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« News not on the Networks | Main | Leave our Hymns Alone » September 20, 2005
The Creed of MTD and the Apostle's Creed
As I've continued thinking about the way that the liberal political commitments shape institutional life in the United Staes with their own ideas of what the true, good, and beautiful entail, I recognize that it becomes very difficult to resist the temptation to be defined as against these currents in order to sustain the faithful witness of the church. If Christian Smith is correct in his analysis, an analysis consistent with scholars like Bill Cavanaugh in his essay in Radical Orthodoxy, liberalism exists in the formation of the nation-state as a parody of the church. Parodies only work if there is sufficient commonality with the "real thing" that one can see the humor in the parodic performance. What happens when no one can see that a parody is a parody? Yet when one is engaged in the performance of the real thing, how does one reject the parody without rejecting the truthfulness that the parody entails, and even, instructs? Smith describes the "Creed" of Moral Therapeutic Deism (or Relational Deity) as In and of itself, except for the oversimplification of #2 and the blatant falisity of #4, there is nothing untruthful about the rest of this "Creed". It describes well some profoundly Christian convictions. Yet this is why it is perhaps so insidious, for it overwhelms the baptismal Creed of the Church: The Apostles Creed: I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Who was conceived of the Holy Spirit, I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy *catholic church, One can move from the Apostle's Creed to affirmations in the Creed of MTD by a certain process of disembodiment and abstraction, the particularistic rearticulation that comes from re-placing the church with the nation-state. In seeing this, Smith's additional comments make sense: What Smith doesn't adequately emphasize is that this "faith" is every bit as much as particular and exclusive as other traditions -- it just masks its particularity by a language of "tolerance" -- and we all know that tolerance cannot tolerate the intolerance. It is the majority discourse within this society, even as it has colonialized the life of the church, whether it be mainline or evangelical Protestant, or Roman Catholic or Eastern Orthodox. Academic theologians have given sophisticated and profound intellectual formulations to support it. It is tempting to see the Tillich versus Barth or the Rahner versus Balthasar tensions of 20th century theology in light of the defense of MTD versus ecclesial resistance to MTD. Yet the real place for the issue is within the parish or local congregation. Pastors face incredible pressure, social and financial, to extract the Creed of MTD from the Apostle's Creed, or merely to interpret the Apostle's Creed in light of MTD (or just abandon the Apostle's Creed and baptism). In good intentioned response to the struggles of those around, the pastor/priest intuitively responds to the "needs of the parishioners" -- and often rightfully so -- from within the truthfulness of the parody. Yet in the process, the life of the church so easily becomes colonized and distorted, the home of a parasite rather than the Holy Spirit. Perhaps this is the challenge for us today: how not to be defined by the parody even while we resist it; how to embrace the truthfulness of what the parody emphasizes while not letting it colonize the life of the church. This calls for great wisdom, far exceeding mine. It seems to me that God has given the church (ie., local congregations, parishes that are at once local and catholic) three distinct, simple practices that might help us live faithfully: (1) Reading the Scriptures in worship and the faithful proclamation of the Word; (2) The Sacraments, especially baptism and the Lord's Supper, the Eucharist; and (3) the Works of Mercy. While in isolation from each other, each one may be coopted into MTD and thus the service of the liberal nation-state. Yet when a congregation/parish remains committed to enfolding all three as witness to the Triune God, it seems to me that they become a profound means of grace to sustain the faithful life of the church, even amidst the tremendous power of the institutions of this society to coopt and colonialize the life of the church. Posted by johnwright at September 20, 2005 8:15 AM |
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