By Mark Tooley on 9.17.07 @ 12:07AM
The death of D. James Kennedy gives hope to those who buried traditional Christianity long ago.
Florida mega-church founder and "Religious Right" pillar D.
James Kennedy died on September 5. His death did not get as much
media play as Jerry Falwell's earlier this year. But Kennedy,
though more taciturn in manner than Falwell, was no less assertive
in trying to "reclaim" America for Christian beliefs. The passing
of the two pastors marked a generational shift of evangelical
Christian leadership in America.
A fellow founder of the Moral Majority, Kennedy was one of the
earliest of America's mega church pastors and widely watched
television preachers.
From his 10,000 member Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church in Fort
Lauderdale, Kennedy reached millions across several decades with
his television ministry, publications, and teaching materials. His
"Coral Ridge Hour' was broadcast on 400 stations and in 150
countries. He authored 50 books and founded two schools.
An entrepreneur and American original, Kennedy was raised by
non-church going parents. His father was a traveling salesman and
his mother was an alcoholic. Kennedy originally dropped out of
college to become an Arthur Murray dance instructor. But his
Christian conversion drove him back to seek multiple degrees and
towards a 50 year career focused on preaching the Gospel and
promoting a Christian cultural worldview. Kennedy also had his
theological quirks. He spoke of God's use of the stars and planets
as providential signals in a way that almost legitimized astrology
and raised eyebrows among fellow conservatives.
Sometimes Kennedy was called a "soft Christian
Reconstructionist" who allegedly wanted to return America back to
the days of theocratically Calvinist New England. But he was never
really a theocrat. More accurately, like other conservative
religionists, Kennedy desired a return to a culturally pre-1960s
America (minus racism and segregation), where abortion and
pornography were restricted, where school children prayed together,
and where nearly every American shared at least a nominally
Christian faith.
Sometimes Kennedy overly romanticized America's Christian past.
His Calvinist forbearers three centuries ago never thought that
even 17th century New England was safely Christian, instead
believing that their country was always under threat of judgment.
In truth, even robust Christians must admit that the most pious
eras in history were a complex mix of wheat and tares. Kennedy
portrayed America's founding fathers, and other key figures like
Abraham Lincoln, as pious patriarchs. Unashamedly, Kennedy would
quote from the hagiographic biographer Parson Weems when making the
case that George Washington was a devoutly orthodox Christian. If
Kennedy's historical perceptions were sometimes exaggerated, they
were understandable reactions to the secularization of American
history.
WRITING FOR THE RELIGIOUS LEFT website Sojourners, author
Diana Butler Bass declared Kennedy to be an icon of the old
Religious Right, which strove unsuccessfully for a restoration of
ostensibly Christian America. "Kennedy believed in Christendom, an
American Christian nation divinely designed as the leader of a
global spiritual empire, and in creating a Christian politics
toward that end," Butler wrote. She compared him unfavorably with
supposedly ascendant new Christian voices who celebrate the end of
Christendom in favor a new counter-cultural Christianity.
Citing "emerging" Methodist thinkers Stanley Hauerwas and Will
Willimon at Duke University (Willimon has since become a United
Methodist bishop), Bass approvingly quoted their farewell to
Christendom: "The gradual decline of the notion that the church
needs some sort of surrounding 'Christian' culture to prop it up
and mold its young, is not a death to lament," they claimed. "It is
an opportunity to celebrate."
As Bass described, Hauerwas and Willimon "believe that
Christendom, the ideal of a Christian nation, was historically
wrongheaded from the start. '"The church,' they argue, 'doesn't
have a social strategy; the church is a social strategy.'" She
observed that older evangelical leaders wanted Christendom back.
But the emerging leaders, influenced by Hauerwas and Willimon, are
"more interested in strengthening a confessing church based on the
model of Dietrich Bonhoeffer's alternative community in Hitler's
Germany."
According to Bass, younger Christians want a post-Christendom
church that is a "community of pilgrims joined together in
practices of faith and justice" that will "recreate Christian
political theology" in America. "D. James Kennedy, RIP," she
concluded. "And while we are at it, let us bury American
Christendom, too."
THIS ANALYSIS BY BASS seems a little harsh against old evangelical
chiefs like Kennedy and Falwell. Surrounded by the chaos of the
1960s and 1970s, the America of the 1950s must have seemed a
reassuring memory to them. And in fairness to both television
preachers, they both in an orthodox fashion saw the Christian walk
as ultimately a sojourn through a foreign land, no matter how
ostensibly friendly the surrounding culture may have seemed in the
past.
Stanley Hauerwas and his followers disdain Christendom, and they
like the Bonhoeffer model because they see the American "empire" as
not altogether dissimilar to the Third Reich against which the
Lutheran theologian struggled to the point of martyrdom. Old
evangelicals like Kennedy may have overly romanticized Christian
America. But baby boomer theologians and ethicists like Hauerwas
have themselves overreacted by demonizing America's past and
present.
America was never fully Christian in thought or behavior. But
James Kennedy fondly recalled some of old America's more admirably
Christian attributes, and he sought to perpetuate their memory,
with the hope that modern Americans might follow by example. His
was an imperfect labor of love and not entirely unsuccessful. May
he rest in peace indeed, and may his better ideas live on.
topics:
Television, Religion, Abortion, Books, Founding Fathers