Analyzing Christian America to death

To paraphrase Twain…..reports of its demise are premature.

That’s sort of the idea in this Acton commentary.

Christian America is busy dying again.

If you believe some partisan historians, it was dead before the American Revolution, or at least, nobody important was a Christian by then. The Founders had all moved on to deism. Then again, maybe Christian America died at the Scopes Trial during the 1920s when Clarence Darrow pinned down the non-theologian, non-scientist politician William Jennings Bryan with the power of hostile cross-examination. If it wasn’t dead by then, it was really dead by the late 1960s when every other religion book seemed to be about either the death of God movement or “secular” Christianity. The most memorable volume of the period was Harvey Cox’s The Secular City, which put a happy face of the death of public Christianity and heralded a new, more mature age of secular community.

Meanwhile, a host of prominent sociologists of religion sagely assured the public (and each other) that public faith simply could not co-exist with a world full of technological wonders like conveyor belts, cathode ray tubes, and time and motion studies. The great sociologist Peter Berger imagined tiny groups of believers huddled together against the coming of the 21st century.

And yet, in spite of it all, Christian America is thriving much better than, say, newspapers and other members of the press are these days.

“Christianity is important in America!” is no more a story than “dog bites man.” “The death of Christianity,” on the other hand, grabs eyeballs.

(Hence, the spurt of news stories lately announcing as much.)

So, where do things stand….

The simple truth of the matter is that America turns on the margins. A movement gets the right politician, finds the right message, and builds a coalition that can command the levers of power. Suddenly, it seems the losers have been cast out and the winners are ascendant. But it is never as simple as that. Nor is it ever really over. Barack Obama is the president. To many, particularly to many social elites, he appears to be the avatar of secular enlightenment. But don’t tell that to the overwhelming majority of his ethnic fan base or to the young, white evangelicals his campaign actively courted. Ronald Reagan was president, too. His rise seemed to augur a new era for religion in the public square. Yet that was not the reason many libertarians and corporate interests supported him.

America is a complicated place. We are a dynamic society because we are a free society. From our birth as a republic, we have been a quasi-stable partnership of enlightenment modernism and vigorous Christian belief working together for the preservation of ordered liberty. There will be more proclamations of the death of Christian America. It is as good a story as the “war” between science and religion, which gets a makeover every time we have a slow news day.

Good one. (Because it does, in spite of the facts.)

And having seen that Newsweek cover on ‘The End of Christian America’, it’s a specially fine touch that the writer of this Acton piece is also the author of a soon to be released book on the subject called The End of Secularism.

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  • I agree that Christianity is not dead in this country. Far from it. There are very full churches from Saddle Back Church to Sacred Heart Cathedral. What does worry me is that there is a steady rise in the number of people who claim no religion or believe in a God who is not part of their lives. Trinity College conducts a poll on religion every 8-10 years and the percentage of those claiming no religion has increased from 8.2% in 1991 to 15% in 2008. It’s not where we are that concerns me, it is where we are trending as a nation. Billy Graham and Pope John Paul II were tremendous evangelists. One cannot forget the Billy Graham Crusades which were aired 2-3 times per year on local commercial TV stations. Billy Graham did not want to go to the found but to the lost. His message was simple, that when the world seems out of control, there is a God who is in control and wants a personal relationship with you. Who is there today who wants to go after the lost sheep like that? Billy Graham’s son wants to take the mission in a different direction. Who can forget Pope John Paul II’s pilgrimages around the world. He, like Graham, had charisma, and an annointing of the Holy Spirit. His rock star image brought people to see him. When they came they received a simple message, do not be afraid, God loves you and wants you to know, love and trust Him! When the world pulls you apart, God is the same yesterday, today and forever. Like Graham a simple message that brought people back to the Church. Both Graham and PJP brought thousands of lost sheep back to a loving relationship with God.

    I can’t help thinking that, with the vacuum created when these two men could no longer minister, the rise of a secular, Godless populace is growing. Who will be the evangelist to fill this vacuum and remind people of God’s love. B16 will do that, but on a more intellectual level. There must be someone who can speak directly to the folks at home and lead them as lost sheep back to the Savior. At the present time there is a void, and each day that passes increases the opportunity for secularism to take hold. That simple message that Graham and Pope John Paul II had for the masses must be delivered today. Who will be the one to simply bring people back to the love of God? Maybe it is us, ourselves, after all.

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