from the  site:
The American  Conservative
 
 
 
Is  There Still A ‘Vital Center’?
By _ROD  DREHER_ (http://www.theamericanconservative.com/author/rod-dreher) 
 • _April 11, 2017, 9:42  AM_ 
(http://www.theamericanconservative.com/dreher/is-there-still-a-vital-center/) 

 
 
_Emma Green interviews sociologist Phil Gorski, whose  new book argues that 
Americans need to rediscover the “vital center” in this age  of 
polarization._ 
(https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/04/gorski-civil-religion/521751/)
  Gorski says that it’s not true that the  Founders were either 
totally secular or totally devout: 
The more accurate story of America is one of “civil  religion,” Gorski 
writes, that cherishes a founding myth and agreed-upon set  of civic values and 
responsibilities. Understanding America’s tradition of  civil religion is 
important for reviving the “vital center,” as he calls it:  “believers and 
nonbelievers, Republicans and Democrats who support a moderate  form of 
secularism and a liberal form of nationalism.” This is “not a mushy  middle 
that 
splits the difference between left and right,” he says, nor does  it “
purport to be a ‘third way’ that ‘transcends’ debate.” Rather, the project  is 
about re-learning how to talk to one another and establishing a set of  
shared principles derived from American history.
>From the interview itself: 
Emma Green: What is  civil religion? 
Philip Gorski: Civil religion is the way a  particular people thinks about 
the transcendent purposes of a life together.  One might understand “
transcendent” in a traditional religious sense, or one  might just understand 
it as 
some kind of ultimate value or higher purpose that  a nation or polity is 
built around. 
American civil religion is a specific version of  that.
And: 
Green: You propose  that many Americans are in a middle space of some sort—
not necessarily between  conservative and liberal thinking, but between 
these poles of radical  secularism and religious nationalism. You seem to be 
arguing that the culture  wars aren’t representative of what most people think, 
feel, say, and  experience. 
Who are these “middle voters,” and how do you know  they exist? 
Gorksi: I don’t know for sure that they exist. But I  do think we have 
cultural resources in our shared history that have unified  us, even in times 
of 
deep division like this one. The fundamental purpose of  my book is to 
recover these resources, and to point people toward this place  that I call the 
vital center. 
It’s not a place of perfect agreement or complete  consensus. But it is a 
place where at least we’re all arguing about the same  values and feeling 
that we’re a part of the same long, hard, intergenerational  project in the 
American experiment in democracy.
You know I’m a pessimist about this kind of thing, but  really, I would 
love to believe that there were a “vital center” that meant  anything. I think 
it is certainly true that most Americans don’t share the sense  of culture 
war that people on either extreme do. Whether that’s because they’re  not 
paying attention, or they just don’t have the emotional investment in this  
or that issue, it’s impossible to say. You might not be interested in the  
culture war, but the culture war is definitely interested in you. 
I have not read Gorski’s book, let me stipulate, but I  am skeptical of his 
hypothesis of a vast, silent, disengaged minority. First,  it doesn’t 
matter that they’re in the majority if they won’t speak up and  act out in 
defense of their centrist views. Second, “civil religion” is  parasitic on real 
religion. You can have a plausible (from a sociological and  political point 
of view) civil religion only when an actual religion is believed  by enough 
people. That is, folks might not go to church much, but they share a  basic 
Judeo-Christian framework for understanding the world and constructing  
society, including legislating. But when that fades away, as it has done and  
continues to do, what binding power can civil religion possibly have? 
Increasingly, Christians can’t even agree on what  Christianity is, and 
requires of us — particularly when it comes to public  issues. Churches are 
splitting over gay rights, for example, and immigration is  hotly contested. 
Sixty years ago, say, there would have been much less  divergence of belief 
among churches, and the sense of national unity (achieved  in part through the 
cultural forces of conformity) was much greater. Besides,  today the 
quickest way to get something is to claim special victimhood status as  the 
result 
of your identity. Whether or not you have a point in your particular  
claim, this habit has become divisive of the body politic. 
It’s like this: if we have a vital center, then where  are these centrists 
at colleges when the left tries to no-platform speakers?  Where were the 
centrists on that day in the quad at Harvard Yale when Nicholas Christakis was  
shouted at and abused by the leftist mob? They don’t say or do anything. No 
 civil religion is strong enough to counter the real American religion: 
worship of the  sacred Self.

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