My
Problem with Christian-ism
A believer spells out the difference between faith and a political agenda
by Andrew Sullivan
Originally published by Time Magazine
Are
you a Christian who doesn't feel represented by the religious
right? I know the feeling. When the discourse about faith is
dominated by political fundamentalists and social conservatives,
many others begin to feel as if their religion has been taken
away from them.
The number
of Christians misrepresented by the Christian right is many.
There are evangelical Protestants who believe strongly that Christianity
should not get too close to the corrupting allure of government
power. There are lay Catholics who, while personally devout,
are socially liberal on issues like contraception, gay rights,
women's equality and a multi-faith society. There are very orthodox
believers who nonetheless respect the freedom and conscience
of others as part of their core understanding of what being a
Christian is. They have no problem living next to an atheist
or a gay couple or a single mother or people whose views on the
meaning of life are utterly alien to them--and respecting their
neighbors' choices. That doesn't threaten their faith. Sometimes
the contrast helps them understand their own faith better.
And there are
those who simply believe that, by definition, God is unknowable
to our limited, fallible human minds and souls. If God is ultimately
unknowable, then how can we be so certain of what God's real
position is on, say, the fate of Terri Schiavo? Or the morality
of contraception? Or the role of women? Or the love of a gay
couple? Also, faith for many of us is interwoven with doubt,
a doubt that can strengthen faith and give it perspective and
shadow. That doubt means having great humility in the face of
God and an enormous reluctance to impose one's beliefs, through
civil law, on anyone else.
I would say
a clear majority of Christians in the U.S. fall into one or many
of those camps. Yet the term "people of faith" has
been co-opted almost entirely in our discourse by those who see
Christianity as compatible with only one political party, the
Republicans, and believe that their religious doctrines should
determine public policy for everyone. "Sides are being chosen," Tom
DeLay recently told his supporters, "and the future of man
hangs in the balance! The enemies of virtue may be on the march,
but they have not won, and if we put our trust in Christ, they
never will." So Christ is a conservative Republican?
Rush Limbaugh
recently called the Democrats the "party of death" because
of many Democrats' view that some moral decisions, like the choice
to have a first-trimester abortion, should be left to the individual,
not the cops. Ann Coulter, with her usual subtlety, simply calls
her political opponents "godless," the title of her
new book. And the largely nonreligious media have taken the bait.
The "Christian" vote has become shorthand in journalism
for the Republican base.
What to do
about it? The worst response, I think, would be to construct
something called the religious left. Many of us who are Christians
and not supportive of the religious right are not on the left
either. In fact, we are opposed to any politicization of the
Gospels by any party, Democratic or Republican, by partisan black
churches or partisan white ones. "My kingdom is not of this
world," Jesus insisted. What part of that do we not understand?
So let me suggest that we take back the word Christian while giving
the religious right a new adjective: Christianist. Christianity,
in this view, is simply a faith. Christianism is an ideology, politics,
an ism. The distinction between Christian and Christianist echoes
the distinction we make between Muslim and Islamist. Muslims are
those who follow Islam. Islamists are those who want to wield Islam
as a political force and conflate state and mosque. Not all Islamists
are violent. Only a tiny few are terrorists. And I should underline
that the term Christianist is in no way designed to label people
on the religious right as favoring any violence at all. I mean
merely by the term Christianist the view that religious faith is
so important that it must also have a precise political agenda.
It is the belief that religion dictates politics and that politics
should dictate the laws for everyone, Christian and non-Christian
alike.
That's what I dissent from, and I dissent from it as a Christian.
I dissent from the political pollution of sincere, personal faith.
I dissent most strongly from the attempt to argue that one party
represents God and that the other doesn't. I dissent from having
my faith co-opted and wielded by people whose politics I do not
share and whose intolerance I abhor. The word Christian belongs
to no political party. It's time the quiet majority of believers
took it back.
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