The Homespun Gospel, or, Does Mark Driscoll Know He is Special?
Mark Edwards
Sentimentality
v. Utility in American Protestantism. In light of Matthew Bowman’s new book, The Urban Pulpit (Oxford, 2014), I've been thinking about what a
comparative, synthetic survey of liberal and conservative American evangelicalism
might look like. The words sentimental and utilitarian kept coming
to me as ways to characterize the fundamental differences between conservative
and liberal evangelicals. Utilitarian is relatively
straightforward: Some time ago, evangelicals—becoming fundamentalists, then new
evangelicals, and finally evangelical conservatives—decided to use cultural
forms like art, music, and architecture as tools to further their gospel of
personal salvation and friendship with Christ.
Evangelical conservatives really don’t care about those forms in and of
themselves—only their utility—and thus are willing to discard them when they no
longer “work” to provide ideological consent (anyone else have Christian
t-shirts in their closets?). In
contrast, liberal evangelicals are sentimental. I don’t mean they are overly
emotional as the word often implies today.
Rather, by sentimental, I mean that liberal evangelicals desire a faith
that is sensational or appealing to many senses. For them, historically, cultural forms are
important for the production and maintenance of public religious sensibilities (I’m thinking of Lori Merish’s notion of "Sentimental Materialism"). Faith, for
Christian sentimentalists, is less about intellectual assent and more about
coveting sacred feelings and experiences.
This is how and why liberal evangelicals like Horace Bushnell,
alongside if not before post-Christian social scientists, pioneered one of the
greatest intellectual revolutions of the twentieth century: recognition of the
social, environmental determination of personality.
Just when I thought I was on to something, I received
a copy of Todd Brenneman’s wonderful new book, Homespun Gospel: The Triumph of Sentimentality in Contemporary American Evangelicalism (Oxford, 2013). Needless to say, its arrival could not have
been more timely to complicate my categorizations of evangelical praxis. After the break, in lieu of a review (which
Jay Green has recently offered at Christianity
Today), readers will get a “sense” of what Brenneman means by evangelical
sentimentality.
Brenneman reimagines evangelicalism as “an aesthetic
formulated not only on belief but also by affective and experiential concerns”
(17). The sentimentality at the “core”
of modern evangelicalism—meaning the evangelicalism of Rick Warren, Joel
Osteen, and particularly Max Lucado, the main focus of the book—equates to
“emotionality,” or, “appeal to tender feelings” (3). The triumph of emotionality in evangelical
conservativism is ironic in that “muscular” fundamentalists and evangelicals like
Billy Sunday have often and long accused their liberal opponents of being soft
and effeminate (24, 61). In fact,
Brenneman insists that contemporary evangelicals willfully refuse to
interrogate their sentimental strategies.
As he elaborates:
In
focusing on the importance of emotion in evangelicalism, we will see that
evangelicals downplay the importance of doctrine. Defining evangelicalism only in terms of
doctrines and beliefs, then, avoids a sizable part of evangelical practice and
misses that evangelicals themselves do not prioritize the very feature scholars
point to as their essential characteristic.
Evangelicals have in fact abandoned a concern with doctrine, although
the beliefs stereotypically associated with them still shape the evangelical
worldview. Emotion, however, pervades
evangelicalism and provides us with a better assessment of the vitality of the
movement (4).
Drawing upon Tracy Fessenden and others, Brenneman
is interested in exploring how evangelical sentimentality has enabled claims to
cultural and political authority. Here
again, it seems, evangelical leaders are replicating the ministerial tactics of
their liberal forbearers and not knowing it.
Sentimental evangelical themes of “nostalgia, domesticity, and familial
love” (7) were mainly invented by nineteenth-century liberal evangelicals like
the Beechers and Bushnell in opposition to the supposedly shallow
emotionality conjured by the revivalists.
Brenneman recognizes this as well, noting how the theologically liberal
Harriet Beecher Stowe effectively harnessed “the power of feeling to create
moral action” (6, 8-9) in Uncle Tom’s
Cabin. (See also Brenneman’s
connection at Then and Now between Elizabeth Stuart Phelps’s 1868 phenom, The Gates Ajar, and the new film, Heaven is for Real.) Stowe through fiction, and Bushnell through
theology, propagated the “moral influence” of their respective suffering
saviors in part to shore up the redemptive power of the Northern Protestant
middles classes. Similarly, evangelical
sentimentality today powers a Mrs.-PAC-men politics of “family values.”
However, in the prophetic spirit of Christopher
Lasch, and in terms reminiscent of T. J. Jackson Lears’s many complaints about
liberal Victorian Protestants, Brenneman concludes that the soppy saints of
evangelical conservativism are not nurturing collective moral action but rather
a therapeutic gospel of “narcissism” and “anti-intellectualism.” As he explains,
Sentimentality
obscures the deeper ideologies at work in evangelical emotional rhetoric and
conceals certain aspects of human experience, such as structural inequalities
from the evangelical gaze. Ultimately
the narcissism of the sentimental appeal works against clear engagement with
the difficulties of human life, focusing instead on the glorification of the
individual. . . . The hoped-for communal transformation of eighteenth-century
evangelicalism has been replaced by a focus on individual transformation that
advocates—explicitly or implicitly—self-absorption. With this shift evangelicals have perhaps
sown the seeds of the failure of their own ideology (15-16).
Furthermore, Brenneman accuses evangelical authors
of having “created a simplistic message that operates in place of a
well-reasoned, intellectual approach to spirituality” (52). On this point, Homespun Gospel should be read as an important supplement to Molly
Worthen’s Apostles of Reason
(Oxford, 2013). While both Worthen and Brenneman
believe that anti-intellectualism is the evangelical conservative’s natural
trajectory, they get to that position in very different ways. And perhaps the latter is right: scholars of
religion should get over troubling the tired rationality of a Francis Schaeffer or Ken
Ham so they can turn their eyes upon Lucado.
I’d gladly welcome any comments on, correctives to,
or dismissals of my sentimental/utilitarian typology at its most premature
stage. More importantly, would somebody
PLEASE send a copy of Homespun Gospel
to Mark Driscoll and to your friendly neighborhood Christian MMA??
Comments
If so, I'm always uneasy about from where such pronouncements issue--from the historian, a theologian, perhaps a sociologist? Or just another fellow Christian with no alphabet soup following his name atall?
To the point, the argument against "sentimentality" and "feelings," I'm reminded of my favorite quote from "Old light" [and "proto-unitarian, some say] Charles Chauncy, who questioned the "enthusiasms" of the First Great Awakening:
there are among these Exhorters, Babes in Age, as well as Understanding. They are chiefly indeed young Persons, sometimes Lads, or rather Boys: Nay, Women and Girls; yea, Negroes, have taken upon them to do the Business of Preachers.
?!
=;-O