The Emerging Christian Minority
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Contributors
David Novak
William T. Cavanaugh
Paige Hochschild
David Novak
Kathryn Schifferdecker
Anton Vrame
Joseph Small
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The Emerging Christian Minority - Victor Lee Austin
The Emerging Christian Minority
edited by
Victor Lee Austin & Joel C. Daniels
1657.pngTHE EMERGING CHRISTIAN MINORITY
Pro Ecclesia Series
8
Copyright ©
2019
Wipf and Stock Publishers. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers,
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Cascade Books
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
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paperback isbn: 978-1-5326-3102-3
hardcover isbn: 978-1-5326-3104-7
ebook isbn: 978-1-5326-3103-0
Cataloguing-in-Publication data:
Names: Austin, Victor Lee, editor. | Daniels, Joel C., editor.
Title: The emerging Christian minority / edited by Victor Lee Austin and Joel C. Daniels.
Description: Eugene, OR : Cascade Books,
2019
| Pro Ecclesia Series
8
| Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers:
isbn 978-1-5326-3102-3 (
paperback
) | isbn 978-1-5326-3104-7 (
hardcover
) | isbn 978-1-5326-3103-0 (
ebook
)
Subjects: LCSH: Secularization (Theology). | Christianity—
21
st century. | Christianity and other religions. | Civilization, Western.
Classification:
BR481 .E53 2019 (
) | BR481 .E53 (
ebook
)
Manufactured in the USA.
March 18, 2019
Chapter 5 originally appeared in Joseph Small, Flawed Church, Faithful God (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2018). Reprinted by permission of the publisher; all rights reserved.
Table of Contents
Title Page
List of contributors
Preface
Chapter 1: Is It Good to Be Persecuted?
Chapter 2: St. Augustine on the Church as Sacrifice, Then and Now
Chapter 3: To Be a Minority
Chapter 4: A Tree Planted by Streams of Water: Scriptural Lessons on Hope
Chapter 5: Professing the Faith in A Secular Age
Chapter 6: Orthodoxy in America: A Minority That Came of Age
The Pro Ecclesia Series
Books in The Pro Ecclesia Series are for the church.
The series is sponsored by the Center for Catholic and Evangelical Theology, founded by Carl Braaten and Robert Jenson in 1991. The series seeks to nourish the church’s faithfulness to the gospel of Jesus Christ through a theology that is self-critically committed to the biblical, dogmatic, liturgical, and ethical traditions that form the foundation for a fruitful ecumenical theology. The series reflects a commitment to the classical tradition of the church as providing the resources critically needed by the various churches as they face modern and post-modern challenges. The series will include books by individuals as well as collections of essays by individuals and groups. The Editorial Board will be drawn from various Christian traditions.
titles in the series include:
The Morally Divided Body: Ethical Disagreement and the Unity of the Church, edited by Michael Root and James J. Buckley
Christian Theology and Islam, edited by Michael Root and James J. Buckley
Who Do You Say That I Am?: Proclaiming and Following Jesus Today, edited by Michael Root and James J. Buckley
What Does It Mean to Do This
?: Supper, Mass, Eucharist, edited by Michael Root and James J. Buckley
Heaven, Hell, . . . and Purgatory?, edited by Michael Root and James J. Buckley
Life Amid the Principalities: Identifying, Understanding, and Engaging Created, Fallen, and Disarmed Powers Today, edited by Michael Root and James J. Buckley
Remembering the Reformation: Commemorate? Celebrate? Repent?, edited by Michael Root and James J. Buckley
List of contributors
Victor Lee Austin, the Program Director of the Center for Catholic and Evangelical Theology, is Theologian-in-residence of the Episcopal Diocese of Dallas and Church of the Incarnation, Dallas. His publications include Up with Authority: Why We Need Authority to Flourish as Human Beings (Bloomsbury, 2010), Christian Ethics: A Guide for the Perplexed (Bloomsbury, 2012), and, most recently, Losing Susan: Brain Disease, the Priest’s Wife, and the God Who Gives and Takes Away (Brazos, 2016).
William T. Cavanaugh is Director of the Center for World Catholicism and Intercultural Theology and Professor of Catholic Studies at DePaul University. He is the author of seven books, including The Myth of Religious Violence: Secular Ideology and the Roots of Modern Conflict (Oxford University Press, 2009) and Field Hospital: The Church’s Engagement with a Wounded World (Eerdmans, 2016). He co-edits the journal Modern Theology. He has lectured on six continents, and his writings have been published in twelve languages.
