More than Hobby Lobby: My Take as a Scholar of Religious History
Charity R. Carney
Hobby Lobby was not my favorite work experience—it required
long hours, ridiculous record-keeping, exposure to monotonous Christian muzak,
and putting up with some creepy coworkers. It was, well, retail. Also, I worked
there for all of three months. I’ve been a religious historian for far longer
and thought I’d share my thoughts on the current case and the evolution of
corporate Christianity in general instead of dwelling on those three months of
stocking googly eyes. Huffington Post and Businessweek both interviewed me
regarding the current SCOTUS case and, while they had good questions, I think
that there are some points that have been missing from the discourse. Namely,
how is Hobby Lobby related to larger trends? What is actually happening to
evangelical religion in the United States? And why are reproductive
rights/contraception at the center of this struggle?
Much of the discourse surrounding Hobby Lobby is,
necessarily, about corporate Christianity. Of course, Hobby Lobby is a great example
of this particular phenomenon and contributes to a larger
narrative of the
blending of the corporate and religious that has been a theme in American
religious history. As our own Darren Grem pointed out, “Religion has been a
part of corporate America for quite some time.” I’ll leave this territory to
Darren and fellow business and religion scholars—it’s an exciting field and
there is obviously much relevance in this work right now. From my own developing
research on megachurches, however, I’m considering a slightly different
perspective on current trends.
Hobby Lobby may win this case because of the pro-business
and conservative nature of the Roberts Court, of course, but there’s a larger
cultural phenomenon that might be influencing public and political opinion as
well. The case is significant because it represents the blending of corporate
and Christian—and one very visible sector of American religion that mixes the
same stuff is the rapidly rising megachurch movement. The public and our
leadership have been primed to consider the religious rights of corporations
because of the general growth of Christian industry and that industry is
manifested in tax-free organizations like megachurches. In other words,
megachurches and seeker-sensitive churches, in particular, are assisting in
blurring the lines between business and religion so that it is difficult to
determine where one ends and the other begins.
Recently, there has been some (additional) attention on how
much money megachurches bring in as a result of the recent robbery at Lakewood
Church in Houston, Texas. The thieves took $600,000 in cash and checks from the
vault, which were the tithes from one weekend’s worth of services.
Some folks started doing the math and estimated that, conservatively, the
church brings in $32 million a year not including extra donations made on holidays
or electronic donations or bookstore sales. Lakewood should not be specifically
targeted for these large numbers—many megachurches bring in large amounts
through tithes, donations, and sales throughout the United States. And it is
largely due to the fact that megareligion has adapted so well over the past few
decades to this mingling of the corporate and the Christian.
Megachurches and megareligion (a term I use to include
televangelism and webcasts that incorporate even more followers into a congregation
or movement) incorporate so many elements of business with marketing,
advertising, entertaining, congregation studies, etc., that they confuse
corporate Christianity and Christianity that is corporate for the larger
culture. If a church is using flashy advertising, powerful
websites, is selling
merch with their logo on it, then it’s acting like a business. And if
businesses are promoting a specific religious doctrine and claiming exemption
from laws as a result, it’s behaving like a church. They have blended the
corporate and Christian beyond earlier permutations and the current religious
landscape has allowed for it. This negotiation of corporate/religious
boundaries leads to complications: If large organizations that pull in a lot of
money are able to have their religious rights protected, then why can’t others?
The difference is that some of those large organizations are churches and
others are retail stores.
That begs the question [scandalous and hyperbolic question alert]:
What is the difference between Hobby Lobby and some megachurches, other than
tax status? I know, I know, a lot. But at a core level, is there a similar
history there that ties these types of organizations together? I’d argue yes. Both
have strong doctrinal beliefs, both spread those beliefs to the masses (either
through broadcasts and services or through products and business practices).
The difference, of course, is that megachurches evangelize in an open,
intentional way and corporations like Hobby Lobby are more slippery in their
approach. They want to be religious organizations but without the pulpit (or
fancy glass podium that can be removed for the massive praise band, if you want
to get technical).
Huffington
Post reported that the “overt Christianity” of the Hobby Lobby environment
“shocked” me when I worked there. But what’s missing from this observation is
the fact that I was not shocked on a personal level. It was not a personal
offense. It was really interesting to me as a scholar of religious history. Evangelical
Christianity has taken some divergent paths in the 21st century.
Many denominations (UMC, for instance) are becoming more open to cultural
differences and others are more steadfast in their rejection of pluralism. Hobby
Lobby, a corporate institution that relies on a diverse group of customers to
succeed (supposedly), is blatantly disregarding the religious pluralism that
has gradually consumed large parts of 21st century American society.
While corporate Christianity has a long history in the United States (as correctly
pointed out by my colleagues), the 21st century is a different era
with increased diversity and different demands.
Some of that diversity also stems from sexual and
reproductive preferences. By fighting over birth control options, Hobby Lobby
is indicating that it rejects the notion that employees should/would have
alternative beliefs on the subject. The corporation’s “religious rights” are superseding
the employee’s rights, in other words. It’s the company’s religious rights
(which are constitutionally debatable, obviously) versus women’s rights over
their own body and reproduction (which we’ve dealt with in previous decades). While we discuss the shifting sands of
corporate/religious identities, it’s also worth exploring the place of women
(particularly their reproduction and sexuality) within this constellation of tricky
constitutional issues.
I keep conjuring the visage of Ed Young, Jr., explaining the
“Sexperiment” to congregants when I think of this tension, too. Young encourages
married couples in his church to have sex as much as possible and in
“Sextember” to have sex every day. One wonders where the pastor lands on the
birth control debate, considering his desire for frisky congregants. If it’s
Hobby Lobby’s approach hopefully his Fellowship Church has a large nursery
facility. All kidding aside, there are some pretty serious issues at stake with
the Hobby Lobby case and some interesting correlations to blooming megachurch
culture in the United States. It’s worth exploring.
Comments
http://www.npr.org/2014/04/01/282496855/can-a-television-network-be-a-church-the-irs-says-yes
Yes, but these do not have to be mutually exclusive. From the oral arguments:
JUSTICE ALITO: Are there ways of
accommodating the interests of the women who may want
these particular drugs or devices without imposing a
substantial burden on the employer who has the religious
objection to it?
MR. CLEMENT: There are ample less
restrictive alternatives, Your
Honor.
IOW, it's not "versus." The Hobby Lobby's owners' religious beliefs can be respected while the contraceptives can be got any number of other ways--including a direct government handout rather than a mandate on a third party.
The problem in my view is that this strongarming of the Hobby Lobbyists is so unnecessary. Our tradition of pluralism has at its best been one of accommodation, not confrontation.