I wrote a commentary on The End of Christian America for the Acton Institute. As you can tell from the title of this blog post, I’m a little skeptical.
Here’s a clip:
Christian America is busy dying again.
If you believe some partisan historians, it was dead before the American Revolution, or at least, nobody important was a Christian by then. The Founders had all moved on to deism. Then again, maybe Christian America died at the Scopes Trial during the 1920s when Clarence Darrow pinned down the non-theologian, non-scientist politician William Jennings Bryan with the power of hostile cross-examination. If it wasn’t dead by then, it was really dead by the late 1960s when every other religion book seemed to be about either the death of God movement or “secular” Christianity. The most memorable volume of the period was Harvey Cox’s The Secular City, which put a happy face of the death of public Christianity and heralded a new, more mature age of secular community.
Meanwhile, a host of prominent sociologists of religion sagely assured the public (and each other) that public faith simply could not co-exist with a world full of technological wonders like conveyor belts, cathode ray tubes, and time and motion studies. The great sociologist Peter Berger imagined tiny groups of believers huddled together against the coming of the 21st century.
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A man of faith in a godless age is hitting Americans where it hurts.
Mr. and Mrs. American Spectator Reader, let P.J. O’Rourke talk sense to your kids.
In Britain, defending your property can get you life.
The debacle of this president’s administration is both a cause and a symptom of the decline of American values. Unless Congress impeaches him, that decline will go on unchecked. An eminent jurist surveys the damage and assesses the chances for the recovery of our culture.
It won’t take long for conservatives to scratch this presidential wannabe off their 2008 scorecard.
The American Christmas, like the songs that celebrate it, makes room for everybody under the rainbow. Is that why so many people seem to be hostile to it?
Was the President done in by the economy, or by the politics of the economy?
H/T to National Review Online
Old Texican| 5.13.09 @ 2:27PM
Hah! Here we are "huddling together"! and uh, keeping our powder dry...."overcoming evil with good."
If God's plan is that we all get killed or intimidated into accepting evil as OK, then "Lord come quickly! and forgive us our shortcomings."
Pingback| 5.13.09 @ 2:40PM
The End of Christian America? Naaah. | But As For Me links to this page. Here’s an excerpt:
john kulits| 5.13.09 @ 2:55PM
I agree with the jalapeno-growing "Old Texican"-- Christianity never goes out of style, but it may go underground. Throughout history-- from the first three centuries of official state persecution of Christians, to four centuries of Greek Orthodox occupation and oppression under the Turks, and to the modern era of New Martyrs (e.g. Soviet Union, sub-Saharan Africa, and Kosovo)--the Kingdom of Christianity only grows stronger under the yoke of oppression.
Angel| 5.13.09 @ 5:53PM
The assertion that Christianity is dead is premature to say the least. Don't count on it, Secularists.
Alan Brooks| 5.13.09 @ 7:03PM
Christianity is all that is left as far as I know.
What else is there? TV? DVDs? music?
Pingback| 5.14.09 @ 12:33AM
The American Spectator : AmSpecBlog : The End of Christian America … | Contemporary links to this page. Here’s an excerpt: