As the GOP presidential debate continues with the top ten candidates doing everything short of wearing "for sale" signs in terms of their efforts to prostitute themselves to the Christofascists, yet another piece looks at the revulsion Millennials hold towards far right Christianity. With more and more documentation that the coming generations find judgmental religious extremism repulsive, the GOP and far right denominations nonetheless continue to double down on their hate and bigotry. A piece in Religion Dispatches looks at this failure to face this reality. Here are highlights:
In a way, the Christian Post‘s Kevin Shrum is quite right about why young people reject Christianity these days. . . . And if you turn around his last seven bullet points (no, really), he really gets at the problem: people feel like the church is a horribly judgmental place more concerned with keeping its own brand of morality afloat than actually helping anyone in need. You’ll notice that Shrum never says a word about service or ministry. It’s all holiness all the time. Unfortunately for churches like Shrum’s, holiness just isn’t very popular in our culture these days. What people want in spirituality is egalitarianism, an emphasis on the ways in which God welcomes, rather than rejects.
Weirdly, though, the standard conservative religious argument these days is that the churches that demand orthodoxy—another word for holiness—are the ones that do best. That’s even true! Conservative churches do fare better these days than liberal ones, though the sociologists tell me that’s mostly the result of their later adoption of birth control. The cultural trends are the cultural trends, even if they do take longer to catch up with some groups than others.
Trouble is, Shrum’s already stipulated White and Barna’s argument that this is exactly what the “Nones” don’t want. You can’t move to the “narrow way” without getting more judgmental and exclusionary. . . . . in a pluralistic society, the literally holier-than-thou act is just deadly.
That leaves Shrum with two options: acknowledge that the church as he conceives it wants a bigger slice of a shrinking pie (that is, hope that as Christianity declines in the US, more of the people who remain will be orthodox believers like him); or, as he just about comes out and says directly, he can skip Christian introspection and blame the people leaving the church for their own lack of faith and discipleship.
If that’s the “well-articulated, well-understood Gospel” he wants to proclaim, well, good luck to him.
1 comment:
Kasich may be the least of these evils, but he signed a bill into law forcing pregnant women to have an ultrasound before terminating their pregnancy and is an active player in the GOP war on contraception.
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