Christian Post
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
_Interview: Ross Douthat on Joel Osteen, Rick Warren, Christian  
Nationalism and His Charismatic Roots_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/interview-ross-douthat-on-joel-osteen-rick-warren-christian-nationalism-and-his-charismat
ic-roots-74009/) 
Fri, Apr. 27, 2012 Posted: 02:58 PM EDT   
____________________________________
  
 
In his new book, Bad Religion: How We Became a Nation of Heretics,  New 
York Times columnist Ross Douthat argues that orthodox American Christianity  
has weakened since the 1950s to be replaced by a number of heresies, both  
conservative and liberal. This "bad religion" has resulted in adverse  
consequences for American society, politics and culture. 
In a Thursday interview with The Christian Post, Douthat talked more about  
his thesis, responded to some criticisms, and discussed how his diverse  
Christian upbringing (charismatic, evangelical and Catholic) helped inform the 
 book. 
The following is an edited transcript of that conversation: 
CP: If you graph the level of industrialization of a country against  its 
level of religiosity, you find a pattern. The higher the level of  
industrialization, the lower the level of religiosity. Then you have this  
outlier, 
the United States, which has high industrialization and high  religiosity. 
Some have explained that by saying religion in America is wide but  shallow. 
It's present everywhere, but doesn't mean a whole lot to most people.  You're 
saying something different. The lake is wide and deep, but the water is  
contaminated. Is that an accurate metaphor? 
Douthat: [Laughs] Something like that, yeah. That's not a terrible 
metaphor.  One of the things I try to do in the book is take seriously some of 
the 
forms of  American religion that people consider to be shallow and try and 
figure out why  they have such a strong appeal and tease out the theology they 
actually  represent. 
The big theme of my book is the decline of institutional Christianity over  
the last 40 or 50 years has empowered a side of American religion that has  
always been there. The sort of do-it-yourself, "create your own Jesus" kind 
of  faith. But, the forms that faith takes do have a real reason they are 
so  appealing. 
For instance, I spend a fair amount of time in the book talking about the  
prosperity gospel – the, sort of, "pray and grow rich" – which is an 
approach to  theology that both a lot of serious Christians and a lot of 
secular 
liberals  tend to laugh at or roll their eyes over and say, "how can anyone 
seriously  believe that?" I try and tease out what it is about prosperity 
theology that  people find appealing and the extent to which it really is 
trying to address  deep theological issues. For a lot of people, it's a 
solution 
to the question of  evil: "why does a good God allow bad things to happen to 
good people?"  Prosperity theology provides a kind of answer to that. 
I try to do the same thing when I turn to what people think of as New Age,  
self-helpy kind of religion, the sort of Deepak Chopra style of faith. I'm 
very  critical of it, but I'm also trying to recognize the root of its 
appeal. 
CP: In the chapter on prosperity theology, you pay particular  attention to 
Joel Osteen. You say there is a "blurry line" between Rick Warren  and Joel 
Osteen, even though Warren has condemned prosperity theology. What did  you 
mean by that?  
Douthat: I should say that I'm an admirer of Rick Warren and I do quote him 
 in the book specifically condemning prosperity theology. But, I think what 
you  see a lot of in American religion, even in areas of American 
Christianity that  don't go all the way with Osteen to the idea that God wants 
you to 
have this big  house and so on, the nature of American religion right now, 
the fact that it is  so non-denominational and post-denominational, the most 
successful churches have  to be run more like businesses than ever before. 
I think that just exposes  Christians to a constant temptation to think 
about the ministry more as a  business than they sometimes should. 
I quote from a scholar the idea of "more money, more ministry," which has  
become a very powerful idea for a lot of American evangelicals over the last 
50  years. It's a true idea. Right? There are all kinds of great things 
that  megachurches and successful fundraising appeals can allow you to do, 
especially  in terms of overseas charity work, and so on. 
I'm just arguing that American Christians need to recognize the temptations 
 that can expose you to as well. It can make churches dependent on a 
superstar  pastor model that is hard to sustain over the long haul and it can 
make 
 Christians focus purely on externals – who has the largest congregation 
and who  can build the biggest megachurch and so on, which is only part of 
what  Christians should be about. 
CP: One reaction to that has been the house church movement, which  has 
been a move away from traditional institutions and the "more money, more  
ministry" model. Do you think the house church movement is a proper corrective, 
 
