(emphasis added)
 
The American Interest
 
 
 
Are Evangelicals Winning the  World? 
_Peter  Berger_ (http://www.the-american-interest.com/byline/berger/)  
 
Why are parts of Germany formerly under the enforced secularism of the  
Communist party rediscovering charismatic religion?
 
In its story of May 16, 2015, the German  newsmagazine Der Spiegel 
_carried_ 
(https://magazin.spiegel.de/digital/index_SP.html#SP/2015/21/134995232)   
a story tiled (_on its cover  at least_ 
(https://magazin.spiegel.de/digital/index_SP.html#SP/2015/21) ) “Are 
Evangelicals Winning the World?” [That is 
my  translation. The German wording is “Are Evangelicals conquering…” I  
substituted the less martial-sounding English “winning”. To the best of my  
knowledge, there is a remarkable scarcity of Evangelical suicide bombers.] 
The  story states that Evangelical congregations are generally growing in 
Germany.  But it concentrates on two congregations: one in Stuttgart, in 
western 
Germany,  the other in a suburb of Dresden, in the former DDR (the defunct 
Communist  German Democratic Republic.) The second location is particularly  
startling.The Stuttgart congregation is described as the first  
American-style mega-church. It is also clearly Pentecostal or charismatic. On  
Sunday 
morning some 2,000 people attend services, close their eyes and raise  their 
hands in ecstatic prayer, “speak in tongues” (meaningless babble to  
outsiders), and watch their preacher perform miracles of healing. The Dresden  
congregation is located in a suburban area that has been called the Saxon “
Bible  belt”, in yet another echo of America. Both regions have a long history 
of  Pietism, the German phenomenon closest to American Evangelicalism (but 
without  the miracles). Whether this Pietist heritage (going back some 
three-hundred  years) provides some links with what is happening now is an open 
question. But  the Dresden case raises a more proximate question: how relevant 
is its more  recent history under Communism? The Austrian sociologist Paul 
Zulehner has  called the former DDR one of three European countries in which 
atheism has  become a sort of state religion (the other two are the Czech 
Republic and  Estonia). Is this wild eruption of supernaturalism a delayed 
reaction to the  period when the Communist regime made propaganda for “
scientific atheism”?  Immediately after the fall of that regime there was a 
popular 
revival of the  much more sedate form of Protestantism of the Landeskirchen, 
the old  post-Reformation state churches; that revival did not last very 
long after these  churches lost their appeal as one of the few institutions at 
least relatively  free from the control of the party.  
According to some data, there are now about 1.3 million members of  
congregations united in something called the German Evangelical Alliance (the  
German word is “evangelisch”). To add to the confusion of any reader of  this 
blog not familiar with the esoterica of German religion, in ordinary  
parlance, “evangelisch” just means “Protestant”; to distinguish  ordinary 
Lutherans from the aforementioned devotees of the supernatural, the  German 
term “
evangelikal” has been invented. Unfortunately, some  Lutheran and 
Scandinavian churches implanted in America have retained the  European meaning 
of “
Evangelical”, as in the biggest Lutheran denomination in  the U.S.—Evangelical 
Lutheran Church in America/ELCA (also known in its  precincts as “Aunt Elka”
). Too bad, dear readers: I didn’t create the confusion,  I’m trying to 
dispel it. (In any case, if a devout Southern Baptist stranded in  the Upper 
Midwest goes to an ELCA service expecting to answer the call from the  altar, 
to accept Jesus as his personal lord and savior, he will be  disappointed.) 
 
Please take it from me, one solidly steeped in in German religious  
esoterica: The Alliance with 1.3 members should rightly be called “Evangelical” 
 
