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MicGodi 09-11-165 |
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God is Back How
the Global Revival of Faith is Changing the World John
Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge Penguin
Press, 2009, 405 pp. ISBN 978-1-59420-213-1 |
John Micklethwait is the editor in chief and
Adrian Wooldridge is the management editor for The Economist and the
authors of four books including one I really enjoyed, The Witch Doctors: Making Sense of the Management Gurus. The authors are an atheist and a Catholic,
both perhaps representing 'cold' vs. 'hot' religion (using their categories). This is a sociological look at the
resurgence of religion (or perhaps awareness
of religion) in the world. The authors say a huge world of faith has been
hidden from Western intellectuals, who assumed modernity would kill
religion. Twenty-first century faith
is being fueled by a very American emphasis on choice and competition. The global rise of faith is powerfully
impacting and destabilizing our century.
[It seems ironic that the authors have
discovered that politics is not just about economics, and yet they interpret
religion in terms of politics and economics.
In their view democracy and free markets are major causes for the
flourishing of religion. dlm] Introduction In Europe religion meant war or oppression; in
America it turned out to be a source of freedom. (Edmund Burke). The European influence was felt around the
world and it was expected that America would also "mature." But religion is returning to public life
everywhere and many older conflicts have acquired a religious edge. Statistics indicate the global drift toward
secularism has halted and religion is on the increase. More combative religions are gaining. But the upwardly mobile, educated middle classes
are driving the explosion of faith. Although
religion has been there all along, the political groups of the West are
awakening to it. But also changes are
occurring in religion. As secular
'isms' collapsed and governments lost faith, a surge in religion was being
driven by the forces of market capitalism: competition and choice. The relationship is not between
modernization and secularization but between modernization and
pluralism. From Moscow to Cairo to
Beijing we are seeing God reinserted in public and intellectual life. The world seems to be moving in the
American rather than the European direction. 1. The European Way: The
Necessity of Atheism Prophets have been predicting the death of God
for generations. It started with the
Enlightenment confidence in human reason and human goodness. The worship of God was replaced with the
worship of man. A succession of
intellectual giants took sledgehammers to the foundations of faith. Religion was attacked by science (Darwin),
biblical criticism (doubts about miracles), and Sigmund Freud (Religion is a
neurosis.). Secular ideologies provided substitutes. The cult of science, social Darwinism, led
to racism and flourishing eugenics societies.
Culture was considered superior to religion. The nation-state provided the concept of a
chosen people with a special destiny. Public education began edging the church out
of the education business. The
twentieth century brought together these ideologies in the "poisonous cocktail
of communism" where religion was unacceptable. "The second half of the twentieth
century saw the almost complete secularization of the British white working
class…." (51) 2. The American Way I: The
Chosen Nation (1607-1900) America was not born religious: it became
religious. Religion and modernity have
never been enemies in America.
"From the very beginning America was an unusual mixture of the
religious and the secular." (56)
The American Revolution was unique in that it was not a rebellion
against clericalism. Revolutionary
America embraced religion alongside liberty, reason and popular government."
(61) The First Amendment created tolerance in its
fullest sense and it introduced competition.
It was up to churches to get people in the doors. "The decision to get government out of
the religion business did as much as almost anything else to establish
America's role as the most religious county in the advanced world." "…a free market in religion forces
clergymen to compete for market share." (64) The Evangelicals rejected hierarchy and
tradition. All you needed was a Bible
and your conscience. Religion grew
from 2.5 million to 23 million between 1776 and 1850. "In Europe, Christianity was a
creature of the old establishment; in America, it was a child of the
revolution." (71) In the Civil War "two of the most religious
armies in the world rode into battle to slaughter each other, each believing
God was on their side." (73) "Throughout the nineteenth century clergymen
argued that 'the cause of America' had become 'the cause of
Christ." Christian
nationalism. Manifest Destiny. 3. The American Way II:
Surviving the Acids of Modernity (1880 - 2000) Protestantism was set back by the split between
liberals compromising with secularism and fundamentalists resisting it. Fundamentalism was promptly humiliated in
its battles with drink and Darwin. And when the political establishment
embraced "the Judeo-Christian tradition," religion was somewhat
reduced to a symbol of American respectability. The free market, charismatic preaching,
application of technology, and the rise of Pentecostalism all worked to
bolster evangelical religion. But a
revolution of the intelligentsia secularized campuses. (The priests were driven from the temples.) One intellectual reported "he had put
his religious beliefs in a drawer one day, and twenty years later he opened
the drawer only to find that his beliefs had gone." (86) Social Darwinism became popular. Literary figures, such as Mark Twain, poked
fun at religion as an antiquated superstition. Someone commented that a Christian is
"one who follows the teachings of Christ so long as they are not
inconsistent with a life of sin."
