A Tale of Two Evangelicalisms - Breaking Ground
https://breakingground.us/a-tale-of-two-evangelicalisms/
BG
Oct 21, 2020
A Tale of Two Evangelicalisms
Photo by Andrei Stratu
Joel Halldorf
Joel Halldorf is associate professor in church history at the Stockholm School of Theology. He is
author of a number of books on evangelicalism, modernity, and politics, most recently Pentecostal
Politics in a Secular World (Palgrave MacMillan, 2020) which delves deeper into the topic of this
essay. He contributes to a number of newspapers and magazines in Sweden, where he lives with his
wife and children. He can be found on twitter as @joelsh.
!
I left Sweden for the United States in the summer of 2000, and arrived in the middle of a
captivating election cycle: the race between George W. Bush and Al Gore. I was a young
Pentecostal, and my newfound friends mostly belonged to the evangelical camp. We
shared theology, and the globalization of evangelicalism had made sure that we sang the
same songs and read the same spiritual writers. But politically, we were worlds apart. I
had never before met Christians who defended the death penalty or desired a stronger
military. And little did I know that the Bible could be read as supporting welfare cuts.
I have been back many times since, and during several elections—but the conversations
have not become easier. In fact, the distance now seems so wide that we can barely
begin a discussion on political matters. Back in the early 2000s, our divisions concerned
financial and foreign policy. Today, white evangelicals are a key voting bloc for Donald
Trump, whose populist politics horrify most Swedish evangelicals. The populist
equivalent in Swedish politics are the Sweden Democrats, who, like Trump, desire a
more homogenous society. But although they give Christianity a prominent place in
their vision, they have been rejected by evangelical voters.
This is a riddle I have been trying to solve for decades: How can those whose theology
and spirituality are so similar hold such widely different political opinions? There is a
sense, especially among theologians, that differences between churches ought to have
theological explanations. That is, after all, what should guide churches as well as
individual Christians. But in this case it is not enough to explain the differences. Instead,
we must look for the answer in the histories that shaped, and continue to shape,
evangelicalism in Sweden and the United States.
Democratic Avant-Garde
When Alexis de Tocqueville set sail for the United States, he was not convinced. It was
the early 1830s, and he was on his way to a young nation that was experimenting with
democracy. Tocqueville, like most intellectuals since Plato, saw it as a high-risk project.
His philosophical misgivings were compounded by the fact that his father had barely
survived the French Revolution, strengthening his suspicion that egalitarianism would
lead to disintegration and chaos, before ending in tyranny.
“
How can those whose theology and spirituality are so
similar hold such widely different political opinions?
!Click to Tweet
1 of 10
10/31/20, 10:25 PM
A Tale of Two Evangelicalisms - Breaking Ground
https://breakingground.us/a-tale-of-two-evangelicalisms/
But his visit left him impressed. Tocqueville toured the nation for almost a year and
concluded that the Americans seemed to have pulled it off. This was due to what he
famously labeled “the art of associating”—their untiring practice of small-scale
organizing: clubs, congregations, and associations. This fostered democratic virtues and
BG
shaped citizens able to achieve democracy on a national level. He was particularly
fascinated by the churches that spread all over the nation, founded as it was on the idea
of religious freedom. They contributed by preaching and practicing solidarity and
patience, virtues necessary to sustain a democracy.
The story of democracy in Sweden begins in a similar way, albeit a century after the
inauguration of democracy in America. Here too the art of associating was vital for the
development of democracy—and evangelicalism was instrumental in fostering it. But it
took time. In the nineteenth century, Sweden was one of Europe’s least democratic
countries. Religious freedom was established only in the 1860s, and before that
evangelicals were fined, imprisoned, or ostracized for their convictions. When the first
Baptist congregation was founded, in 1848, it had to be done in secret. But this
congregation was the very first democratic association in the country.
