Theology Has Consequences
By Ross Douthat in The Atlantic
What will provide the theological
content of the nation's civil religion now that the "mere orthodoxy"
of the evangelical-Catholic alliance has proven unsuitable for a pluralistic
nation of 300 million people? To my mind, the most likely and salutary option
is moralistic therapeutic
deism. Here is the core of its (Rousseauian) catechism, in
the words of sociologist Christian Smith:
1. "A god exists who created
and ordered the world and watches over human life on earth."
2. "God wants people to be
good, nice, and fair to each other, as taught in the Bible and by most world
religions."
3. "The central goal of life is
to be happy and to feel good about oneself."
4. "God does not need to be
particularly involved in one's life except when God is needed to resolve a
problem."
5. "Good people go to heaven
when they die."
Theologically speaking, this
watered-down, anemic, insipid form of Judeo-Christianity is pretty repulsive.
But politically speaking, it's perfect: thoroughly anodyne, inoffensive,
tolerant. And that makes it perfectly suited to serve as the civil religion of
the highly differentiated twenty-first century United States.
Whether you share this optimism
about the "salutary" advance of moralistic therapeutic deism
ultimately depends on whether you share Linker's sense that the biggest problem
facing America in the Bush years was the "siege" of secular America by orthodox Christians. The more you fear the theocon
menace, the more you'll welcome the Oprahfication of Christianity - since the
steady spread of a mushy, muddle-headed theology is as good a way as any of
inoculating the country and its politics against, say, Richard John Neuhaus's
views on natural law.
But let's say you think that the
biggest problems facing America in the Bush years were, I dunno, the botched
handling of the Iraq occupation and a massive and an unsustainable housing and
financial bubble. In that case, you don't have to look terribly hard to see a
connection between the kind of self-centered, sentimental, and panglossian
religion described above and the spirit of unwarranted optimism and metaphysical
self-regard that animated some of Bush's worst hours as President (his second
inaugural address could have been subtitled: "Moral Therapeutic Deism Goes
to War") and some of his fellow Americans' worst hours as homeowners and
investors. In the wake of two consecutive bubble economies, it takes an
inordinate fear of culture war, I think, to immerse yourself in the literature
of Oprahfied religion - from nominal Christians like Joel Osteen to New Age
gurus like Eckhart Tolle and Rhonda Byrne - and come away convinced that this
theological turn has been "salutary" for the country overall.
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