Douthat then adds that
Harvard’s Robert Putnam (of “Bowling Alone” fame) and Notre Dame’s David Campbell ... argue ... institutional Christianity ... seems to be gradually losing its appeal.
The bottom line?
Putnam and Campbell are quantitative, liberal, and upbeat; Hunter is qualitative, conservative and conflicted. But both books come around to a similar argument: this month’s ubiquitous carols and crèches notwithstanding, believing Christians are no longer what they once were — an overwhelming majority in a self-consciously Christian nation.
Douthat, of course, laments that. I welcome it.
He does add a coda:
Or to put it another way, Christians need to find a way to thrive in a society that looks less and less like any sort of Christendom — and more and more like the diverse and complicated Roman Empire where their religion had its beginning, 2,000 years ago this week.
That said, he's ignorant of the history of Christian development and evolution, and ignorant of how battles over orthodoxy in those days made today's American Religious Right look like pussycats at times.
And, beyond that, Douthat does not seem cognizant that the mindset of the modern Religious Right simply isn't amenable to change.
As institutional Christianity loses its appeal and the numbers begin to dwindle, certain that it is because of watered down faith, some dig their heels in and turn fundamentalist. A combination of anger, frustration, and the internal hope/belief that they and they alone are right.
ReplyDeleteSame thing happening in AA.