Joel C. Daniels is Rector of the Nevil Memorial Church of Saint George in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, and postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Mind and Culture. His monograph, Theology, Tragedy, and Suffering in Nature: Toward a Realist Doctrine of Creation, was published by Peter Lang in 2016 as part of the Studies in Episcopal and Anglican Theology series. He is Assistant Editor of the journal Religion, Brain & Behavior, adjunct faculty at Fordham University and the General Theological Seminary, and serves on the board of directors of the Society of Scholar-Priests.
Paige E. Hochschild is on the theology faculty of Mount St. Mary’s University, in Emmitsburg, Maryland. Her most recent publication is Memory in Augustine’s Theological Anthropology (Oxford University Press, 2012).
David Novak is the Richard and Dorothy Shiff Chair of Jewish Studies at the University of Toronto. He is the author of Jewish Justice: The Contested Limits of Nature, Law, and Covenant (Baylor University Press, 2017), The Sanctity of Human Life (Georgetown University Press, 2009), and Talking with Christians: Musings of a Jewish Theologian (Eerdmans, 2005). His book, Covenantal Rights: A Study in Jewish Political Theory (Princeton University Press, 2000), won the annual award of the American Academy of Religion for best book in constructive religious thought.
Kathryn Schifferdecker is Associate Professor of Old Testament at Luther Seminary, St. Paul, Minnesota. She is the author of Out of the Whirlwind: Creation Theology in the Book of Job (Harvard University Press, 2008). She is a regular contributor to Workingpreacher.org and Word & World.
Joseph D. Small served as director of the Presbyterian Church (USA.) Office of Theology and Worship from 1989–2011. He is currently adjunct faculty at the University of Dubuque Theological Seminary, the Reformed Institute of Metropolitan Washington, and church relations consultant to the Presbyterian Foundation. He is the author of, among other books, To Be Reformed: Living the Tradition (Witherspoon Press, 2010) and Let Us Reason Together: Christians and Jews in Conversation (Witherspoon Press, 2010). His festschrift, Theology in Service of the Church: Essays in Honor of Joseph D. Small 3rd, was published in 2008 (Geneva Press).
Anton C. Vrame is Director of the Department of Religious Education of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. He is also Adjunct Associate Professor of Religious Education at Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology. He has focused much of his research on the sociology of the Orthodox Christian churches in the United States, which has led him to examine the history of Orthodoxy in America. He is a member of the Convening Table on Theological Dialogue on Matters of Faith and Order (the Faith and Order Commission) of the National Council of Churches, and served for five years as the Chair of Faith and Order. He is a priest of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.
Preface
Victor Lee Austin and Joel C. Daniels
Ever since the Edict of Milan in AD 313, the Christian church has enjoyed a special relationship with civic authorities in Western Europe. The reign of Christendom—a catch-all term for the social, political, and cultural privileges enjoyed by the Christian church—was an integral component in the development of Europe from the Middle Ages onward. While its vestiges may remain, Christendom finds itself losing ground rapidly. Part of this retreat is due to the growing proportion of non-Christian religions in the West, but most of it has to do with increased secularization and a general turn away from religion altogether. According to the Pew Research Forum, the primary driver in decreasing rates of service attendance and beliefs in the United States is the rise of the nones
: persons who claim no religious affiliation at all, particularly those born after 1980.¹ As of 2015, the religiously unaffiliated accounted for 23 percent of all American adults; the group accounted for 16 percent in 2007.
What does this changing landscape mean for existing Christian communities? Are there biblical or historical precedents for this situation? What should we expect in the future? These were the issues taken up by the speakers at the 2016 conference, The Emerging Christian Minority,
sponsored by the Center for Catholic and Evangelical Theology. Each author here addresses the topic from a different perspective. Given the historical relationship between persecution and church vitality, William Cavanaugh asks, Is it good to be persecuted?
Paige E. Hochschild discusses Augustine’s reflections on the church as sacrifice. David Novak, a rabbi, makes an interfaith contribution by discussing the Jewish experience of minority status in the West. Kathryn Schifferdecker finds hope for the future in the words of Scripture, specifically in the book of Job. Joseph Small looks to the early church and the church in the global south to reflect on the place of the gospel in an age of secularization. Finally, Anthony Vrame examines the archives of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America to tell the story of that communion’s growth in a foreign land: the United States.