or do they have their own heresies? 
Douthat: Every Christian in every time and place is going to be tempted by  
certain forms of heresy. I'm sure I'm tempted by my own. Yes, in many ways 
that  kind of more small-scale, intimate approach to faith can absolutely be 
a  necessary corrective to the "bigger is better" ideas in American 
religion. 
The danger there is ... and, again, I'm a Roman Catholic writing about  
American Christianity as a whole so I bring a certain set of Catholic biases to 
 this debate, but I do think that evangelicals in general need to think 
seriously  about how you pass on your faith across generations and over the 
long haul. 
Just as the superstar pastor model can have its problems once the superstar 
 pastor gets old or has a scandal or something, the house church model ...  
there's a reason that the house churches of the New Testament era grew up 
into a  more institutional faith down the road. In the end, you do need 
institutions to  transmit the faith for the long haul. That's why I make the 
case 
that, in  certain ways, American Protestants could stand to recover the 
denominationalism  that they've left behind over the last 50 years. They are 
real values in having  a confessional tradition that can sustain your faith 
over the long term. 
CP: In your description of orthodoxy, you include the trinity, virgin  
birth, substitutionary atonement, the resurrection, and the authority of  
scripture. Those things sound like mainstream Christianity to me, so, where are 
 
the heresies? 
Douthat: The argument I make is, one, fewer people do believe in those core 
 doctrines. And, two, the churches that were more likely to believe in 
those core  doctrines have weakened overall in the last 50 years. I think it's 
more apparent  if you step back and look at American Christianity as a whole. 
In many ways, American evangelicalism is somewhat stronger today than it 
was  in, say 1955 – certainly more mainstream and influential in the culture 
as a  whole. But, the increased strength of evangelicalism hasn't increased 
fast  enough to compensate for the total collapse of mainline Protestantism 
and the  pretty steady weakening of my own Roman Catholic Church. So, I think 
the kind of  small "o" orthodoxy that I'm talking about encompasses people 
in historical  Protestant traditions, Roman Catholics and the Eastern 
Orthodox. From that  definition, I think you can see a steep decline over the 
last 
40 years. 
CP: One of the criticisms of your book is that you select only the  
evidence that supports your thesis ... 
Douthat: [Laughs] Because, what? The alternative would be to select 
evidence  that doesn't support my thesis? Sorry, go on. 
CP: They're saying America did not really have this mainstream  orthodoxy, 
to the extent that you claim, in the 1950s, and there is not nearly  as much 
divergence since the 1950s. 
Douthat: Yes. And I think that those criticisms are wrong. [Laughs] Not  
surprisingly. 
It's clearly the case that there's not some moment in American history when 
 every evangelical is holding hands with every Catholic who is holding 
hands with  every mainline Methodist, or what have you. Obviously, American 
Christianity was  deeply divided in all kinds of ways at mid-century too. But, 
a 
couple of things  were pretty clear about that era. One, there was a kind 
of convergence going on.  Even though Reinhold Niebuhr, the great mainline 
Protestant theologian, didn't  think highly of Billy Graham, he and Graham 
still, clearly, had more in common,  both theologically and in their attitudes 
toward religion in public life, and  all these things, than did, let's say, 
Harry Emerson Fosdick and Aimee Semple  McPherson, to pick similar examples 
from the 1920s. The fact that the 1950s were  defined by neo-evangelicalism 
and, with Niebuhr, the mainline neo-orthodoxy, you  can see, in both cases, 
that convergence taking place towards a kind of  Christian center. 
And then, with Catholicism and Protestantism, you can find plenty of  
evangelical polemicists who were still calling the Pope the anti-Christ, and so 
 
