American Christianity Today: Establishment, Decline, and Revival (Dyron Daughrity) - Review
AMERICAN CHRISTIANITY TODAY: Establishment, Decline, and Revival. By Dyron Daughrity. Abilene, TX: Abilene Christian University Press, 2024. 304 pages.
The debate rages, especially in light of the ascendancy of a
virulent form of Christian nationalism, about whether the United States is a
Christian nation. The answer to that question depends on how we define our
terms. Constitutionally, the United States is a secular nation in which no
officeholder is required to affirm any religious/faith position. Article 6 of
the Constitution is quite clear: "No religious test can be required for
any office or public trust under the United States." This is the only mention
of religion in the Constitution itself. The First Amendment, which seems less
important to many than the Second Amendment, states: "Congress shall make
no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; ..." The Declaration of Independence does mention the
Creator and Divine Providence, but neither of these terms are inherently
Christian. Interestingly, the Constitution of the Confederate States of
America, a "nation" formed in part to defend slavery, does invoke
"Almighty God" in defining its existence. Finally, the Treaty of
Tripoli of 1797, signed under the Presidency of George Washington, let this
Muslim nation know that “As the
government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the
Christian Religion, as it has in itself no character of enmity against the
laws, religious or tranquility of Musselmen, and as the said States never have
entered into any war or act of hostility against any Mehomitan nation, it is
declared by the parties that no pretext arising from religious opinions shall
ever produce an interruption of the harmony existing between the two countries.”
Speaking in legal terms, the United States is not a Christian nation. It is,
instead, a secular one and has been a secular nation from the beginning of this
constitutional republic. Although this is true, legally, it is also true that
the nation that emerged from the struggle for independence from the United Kingdom
has been a majority Christian nation throughout its history. However,
historically, and even today, the majority of citizens of the United States have
claimed to be Christian, whether or not they were church members. So, perhaps in
that sense, the United States is a Christian nation, but not a legal one.
Now
that we have defined our terms and determined that legally speaking the United
States of America is a secular nation and not a Christian one, we can move on
to another topic. That topic concerns the status of Christianity in the United
States today, recognizing that Christianity itself is very diverse. This is the
question explored by Dyron B. Daughrity, the William S. Banowsky Chair and
Professor of Religion at Pepperdine University, in his book American Christianity Today: Establishment, Decline, and Revival (Abilene Chrisitan University
Press, 2024). Daughrity approaches this question from a Churches of Christ
perspective, which has its own set of unique elements. Church of Christ (not the United Church of Christ) people
tend to be on the conservative side but not necessarily evangelical. In this
book, we see a conservative approach to religion emerge occasionally, but
overall Daughrity offers a fair appraisal of American Christianity.
Before I get to the makeup of the
book itself, that is, the content, I want to take note of the book itself. It
is 8.5 by 11 inches, with double columns, printed on high-quality paper
allowing for full-color pictures. It is designed to be used as a textbook for introductory
classes on Christianity in the United States or just for perusing. The author
provides pictures, sidebars, and a few graphs.
Part Two is titled "America's
Christian Traditions." In eight chapters of about 8 to 10 pages each
(double columns with pictures and sidebars), Daughrity briefly lays out the
basic elements of the primary expressions of Christianity in the United States:
Roman Catholicism (Chapter 3), Evangelicalism (Chapter 4), Mainline
Protestantism (Chapter 5), the Black Churches (Chapter 6), Pentecostalism
(Chapter 7), Eastern Orthodoxy (Chapter 8), Anabaptism, a chapter titled “Preachers
of Peace” (Chapter 9), along with a chapter on three other traditions—Mormons,
Jehovah's Witnesses, and Seventh Day Adventists. That chapter, titled “Resilience
and Proliferation,” explores, in brief, these three were born in the nineteenth
century, along with several others that could be seen as more
"orthodox" or traditional in their theology and practice, but while
thriving, seek to adapt to the culture around them.
Having introduced the reader to the
broad spectrum of a very diverse Christian population (and Christian options) laid
out the spectrum of a diverse Christian population, in Part Three, Daughrity
examines "Critical Issues in American Christianity." Here he offers
six chapters that address immigration (Chapter 11), Women and American
Christianity (Chapter 12), Interreligious dialog (Chapter 13), Ecumenism
(Chapter 14), Global Missions (Chapter 15), and a gathering "Hot
Topics" that includes climate change, gender, abortion, sexuality, and
race. As one might expect there are differences of viewpoint on these critical
issues that reflect the diversity of American Christianity. He reminds us that politics
often plays an important role in how religious communities face these issues.
The final section, Part Four,
focuses on "Important Trends and Recent Movements in American
Christianity." Here, in the final eight chapters of the book, Daughrity
gives attention to the following trends and movements: Christian entertainment
(Chapter 17), Christian music (Chapter 18), Christian Youth Programs (I will
note that these are all evangelical options) (chapter 19), Mega Churches
(Chapter 20), Sacred Spaces—Church Buildings, monuments, and pilgrimage sites.
In this chapter (Chapter 21), Daughrity provides a considerable number of
pictures, including an image of one particular building per state. The
remaining chapters focus on Urban Christianity (Chapter 22), Rural Christianity
(Chapter 23), and Christian Higher Education.
In this well-laid-out and even encyclopedic
book, filled with pictures and images, Daughrity provides us with an overview
of what makes American Christianity, in all its diversity, tick. For the most
part, Daughrity offers a fair appraisal of this diversity. However, his more
evangelical moorings do come out at points, especially when dealing with trends
and contemporary movements. Nevertheless, overall, Dyron Daughrity’s American Christianity Today was an enjoyable book to read. It demonstrates that
Christianity remains the dominant religion in the United States, which might
suggest that the United States is, even if not legally, a Christian nation. When
compared with Europe, where state churches still exist but Christianity is not
thriving, Christianity in America seems in relatively good shape. What
Daughrity demonstrates is that there is something rather unique about the
United States, which has allowed religious diversity to exist, allowing diverse
expressions to thrive, as they express themselves in the religious marketplace.
As to whether this has always been a good thing is another question.
Returning to my original
observation, it is one thing to say that on the one hand, Christianity is the
dominant (majority) religion in terms of numbers and expressions, and on the
other hand pursues forms of Christian nationalism that seek to impose
particular forms of Christianity on the nation, including seeking power over
the government and other spheres of American life. I sense that Daughrity affirms
the first point but doesn't embrace the latter. That is a good thing. After
all, American Christianity covers the gamut of American political life, from
disengagement to various political positions, from left to right (since I find
myself on the political left, I approach many critical issues from a very
different vantage point from those on the right!). Therefore, I can commend
Dyron Daughrity’s American Christianity Today to readers seeking to
better understand the complex religious world that exists in the United States,
just read discerningly! After all, every author does write from a particular vantage
point.
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