Q & A: Ross Douthat on Rooting Out Bad Religion

Q & A: Ross Douthat on Rooting Out Bad Religion
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Bad Religion: How We Became a Nation of Heretics |
The biggest threat facing America is not a faltering economy or a spate of books by famed atheists. Rather, the country meets new challenges due to the decline of traditional Christianity, New York Times columnist Ross Douthat suggests in Bad Religion: How We Became a Nation of Heretics (Free Press). Douthat has taken his own personal tour of American Christianity: he was baptized Episcopalian, attended evangelical and Pentecostal churches as a child, and converted to Catholicism at age 17. He argues that prosperity preachers, self-esteem gurus, and politics operating as religion contribute to the contemporary decline of America. CT spoke with Douthat about America's decline from a vigorous faith, modern heretics, and why we need a revival of traditional Christianity.
What do you mean when you say we're facing the threat of heresy?
I try to use an ecumenical definition, starting with what I see as the theological common ground shared by my own Catholic Church and many Protestant denominations. Then I look at forms of American religion that are influenced by Christianity, but depart in some significant way from this consensus. It's a C. S. Lewisian, Mere Christianity definition of orthodoxy or heresy. I'm trying to look at the ways the American religion today departs from theological and moral premises that traditional Protestants and Catholics have in common.
How did America become a nation of heretics?
We've always been a nation of heretics. Heresy used to be constrained and balanced by institutional Christianity to a far greater extent than it is today. What's unique about our religious moment is not the movements and currents such as the "lost gospel" industry, the world of prosperity preaching, the kind of therapeutic religion that you get from someone like Oprah Winfrey, or various highly politicized forms of faith. What's new is the weakness of the orthodox Christian response. There were prosperity preachers and therapeutic religion in the 1940s and '50s—think of bestsellers like Norman Vincent Peale's The Power of Positive Thinking—but there was also a much more robust Christian center.
The Protestant and Catholic churches that made a real effort to root their doctrine and practice in historic Christianity were vastly stronger than they are today. Even someone who was dabbling in what I call heresy was also more likely to have something in his religious life—some institutional or confessional pressure—tugging him back toward a more traditional faith. The influence of heretics has been magnified by the decline of orthodox Christianity.
Have evangelicals created a fertile ground for heresy?
People have asked, "Don't all the trends that you describe go back to the Protestant Reformation?" Since I am a Roman Catholic, I do have sympathy for that argument [laughs]. But it's important not to leap to a historical determinism about theological and cultural trends. Some of the trends might represent the working out of ideas inherent in Protestantism or grow out of religious individualism that is more Protestant than Catholic. But I don't think it was necessarily inevitable that we reached this point. It's a long way from Martin Luther's On the Freedom of a Christian to Eat, Pray, Love, and a vigorous Protestantism should be able to prevent the former from degenerating into the latter.
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Like Abel
There's a lot of brainwashing of the sheep and any voice that can shatter the image of idolatry of the prosperity gospel is a blessing to the body of Christ. The worst case scenario is an evangelical media preacher that preaches compromise. When compromise is part of whats fed to the sheep…its no wonder Evangelism is a missing element in most of these churches, you eventually have to face reality and ask for repentance. ( I myself made a life commitment to stay in a prosperity gospel infected Charismatic church…its like being in North Korea )
russell rentler
"I'm sorry, i'm either brainwashed by my bible school professors, or the religion teaches some heresy." As a former evangelical Protestant for 31 years I need to be painfully truthful here. In answer to your question, your bible school professor probably brainwashed you. I too was never told that the early Christians believed and practiced a sacramental theology. No one told me that the early christians believed that Jesus truly became present in the consecration of the bread and wine and the early church services have been documented to be the Mass as it is now called. You asked for help. I humbly suggest you buy a Catechism, or email me I will send you one free, and learn what the Catholic Church says about itself, not what you were told. Once I discovered that the Early Church had beliefs and practices IDENTICAL with the Catholic Church, I had to surrender, despite my reservations. Becoming Catholic has been the greatest move I have ever made. .www.crossedthetiber.co
Bob Bobo
This is an excellent Q&A. I think he's done an amazing job putting all this in focus. Well said. This man knows his stuff. But I have one question. I think this is one of the best articles I've read in CT. But to be honest, I do find it funny that he's catholic. Why? Sure many christians are "catholic" and find the structure/ ceromony a spiritual experience. But, some of the most important doctrines passed down from Rome are such heresy (to many evangelicals). Some priests say works is the way to salvation. The idea that each sacrement in order saves the soule from birth to death only in the catholic "church". The wafer actually becoming the bread and body? I'm sorry, i'm either brainwashed by my bible school professors, or the religion teaches some heresy. In polictics we must embrace all diferences and common ground. We all have to live together, only God is the judge. I wish I could emprace the catholic doctrine as reliable, but I can't. Help please.