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{"id":38220,"date":"2012-06-01T08:00:20","date_gmt":"2012-06-01T12:00:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ordinary-times.com\/?p=38220"},"modified":"2012-06-01T17:54:13","modified_gmt":"2012-06-01T21:54:13","slug":"religion-in-politics-a-theory","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ordinary-times.com\/2012\/06\/01\/religion-in-politics-a-theory\/","title":{"rendered":"Religion in Politics: A Theory"},"content":{"rendered":"

I. Religious Ideology vs. a Religious Disposition<\/strong><\/p>\n

I\u2019ve spent a few weeks trying to figure out what bothered me about Amy Sullivan\u2019s May 11 Washington Post<\/em> article<\/a> on the rise in leftist religious rhetoric, and\u2014after a few conversations with friends\u2014I think that I\u2019m getting close. The faith-based leftism in her article sometimes sounds like a mirror image of the modular<\/a>, narrow-minded Christianity of the Religious Right. It takes religion as a source of political content, rather than a comprehensive way of understanding the world.<\/p>\n

Sullivan argues that liberals are now every bit as adept as conservatives at drawing upon religion in their public arguments:<\/p>\n

American politics is rife with religious rhetoric\u2014but in the modern era, it has almost always been deployed on behalf of conservative positions\u2026[BUT] Democratic politicians now unabashedly cite religion when making their case, and GOP leaders sometimes find themselves in the unusual position of justifying\u2014rather than merely stating\u2014their religious claims.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

Somewhere out there, E.J. Dionne and Jim Wallis are smiling. Some years ago, in Souled Out<\/em> and The Great Awakening<\/em>, respectively, each argued that leftists were on the cusp of a religious revival. And insofar as that\u2019s true, it\u2019s great news for the Left.\u00a0<\/p>\n

And this brings me to what bothers me about Sullivan\u2019s piece. Parts of the article treat faith as a foundational mine where politicians dig for rhetorical content. In other words, instead of leaning back on Rawls or secular foundations for human rights, leftists now make the same arguments\u2014but with new and improved faith-based justifying power! For reasons I\u2019ll get into below, I think that this approach is unprofitable. There are at least two ways to bring faith into the public square.[1]<\/a> Let\u2019s take them up in turn.<\/p>\n

The first option looks to religion for substantial political content. Call it \u201cIdeological Religion.\u201d People who approach politics in this way troll their sacred texts, papal encyclicals, past sermons, and other religious documents in search of specific policy preferences. They try, in other words, to build the content of their political convictions from the content of their faith tradition. What, they ask, does the Pope tell us about how to treat criminals? What does the Bible teach about homosexuality? Or our relationship to the environment? Or eating shellfish? Or growing facial hair? Ideological Religion reduces a faith tradition to an encyclopedia of moral information\u2014to find out how to govern, we need only dig up the (purportedly obvious) right positions and bring them to our public arguments. Problem(s) solved, neat and clean! This is, I think, largely what Sullivan and many other religiously-minded leftists have in mind when they talk about resuscitating the Social Gospel tradition, etc.<\/p>\n

The second option takes religion as a stance for approaching the world. Call it \u201cDispositional Religion\u201d (an ugly term that I\u2019d happily replace\u2014suggestions?).[2]<\/a> Instead of looking to their faith for crisp ideological positions, people who approach politics in this way ask a different set of questions: How should a person of faith understand urban poverty? Or God\u2019s Creation? Or the facts of human sexuality? They do not expect that religion provides specific and conclusive solutions to political problems, but they shape their attitude towards human social life in reference to their faith.<\/p>\n

Dispositional Religion isn\u2019t just a better fit for the Left. It\u2019s superior to Ideological Religion in a whole host of ways. No matter what, though, leftists should resist imitating the Christian Right\u2019s theological rigidity and polarizing religious rhetoric.<\/p>\n

II. Theological Respectability<\/strong><\/p>\n

First of all, there\u2019s little doubt that Dispositional Religion is more theologically respectable. As badly as we might want easy answers to our problems, most faiths don’t offer those. For example: don’t kill<\/a>…except<\/a>, except<\/a>, except<\/a>, except<\/a>, except<\/a>, and etc<\/a>, etc<\/a>. Or: free markets and private property are sacred…but so are decent living wages and public checks on market power<\/a>. Few faiths speak conclusively or univocally on any particular policy question. Their content is rarely clear enough to crisply resolve legitimate human ethical quandaries.<\/p>\n

What’s more, Ideological Religion\u2019s adherents have to wrestle with the pride<\/em> problem. In most non-humanist faiths, God transcends human things–including human understanding. What’s more, in most of these same faiths, the world is known to be a broken, conflicted place that confounds easy ethical solutions. If we know ourselves to be broken, humble, fallible, and sinful creatures, we ought to be wary of those who profess to know God\u2019s will.\u00a0Indeed, whenever someone tells you they know\u00a0specifically\u00a0<\/em>what God wants us to do about something, keep an eye on your soul, a grip on your heart, and a hand on your wallet.<\/p>\n

Meanwhile, Dispositional believers accept that their faith does not solve political questions, though it may help in guiding them to a subset of possible answers. It informs an approach to problems without presuming to skip lightly over their actual complexity. They may still ultimately conclude that their faith compels them to take a particular position, but they will usually resist sanctifying it as the only<\/em> available position for a believer to adopt.<\/p>\n

