Tim Keller and John Inazu: How Christians Can Bear Gospel Witness in an Anxious Age
Our confidence in the gospel spurs us to serve our communities, not to shrink back when they decide they no longer need us.
Christianity Today | 20 June 2016
As the Catholic writer Joseph Bottum has observed, we live in an anxious age.
In an increasingly diverse and rapidly changing culture,
some people are anxious about shifting cultural norms, civil rights,
and religious liberty. The past decade has seen a rapid transformation
in public opinion and legal norms around sexuality, same-sex marriage,
transgender rights, and religion in the public square—changes that have
caused anxiety for a great number of traditional religious believers,
including Christians, Muslims, and Orthodox Jews.
Socioeconomic disparities create other anxieties. Some
people have been left jobless or underemployed by the global economy.
Others confront inadequacies in housing, education, and health care in
impoverished and often segregated neighborhoods and communities. And
people wonder why those with greater means are indifferent to the
financial burdens of the lower and middle classes.
There is, of course, an even more dire anxiety that
emerges when some people prove incapable of living with our differences.
In the past few years, violent men have taken innocent lives in places
including a Sikh temple in Wisconsin, the apartment of a Muslim family
in North Carolina, a black church in Charleston, and just last week, a
gay nightclub in Florida. In each of these instances, vulnerable
communities became the intentional targets of mass violence, leaving
others in those communities wondering about their own safety and sense
of belonging in this country.
How should Christians in the United States bear witness
in an anxious age? We start by understanding the context in which we
live. That begins by understanding the context from which we have come
and the ways in which that context has contributed to some of our
current anxieties.
The Protestant Culture of the Past
“Christianity as a social phenomenon,” wrote theologian
Lesslie Newbigin, “has always and necessarily been conditioned as to its
outward form by other social facts.” When Newbigin wrote this in 1941,
one of the main “social facts” in the United States was that public
norms were dictated by a distinctly American Protestant culture in the
white middle class. As such, Protestant churches provided many Americans
with a great part of their social identity. The majority of Americans,
whether or not they were devout, identified with some church and its
basic teachings. These teachings—for better, and sometimes for
worse—contributed to a largely monolithic way of thinking about religion
and morality. By the middle of the 20th century, that way of thinking
had made room for some Catholic and Jewish influences, but little else.
The Protestant culture contributed to many traditional
norms, including the two-parent family, the value of work and frugality,
the priority of the local community, and the importance of personal
virtue. Its moral cohesion built and sustained major institutions that
to this day provide billions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of
volunteers for charitable work.
On the other hand, the Protestant culture also failed to
recognize, and sometimes enabled, significant injustices. Protestants
were indifferent and sometimes hostile toward the civil liberties
challenges that religious minorities confronted. Most white Protestants’
absence from the civil rights movement perpetuated personal and
structural racism that exists to this day. And the cultural and legal
power of the Protestant culture often stifled differing views about
religion, gender, and sexuality.
The Social Facts Have Changed
The past decade has seen tremendous shifts in
immigration, globalization, and technological specialization that have
contributed to what some have called the Age of Fracture. But as Joseph
Bottum has suggested, “the single most significant fact over the past
few decades in America—the great explanatory event from which follows
nearly everything in our social and political history—is the crumbling
of the Mainline [Protestant] churches as central institutions in our
national experience.” Whatever one thinks of mainline Protestantism
today, Bottum is right that it once provided the sociological and
institutional framework that sustained the Protestant culture. That
framework no longer exists. In its absence, the deep and accelerating
cultural trends toward individualism and autonomy have continued to
erode trust in social institutions—business, government, church, and
even the family. And neither evangelicalism nor Roman Catholicism nor
secularism has been able to fill the vacuum left by the shrinking of the
Protestant mainline.
This new cultural reality raises some anxieties, but it
also presents many of us with an opportunity to rediscover Christian
witness in a world that we do not control. The dominant Protestant
culture enabled some Christians in this country to forget, as the book
of Hebrews proclaims, that here we have no abiding city. While we are
called to love our neighbors and to maintain what James Davison Hunter
has called “faithful presence,” no human society can be identified with
the kingdom of God. Christians profess that our citizenship is in heaven
(Phil. 3:20), which means that we are never quite at home.
Claims that American Christians today are
facing persecution sound tone-deaf not only to secular progressives but
also to many non-white religious believers.
We can also learn from the biblical witness how to
engage in the world around us. The book of Jeremiah tells the story of
God using the prophet to instruct the Jews in Babylon not to hate or
ignore the pagan city, but to become long-term residents, to exercise
good will toward it through prayer, and to seek its peace and
prosperity. They were to build up the social fabric for their common
well-being (“if [Babylon] prospers, you too will prosper” [Jer. 29:7]).