With religious freedom came a rapid growth of evangelical denominations—or free
churches as they are called in Sweden—in contrast to the established Lutheran state
church. This changed the political culture, for most evangelicals formed democratic
associations. As a grassroots movement these free churches fostered civic virtue
through the art of association. Many evangelicals also became involved in national
politics and worked diligently for democratization, particularly religious freedom and
other liberal reforms.
The free churches belonged to the democratic avant-garde of Swedish modernity. They
introduced the organizational forms that the other popular movements—the worker’s
movement and the temperance movement—would copy: democratic associations with
protocols, budgets, and membership rolls. In Sweden it took until 1921 before women
were given the right to vote in parliamentary election. By then they had already had this
right in evangelical denominations for seventy years.
Progressive Evangelicalism
During the nineteenth century, evangelicals in Sweden and the United States had
similar political instincts. As the late historian Donald Dayton and author Marilynne
Robinson have both shown, large parts of evangelicalism in this era were politically
progressive. They spearheaded the fights against slavery, economic injustices, and
discrimination of women.
This is a sadly neglected chapter of American church history. The famous revivalist
Charles Finney is mostly remembered for his revivals on the East Coast in the 1830s. But
it is a less-known fact that he preached that personal salvation must be tied to social
justice. “Revivals are hindered,” he wrote, “when ministers and churches take wrong
ground in regard to any question involving human rights.” His revivals inspired the
founding of Oberlin College, the first university to allow not only women but also people
of all colors to study together.
But the United States was politically very different from Sweden, and seeing this will
help us understand the political differences between evangelicalism that would
eventually develop in these two countries. For while the United States was founded as a
democracy—albeit a flawed one—Sweden was still in the late nineteenth century a
monarchy with a parliament open only to the well-off. In order to be elected or even vote
in elections, you had to own property or have a certain income. In 1896, a mere 6
percent of the Swedish population had the right to vote—figures in neighboring Norway
and Denmark, as well as Great Britain, were almost 20 percent. Furthermore, Sweden
had established a reputation as one of the most economically unequal countries in
Western Europe.
To change this, a massive political mobilization became necessary—a struggle to
replace the old regime of king, state church, and nobility with a democratic and more
equal society. Evangelicals were part of this mobilization. They joined hands with
liberals and Social Democrats and fought against the conservative establishment to
shape a modern nation with democratic rights and economic justice. Evangelicals
2 of 10
10/31/20, 10:25 PM
A Tale of Two Evangelicalisms - Breaking Ground
https://breakingground.us/a-tale-of-two-evangelicalisms/
wanted society to imbue those democratic values and practices that they had come to
take for granted in their churches. As the political scientist Lydia Svärd concludes, “For
people who had gotten used to voting in their congregation, temperance association, or
local union, it was a natural thing to seek the right to vote in state and municipalities.”
BG
Evangelicals’ political instincts and historical circumstances placed them firmly in the
liberal camp. They were pro-democracy and pro-solidarity, but against revolution. They
wanted to change society through reform, and were highly involved in the process of
doing so. In 1908, forty-three evangelicals had seats in the second chamber of the
parliament, and the majority of those (twenty-five) belonged to the Liberal party. This
meant that 20 percent of parliament and almost 30 percent of the Liberal party were
evangelicals. Those are substantial numbers given that evangelicals at the time made up
5 percent of the population.
A few Social Democrats were radical Marxists who rejected religion of any kind, but
most were ready to join hands with evangelicals for a common cause. Accordingly,
liberals and socialists could work together for democracy and economic justice, united
against a common enemy: the conservative establishment.
Swedish Evangelicalism in the Twentieth Century
The struggle for democracy and economic solidarity shaped Swedish evangelicalism into
a liberal, left-leaning political movement. This identity was strong and enduring. In the
1956 election, 58 percent of the evangelicals voted for the Liberal party (Folkpartiet),
which was more than twice the figure for the party in the general election (24 percent).
The second largest party was the Social Democrats, with close to 30 percent of the
evangelical vote. The Conservative party gained 10 percent of the evangelical vote, a
mere half of the support among the general electorate.
