Posted by
Ahithophel on Monday, July 10, 2006 12:48:26 AM
In today's Sunday edition of the Boston Globe, the esteemed Harvard historian of American religion, Harvey Cox, submits an article that describes and (I think it's fair to say) enthusiastically welcomes a movement within American evangelicalism away from the 'religious right'. Now, Cox certainly possesses a formidable scholarly reputation, and has dedicated most of his career to understanding twentieth-century American religious history. But this piece is probably not worth reading, except as a disproof of the oft-heard claim that liberals are the guardians of nuance, because it is fundamentally flawed by three undefended (and in my view false) assumptions.
The title is "Old Time Religion," and the subtitle tells us "a new generation of evangelicals are discovering their progressive roots." So we know from the beginning that Cox intends to show (A) that contemporary evangelicals are moving leftward on the political spectrum, and (B) that this does not constitute a rejection of their heritage, but a return to a previous, even illustrious (and more authentic?) tradition of American evangelicalism.
Regarding (A), for instance, he writes that:
"Evangelical Protestants are becoming increasingly concerned about a wide range of issues...which put them at odds with much of the Bush agenda...It is simply no longer accurate to identify 'evangelical' with 'religious right.'"
There are two assumptions in these statements that, once challenged, undermine Cox's argument. They are:
1. There once was a time when it was accurate to identify 'evangelical' with 'religious right.'
2. There once was a time when "Evangelical Protestants" were less "concerned about a wide range of issues."
In other words, for Cox to say this equation is "no longer" accurate, it must have been accurate at some time. For him to say that evangelicals are "becoming increasingly" concerned with a variety of issues, it must be the case that they were recently less concerned. As we'll see, many of the problems with Cox's argument come from a caricatured understanding of evangelicalism from the 1970s to the 1990s.
In his second claim (B), Cox says that this newly-emerged evangelical progressivism marks a return to the tradition of earlier Christian 'progressives' who fought for the abolition of slavery and women's suffrage. The hidden assumption here is:
3. That there is continuity (in some meaningful and significant sense) between the evangelical progressives of today and the Christians who fought against the oppression of blacks and women in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Now it may not be entirely fair to call these assumptions, because Cox does advance something like an argument for (1) and (2), with his (necessarily) brief overview of twentieth-century American religion. But the arguments are so thin and perfunctory, and so fail to face the important questions, that he clearly does not feel the need to demonstrate their truth. I'll show this below.
So what is Cox's argument?
The opening story Cox tells about Bush's reception at Calvin College (a 'conservative' evangelical setting) is merely anecdotal, and has rhetorical but no argumentative value. Even as an anecdote it's surprisingly weak. Let's move on to the heart of the argument.
History shows us, according to Cox, that "Christians who are theologically conservative have not always been politically right wing." Fair enough, with one proviso: these categories of 'conservative' and 'right wing' are still vague and undefined. To give an example: By and large, theological conservatism does lead to 'political conservatism' on social-moral questions, but the application of conservative theological principles to international affairs, say, is a much more contentious matter even within American evangelicalism. Cox runs into the same problem when he writes that "African-American churches...have always been theologically conservative and politically progressive." Yes, they've been progressive when it comes to questions of social justice and racial equality, but more conservative on moral matters. Besides, what it meant to be progressive at the start of the twentieth century may have little to do with what liberals mean by progressive today.
Cox begins his history by noting that theologically conservative Protestants at the start of the twentieth century were more concerned with "religious, not political" matters, but nonetheless they "were often left-leaning populists and progressives in the political arena." Then he provides a sketched history (I don't mean this as a criticism; of course it's sketched, it's a newspaper article) of evangelicalism in the twentieth century. The history he provides, if not nuanced, at least points to the presence of competing strands of political thought within the larger stream of American evangelicalism.
All nuance disappears, however, when it comes to the period of the emergence of the religious right. As opposed to the "broad social outlook" of earlier leaders, what emerged now was "a narrow and contentious new kind of evangelicalism." This is when Cox's argument falls fatally off-track. In a move that I have seen countless times in academia in general and especially among liberal Christians, Cox equates the evangelicalism of the 70s to 90s with Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson. Thus, in this view, 'evangelicalism' in this period can be equated with the 'religious right,' because they have defined it as such.
The problem is that Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson were never representative of the breadth of American evangelicalism. Cox imagines that what was earlier a complicated, multifaceted community and movement suddenly transmogrified into a narrow monolithic entity.