They were to be known as a people who served their neighbors and their
city. At the same time, God’s people were not to place their future
hopes in social and economic improvement. They were to love and serve
their earthly city, but they were not to forget that God would some day
judge that city for its evil and injustice. It was only in God that
believers could be sure of a “hope and a future” (Jer. 29:11). In this
hope, instead of merely co-existing with the Babylonians, gnawed by
memories of former cultural acceptance, the Jews in Babylon were to
strive for the good of their city, the growth of the people of God, and
their resulting testimony to the glory of God. Like the Jews in Babylon
living in a foreign land, Christians are—and always have been—“resident
aliens” called to love our neighbors with deeds of service so that those
around us will “see [our] good deeds and glorify God” (1 Peter 2:12
NIV).
To live as resident aliens entails a certain
vulnerability, but it does not always mean persecution. Claims that
American Christians today are facing persecution sound tone-deaf not
only to secular progressives but also to many non-white religious
believers who have long been actual minorities. That isn’t to say that
demographics aren’t changing, or that Christians in the United States
don’t face legal abuses and miscarriages of justice. But it is a caution
about the use of language and a posture of the heart.
Whatever our circumstances, Christians are called to
pray for rulers and nations. We know the love and grace of Jesus, who
gave himself for us while we were yet enemies, and who calls us to serve
our neighbors sacrificially whether they believe as we do or not.
Three Examples of Engagement: Politics, Race, and Religious Liberty
One way that we can engage with the world around us is
by attending to the practical needs of our neighbors. When tragedy
strikes any community, Christians ought to be among the first to give
time, money, and other resources to help those who have been harmed and
to mend the social fabric. We can respond with compassion and love for
the sake of our neighbors, with actions as well as with words. We can do
so in response to tragedies that unfold in seconds, and to those that
take shape over the course of decades.
Practical partnership does not require endorsing all of the goals or values of those with whom we partner.
Sometimes, loving our neighbors means engaging in politics. Washington Post
columnist Michael Gerson recently observed that the maxim “politics
always follows culture” is most often espoused by those who have the
luxury of reflecting on culture. For many people, however, politics is
not an afterthought but an urgent need. That is particularly true in
areas where the social fabric is torn. In these settings, politics—and
law, government, and public institutions—can often be a matter of life
and death. Christians have a role to play in these settings, not as
self-interested rulers but as active participants seeking the good of
our neighbors. Of course, politics is messy, and Christians who engage
in it will quickly find themselves working with people and institutions
whose purposes are not gospel-oriented. But practical partnership does
not require endorsing all of the goals or values of those with whom we
partner.
Another area where Christians can bear witness in an
anxious age is by committing to the work of racial justice. Despite the
many failures of white-majority churches to take action in this area,
the gospel has tremendous resources for seeking justice and peace across
racial divisions. The death and resurrection of Jesus has broken down
cultural barriers throughout history—no other major religion has spread
as far and across as many cultures as Christianity.
For many people of color, frustration has outpaced hope. Yet Christians, as Thabiti Anyabwile notes, can resist
“the temptation to hopelessness,” even in the “thick fog of despair
that settles on entire blocks of families mangled and maligned by mass
incarceration.” The consequences of mass incarceration are enormous, as
are the ongoing realities of neighborhood and school segregation,
education inequity, and employment and health care disparities.
Christian hope is not blind optimism. But neither is it utter despair.
Christians of all races can learn how longstanding
policies and practices around housing, education, and criminal justice
disproportionately harm some of their neighbors. We can take the time to
listen to the pain of our neighbors without presuming either easy
solutions or insurmountable challenges (and sometimes we will need first
to learn how to listen). Instead of walking away from challenges that
seem “too big,” Christians who confront the barriers of race and class
disparities can draw near to their affected neighbors through the power
of the gospel. Suburban churches can engage in the hard work of
understanding the personal and structural consequences of generational
injustice. Through a posture of reconciliation and humility (not merely a
vision of “community service”), they can engage urban communities
through volunteering with early-stage literacy programs, partnering with
ministries in underserved neighborhoods, and investing financial and
human capital in local urban businesses.
There is no principled legal or theological argument that looks only to the good of Christians over the interests of others.
Finally, Christians might engage in the cause of
religious liberty with more hope and less anxiety. Many Christians today
feel increasing legal pressures on their institutions and the ways of
life they are accustomed to. Some of these challenges are significant:
campus ministries experience hurdles to campus access, Christian
adoption and social service agencies confront regulations in tension
with their missional convictions, and Christian educational institutions
face threats to their accreditation and tax-exempt status. We should
not be naïve to these challenges, and we should work diligently to find
appropriate legal and policy responses. But we must make our case in
publicly accessible terms that appeal to people of good will from a
variety of religious traditions and those of no religious tradition. In
doing so, we cannot ignore the importance of religious liberty for all.