“
Compared to secular voters, Swedish evangelicals are more
engaged in environmental issues, more supportive of
migration and humanitarian aid, and more critical of
military export.
!Click to Tweet
The politics of Swedish evangelicalism changed somewhat in the 1960s, when Lewi
Pethrus, leader of the Pentecostal movement, founded the Christian Democrats. Pethrus
was culturally conservative, and wanted to halt secularization, particularly of schools
and entertainment. But he was still in favor of progressive economic politics. In their
first official political declaration, the party began by affirming the “appreciation and
respect” for the welfare state, and declared that it was ready to “wholeheartedly support
and develop it further.” They described unions as “indispensable,” and warned against
fiscal and corporate centralization. Pethrus, a theologically conservative Pentecostal,
emphasized his whole life that “Christianity and social justice are intimately connected.”
Swedish evangelicals were skeptical of socialism, not social justice—even when that
justice was mediated through state-sponsored welfare. Polls from the late twentieth
century show that Swedish evangelicals continue to be against the death penalty, and
for welfare, migration, humanitarian aid, and the environment. Compared to secular
voters, Swedish evangelicals are more engaged in environmental issues, more supportive
of migration and humanitarian aid, and more critical of military export.
White American evangelicals tend toward the opposite in all those issues. They are, as
we shall see, shaped by another and very different story.
The Great Reversal in American Evangelicalism
In the 1960s a young evangelical named Donald Dayton began his studies at one of the
movement’s colleges. All around him, the world was changing: the civil rights movement
marched against racism and students took to the streets to protest the Vietnam War.
But nothing of this reached his college. Here, politics peaked when the students
3 of 10
10/31/20, 10:25 PM
A Tale of Two Evangelicalisms - Breaking Ground
https://breakingground.us/a-tale-of-two-evangelicalisms/
protested the ban against TV on Sundays.
It was, Dayton thought, like living in a bubble.
BG
Like so many in his generation, he felt squeezed between the progressive spirit of the age
and an evangelical movement that wanted to preserve status quo. He had to choose
between evangelical piety and political involvement, and—again like many—he picked
the latter. He moved to New York City, started attending black churches, and began his
studies at Columbia University. He was saying farewell to evangelicalism.
But as he was working on a paper at his new university, he discovered that this today
rather complacent movement had radical political roots. Evangelicals had fought hard
against slavery, protested discrimination of women, and championed economic justice.
But somewhere along the way that had changed, and Dayton would spend his life trying
to explain what had happened.
Historian George M. Marsden later labeled this change “the Great Reversal”: The
rejection of progressive politics, including support for welfare through state politics—
and in some cases even skepticism of private or church-sponsored charity. In the early
twentieth century, the branches of evangelicalism in Sweden and the United States were
moving away from each other politically. They swam in different waters, and were
carried away by different currents. In America there were neither landed nobility nor
state churches. Democratic rights, including religious freedom, were already in place.
Accordingly, there was no need for political mobilization where evangelicals joined
hands with liberals and socialists in order to overthrow a conservative establishment.
The strong alliances that shaped Swedish evangelicalism—and for that part much of
European evangelicalism—never took place in the United States.
Further, the state played a different role in their political imaginations. In the story of
Swedish modernity, the democratic welfare state transformed an unjust and elitist
society into a more just one. But the founding myth of United States is not a story about
freedom through the state, but freedom from the state. There is a strong anti-statist
theme in American politics and culture, which has its roots in the flight from the
oppressive Old World and the struggle against the British rule. This theme was baptized
by Puritans, and later evangelicals, who saw it as part of the divine destiny of the United
States: to be a shining beacon of freedom to the world. In this story, the state is
associated with the oppressive structures of the Old World and should be kept to a
minimum. Freedom is that pristine moment when the pilgrims arrived or the birth of
the Republic, when the British yoke was broken. Welfare is seen as an unsound
expansion of the state—something that undermines individual thrift and responsibility,
and is financed by taxes that rob people of the freedom to do what they please with their
money.