Mainline Protestants became more activistic, heavily influenced by the
Social Gospel movement that directed Christians to help the poor.
Evangelicals fought to preserve the fundamentals. Traditionalists believed in personal
responsibility rather than government welfare. Evangelicals lost the war of Prohibition,
"Much as their latter-day descendants are losing the war against
drugs." (90) The great rally
against Darwinism became a public relations disaster for Evangelicals
resulting in them being characterized as backward and bigoted. "It created identification in the
public mind between liberalism and secularism, and it drove Bible-believing
Christians into the arms of people who were both culturally and economically
conservative." (92) Religious revival continued after the Second
World War. Church membership rose to
69% in 1959 and religion regained some intellectual prestige. There were remarkable steps forward in
religious toleration. The
Judeo-Christian nation was born. But
"Religion was reduced to a mere badge of commitment to the American
creed of individualism, egalitarianism and upward mobility." (96)
By 2000, the country was split between "people who were hot for
religion, whether they were Protestants, Catholics and Jews, and people who
were cooler, whether they were atheists, modernists or infrequent church
attendees." (97) "If the religious wars of the early
twentieth century were ignited by the overreach of America's Evangelicals
over alcohol and evolution, the religious wars of the second half were
ignited by the overreach of those bent on driving religion to the margins of
American society." (98) The
Supreme Court decision to remove prayer and Bible reading from public schools
was followed shortly by a permissive decision on pornography and the Roe vs. Wade decision legalizing
abortion. Evangelical America showed a
resurgence led by Billy Graham, Bill Bright, Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson,
and The Moral Majority. The rise of
the religious right bound Evangelical Protestants to conservatives of other
religious traditions. Several presidents articulated their Christian
commitments. 4. Bush, Blair, Obama and The
God Gap (2000 - 2008) Bush, Blair, and Clinton are all sincere
Christians. Blair tried to keep it
under wraps while in office because Brits think Christians are
"nutters." Bush wore it on
his sleeve but it was partially politically motivated and the degree it
affected his policies is exaggerated.
American politics will continue to be more faith driven than its
allies. "These new [religious] activists are mixing
familiar conservative concerns, such as abortion and gay marriage, with new
worries about global warming, inequality, human trafficking and prison rape.
… The pied piper of this group is Rick Warren." (127) Obama symbolizes the new religious left. He beat Hillary Clinton by
"out-Godding" her.
"Here was a man who had not recently remembered his faith, but
talked at length about his religiosity in his two autobiographies…."
(120) Europe is no longer Christian but there are
glimmerings of faith reviving, largely through mass immigration of millions
of Christians from the developing world.
Some religion is beginning to return to intellectual life. The rise of Islam makes more religion in
politics inevitable. 5. Pray, Rabbit, Pray:
Soulcraft and the American Dream Religion is thriving as a solution to many of
modernity's problems. 6. The God Business: Capitalism
and the Rise of Religion Nashville is a place where God and Mammon happily
coexist. American religion has a
competitive advantage. Religious
products make up a $6 billion business.
America leads in producing religious entrepreneurs and empires. Mainstream media is getting in the
business. Faith based companies are
pushing into the mainstream market as well.
Christians are increasingly media savvy. The modern corporate model is working well
for worship in the total service mega churches. Some preachers are worried
they are producing a tribe of spectators who come only for the spectacle, the
Disneyfication of religion. "The
megachurches are simply using the tools of American society to spread
religion where it wouldn't otherwise exist…." "The megachurches may be soft on the
surface, but they are hard on the inside." "You may start out in a Disney theme
park but you end up in the heart of Evangelical America." (191) 7. Empires of the Mind: God and
the Intellectuals There is a resurgence of interest in religion among
America's intellectual elite. A number
are being caught up in the religious revival.
For most of human history the intellectual elite have been religious. Theology was the queen of the
sciences. The return to religion was
supercharged by 9/11. William F. Buckley was instrumental with his 1951
bombshell, God and Man in Yale
followed by his founding of the National
Review. Evangelicals are starting
to produce scholars again. Abut 10% of
undergraduates at Ivy League Colleges are regularly involved in Evangelical
groups. Harvard now has a chair in
Evangelical Theological Studies. 8. Exporting America's God Pentecostalism is the great religious success
story of the 20th century.