There is no principled legal or theological argument that looks only to
the good of Christians over the interests of others.
Focusing on others means attending to the challenges and limits that they confront
in the practice of their faith. Today’s cultural climate makes it
especially essential for Christians to defend the religious liberty of
American Muslims. Whatever challenges Christians may feel to their
practices pale in comparison to the cultural and often legal challenges
that confront American Muslims. As one Muslim leader shared, “Muslims
today are afraid to think in this country.” These challenges
are exacerbated when some Muslims engage in acts of terror in this
country. Even though Christians and atheists also perpetrate acts of
terror and violence (in places like movie theatres, elementary schools,
and shopping malls), many of our neighbors react with particular fear
and judgment when the perpetrator is identified with Islam.
We can be encouraged by the work of the Becket Fund for
Religious Liberty, which spends time and money defending people of all
faiths, including Muslims. Other prominent Christian leaders, like
Russell Moore, have rightly challenged the anti-Muslim rhetoric that has
emerged from some segments of religious and political discourse. We can
do this on the local level, too. Christians can engage with our Muslim
neighbors through acts of friendship, sharing meals, and opening our
homes and churches to refugees. And we can resist careless rhetoric that
imputes the actions of some onto the beliefs of all. Just as we rightly
resist charges that all Christians are bigots or that Christian
teachings are responsible for violence against abortion clinics, we
should be quick to do the same when the perpetrators of violence are
tied to other faiths or identity groups.
Confidence in the Gospel
Our engagement in the world in an anxious age is made
possible by our confidence in the gospel in a pluralistic society where
people have profoundly different beliefs. We won’t always be able to
persuade those around us that our beliefs are right and theirs are
wrong. Indeed, some of our most important beliefs stem from contested
premises that others do not share. But recognizing the existence of
these disagreements should not prevent us from holding to what is
ultimately true. Our beliefs can be true, and we can hold these
warranted beliefs confidently even though others reject them. For this
reason, recognizing the social fact of difference should not be mistaken
as relativism. To the contrary, a greater awareness of our
distinctiveness that comes from confidence in the gospel can encourage
us to work to strengthen the social fabric for the good of others.
This kind of posture is what one of us has called “confident pluralism.”
As Christians, we can engage with the pluralism around us because our
confidence lies elsewhere. We can acknowledge genuine differences in
society without suppressing or minimizing our firmly held convictions.
We can seek common ground even with those who may not share our view of
the common good.
As Christians, we can engage with the pluralism around us because our confidence lies elsewhere.
Engaging across difference is not without risk. Duke
professor Luke Bretherton warns against several dangers that such
engagement may bring. There is “co-option,” in which the church ends up
becoming a mere instrument for political or social cohesion,
“competition,” in which the church becomes just another affinity group
demanding its rights, and “commodification,” in which the church becomes
another form of therapy, private fulfillment, or lifestyle choice. The
allure of acceptance and accommodation increases the need for the
practices of discipleship, formation, and worship that remind us why the
church is not a political party, an identity group, or a social club.
In the other direction, we risk rejection and
misunderstanding. There will be those who dismiss practices like prayer,
forgiveness, and proclamation as naïve and impractical. These reactions
should not surprise us. Confidence in the gospel is and has always been
a radical idea for this world. The gospel is the otherworldly hope that
sustains us. It is the hope that encourages Christians to enter into
broken and wounded places, with acts of friendship and love. It is the
hope of black Christians who choose to believe and forgive in the face
of racial injustice, and of Christians of all races who join in the
difficult work of restoration and reconciliation. It is the hope of
Christians who stand with Muslims in the common cause of religious
liberty.
The audacity of Christian hope is that Jesus Christ came
into the world, and is reconciling all things to himself. He is both
the subject and object of our confidence, and as generations of saints
who have come before us have testified in word and in deed, he is
sufficient. It is with that hope and that confidence that we engage in
the world in an anxious age.
John D. Inazu is associate professor of law and
political science at Washington University in St. Louis and a visiting
fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture at the
University of Virginia. He is the author of the new book Confident Pluralism: Surviving and Thriving Through Deep Difference
(University of Chicago Press). Timothy Keller is founder and pastor of
Redeemer Presbyterian Church in Manhattan and author of several books,
including most recently Prayer: Experiencing Awe and Intimacy with God (Penguin).
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