Subscribe
Email Address
SUBMIT
From these narratives came two developments in the early 1900s that pushed American
evangelicals even further away from progressive politics. The first was the modernistfundamentalist conflict. During this period, the social gospel movement emerged,
uniting liberal theology with an emphasis on social justice. In response, Reformed
theologians formulated a series of pamphlets titled The Fundamentals in order to
establish the nonnegotiable basics of Christian dogma. Soon, evangelicalism became
firmly entrenched in the fundamentalist camp. According to the logic of theological
battles and bundling, they had to firmly reject whatever the other embraced, including
social justice. Marsden argues that “the factor crucial to understanding the ‘Great
Reversal’ is the fundamentalist reaction to the liberal Social Gospel after 1900. . . . By the
time of World War I, ‘social Christianity’ was becoming thoroughly identified with
liberalism and was viewed with great suspicion by many conservative evangelicals.”
Swedish evangelicals also rejected liberal theology; this movement was never strong
4 of 10
10/31/20, 10:25 PM
A Tale of Two Evangelicalisms - Breaking Ground
https://breakingground.us/a-tale-of-two-evangelicalisms/
enough to pose a real threat to them. Liberal theology was something distant, a sign of
the corruption of already failing churches, and evangelicals did not fashion their
theological identity in opposition to it. Swedish evangelicals did not have to choose
between conservative theology and progressive economic politics.
BG
But in the United States, this either/or binary became even more entrenched after
World War II, when American identity was formulated in opposition to the Soviet
Union. Now communism and socialism become the great enemies: they were not only
anti-Christian ideologies but also pressing existential threats to the nation. While 30
percent of Swedish evangelicals voted for the Social Democrats in the 1950s, in the
United States this was the decade of McCarthyism and the Red Scare. Some evangelicals
connected the dots of the three themes and claimed that the progressive politics of the
social gospel were inspired by communism and stood in opposition to the divinely
sanctioned American spirit. State welfare was anti-Christian as well as un-American.
“
In Trumpism, the state plays a bigger role as protector of
what is described as a “traditional” American way of life
against the threatening forces of secularization, pluralism,
and migration.
!Click to Tweet
These are two very different stories, and they go far to explain the differences between
me and my American friends in 2000. I was the product of an evangelical movement tied
to political liberalism, with an emphasis on social justice. In US history, a number of
intersecting themes had moved them in a different direction: the anti-statist impulse
shaping American culture and a theological battle that led to paranoia over social gospel
and the Cold War fear of socialism. For them the state was no natural ally, but rather an
obstacle to overcome in order to become free. In my history, the modern state was what
guaranteed freedom from unequal and undemocratic structures.
In the end, the strongest argument I met was not political but moral. Evangelicals then
dreamt of placing a born-again Christian in the White House. This reflected the tactics
of the Religious Right, who wanted to elect Christian men to political positions. But two
decades later, this has changed. Donald Trump is no model of piety, and his politic are of
a different kind. In Trumpism, the state plays a bigger role as protector of what is
described as a “traditional” American way of life against the threatening forces of
secularization, pluralism, and migration. This is a new chapter in the story of evangelical
politics.
The Turn to Populism
The alliance between white evangelicals and the GOP was formalized in the 1970s
through organizations like the Moral Majority. During this period a number of Supreme
Court decisions perceived as secularizing—particularly the legalization of abortion
—drove evangelicals into politics. They were motivated by a desire for a stronger
Christian ethics in society and a fear that state regulations would interfere with their
own institutions.
From Ronald Reagan onward, evangelicals had the sense that the Republican Party
listened to their case and supported their cause. They were granted access to presidents
and prominent politicians. In 1980, 65 percent of white evangelicals supported Reagan,
and by the time of George W. Bush the figures approached 80 percent. But despite the
fact that the Republicans controlled all three houses from 2003 to 2007, very little
changed in terms of the core issues that motivated evangelicals. Disillusionment started
to spread. Pastor and subsequent Trump supporter Robert Jeffress recalls,
I remember very well back in 2004, being on a conference call with religious leaders
and how disappointed they were with George W. Bush, and how they felt like he
had just really misled us. . . . I don’t want to disparage him at all, but what came out
of that eight years? A $7 trillion war in the Middle East.
