Protestant Accommodation -- Sightings


I will admit that I'm a bit mystified with the fuss about the HHS Contraception ruling.  It seems pretty fair to me -- employers should provide access to contraception, and if contrary to their conscience, the insurance companies should pick it up.  In reality, it behooves the insurers to do so as providing contraception is a lot cheaper than pregnancy.   The employers that are in the center of this are Catholic related institutions that employ and serve a population that is more non-Catholic than Catholic.  I understand that some see this as a religious liberty issue, but for the life of me I cannot -- unless it is a question of imposing religious views on the state.  
In any case, Martin Marty illuminates one interesting aspect of this controversy -- the engagement of conservative Protestants in support of the Catholic cause.  He notes that Catholic bishops have been imposing themselves for generations, but conservative Protestants once sat on the side-lines more interested in heaven than gaining political power.  Now they seem to relish it, while Mainliners, once the religious power brokers have been effectively sidelined.  It's not that we don't speak out, but the media pretty much ignores us.  There's a new game in town, and we're not involved! 
So, take a look at what our venerable commentator on things public has to say to us this morning.
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Sightings  2/13/2012 
 Protestant Accommodation
-- Martin E. Marty 

Keeping an eye and ear on hourly, daily, and weekly incidents and trends in zones where “religion and public life” intersect is one thing. Taking looks at such incidents and trends in half-century cycles is another. These longer-range surveys provide perspective. A Rip van Winkle returning from 1965 days to the scene this month would not have been surprised to hear of the Catholic bishops’ blast at the Health and Human Services birth control initiatives. Catholic leaders have reacted thus for almost a century. Picture the surprise of an awakened van Winkle, however, as he saw the radical embrace of raw political power by Evangelical pastors massed in militancy to join Catholics in reaction.
            
“Evangelical” in this case has become the code word for the ever-expanding population of conservative Protestants who joined and join some Catholics on the front lines of Cultural Warfare. They may be great-great-great grandchildren of nineteenth-century Protestant activists, but in most of the twentieth century such activists had backed off and changed their mission. In 1970 in Righteous Empire I could speak of Evangelicalism as largely “Private Protestantism,” which “accented individual salvation out of the world” over against what latter came to be called “Mainline.” It had been “‘Public’ Protestantism,” which was more exposed to the social order and the social destinies of citizens. Note: there remain plenty of ‘Mainline’ and ‘Public’ Protestant Activists in action today, but the cameras and microphones have turned attention from them. What is going on and what has gone on with the Mainliners, who have left a cultural niche or a political canyon to be occupied by activist “Public Evangelicals?”         In one word, “Accommodation,” specifically “The Accommodation of Protestant Christianity with the Enlightenment.” The title of a Daedalus article by Berkeley professor David A. Hollinger, who tutors me and so many others.

Hollinger argues that two main trends led to shifts of accent in “Public” Protestantism. It “accommodated” to the heritage of the Enlightenment, the movement of ideas which characterized the ideological outlook and practice of most of the national founders—no fundamentalists they!—and eventually of most academic and literary heirs of those founders. The accommodation to Darwinian Evolution and many other scientific challenges came more easily to Mainliners, who performed many kinds of services in cultural life. But these occurred at expense to their institutional power, the loyalty of church members, and much of their hold on cultural and political life.
The heirs of Fundamentalism and other now-Evangelicals may have accommodated to other “worldly” influences—I’d list “the market” and “nationalism” etc.--but they held the line on many intellectual and cultural trends. Hollinger adds: mark the change in political power when, thanks to Civil Rights legislation, the Mainline mainly lost the South. He also points to the drastic demographic shifts beyond the move to the South. The change in immigration laws in 1965 robbed the northern “white-ethnic” liberal accommodators of their former hegemonic position. The election of Catholic John Kennedy was another symbol of this shift.
How Evangelicals, often rejecters of the Enlightenment in the name of the heritage of partly-putative “Christian America” founders, will use their power will be fateful for the American future. But these now-“Public Protestant” Evangelicals are here to stay. For younger and newer interpreters of culture, as Hollinger sees it, they are virtually the only game in town, in the consciousness of post-1965 Americans.
References

David A. Hollinger,  “The Concept of Post-Racial: How Its Easy Dismissal Obscures Important Questions,”Daedalus (Winter) 2011, 174-182.


--- . “From Identity to Solidarity, ”Daedalus (Fall 2006), 23-31.
--- .“The One Drop Rule and the One Hate Rule, ” Daedalus (Winter 2005), 18-28.


Martin E. Marty's biography, publications, and contact information can be found at www.memarty.com.


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Sightings comes from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.

Comments

Allan R. Bevere said…
Let's not forget, Bob that the mainline liberals were imposing themselves a long time before Protestant conservatives. The conservatives finally decided to take a page out of the mainline liberal playbook.
Robert Cornwall said…
Allan, I don't disagree. That's the point Marty makes. Though the content of that imposition has changed.

I'm reading a book on a theology of Public Witness that utilizes Bonhoeffer. He objects both the the quietism that can pervade our faith and a moralism that imposes itself on society without any sense of our own guilt and thus complicity. Jennfer McBride's The Church for the World (Oxford).
Allan R. Bevere said…
I follow you, Bob. The issue for me, I think is that I reject that quietism or activism are the only two options for Christians. Of course, you already know my views on this.
David said…
The conservative "team" is getting nostalgic for the times when those evil women would die in horrible agony from having back-alley abortions.

I realize it's "a game". I realize the right don't want poor and minority classes to reproduce. Suffering in the world must be "God's Mysterious Will". Oh yeah, cannon fodder needed for the crusades. I admit when I'm wrong.

"Look at what’s happened just in our tolerance for abortion. Fifty years ago…60 years ago, people who did abortions were in the shadows, people who were considered really bad doctors. Now, abortion is something to that is just accepted.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=yn-eejMcmuA
Jeff said…
Just an observation: The theological underpinnings of social activism for Mainliners looks quite a bit like John Rawls' "Theory of Justice" (& less like Niebubrian ethos of decades past) where as Evangelicals are still operating from a "Holy War" paradigm.

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