III. Bringing Political Polarization to the Altar?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Beyond theological viability, Dispositional Religion also avoids the political problems that have plagued conservative religious ideologues for years. If fundamentalists proved the political utility of sharp religious rhetoric, they also demonstrated its shortcomings. For a spell, the Religious Right could whip up a winning electoral coalition by simplifying their faith into a set of sharp ideological rallying points. Eventually\u2014and inevitably<\/em>\u2014their supposed “moral high ground” hardened into a moral bunker. Their coalition, built on bigoted and narrow foundations, took its power from exclusion-driven purity. Coalitions built upon inflexible hatred will not stand for long. Coalitions built upon crisp, certain convictions cannot maintain their appeal.<\/p>\n

Religious polarization isn’t just dangerous to political movements\u2014it can be even more<\/em> threatening to religious institutions. You don’t need to read J.S. Mill or Alexis de Tocqueville to know that it’s exceedingly risky for a religion to ally itself to a particular political position. At its best, faith can provide us with a stable ground to rely upon when transient, earthly matters fail us. If, however, our religion implicates itself in a political cause, it links its credibility to the most transient of moorings.\u00a0If we tie parts of our faith to particular political content, we risk polarizing and sundering that which ought to be safe from human meddling.<\/p>\n

If you ask Christ’s party affiliation, you’re asking the wrong question. If we conclude that the Sermon on the Mount and Christ\u2019s treatment of the moneylenders go to the Left, while the Right gets Leviticus\u2014if, in other words, we decide that both sides don\u2019t<\/em> read the same Bible or pray to the same God<\/a>, we will have allowed our current paralytic crisis to erode one of the few areas of common ground that yet remains. There is nothing worthwhile to be gained by allowing our political factions to spill into religious life. We already have quite enough religious sectarianism as it is.<\/p>\n

(Incidentally, for more on this, read David Sessions<\/a> and his wife Alisa Harris<\/a>. Both have each written eloquently on how evangelicals\u2019 hard-line social conservatism is costing them with younger Americans.)<\/p>\n

IV.The Political Calculations<\/strong><\/p>\n

The other side of the polarization coin can\u2019t be ignored. If Ideological Religion leads to sharper, more exclusive divisions, Dispositional Religion helps identify shared ground. For instance, though Christians may disagree about what their faith dictates regarding premarital sex, euthanasia, state-sponsored violence, interreligious dialogue, foreign aid, and much more\u2014they can all agree that they are called to compassion for the world\u2019s weak, poor, sick, and hungry. Though their faith does not provide simple policy solutions, it demands that they be disposed towards ministering to the needy. Leftists (and conservatives, for that matter) can appeal to a broad array of believers if they take a less ideological approach. It goes without saying, I hope, that broader<\/em> is better<\/em> when it comes to democratic elections.<\/p>\n

Consider an example from the early twentieth century: theologians Walter Rauschenbusch (pictured above) and Reinhold Niebuhr disagreed on many political questions, but they agreed on the fundamental problem of human community life. In Christianity and the Social Crisis<\/em>, Rauschenbusch argued that Christianity is a progressive, fighting faith\u2014but he also wrote, \u201cThe really grinding and destructive enemy of man is man.\u201d In all of his books, Niebuhr argued that humans were always more enmeshed in the particular blindnesses of their historical moment than they realized\u2014and he also wrote \u201cMan is a problem to himself.\u201d Despite their theological and political differences, both men agreed upon humans\u2019 core challenge. It goes without saying that many other theologians of multiple faiths (and political convictions) would also agree.<\/p>\n

Whatever else it means to have a Christian view of politics, it can\u2019t<\/em> mean prioritizing revenge over compassion. It can\u2019t mean privileging human pride or selfishness. It can\u2019t include fetishizing hatred or celebrating the killing of our enemies. Those simply aren\u2019t available for those who believe in a divine savior who demanded\u2014above all else\u2014that all humans love one another. Those simply aren’t part of what it means to take a Christian view of politics\u2014and the same is similarly true for most other (non-satanist) religions. Garrison Keillor once put it this way (and I\u2019m paraphrasing): \u201cif you\u2019re a Christian, and you find yourself arguing against<\/em> forgiveness, you have to know that it\u2019s only a matter of time before you\u2019ll be changing sides.\u201d Leftists who\u2019d like to reinvigorate their side\u2019s treatment of religion ought to take that to heart. The United States is full of believers (Christians and non-Christians alike) who are dispositionally inclined to agree.<\/p>\n

Conor P. Williams writes and teaches in Washington, D.C. Find more on Facebook<\/a>, Twitter<\/a>, and at\u00a0http:\/\/www.conorpwilliams.com<\/a>.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n

\n
\n
\n

[1]<\/a> If any of this seems ethnocentrically (or otherwise insufferably) Christian, let me first offer a apology. It\u2019s genuinely not<\/em> my intention to offend. I promise. Secondly, I suppose there are at least three reasons for the post\u2019s narrowness: 1) I\u2019m not comfortable theorizing the theology of traditions with which I\u2019m not especially familiar, 2) for better or worse, Christianity is the dominant religious thread within the American political tradition, and because 3) a good chunk of this argument leans heavily on hunches\u2014so it\u2019s best that I avoid substantive adventuring.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

\n

[2]<\/a> Yes, the category names are hokey. Think of it as organizational shorthand. For a while, I was thinking of them as \u201ccontent-driven political religion\u201d and \u201cthe religious attitude in politics.\u201d Not much better, I\u2019m afraid.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

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