on, down to the election of John F. Kennedy. But, as my friend _Alan Jacobs 
pointed out_ 
(http://ayjay.tumblr.com/post/21813687142/this-is-a-picture-of-billy-graham-with-cardinal)
 , responding to some of the  criticisms of my 
book, he started with a big photograph of Billy Graham with  Cardinal Cushing 
of Boston, the Catholic Cardinal who had become friends and  allies starting 
with Graham's first crusade in Boston in 1950. If you don't  think Billy 
Graham and Cardinal Cushing are central figures of mid-century  religion, then 
I don't know what kind of definition of mid-century religion you  are 
taking. 
So, I think it is very clear that, though great difference remained,  
evangelicals moved closer to Catholics, mainline Protestants and evangelical  
Protestants moved closer together, and this convergence coincided with greater  
institutional strength for all the Christian churches than, for the most 
part,  you see today. 
It's just silly to look at the incredibly steep decline in the mainline and 
 the clear institutional weakening of Catholicism in the 1960s and 70s and  
pretend that something really big didn't change then. It did change. There  
really was a significant institutional decline. As I say in the book, it's 
an  interpretation of an era. It's not a comprehensive portrait. Obviously, 
America  is a big and complicated country with a lot of things going on at 
any given  time. But, I think I'm working pretty close to the mainstream of 
American  religious historiography when I portray that era as a period of 
convergence on  the one hand and significant institutional strength on the 
other. 
CP: One of the heresies you mention is Christian nationalism, this  melding 
of Christianity with America's purposes and the notion that "God is on  our 
side." Can a Christian be patriotic without being heretical? 
Douthat: Absolutely. The point I try to make in the chapter is that too is 
a  blurry line. It's not always clear where a healthy patriotism shades into 
a  dangerous nationalism. 
I think Christians are always going to be walking that line, whether they 
are  American Christians or citizens of any nation on Earth. But, I do think 
you can  see, throughout American history, this temptation, and it's both a 
liberal and a  conservative temptation, to take a healthy patriotism a 
little too far. For  liberals the temptation is to say the purpose of politics 
is 
to  straightforwardly bring the kingdom of God to Earth. For conservatives, 
I talk  about Glenn Beck, the temptation is more apocalyptic and messianic, 
it's the  temptation to say we did have a covenant with God, a literal 
covenant beginning  with the Founding, and we are, like Israel in the Old 
Testament, falling away  from it. 
The distinction I try to make is, I use Abraham Lincoln's line, that  
Americans are an "almost chosen people," which is meant to suggest that there  
are clear parallels, literal, theological and everything else, between the  
American story and the Old Testament story of Israel and then the broader 
story  of the Christian church. It's OK to recognize the parallels. It's OK to 
invoke  them. But, you have to keep that "almost" in front of the "chosen." 
You can't go  all the way and say, "America is Israel, America  is the 
Church." That's where I think patriotism shades into, what  I call, the heresy 
of 
nationalism. 
CP: Do I understand correctly that you used to be  evangelical? 
Douthat: As a kid, we were involved both with various aspects of 
charismatic  Christianity and then we were involved briefly at a small 
evangelical 
church  that people were trying to start at Yale University. 
CP: OK, so you didn't grow up in a traditional Catholic  family? 
Douthat: No, I grew up, baptized Episcopalian, my parents were 
Episcopalian,  and then starting when I was about seven, eight years old, we 
started 
attending  a sort of charismatic healing services with a woman who had a 
healing ministry  in Connecticut. And that led us into both Pentecostalism, 
evangelicalism and  places where they overlapped. So, for instance, we drove to 
Toronto for the  famous "Toronto blessing." A Pentecostalist outpouring at a 
Vineyard church  there, near the Toronto airport. I think I was about 13. 
We knew Eric Metaxas. My parents knew him and I knew him a little as well  
when I was about 13, because he was involved with some of these evangelical  
forays at Yale University. I didn't see him for 20 years and we actually, 
very,  very recently, reconnected. 
CP: So, you chose Catholicism as an adult? 
Douthat: I was 17. So, I'm in the unusual position of being neither a 
cradle  Catholic nor, technically, an adult convert. But, I hope that I, at 
least,  passed the age of reason [laughs]. 
CP: Why did you choose Catholicism? 
Douthat: My mother converted when I was 16. She was the driving force 
behind  religion in our family. So, I'm sure I was heavily influenced by that. 
But, I  also was, and still am, convinced by the Catholic churches historical 
claims to  represent the continuity with the early Church that other forms 
of Western  Christianity lack. 
I read a lot of G.K. Chesterton. It was a fairly conventional intellectual  
path to the Catholic church, I would say. 
CP: Is there an extent to which, in this book, you are writing about  
yourself, as well as the nation? Is there a personal search towards orthodoxy  
and away from heresy that underlies this? 
Douthat: Well, I don't want to suggest that ... I'm trying to start with a  
broad definition of orthodoxy, so I'm not trying to suggest, for instance, 
that  whatever evangelical churches that my parents were part of were 
heretics, or  something. I'm not writing a story in which my childhood 
experience 
is a journey  from heresy into orthodoxy. 
I do think, though, that that background did give me a sense of the  
incredible diversity and complexity of American religion, which not everybody,  
especially not everybody in my line of work, necessarily has. 
I think that one of the themes of the book is that, independent of the  
critique I'm making, I'm just trying to paint a more comprehensive portrait of  
American religion than you get from a right versus left, religious 
conservatives  versus secular liberal, believer versus atheist, binary. Too 
often, 
we just look  at religion in America through that kind of either/or lens. I 
think it's much  more complicated than that. And, that's why I wanted to 
write about somebody  like Elizabeth Gilbert and "eat-pray-love," and somebody 
like Joel Osteen. These  figures who aren't culture war figures exactly, but 
who I think are enormously  important to understanding religion in America 
today. 
CP: In the introduction, you say that you're writing the book for a  broad 
audience, not just a Christian audience. Why should non-Christians be  
interested in reading your book? 
Douthat: Institutional Christianity has had clear secular benefits to  
American life for hundreds of years. It's played both a prophetic role in terms 
 