Cox faults the Moral Majority, for instance, for turning away from the "religious" or "theological" concerns of earlier generations, in favor of moral and "explicitly political" concerns. The Moral Majority, however, was never intended to address all of the concerns of the evangelical community, and was content to leave theological inquiries to the churches and the seminaries; it was quite explicit that it's emphasis was solely on social-moral issues, and thus it made common cause with those outside the walls of evangelicalism, i.e., with those who shared the same fundamental moral convictions.
The Moral Majority, in Cox's view, accomplished an alliance between evangelicalism and political conservatism that benefited both parties. Of course this is presented in pernicious terms, as though an organization that rallies people to vote for candidates who share their values, or political office-holders granting input and seeking counsel from those they represent, are somehow devious things. When the Moral Majority faded away, Cox says, it was replaced by other organizations such as the Christian Coalition and Focus on the Family.
My intention is not necessarily to defend these organizations, but to make two points, contradicting the assumptions (1) and (2) I listed above. First, it was always wrong to identify evangelicalism with the 'religious right,' especially if by religious right you mean Jerry Falwell. The focus upon Falwell has always been a canard, has always owed more to the convenience of Falwell for the rhetorical purposes of the liberal media and less to do with Falwell actually representing all evangelicals.
To use a personal illustration, I've spent all of my life in evangelical circles, and even in evangelical circles that are politically conservative I have never read, seen, or listened to anything from Jerry Falwell or Pat Robertson. There are many varieties of American evangelicalism, and many varieties of evangelical conservatism, and reducing them to straw-men in this way is simply dishonest.
Putting Falwell forward to represent American evangelicalism is like putting Lyndon LaRouche forward to represent liberalism. I don't deny that Falwell has influence over some followers, but that influence has been vastly exaggerated, partly because his often-extreme viewpoints can be used to discredit evangelicals generally. So it may be convenient for opponents who wish to caricature and denigrate evangelicals, but it is unfair and inaccurate, and not helpful for honest argumentation.
Cox, then, operates with a caricatured image of the 'religious right', and a caricatured image of late-twentieth-century evangelicalism that allows him to identify it with the religious right. The 'religious right' he describes only existed in the minds of media and academia liberals.
The second mistake follows from the first. Because Cox reduces the evangelicalism of the late twentieth century to Falwell and Robertson, and to their organizations that were formed to advance very specific social-moral purposes, he concludes that evangelicals had forgotten about questions of social and international justice (and thus the present concern with these questions constitutes something new). Nothing could be further from the truth.
Precisely because these organizations did not represent the breadth of evangelicalism, there were other organs within the evangelical world (they're called churches) that concerned themselves with social justice and care of the poor, and with international affairs and war. The attention of media and academia liberals focused on militias and abortion-clinic bombings because it suited their agenda and prejudices. But the truth is that evangelicals have always devoted enormous resources in money and man-hours to the poor and needy. Cox can claim that the emerging generation of (more liberal) evangelicals "are concerned about a much wider range of issues" only because he has constructed a falsely narrow image of the earlier generations.
I have said that 'evangelicalism' always has been a broader category than the 'religious right,' and that 'evangelicals' have always had a broader set of concerns than Cox supposes. But even the claim that the 'religious right' only cared about abortion and homosexuality is manifestly false. Even Falwell and Robertson, whom Cox takes to be representative of the narrowness of evangelical vision during this period, were constantly gathering and sending goods to victims of famine and disaster. Cox's claim is similar to one that is often made by Jim Wallis (whom Cox mentions in the article), that conservative evangelicals have reduced "values" to abortion and homosexuality. This is such an absurd claim that it's difficult to take seriously. I pointed this out to Wallis once, that evangelicals debate and take action on a far broader variety of concerns...he agreed...and then he went right on making the same claim as before. It's not about honest representation, unfortunately; it's about finding the rhetorical means to advance a particular agenda, whether or not that rhetoric stretches the truth.
Also, simply because political conservatives have advocated solutions to social ills that are different from those of liberals does not mean that they don't take those ills seriously. I think we should admit that political conservatives and liberals can care equally for the common good, but can advocate different solutions in good faith. Cox appears to take for granted that because the religious right did not advocate welfare-state responses to poverty and dovish foreign policies, they cared nothing for the good of the needy and the oppressed here and abroad.
