NY Times
Ross Douthat
 
 
The Strange Religious Future
 

November 19, 2014 

 
 
I had the privilege of being  part of a Fordham University event last night 
on _the  future of religion_ 
(http://www.fordham.edu/academics/programs_at_fordham_/center_on_religion_a/events_calendar/november_18_2014_74508.asp)
 , 
responding (along with a rather more _distinguished fellow  panelist_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvey_Cox) ) to remarks by the religion 
journalist 
and academic Molly Worthen  on the roots of institutional faith’s 
present-day developed-world decline. There  was, I think, some basic agreement 
among 
all of the panelists about some of the  patterns and shifts we’re 
experiencing right now (the decline of  institutional authority, the working 
out of the 
sexual revolution, the rise of  _the so-called  “nones”_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2012/10/09/nones-on-the-rise/) ), and then a number of 
interesting 
things were said about the  possible unknowns that might either accelerate or 
redirect current trends:  There was discussion of how 
institutional-cum-orthodox forms of faith might  experience some sort of 
revival, of how 
spiritual-but-not-religious forms of  faith might represent the vanguard of an 
entirely new era of religious  understanding, and of how religious forces 
outside 
the developed world (Islam,  Pentecostalism, Chinese Christianity) might 
matter more to the West itself than  a Western-centric vision allows. 
All of us were  trying, I think, to escape a little bit from the tyranny  
of extrapolation — the tendency to assume that today’s trends will  
necessarily be tomorrow’s, and that history happens in a relatively linear and  
Whiggish fashion. But reflecting on the discussion afterward, it seems worth  
dwelling a little more the importance of the unexpected in religious  history, 
the ways in which various forms of rupture and reversal can make  punditry 
look foolish. 
This issue has come up a bit in  _my  recent discussions of Roman 
Catholicism_ 
(http://americamagazine.org/issue/james-martin-and-ross-douthat-pope-francis-synod-and-demands-law-and-mercy)
 , where the word “schism,” which I’ve 
 _dropped_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/26/opinion/sunday/ross-douthat-the-pope-and-the-precipice.html)
   _a  few times_ 
(http://douthat.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/04/29/more-catholic-than-the-pope/) , 
has often been greeted 
with a touch of shock or outrage from  people on different sides of internal 
R.C. debates. As it should be, of  course — I’m obviously using it to shock a 
bit, to emphasize what I see as  _the  high stakes_ 
(http://douthat.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/10/28/why-i-am-a-catholic/)  in current 
debates — but only 
if that shock is happening  for the right reasons, only if it reflects a 
legitimate horror of schism, rather  than a disbelief that such a thing could 
ever happen. Because no such disbelief is justified, any more than it  would 
have been before any previous schism or division (ancient,  medieval or 
Reformation-era ) put an end to a previously longstanding unity.  Schism 
happens; 
indeed, it happens pretty often in its _minor_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Catholic_Church)  _forms_ (http://sspx.org/)  
(and has been happening 
apace in  Protestantism), and while its major forms are rare enough that you 
shouldn’t  expect them around every corner, when they do happen they can 
dramatically  redirect existing trajectories, and completely rewrite what seem 
like basic  religious scripts. 
As, of course, can all sorts  of unlooked-for developments. Whatever 
ultimately comes of the Francis era  in Catholicism, nobody making predictions 
about the future of Catholicism circa  2010 expected Benedict’s resignation and 
Francis’s accession, let alone anything  that’s followed. Similarly, 
nobody making projections about the future of  Catholicism circa 1940 would 
have 
expected something exactly like the  Second Vatican Council. And nobody 
looking at the religious landscape  in 1950 would have imagined that by 2040 
Africa could dominate  Catholic demographics and that China might have _the  
largest Christian population in the world_ 
(http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/2/a6d2a690-6545-11e4-91b1-00144feabdc0.html) . 
And all of these happenings  aren’
t merely unexpected; they’re weird, exotic, strange (two popes at  once? the 
mass in English? Africans and Asians evangelizing the West?) by the  
standard of what earlier trends would have led one to expect. 
Let me give you another, much  more hypothetical example of what I mean. In 
recent months the Mormon  church has formally acknowledged that Joseph 
Smith was _rather  more polygamous_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/11/us/its-official-mormon-founder-had-up-to-40-wives.html)
  than many Latter Day Saints 
had been led to believe. This  acknowledgment prompted Slate’s Will Saletan 
to write _an  interesting piece_ (http://www.slate.com/articles/new
s_and_politics/frame_game/2014/11/mormons_will_accept_homosexuality_mormon_church_lead
ers_use_revelation_to.html)  predicting that the same process of ongoing  
revelation that led Mormons to put away their founder’s view of marriage 
(and,  later, to remove the bar on the priesthood for Mormons of African  
descent) will eventually lead the church to embrace same-sex unions: 
 
When you look back at these  stories—not just the reported facts, but the 
way the church has recast  them—you can see how a reversal on homosexuality 
might unfold. First there’s a  shift in the surrounding culture. Then there’
s political and legal pressure.  Meanwhile, LDS leaders have to grapple with 
the pain of gay Mormons—now  acknowledged by the church as “_same-sex 
attracted_ (https://www.lds.org/topics/same-gender-attraction?lang=eng) ”—who 
sacrifice for an institution that  forbids them to love and marry. Within the 
church hierarchy, less conservative  voices gradually replace leaders who 
have died or stepped down. Eventually,  the time is right for a revelation. 
When you pray hard enough, and you know  what you want to hear, you’ll hear 
it.