It can be seen everywhere in the developing world. Christianity in Latin America and Korea is
being fueled by the embrace of the free market (competition) and individual
choice. "Everywhere you look in religious America,
Christians and churches are taking the Bible's 'great commission' to 'make
disciples of all nations' to heart."
(225) There is a vigorous
'Christian solidarity' movement in America.
The campaign against religious persecution quickly developed into a
wide-ranging campaign against everything from sex trafficking to
slavery." (226) Religious organizations provided $8.8
billon in foreign aid in 2006, 37% of all U.S. government foreign aid. Missionary work is dangerous, so why is it
growing? 1. The success of 'hot' religion (growth of
evangelicals), 2. boom in short-term
missions (which is having a big impact on the next generations), and 3. the
growing sophistication of missionary activity. At the same time immigrants are helping
reshape American religion. And developing
countries are sending missionaries here. American continues to have a huge influence on
the shape of religion because of our wealth and because others look to us for
how to organize and manage and how to adapt a traditional religious message
to modern audiences. "It is not
clear how the world's religions will fare in a gradually more 'American'
environment." (242) 9. All that is Holy is
Profaned: Exporting American Materialism "People everywhere, but particularly in the
developing world, are reacting to the hurricane of capitalism by taking cover
under the canopy of religion." (244) Capitalism brings insecurities that
increase the demand for religion as a place of certainty. The worldview projected by America is highly
offensive to traditional societies, particularly depictions of female
sexuality and raw violence. The internet
allows people to question everything their elders tell them. "The assault on tradition is often an
assault on religion." (248) It is most striking in the case of
pornography. American capitalism is so
seductive. "Jesus was a critic of
avarice and greed." (250) But
opposition to capitalism is becoming rarer.
The greatest reaction is outside the Christian world and the most
uncompromising opposition is in the Middle East where capitalism is seen as a
Western tool. Three of the most important innovations in
radical Islam are 1) making a distinction between the 'faithful' and the
'unfaithful' Muslim rulers, 2) to reassert the power of Islam as the way to
deal with modernity, and 3) to pronounce a death sentence on decadent Western
civilization. What they most resent is
'sexual and cultural promiscuity.' For
them, Islam is the ideal antithesis of the modern West. Their way forward is to go backward. 10. The Bible versus the Koran:
The Battle of the Books and the Future of the Two Faiths Christians and Muslims are both people of a holy
book and they have an obligation to spread the word. The Koran is the backbone of Muslim
education and, in many countries, the foundation of the constitution. Christians and Muslims are both very adept at
using the tools of modernity -- globalization, the media and growing wealth
to distribute their books although they approach the religious task
differently. The average American home has 4 Bibles but biblical knowledge is
abysmal. Fewer than half of Americans
can name the first book. 12% think
Noah married Joan of Arc. But the
situation is worse with Islam. The Bible is a bottom up affair with hundreds of
organizations contributing to getting the Word out. The Koran is going global almost
exclusively on the back of Saudi oil wealth.
It is one of the central pillars of Saudi foreign policy. "Christians, though models of tolerance by
Saudi standards, fight no less fiercely for souls. Many Evangelical Christians are fixated on
what they call the 10/40 window…."
(272) Christians have several advantages. They are much more enthusiastic about
translations. They are effective at
turning the operation into a profitable commercial enterprise with an
enormous variety of products. The
believers are quite wealthy as opposed to the heartland of the Koran, which
is relatively poor. Whereas the
heartland of Islam is theocratic, the West believes in religious
freedom. The uneven playing field
(Saudis can build mosques in the West but Bibles cannot be distributed there)
in the long-run weakens the home players.
Christianity seems to be doing better at thriving in the face of
modernity. At the same time religion saturates the culture
of most Muslim countries. Islam is
doing a better job spreading to Christendom, largely by immigration, than
Christianity into the Islamic world. Several European cities will become
majority Muslim. And Islam is
developing its political muscle. But the Islamic world is a long way behind the
Christian one in its engagement with modernity. Islam has never experienced a Reformation
or Enlightenment. "Despite the
blessings of oil, the Arab world…lags behind the West in most indices of
economic success and political maturity…." "There is depressingly little evidence
of internal cultural creativity…. Most
Gulf countries have an unhealthy reliance on a single windfall, oil, that
owes everything to the twin accidents of geology and geography and nothing to
the ingenuity and entrepreneurialism of the people." (283) "Roughly two in three private-sector
jobs in the Gulf are performed by foreigners." (284) And the oil money is still be pocketed by
governments and ruling families. Many
Europeans are also doing badly, undereducated, underemployed, embracing
radicalism. It is hard to ignore two
facts. A lot of radicalism is rooted
in Islam. A substantial minority of
Muslims agree with all or some of Osama bin Laden's aims. "Muslims are much more likely than
Christians to be riven by wars of religion…." And many Islamic reformers would like to go
backward rather than forward.