of generating moral critiques of American excesses, and so on, and also a  
communal role, in terms of building community as the country moved westward 
to  the role my own Catholic Church played in assimilating generations of  
immigrants. The story, in part, that I'm telling is a story in which many 
things  about American life, that even secular people consider good, have 
flowed from  the presence of a robust, resilient institutional Christianity. 
As a corollary, I'm also saying that the idea of a post-religious society 
is  a fantasy, ultimately. Human beings are, by nature, religious in various 
ways.  And so, the fact that institutional churches have gone into decline 
doesn't mean  that we're going to enter some purely secular age. Secular 
people need to be  aware of that. They need to understand that what replaces 
Christianity isn't  going to be Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, and so 
on. It's going to be  something else and something they may not like very 
much. 
CP: Your _interview with Bill Maher_ 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gy5ngLMUmC0)  was  interesting. 
Douthat: Was it? [Laughs] 
CP: Maher used this phrase "secular religion" to explain the crimes  of 
atheist totalitarianism in the 20th century. You were about to respond to  that 
before he moved onto something else. 
Douthat: All I would have said was a continuation of a point I was trying 
to  make to him. Which was, I think it is fair, in a way, to describe certain 
forms  of Marxism, for instance, as the secular equivalent of a religion. 
But, I think  the same is true, to a certain extent, of secular liberalism as 
well. 
If you're willing to recognize the religious element in one secular 
ideology,  you need to be able to recognize it in your own. I think that 
secular 
liberals  need to recognize that they are still, often, hanging their 
worldview on what  are metaphysical ideas. The idea of universal human rights 
may 
not seem as weird  to some people as the idea of a personal God, but it is 
still a metaphysical  idea that liberalism, at least as we know it, couldn't 
really survive without.  So, that was the point I was trying to make to him. 
Even secular people can't  really escape from the need to rest their ideas on 
some belief, some sort of  commitment that is not scientific commitment.
Napp Nazworth
 
____________________________________

Copyright © Christianpost.com. All rights  reserved. 











 








-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to