 
The church is well along this  path. Two years ago, it acknowledged 
homosexuality as a deeply ingrained  condition and said it “_should  not be 
viewed 
as a disease_ 
(http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/frame_game/2012/12/mormons_and_gays_does_a_new_lds_web_site_pave_the_way_to_accepting_same
.html) .” Today, in its essay on polygamy, the church  affirms its defense 
of traditional marriage, but with a caveat. “Marriage  between one man and 
one woman is God’s standard for marriage,” the essay  concludes—“unless He 
declares otherwise, which He did through His prophet,  Joseph Smith.” It 
happened once. In fact, it happened twice. When the time is  right, it’ll 
happen again.
This is a good example of  plausible religious punditry, looking at past 
and current patterns to predict  future developments. A number of Christian 
churches have made a shift on  homosexuality like the one Saletan describes; 
the Mormons have a history of  making shifts on issues where the church is 
out-of-step with American culture;  and their church would have a clear 
doctrinal basis, in _continuous  revelation_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_revelation) , to justify making such a 
move. Project current trends 
forward,  and it seems like, well, a normal thing to expect. 
Now I could put my own pundit’s  hat on and come up with some plausible 
reasons why, instead, Mormon doctrine  might remain exactly as it is. (There 
is, for instance, a significant difference  between re-adapting to a 
longstanding religiously-based sexual-moral consensus,  one that originates in 
shared 
scriptures and beliefs, and adapting to an  emerging sexual-moral consensus 
whose origin is much more secular. There is also  a difference between a 
revelation that makes you more like every other existing  Christian church and 
a revelation that puts you on the liberal side of an  ongoing 
intra-Christian conflict, etc.) But that, too, would be a somewhat  
normal-seeming thing: 
Just continuity as opposed to change. What’s more  important is that I 
could also imagine something much more abnormal —  given current expectations, 
that is — happening around these issues  than what Saletan predicts. 
One such something would be  a real rebirth of Mormon polygamy — its escape 
from or expansion out of the  fundamentalist ghetto where it has survived 
(and, to some extent, thrived) ever  since revelation ruled it out. Most 
devout Mormons, or at least the ones I’ve  talked to about the issue, already 
have an understandably complicated  relationship with their polygamous 
forebears. There isn’t a sense that, oh,  that was a terrible mistake and we 
don’t 
know why it happened, because  given basic Mormon premises that idea doesn’
t make any theological sense;  rather, there’s a sense that polygamy has 
some kind of important place  in God’s plan, that in some circumstances it must 
be not only sanctioned but  laudable, and that the change in revelation 
reflected a change in those  circumstances, but one that didn’t make Joseph 
Smith and Brigham Young any less  obedient to God in their own situations. 
So context matters — and while I  don’t know how many Mormons would frame 
it exactly this way, I think one  way to read that context is to look at the 
revelation suspending polygamy and  see God basically blessing a 
political-cultural bargain between the Latter Day  Saints and the United 
States, in 
which Mormons would be granted the liberty  required to thrive in return for 
adapting themselves to American familial norms  … as adapt they did, becoming 
the archetype of 1950s bourgeois normality and  then remaining archetypal 
long after that norm had ceased to meaningfully  exist. 
But if that bargain was  real, and not only real but divinely-sanctioned, 
then what should pious Mormons  today make of the fact that the United States 
now seems to be going back on the  deal? How should they respond to the 
possibility that their faith is  becoming effectively alien again, developing 
another _“marriage  problem,”_ 
(http://douthat.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/13/does-mormonism-have-a-marriage-problem/)
  because it still hews to the terms 
of  the original deal even as American culture demands assent to a  very 
different, effectively post-biblical, understanding of what marriage  is 
supposed to be? Saletan sketches one possible response, in which  Mormons 
simply 
accept the new bargain, the new terms, and adapt once again.  But that’s the 
Whig’s view of history, in which everyone responds to new  incentives by 
rushing in the same direction. If you take the example of  Mormonism’s 
founding fathers seriously, you might just as easily say, the  bargain has been 
broken, therefore the revelation that helped seal it no longer  applies, 
therefore we can go our own divinely-sanctioned way again even as the  wider 
culture rushes in another direction. And the end result might  not a L.D.S. 
church that evolves toward, say, the current Congregationalist or  Unitarian 
view 
of marriage; it might be an L.D.S. church that has much more  trouble 
sweeping polygamy to its margins (especially if civil laws against the  
practice 
fall), and that suddenly has to deal with powerful fundamentalist  currents, 
a powerful fundamentalist wing, in ways that would have been hard to  
imagine before the same-sex marriage debate began. 
This is all the purest  speculation, of course. Like a Catholic schism, a 
springtime for Mormon polygamy  is not something that can be gleaned from 
current sociological data, church  attendance figures, polling and the like. 
And it would be, well, a very strange  development. But this is my point: We 
can’t know exactly what it would look  like, but where religion’s future is 
concerned, the strange in some form is  always part of what we should 
confidently  expect.

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