We reach Cox's third assumption, that today's political progressives are aligned with the progressives who fought for abolition and women's suffrage. There may be an argument to be made for this position, but Cox never provides one, and never even confronts the need for one. He simply assumes that when someone drifts into the 'progressive' sphere, one stands in the same sphere once occupied by the abolitionists. Would he agree, I wonder, that when one becomes a Republican, one stands in the tradition of Lincoln? At what point do the historical connections become so attenuated that they lose their validity and meaning?
There is no clear and direct line from the abolition of slavery to contemporary liberal positions on abortion and the Iraq war. Would the abolitionists themselves have supported contemporary 'progressive' policies? It's not clear that they would. Moreover, does one ever reach a point where enough 'progress' has been made, and thus the wiser thing would be to 'conserve'? Do you ever reach a point where further movement in the same direction would no longer be 'progress' but 'regress'? Aligning every issue on the progressive-conservative arrow makes little sense, especially over the course of long stretches of history. Claiming that abortions-rights activists stand in the line of the abolitionists...well, at the very least it requires a rigorous defense, and Cox supplies none, and seems unaware of the need.
In summary, then, (1) evangelicals always were concerned about a broad set of issues, and always have been a more subtle and complicated set of viewpoints and constituencies than liberals have liked to think--most theologically-conservative evangelicals that I know have a smattering of politically 'liberal' and 'conservative' stances on many issues. (2) The perception of a "new" movement in the direction of a broader set of concerns is only possible on the basis of a simplistic and factually false reduction of earlier evangelicalism to the caricatured narrowness of a Jerry Falwell--this "new movement" is not so much the creation of something new as the discovery of something that was there all along. (3) It is not clear (it is, at the least, quite debatable) that the 'progressives' of today stand in significant continuity with the progressives who fought for an end to slavery.
Finally, Cox includes a number of throwaway-sentences that lead one to doubt his good-faith in argumentation. A few examples: "Jesus himself had little to say about family values," and "he often criticized the 'traditional values' of his own time." Jesus "had nothing to say about gays and a strong military," and he "died by torture."
If I were not trying to read charitably, I would have to say that these are the sorts of sayings one would expect to find on bumper stickers, not coming from the pen of a renowned Harvard professor. They do not exhibit the values of academia, values of charity and balance, fairness and self-criticism. First of all, Jesus very much did have things to say about family values, if you include love, honesty, forgiveness, humility, mercy, faithfulness, and etc., among them. Why Cox should have failed to do so is beyond me, unless, again, he's construing conservative evangelical views in an exceedingly narrow way, a far narrower way than any actual conservative evangelical would. Second, many of the teachings of Jesus arguably establish principles which apply even to issues he did not address directly (the Constitution says nothing about gay marriage, right, and yet liberals certainly wish to argue that its fundamental principles have consequences for the debate?). Third, in addition to the sayings of Jesus there are other parts of the Christian scriptures that address questions of sexuality and justice between nations, more and less directly. Fourth, the fact that Jesus criticized values that were traditional in his time (and even that claim needs refinement) does not mean that he would criticize all values that have attained the status of tradition. Presumably he did not oppose then-traditional values only because they were traditional, and would not advocate the opposition of tradition at all times, whatever the tradition may be.
The "torture" point should be dealt with another time. Cox intends this to tie in with his later account of how evangelical Protestants joined with those of other religious traditions to say that torture should be rejected. This should hardly be surprising, and it was not, as Cox makes it out to be, a clear rebuttal of the Bush administration. The question is not so much whether torture is wrong; most of us can agree that it is. The question is rather what constitutes torture and whether the US military has ever advocated torture as a matter of policy. The reason "no names were named" is because it's not clear that US has been guilty of torture as a matter of policy. In any case, another topic for another time.
The last and possibly most egregious claim is that these new, more moderate evangelicals "are more 'religious'" than the older generation of evangelicals. The presumptuousness and--again--the sloppy imprecision of this claim is really rather startling. "One could argue," he says, "that they are more concerned about actually following Jesus." Well, one could argue many things, most of which are wrong. In Cox's simplistic view the earlier generation of evangelicals had no concerns beyond the explicitly political, no activities beyond opposing abortion and homosexuality, had no concern for the poor and oppressed, and so on. A generation like this would probably be less religious than the new generation that Cox describes. But Cox has given us no strong reason to believe that such a previous generation ever really existed. The evangelicals of that generation, whom I have known, have generally shown an authentic and often quite radical concern to live their lives in the imitation of Christ in the best way they know how.
Taking political disagreement and saying this makes the opponent less religious--I thought that was something the 'religious right' was supposed to do?