5 of 10
10/31/20, 10:25 PM
A Tale of Two Evangelicalisms - Breaking Ground
https://breakingground.us/a-tale-of-two-evangelicalisms/
The Republicans seemed either unable or unwilling to make good on their promises.
Change continued to accelerate in a way that made many evangelicals feel increasingly
left behind. In 1997, a quarter of the population identified as white evangelicals, but two
decades later that figure is down to 17 percent. Religious pluralism is growing, and so is
BG
tolerance of divorce and LGBTQ rights. Some evangelicals worry that these
developments will lead to regulations of their own schools, hospitals, and other
institutions. They sense the contempt from the liberal cultural establishment, which
views them as bitter people who “cling to guns or religion,” as Obama infamously put it.
The liberals are after them, and Republicans seem unable to protect them. This feeling is
the context for evangelical enthusiasm for Trump. After forty years of constant defeats,
evangelicals were ready to try something else. A Christian character might be good for
much but not, it seems, for winning battles in the cultural war. Sure, Trump is a brutal,
crude strongman—but he is their brutal, crude strongman. The now disgraced Jerry
Falwell Jr. articulated the new strategy in a tweet:
Conservatives & Christians need to stop electing “nice guys.” They might make
great Christian leaders but the US needs street fighters like @realDonaldTrump at
every level of government b/c the liberal fascists Dems are playing for keeps &
many Repub leaders are a bunch of wimps!
Evangelicals worry about cultural, religious, and demographic changes. Historian John
Fea argues that this worry reflects a fear of losing their own privileged position in the
nation. His colleague Thomas Kidd similarly claims that evangelical politics is rooted in
a desire to return the nation “to a nostalgic past of Christian cultural establishment
while exhorting individuals to reject mere cultural Christianity and to be born again.”
Trump seemed strong enough not only to protect evangelicals from the state
interventions orchestrated by liberals but also to return the nation to a more
homogenous Christian past.
“
A Christian character might be good for much but not, it
seems, for winning battles in the cultural war.
!Click to Tweet
Sweden: The Rejection of Populism
In Sweden, the political rise of populism is manifested by the Sweden Democrats, a
nationalistic party that made it into parliament in 2010 with 6 percent of the vote. In
2014 that figured doubled to 13, and in 2018 they became the third largest party, with
support from 18 percent of Swedish voters. The party wants to limit immigration and
protect what they describe as a traditional homogenous Swedish culture. Christianity is
important in their nationalistic project, and they see the church as a central part of the
national identity. This desire to return to a Christian, more homogenous past clearly
mirrors Trump’s political vision.
Given the fact that Sweden is one of the world’s most secular countries, one would
expect that a party which highlights the role of the church would attract many
evangelicals. But instead, evangelical voters are among the most reluctant to support
the Sweden Democrats. For two decades, the number of evangelicals doing so has been
between one-third and one-half of the figures of the regular voter. The reason is that
Swedish evangelicals are repelled by the populist rejection of migration and pluralism.
Political scientist Magnus Hagevi concludes that “individuals who are regular free
church goers tend to have comparatively positive opinions towards refugees and
towards Sweden as a multicultural society.”
!Click to Tweet
“
Political scientist Magnus Hagevi concludes that
“individuals who are regular free church goers tend to have
comparatively positive opinions towards refugees and
6 of 10
10/31/20, 10:25 PM
A Tale of Two Evangelicalisms - Breaking Ground
https://breakingground.us/a-tale-of-two-evangelicalisms/
towards Sweden as a multicultural society.