in the American sense of that word! Like their American cousins, these German 
 Evangelicals insist that the Bible, Old and New Testament, should be taken 
 literally as the highest authority in all matters of faith and morality. 
Oddly  enough, Evangelicals on both sides of the Atlantic have an affinity 
with  right-wing and anti-immigrant politics. Dresden in particular has seen 
its  Evangelicals very visible in the ongoing anti-Muslim demonstrations. At 
the  other end of Germany, in Bremen, an Evangelical pastor has attracted 
media  attention by warning against the notion that Christians have anything 
in common  with Islam or Buddhism—they should purify themselves from all this 
“Muslim  nonsense”, and not put up statues of the Buddha, that “fat old 
gentleman”.  
Why is this happening in Germany now? I don’t know. Is this a singular  
event, or is it part of a larger process of desecularization in western Europe, 
a  region more secular than any other part of the world? Possibly. The 
British  sociologist Grace Davie has been warning us against over-estimating 
the 
degree  of “eurosecularity”—as she put it, many things are happening “
under the radar”.  Eastern Europe, especially Russia, has undergone some 
dramatic returns of  religion in the wake of the enforced secularism of the 
Communist party. But even  if I must honestly say that I don’t fully understand 
the present situation of  religion in western Europe, there is one fact that 
we can be reasonably sure of:  Evangelical Protestantism (especially but not 
exclusively in its  Pentecostalist/charismatic form) is going through a 
period of rapid growth in  Africa, Latin America and parts of Asia (notably in 
China). Why is this? David  Martin, another British sociologist who has been 
a kind of dean of  Pentecostalism studies, has shown in great detail how 
this astounding  development can be understood as yet another incarnation of 
the Protestant  ethic, which was a crucial factor in the genesis of modern 
capitalism.  
I think he is right. But I think there is another important factor, which  
has been generally overlooked. Allow me to regale you with the Berger 
hypothesis  on why Evangelical Protestantism is  doing so well in much of the 
contemporary world: Because it is the most modern of any large  religion on 
offer today. I am well aware of the fact that this  contradicts the prevailing 
view of Evangelicals in academia and the media—so  brilliantly expressed in 
President Obama’s priceless characterization of a  demographic not voting for 
him in the 2008 election as economically challenged  people “clinging to 
their guns and their God”. In other words, seen from the  perspective of 
Harvard Yard these are the great unwashed out of step with  modernity. But 
curiously this is also how diehard Evangelical fundamentalists  see 
themselves—as 
defenders of the true faith against the intellectual and moral  aberrations 
of modernity. They are both wrong.  
Evangelicals believe that one cannot be born a Christian, one must be  “
born again” by a personal decision to accept Jesus. What can be more  modern 
than this? This view of the  Christian faith provides a unique combination of 
individualism with a strong  community of fellow believers supporting the 
individual in his decision.  It allows individuals to be both  religious and 
modern. That is a pretty powerful package. Is my  hypothesis just an 
expression of my own faith? Definitely not. I am not  Pentecostal nor any other 
sort 
of Evangelical. But if (instead of being an  incurable evangelisch 
Lutheran), I were Evangelical but also  an objective sociologist, I would look 
at 
the empirical evidence and find the  hypothesis plausible, and worthy of 
exploration. Am I sure of this  interpretation? Of course not; science, 
including 
social science, does not lead  to certainties, only probabilities. This is 
not the place to develop my  hypothesis in greater detail. Let me just 
suggest that to be a Saxon Evangelical  is not as much of a contradiction as it 
may seem, and that such an individual  can find congenial places of worship 
from Sao Paulo, to Lagos, to Seoul (not to  mention Dallas).  
There is one obvious objection I should deal with: My hypothesis (a  
man-bites-dog story if there ever was one) seems to fly in the face of the fact 
 
that Evangelicals have great problems with many aspects of a modern,  
science-based worldview. How can one be a modern person who also believes that 
the 
world is only six-thousand years old, or that prayer can  divert the course 
of a hurricane to hit my neighbor rather than myself? Or, for  that matter, 
that the first five books of the Old Testament were written by  Moses? Come 
with me to Dallas and you can easily meet people who manage this  feat: 
successful petroleum engineers, heart surgeons or computer  specialists. It is 
good to keep in mind  that most people are not philosophers who want to have 
a logically coherent  worldview. But all of us, including philosophers, 
operate in different  “relevance structures” (to use the very useful concept 
coined by Alfred Schutz),  and we constantly switch from one to the other. For 
example, I earnestly discuss  sociology with a woman colleague at a 
scholarly conference, and find her  increasingly attractive: I am switching 
from a 
professional to an erotic  relevance. Alternatively, I discover that she is 
an ardent supporter of a  politician I find very objectionable: She loses 
her attractiveness, as I switch  from an erotic to a political or moral 
relevance. Probably this ability to switch relevances already  belonged to our 
Neolithic ancestors, but it becomes specially important if one  is to operate 
in a complicated modern society.  
Back in Dallas, our petroleum engineer does drilling in the morning,  plays 
chess in the evening—and goes to a conservative Baptist church on Sunday  
morning, listening to a sermon repudiating the theory of evolution. As long  
as these different relevances don’t collide on the level of actual behavior  
(say, some Evangelical Old Testament scholar claims that a hitherto 
overlooked  passage in the Book of Leviticus condemns chess), one can happily 
go on 
 switching relevances. Perhaps the following joke is (indeed) relevant to 
this discussion: Why are Baptists opposed to premarital sex? Because it  may 
lead to dancing!  
Finally, let me tell a Pentecostal joke (perhaps the only existing one):  
At a meeting of Pentecostals, how do you find out how many people want to 
stay  for lunch after the meeting? You go in and say: Those who want to stay 
for lunch  after the meeting, please lower your hands!

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