Sunday, January 18, 2015

Strategies of Power (and cultural Influence)


I am sitting on my back patio, reading on into Essay Three (his book is divided into three parts) of James Davison Hunter’s book and getting a little excited as I see where he is headed. In true “external processor” fashion, I have reached a point where I need to stop and express my thoughts in print (even if no one reads this, it helps me organize my thoughts).

In his second essay (part 2 of the book) he devotes one chapter each to examination of three current political theologies of Christian evangelicals; the Christian Right, the Christian Left and what he calls the Neo-Anabaptist position. He describes them as cultural strategies of “Defense against,” “Relevance to,” and “Purity from” and shows that the first two (the Right and the Left) buy into the “Constantinian heresy” (from an Anabaptist perspective and here Hunter agrees with them) of Christian alliance with the coercive power of the State and the necessity of political domination to impose moral views on a pluralistic public that is lacking a clear moral consensus. One of his most telling quotes is about the extensive politicization of our society:

"The politicization of everything is an indirect measure of the loss of a common culture ... the competition among factions to dominate" (I cannot find the page number right now but he amplifies this view in pages 102 to 107 in his discussion of the Nietzchean Will to Power and the ugly function of Ressentiment)

 I have come to appreciate the biblical values reflected in many of the moral issues of the Christian Left (protections for the weak, justice for the poor), although Hunter does a good job of deconstructing the Christian Left’s Nietzschean “will to power” that also even more clearly characterizes the Christian Right’s approach to politics. My problem with the Right (as well as with the Left) has been the way they seek political domination through party politics and ultimately control of the State, which seems ideologically partisan and antithetical to the spirit of Christ. The Christian Right actually did achieve complete control of all three branches of government (executive, legislative and judicial) in the 2000s, roughly at the same time that they peaked in influence and began to decline. The Democrat Party learned from its errors, and made room to include people of faith on the Left in 2008. Hunter does an excellent job of documenting and exposing this process. In many ways, I find myself closest to what he calls the ‘neo-Anabaptist” position (which values the teaching of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount about loving one’s enemies, and turning the cheek), but, as he points out, the problem with that position is not so much the issue of “domination” but their hostile attitude toward the World and tendency to disengagement from the public sphere. So many of his paragraphs about power, cultural power and political power; and both soft and hard power, fit into concepts I have become aware of in recent years, especially through Robert Farrar Capon’s ideas of Left-handed and Right-handed power (borrowed from Luther) and David Hawkins in Power versus Force (probably borrowed from Chinese Daoism). It is a good thing that I own my own hardcopy of Hunter’s book; the pages have turned yellow with highlighting.

For at least a decade (the same decade that Debbie was ill and I was in graduate school) I have floundered around in the dark, like the proverbial blind man in India, thoroughly frustrated as I groped and prodded the contours of the proverbial elephant, sensing the outlines of some truth intuitively but unable to coherently describe what I was sensing. By keeping one foot in the university and secular culture, and the other in evangelical subculture, I led myself to a place where I felt culturally schizophrenic...

 I felt strongly that the Christian Right took a seriously wrong turn somewhere in the late 1980s and 1990s and departed from Jesus’ style of exercising influence by attempting to dominate the State and legislate evangelical morality through the electoral process (in the absence of a clear cultural consensus) thus leading to the disastrous “Culture Wars” and the current massive exodus of Millennials from churches (just do a check of the hashtag #postchurch on Twitter).

Hunter has helped me save a great deal of reading and investigation with the Christian Left and the Neo-Anabaptists by analyzing their underlying strategies of influence (Note: I owe a deep debt of gratitude to thinkers such as Brian McLaren and Anabaptists such as Yoder and Hauerwas and I respect their basic theological message just not necessarily the accompanying strategies of cultural influence).   


I am anticipating where Hunter is going with his idea of cultivating “Faithful Presence” in the public realms of culture such as art, higher education, business, development, science and philanthropy (as opposed to the three predominant strategies of “Defense against, “Relevance to,” and “Purity from”) and I am genuinely excited about it. For several years I have been reflecting on the Babylonian captivity of the Jews as a paradigm of culture change and a reflection of God’s higher purposes with all of the implications of Jeremiah 29 (especially verses 5 to 9).
Faithful Presence accurately describes the attitude of Daniel and his three friends as they served in public administration under Nebuchadnezzar’s rule in the Babylonian Empire. They did not defensively resist the empire (although some Jews did, such as those who escaped to Egypt), they did not assimilate to Babylonian Culture (witness the three Hebrew children in the fiery furnace) and they did not withdraw from active participation in the life of the empire in order to maintain their purity (although some Jews did, think of the exiles who laid down their harps and refused to sing songs of Zion). Daniel and his friends provided a faithful (and non-political although quite public) witness and had the privilege of helping to interpret the Emperors’ dreams.  


I think Hunter’s proposed strategy will provide another big piece of the crazy jig-saw puzzle in my head about “what Israel should do,” and “how we should then live.”  I have to confess that it also stirs in me, not only hope, but the early flickering of desire to participate in a faith community. I have been a blind man without a vision for far too long.



5 comments:

  1. As I've reread the book (thanks for the prompt, Joseph), I find Hunter's "faithful presence within" paradigm more helpful than I thought first time 'round. It at the very least is a very helpful "conversation partner" for those operating within one of the other three paradigms Hunter outlines (defensive against culture/ Christian Right, relevant to culture/Christian Left, purity from culture/neo-Anabaptist). Joseph's summaries are extremely helpful, but don't let them keep ypu from the book itself!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Joseph thanks for the recap. After your first review I decided to get a hold of the book. I find it hard to put it down. I have enjoyed his quick history lesson at the conclusion of his first essay as he applied his propositions to cultural changes in history. Looking forward to essay 2.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, I was tempted to scan that chapter into a PDF and post it online. For anyone who loves history, that one chapter is more than worth the price of admission.

      Delete
  3. no more comments? This issue of power vs. force, or to put it in Lutheran terms, Left-handed versus Right-handed power, deserves a much more in depth conversation ... it goes to the heart of many of the problems with the church.

    ReplyDelete
  4. It's a fascinating topic. I've always thought there is an ongoing tension for Christians between the relationship of Church and State that those who solidly plant themselves in any of 3 camps don't entirely appreciate or live into--the whole "in the world, but not of it" thing. I haven't read the book so it would be inappropriate to make any judgment on Hunter's position, but I'd argue that strict political affiliation is almost always, and maybe just always, problematic for Christians. This would not necessarily have to lead to a neo-Anabaptist position. A Christian can and should engage the political process. Jesus and his message was and remains political. But, as a Christian, one can never be beholden to, or submit to the Lordship of, a political agenda. Furthermore, we must always be aware that our perception of the world, the state, the church, other human beings and politics in general is tainted by sin and all the damage that sin has ravaged up on as persons and communities--and because of this, we would be deeply mistaken to assume that any politic or government we create on this earth, in this present age, is ordained of God, whether Leftist, Rightist, or Anabaptist. These are just some rambling thoughts. Great post. I should probably just read the book.

    ReplyDelete