BG
Behind this openness are of course theological convictions, but again, the wider political
context seems to be an important factor. In this case the fact that Swedish evangelicals
have been a minority since the beginning is significant. The fight for religious freedom
was, as we saw, central to the original political mobilization of the nineteenth century.
During the 1900s Sweden became a secular country with a Lutheran state church, which
further underscored the minority status of the free churches. As a minority, they depend
on a state that accepts religious pluralism. The embrace of this principle has lead
evangelicals to argue for tolerance of other religious traditions—including Muslims.
Polls show that evangelicals are more open to a multicultural society than the average
Swede, and that they oppose bans of religious building such as mosques.
It seems like churches that are at arm’s length from power and the cultural mainstream
are in a better position to develop the Christian virtue of hospitality. As a majority
religion intertwined with the state, Christianity often becomes more rigid, less
hospitable, and at times hostile—even to other Christian minorities. Pluralism is seen as
a threat, since it might mean that Christianity will lose its privileged position. In contrast
to this, a minority can never expect to set the rules for any encounter. Instead they must
find ways to negotiate and live with difference. Accordingly, they become well equipped
to live as a creative minority in a pluralistic society.
“
It seems like churches that are at arm’s length from power
and the cultural mainstream are in a better position to
develop the Christian virtue of hospitality.
!Click to Tweet
This explains why Swedish evangelicals are less threatened by immigration, pluralism,
and the growth of Islam than are their US evangelical counterparts, to say nothing of the
Swedish secular majority. To a minority, pluralism is not the big threat. In this case,
diversity is a step up from the traditional homogenous secular-Lutheran society. It levels
the playing field, and makes clear that there is no neutral ground, only competing
perspectives. The development of what Jürgen Habermas called the post-secular society
is a welcome development to a minority. Swedish evangelicals are aware that any
attempt to homogenize the culture would marginalize them.
Evangelical Political Theology
This historical sketch does not cover every factor shaping the politics of either Swedish
of American evangelicalism. The latter has also been formed by multiple wars and the
heightened patriotism in their wake, strong businessmen, and deeply unresolved issues
pertaining to race. White evangelicals did to a large extent sit out the civil rights
movement, and since the Civil War they have rarely been in the frontline for the struggle
against racial injustice. This is something the movement needs to reckon with. The fact
that Donald Trump’s xenophobic remarks have not deterred evangelical voters, but
according to some scholars is part of their attraction to him, makes the problem even
more acute.
“
To a minority, pluralism is not the big threat.
!Click to Tweet
Interestingly, the political attitudes of Swedish evangelicals are similar to African
American evangelicals. They too tend to oppose the death penalty, support
humanitarian aid, and embrace social justice. Swedish and African American
7 of 10
10/31/20, 10:25 PM
A Tale of Two Evangelicalisms - Breaking Ground
https://breakingground.us/a-tale-of-two-evangelicalisms/
evangelicals share the experience of being minorities in their respective nations: the first
in the shadow of a secular-Lutheran mainstream, the other of the WASP culture. This is
another indication that sociology and historical circumstances strongly shape
evangelical political theology.
BG
The conclusion of this cannot be, however, that minority status leads to a “good” politics,
while being in the majority—or expecting to be—is always problematic. Instead, it is
better to note that both positions come with temptations as well as possibilities for
faithful witness. The political theology of Swedish evangelicalism has many deficits. It
has tended toward individualistic pietism, and has not reflected enough on what it
means to build institutions shaped by a Christian political imagination. In its embrace of
the welfare state, it has too readily accepted being sidelined on matters concerning
caritas. It has neglected the public debate and not built institutions that safeguard the
formation of intellectual representatives of the movement. In all these matters,
American evangelicalism has been stronger—and sometimes also more faithful.
“
Interestingly, the political attitudes of Swedish evangelicals
are similar to African American evangelicals.
!Click to Tweet
But one inevitable conclusion from the stories told above is that there is no straight line
from evangelical theology and spirituality to one particular political identity. This is an
important insight given the growing homogenization of white evangelical political
identity. The intertwining with the Republican Party has gone so far that the term
“evangelical,” as Kidd notes, has become “fundamentally political in popular parlance.”
