>From one of the blogs I just cited.  Don't know much about them, but what I've 
>seen I like so far...

http://www.christandpopculture.com/elsewhere/tim-keller-ross-douthat-and-christianitys-decline-in-the-us/

Tim Keller, Ross Douthat, and Christianity’s Decline in the US

Over at Redeemer’s City to City Blog, Pastor Tim Keller has written a post in 
which he interacts with some of the ideas in NYT columnist Ross Douthat’s 
upcoming book entitled Bad Religion: How We Became a Nation of Heretics.

Per the publisher’s request, Keller does not quote from, or offer a formal 
review of, Douthat’s book, but instead pens a post regarding Douthat’s 
essential premise: Christianity has been and still is in decline in the United 
States. Keller calls Douthat’s ideas “essential reading for all Christians 
seeking to understand Christianity’s relationship to culture in the US.” While 
that may seem to some people an overstatement, I don’t think it an 
exaggeration. Most people recognize this premise as a reality (whether they 
view this decline as a problem or a victory is another question). However, far 
fewer people seem to recognize the essential nature of the problem, much less 
the sense in which they might be participating in it.

While Keller’s post is worth reading in full, one particular section is 
noteworthy. Referencing Douthat’s second chapter, Keller offers five “major 
social catalysts” for Christianity’s decline since the 1960′s:

1) First, the political polarization that has occurred between the Left and 
Right drew many churches into it (mainline Protestants toward the Left, 
evangelicals toward the Right). This has greatly weakened the church’s 
credibility in the broader culture, with many viewing churches as mere 
appendages and pawns of political parties. 2) Second, the sexual revolution 
means that the Biblical sex ethic now looks unreasonable and perverse to 
millions of people, making Christianity appear implausible, unhealthy, and 
regressive. 3) Third, the era of decolonization and Third World empowerment, 
together with the dawn of globalization, has given the impression that 
Christianity was imperialistically “western” and supportive of European 
civilization’s record of racism, colonialism, and anti-Semitism. 4) The fourth 
factor has been the enormous growth in the kind of material prosperity and 
consumerism that always works against faith and undermines Christian community. 
5) The fifth factor is—that all the other four factors had their greatest 
initial impact on the more educated and affluent classes, the gatekeepers of 
the main culture-shaping institutions such as the media, the academy, the arts, 
the main foundations, and much of the government and business world.

What’s striking to me is how self-evident these points seem even here at Christ 
and Pop Culture. All you need to do is read Alan Noble’s column “Citizenship 
Confusion” each week to see how confused a good many Christians are about 
points 1 (political power posturing) and 3 (the perpetuation of racism and 
imperialistic kingdom-building is more than an impression, is it not?). Or 
take, for example, some of the comments in Faith Newport’s most recent “The 
Female Gaze” column to see almost word-for-word evidence of point 2 
(Christianity’s “old fashioned” sexual ethic). One commenter suggested the 
following regarding sexual ethics from a Christian perspective:

Having a discussion based on intellect, exploring ideas other than the ones we 
have shoved down our throats every Sunday, admitting that the things we’ve been 
told might not be entirely accurate or relevant anymore[.] . . . Christians 
today are so against questioning the Bible, the church teachings, and “the way 
it’s always been” and I cannot be a part of something so disconnected from 
logic.

While point 4 (materialistic consumerism) is in many ways connected with the 
1st point (political power posturing), the 5th factor seems especially 
important: those in charge of the major culture-shaping institutions have been 
most significantly affected by the first four factors. For a thorough 
examination of this top-down institutional phenomenon, UVA sociologist James 
Davison Hunter’s book, To Change the World: The Irony, Tragedy, and Possibility 
of Christianity in the Late Modern World, is an absolute must-read. Or, at the 
very least, Carissa Turner Smith’s excellent essay on Hunter’s book is well 
worth the time.

What seems especially evident is that Christians recognize the above issues but 
often misunderstand the nature of them. How many see Christianity’s decline as 
a culture war that needs to be won by electing the right political officials? 
Or, how many see Christianity’s decline as attributable to risque television 
programs and increasing rights for homosexuals, and yet overlook our in-house 
troubles with sexual promiscuity and essentially-dead marriages? Or, how many 
see Christianity’s decline as a battle to be won with the Middle East? Or, how 
many see Christianity’s decline as the slow uprising of “socialism,” and thus 
the repression of financial and material prosperity? Or finally, to speak to 
the 5th point, how many Christians see Christianity’s decline as the triumph of 
“leftist” institutions, and yet fail to equip and support people to enter into 
these institutions instead of perpetuating the scandal of the evangelical mind?

In my opinion, Keller pointedly adds to the discussion when he invokes Lesslie 
Newbigin:

Lesslie Newbigin blames the marginalization of Christianity in the West on the 
outworking of the 18th century Enlightenment—which promoted the sufficiency of 
individual human reason without faith in God—for a great deal of the shift. In 
this he understands historical patterns as being caused by ideas and 
intellectual trends working their way out through a society’s institutions. I 
see no reason why Newbigin’s history-of-thought approach and Douthat’s 
sociology-of-knowledge approach cannot both be right.

The story of autonomy’s enthronement and steady decay centers on the imperative 
to qualify freedom with self-restraint. If nothing else, the 20th C. taught us 
that Reason itself isn’t a sufficient cultural authority. Indeed, you might say 
that the decline of Christianity comes down to this issue of cultural 
authority, from who it derives, and how it ought to be achieved. Perhaps, in 
our attempts to maintain a dominant cultural position and fend off any decline, 
we have in many ways become a religious mirror of what it is we are fighting 
against by adopting a stance more concerned with the kind of freedom that 
forces the Other to submit to one’s purposes. It’s that false freedom that is 
essentially self-absorption cloaked in nobility.

It’s no secret nor coincidence that Christianity flourishes when people are 
willing to put their lives on the line to love their enemies. It’s urgent that 
we American Christians reevaluate our purposes and cross-check them with He 
whose name we claim to bear witness. Christian love is costly, but not more 
costly than selling our souls to achieve America’s driver seat. Particularly 
when not only do the ends not justify the means, but the means aren’t even 
producing the ends. We need to take seriously the outlined factors above, and 
learn how “love the Lord your God” and “love your neighbor as yourself” might 
be judiciously applied to them. Christianity’s resuscitation to authenticity in 
this part of the world depends on it.


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