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Candace Hamm's avatar

Oh well done. You just articulated the whole thing about Peterson et. al. with an eye to the real and very large problem looming over them far better than any academic take that I’ve seen, and took on the elephant in the room. I haven’t really seen anyone else do that yet (which doesn’t mean it isn’t out there, just that I haven’t seen it in the academic discussions I’ve been around.)

That’s valuable. This is not an academic vs. lay person take. Lay people have really valuable things to say too, just as much as us in the academy, and this was one of them. Thanks so much for this.

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Daniel F's avatar

"Jesus answered: 'My kingdom is not of this world.'"

Much of contemporary Christianity, consciously or not, ends up being very this-worldly. Even many of the good aspects of Christian culture – social charitable activities, encouragement of moral behavior, etc – can be this-worldly. All of the Cultural Christianity and Instrumental Christianity is this-worldly in focus, with barely any acknowledgement of spiritual realities.

And this is not a question of Liberal or Conservative, Left or Right. The “temptation on the left” (as Fr. Seraphim Rose referred to it) is making Christianity too “relevant”, submitting to contemporary trends, erasing any boundaries, mistaking extreme tolerance for love, etc. The “temptation on the right” is to make it overly moralistic, “based” and rigidly doctrinaire, to the extent that love is pushed aside in favor of “correctness”.

Two other interesting essays in this regard are the following:

One is Fr. Seraphim Rose’s “Letter to Thomas Merton”, which brilliantly summarizes the “Not-This-Worldliness” of true Christianity, as well as the risk that even our most well intentioned actions end up being a kind of outwardly focused busy-ness that distracts us from living a life of true repentance and of holiness.

Representative quote:

“You speak of "Christian action," "the Christian who manifests the truth of the Gospel in social action," "not only in prayer and penance, but also in his political commitments and in all his social responsibilities." Well, I certainly will say nothing against that; if Christian truth does not shine through in all that one does, to that extent one is failing to be a Christian, and if one is called to a political vocation, one's action in that area too must be Christian. But, if I am not mistaken, your words imply something more than that; namely, that now more than ever before we need Christians working in the social and political sphere, to realize there the truth of the Gospel. But why, if Christ's Kingdom is not of this world? Is there really a Christian "social message," or is not that rather a result of the one Christian activity—working out one's salvation with diligence? I by no means advocate a practice of Christianity in isolation; all Christianity—even that of the hermit—is a "social Christianity," but that is only as context, not as end. The Church is in society because men are in society, but the end of the Church is the transformation of men, not society. It is a good thing if a society and government profess genuine Christianity, if its institutions are informed by Christianity, because an example is given thereby to the men who are a part of that society; but a Christian society is not an end in itself, but simply a result of the fact that Christian men live in society.”

http://orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/merton.aspx

The other is Paul Kingsnorth’s recent essay / lecture “Against Christian Civilization”, which with its provocatively hyperbolic title, makes similar points:

“Did God intervene on Earth just to give us another identity to fight over? Or to build us a civilisation or an empire with a cross painted on it? Or did he tell us to live differently? To see differently. Literally, to repent, which in the original Greek word, metanoia, does not mean ‘say sorry’, as I always used to believe, but rather: transform yourself. Turn around, change your mind, change your heart, change your way of seeing. And through that: change the world."

https://paulkingsnorth.substack.com/p/against-christian-civilisation-ea2

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