Mark Labberton, president of Fuller Theological Seminary, concludes that “evangelical”
has “morphed from being commonly used to describe a set of theological and spiritual
commitments into a passionately defended, theo-political brand.” Evangelical names a
white, self-identifying Christian who votes for the Republicans but does not necessarily
go to church.
“
There is no straight line from evangelical theology and
spirituality to one particular political identity.
!Click to Tweet
This means that theology has succumbed to ideology, and the church to a political party.
In the age-old combat between state and church, white evangelicalism has de facto lost
its independence. In tying themselves to Trump, they not only reduce their faith to
ideology but also make their future dependent on a political project. There is an
ominous parallel here to the secularization of Europe, which to a large extent was a
political reaction against churches that were perceived to be politically corrupt. For the
state churches were allied with the old political order, and defended the monarchy
against the growing demands of democratic reform. The religious establishment picked
the wrong side, with the result that being pro-democracy meant being anti-church. In
countries such as England and Sweden the evangelical movements, who were Christian
as well as pro-democracy, made it possible to combine Christian faith with progressive
politics. But when this was lacking, as in France, it resulted in rampant secularization.
!Click to Tweet
“
In the age-old combat between state and church, white
evangelicalism has de facto lost its independence. In tying
themselves to Trump, they not only reduce their faith to
ideology but also make their future dependent on a political
project.
8 of 10
10/31/20, 10:25 PM
A Tale of Two Evangelicalisms - Breaking Ground
BG
https://breakingground.us/a-tale-of-two-evangelicalisms/
The alliance between the established state churches and the monarchy gave these
churches access to the halls of power, but when the political winds shifted they found
themselves supporting a regime that lacked legitimacy. There are similarities here with
what seems to be going on in the United States. Already there are signs that people
—especially young people—who reject Republican politics also feel inclined to leave the
church. American secularization might arrive a century later but for the same reason as
in Europe: as a reaction against the politicization of the church.
Today, America is characterized by a political polarization that seeps into all aspects of
life: culture, the universities, workplaces, and even family dinners. In this moment, the
church needs to look at what has been its main political mission throughout history
—namely, to keep the peace and, crucially, to embody peace. As historian John Bossy has
noted, the liturgy and practices of the church in medieval Europe were designed to
foster peace and friendship in a world where struggle, conflict, and war always seemed
close.
“
American secularization might arrive a century later but for
the same reason as in Europe: as a reaction against the
politicization of the church.
!Click to Tweet
This does not mean abandoning politics. Rather, one expression of such a politics would
be to create spaces where people of different convictions are able to gather and explore a
unity that is not based on political agreement. But this demands that Christians, instead
of using politics as a theological shibboleth, listen—though of course not uncritically—
to what has shaped individual convictions. For behind each conviction lies a story, and
knowing it often leads not to consent but to some kind of understanding. But
reductionism is always a temptation: to reduce individuals to their political convictions,
and the church to a branch of a certain party. Withstanding it demands a richer
anthropology, a deeper understanding of the church as the body of Christ and a
realization that the political mission of the church is to work for unity. Not to keep quiet,
but to keep the peace.
BG
Share
"
#
!
Facebook
Mail
Twitter
More from Breaking Ground
More from
Breaking Ground
9 of 10
10/31/20, 10:25 PM
A Tale of Two Evangelicalisms - Breaking Ground
https://breakingground.us/a-tale-of-two-evangelicalisms/
Sacred Conversations
Elizabeth Oldfield
BG
A Time to Rend, A Time to Sew
Anne Snyder
Whose Justice? Which Peace?
Myles Werntz
Subscribe
Email Address
SUBMIT
Connect with Us
[email protected]
Submissions
View Guidelines
Channels
"
!
Site designed by Polymath Innovations.
Site designed by Polymath Innovations.
10 of 10
10/31/20, 10:25 PM