(289) There is a central
political battle within Islam between 'martyrs,' who are ready to die for
change and the authoritarian 'traitors,' who now wield power and are too
friendly with the West. "Resistance to pluralism is thus a double
disaster for Islam: it is holding back economic progress in general and
undermining its ability to compete for souls in the long run."
(292) The fiercest opposition to
pluralism is in Saudi Arabia. Dubai
allows freedom of worship but trying to convert a Muslim is a criminal
offense. Malaysia now has sharia
courts that intervene to stop anyone from leaving Islam. "This aversion to pluralism poisons
everything that it touches in the Islamic world." (293) If a free discussion of "first
things" is prevented, there is no hope of producing world class
universities. 11. The New Wars of Religion "The greatest change in foreign policy in
the recent past has been the revival of religion. It is impossible to understand international
affairs today without taking faith into account." (299) We are living in 'the age of sacred terror'
(quoting a book title). Politicians are stirring up religious passion. Outsiders are rushing into conflicts to
defend their religions. Terrorist outrages
have religious connections. Three out
of four most likely flashpoints for nuclear conflict have a strong religious
element (Pakistan-India, Iran, and Israel-Palestine). "A ring of instability lines Islam's
southern frontiers, which runs roughly along the tenth parallel from West
Africa to the Philippines. Radical
Islam has a huge influence over several countries--notably Iran, Saudi Arabia
and Pakistan." (304) Saudi Arabia
plays a double game of appeasement and repression. Pakistan has long played a double
role. "The jihadis' most
important war is not against the West but against apostate Muslim regimes,
notably Saudi Arabia…."
"Muslims also slaughter each other in large numbers." Perhaps the most dangerous power struggle
is between Sunnis and Shias. Most of
the deaths in Iraq were the result of sectarian violence after the U.S.
invasion upset the balance. Quarrels
within countries could do the most damage.
"The revival of religion is multiplying the number of people who
are willing to kill and die for their faith." (308) There are plenty of reasons to kill without
religion. The 20th century
was the most secular and the most bloody in our existence: Godless religions
of Nazism and communism killed tens of millions according to George Weigel. Killing is now much more bottom-up than top-down
and the ability of governments to control religious politics has
declined. "The most immediate
global threat comes from the ungoverned, undergoverned and ungovernable areas
of the Muslim World…." (311) 12. The Culture Wars Go Global In a growing number of countries religion is
being pushed into the public square.
Politics is being driven by values such as abortion and gay marriage,
stems cells and cloning, headscarves and sharia law. Abortion remains central. "Ultrasound pictures have probably
done more for the pro-life cause than any number of papal encyclicals."
(328) "Europeans used to watch America's culture
wars with a mixture of bemusement and contempt…. Now Europeans are also arguing about the
expression of faith in the public square and the right of journalists to
offend religious minorities. … The reason for this is Islam." (338) Muslim immigrants are rediscovering a
commitment that had begun to fade.
They are segregated in an all-embracing religious cocoon that
reinforces cultural exclusiveness and produces an army of Europeans whose
first loyalty is their religion. Many
young second-generation Muslims want to reconfigure European society to accommodate
their preferences. The U.N. has long been a bastion of power for
liberals but even there Christian right activists have arrived. "The UN will no longer be able to
treat issues of overpopulation and bioengineering as mere technical issues to
be decided by committees of experts." (351) Conclusion: Learning to Live with Religion "The great forces of modernity--technology
and democracy, choice and freedom--are all strengthening religion rather than
undermining it." "Democracy
is giving the world's people their voice and they want to talk about
God." (quoting timothy Shah and Monica Toft) (355) The world is generally moving in the
American direction - with three caveats.
1. The relationship between
religion and modernity is far from smooth for many believers. 2.
This does not mean that the alternatives disappear. 3.
The natural accompaniment of modernity is not religiosity but
pluralism: religious beliefs become competitors in the marketplace. Religion can be dangerous in politics and the
most striking danger is on the international level. Western policy makers have alternated
between underplaying and overplaying the role of religion in foreign affairs
and the mistakes have been costly. A few power brokers are realizing that if
religion can be dangerous, resolution must include religion and religious
leaders. Faith can be a source of
tribalism and division or a source of strength and making sense of the
world. "Faith-based diplomacy is
no panacea…but it is extremely difficult to imagine a lasting peace without
their involvement." (367) |
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