There is no doubt that the religious landscape in the United States will continue to shift, with some consequences that cannot be predicted. As these writers show, however, these changes provide the church with opportunities as well as challenges. We hope that these collected reflections can serve as an inspiration to Christian communities, who seem to be emerging into a minority status, to increase their faith in the one who promised to be with us always, even to the end of the age.
Victor Lee Austin, Episcopal Diocese of Dallas
Joel C. Daniels, Nevil Memorial Church of St. George and Center for Mind and Culture
1. http://www.pewforum.org/2015/11/03/u-s-public-becoming-less-religious/.
1
Is It Good to Be Persecuted?
William T. Cavanaugh
Is it good to be persecuted? No, it’s not. It is not good to be persecuted. It is bad to be persecuted.
I am tempted to stop there, but the editors of this volume who gave me the title for my paper would probably not be pleased. They clearly had more in mind than the simple question of whether or not being on the receiving end of persecution is a good thing. No sane person would say that being tortured and executed for one’s faith is positive. But one could make the argument that the church is stronger and better under persecution. The intensity and devotion of Polish and Irish Catholicism in the twentieth century is often attributed to the persecution of the church under the Communists and the British. It might not be a coincidence that Catholic practice in Ireland has taken a steep dive since the peace accord was signed on Good Friday in 1998. Likewise, the Catholic Church in Chile seems to have lost much of its sense of purpose now that it doesn’t have General Pinochet to kick it around anymore.
Even if one buys that argument on a purely sociological basis, however, there are few who would demand the return of human rights abuses so that the church could feel needed again. But there could be a sense, as Candida Moss puts it, that In Christian terms, if you’re being persecuted, you must be doing something right.
¹ Persecution, in these terms, is not something to be desired, either for its own sake or for some end such as strengthening the church, but when found it is an indicator that Christians have taken the high moral ground. The fact of being persecuted could then be worn as a badge of honor. Claiming to be persecuted could be used as evidence of the rightness of one’s cause, and therefore also as evidence of the depravity of one’s opponents. Claiming to be a victim of persecution could have the effect of galvanizing the church around a righteous cause, indeed the cause of Jesus Christ and the martyrs who also suffered persecution for righteousness’s sake. Persecution could also be a rallying point around which to draw outsiders to sympathize with the church’s plight.
There is a sense among many Christians today that Christians are not only rapidly becoming a minority in American society, but are becoming a persecuted minority. The campaign for religious liberty that the Catholic bishops and others have put forward is in many ways a response to this sense that the church is vulnerable to officially sanctioned interference and even persecution for sticking to its principles in a rapidly changing society. In the midst of the 2012 election campaign, Francis Cardinal George of Chicago repeated in print his famous off-the-cuff remark that he expected to die in bed, my successor will die in prison, and his successor will die a martyr in the public square.
In the same column he wrote, Secularism is communism’s better-scrubbed bedfellow,
and denounced the anti-religious sentiment, much of it explicitly anti-Catholic, that has been growing in this country for several decades.
²
The rhetoric of Cardinal George and others has evoked a reaction not only among secularists but among some Christians who have criticized such language for its polarizing effects on our discourse. Candida Moss, formerly of Notre Dame and now professor of theology at the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom, has gone further, and located a kind of persecution complex endemic to Christianity which she sees as responsible for coarsening our current political debates. Moss’s book The Myth of Persecution (2013) is a full-frontal attack on the way Christians have narrated the history of early Christian martyrdom. According to Moss, the tales of relentless Roman persecution of Christians are largely fabrications of the postmartyrdom period meant to lend legitimacy to orthodox Christian power. Although Moss is an academic, her book was published by a popular press, HarperOne, and it is aimed at and has found a general audience. The book is not just about the past, but about how the rhetoric of persecution has poisoned political and cultural debates in the present by allowing Christians to proclaim victim status and demonize opponents.
In this chapter, I will examine the rhetoric of persecution among Christians from two opposing points of view, that of Moss and that of the U. S. Catholic Bishops’ campaign for religious liberty. I will argue that both are seriously flawed, and for the same reason: neither can countenance the idea that there