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- WHEN BEDBUGS BITE:
- THE UNEASY MARRIAGE
- OF EVANGELICALISM
- AND WESTERN INDIVIDUALISM
-
-
- Copyright 1986
- by
- C. Thomas Culver
-
- Wheaton College
- Wheaton, Illinois
-
- 23 April 1986
-
- OUTLINE
-
- I. Introduction
- II. Individualism
- A. Definition
- 1. Historically
- 2. Modern Attempts
- 3. Hollinger's Typology
- a. Individualism as Metaphysic
- b. Individualism as Value System and as Social Philosophy
- B. Historical Development
- 1. Medieval Society
- 2. The Renaissance
- 3. The Reformation
- 4. The Enlightenment
- 5. Puritanism
- III. Evangelical Individualism
- A. Ecclesiology
- B. Social Ethics
- 1. Historically
- 2. Modern Trends
- a. A Cursory Glance
- b. An Indepth Look
- c. The Two Kingdoms
- IV. Conclusion
-
-
-
-
- I. Introduction
-
- The concept of contextualization has, in recent years, gained such
- widespread acceptance among missionaries and missiologists that today in many
- circles to speak of a contextualized Christianity is to be guilty of a
- tautology. That an evangelist or a church planter in Africa is aiding in the
- building of an _African_ church, that a theologian in an Asian seminary is
- striving to help his Asian students develop an Asian theology free from all
- Western influence, has become axiomatic. The gospel of Christ, it is said
- repeatedly, is not the property of any one culture, but is above all culture,
- and therefore it is the missionary's sacred duty in the presentation of the
- gospel to divorce himself from all Western ways and to address his audience
- not with Western jargon but in terms congruent with the receptor's culture.
- Thus it is encumbent on the cross-cultural worker, before all work begins, to
- learn not simply the native language, but much of the native culture as well.
-
- However, as Friederich Dierks points out[1], it is not sufficient to
- understand the ways of the receptor culture. The missionary must first come
- to a understanding of his own culture and all the ways in which his own
- understanding of Christianity has been shaped by it. The missionary task
- begins not with the contextualization of the gospel but its
- _de_contextualization, and it is this step perhaps even more than
- recontextualization in concepts familiar to the receptor which is the most
- difficult the missionary will ever take, for, in the words of an old Tswana
- proverb, _Tshwene ga e ipone mariba_ -- a baboon can never see how ugly his
- sunken eyes are.
-
- Yet for all its importance, little has been done to aid the missionary in
- understanding his own culture explicitly. He is left on his own to discover
- -- or not -- his cultural preconceptions. All too often the missionary never
- realizes that his failures are due to his continued use of Western
- methodologies and Western patterns, opting instead to blame the receptor
- people. Moffat probably never came to understand that the observed lack of
- altars and other concrete signs of worship among the Tswana people was due
- not, as he thought, to a lack of religion, but rather to the fact that the
- African, for whom the whole of his environment and the whole of time is
- permeated with religious meaning, does not feel the cumpulsion which the
- Westerner, with his Western tendency toward separation of things sacred and
- profane, feels to set aside and invest with special religious meaning places
- such as a church building or an altar or times such as Sunday or Easter or
- Christmas. Anecdotes without end could be told of similar incidents, many or
- most of which would be quite humorous were it not for the damage which such
- misunderstandings have caused. As Dierks asserts, "Dualism in missionary
- communication was therefore directly responsible for the formation of a
- syncretistic Christianity in Africa. Christianity in Africa could have been
- different if the message had been embedded in the holistic world-view of
- African peoples."[2]
-
- Thus it becomes imperative for a missionary to learn along with his or
- her studies in methodologies of contextualization and biculturalism and
- training for cross-cultural experience something of just how it is that
- Western (and in particular American) society has contextualized and adapted
- (and distorted) the gospel. This paper is an attempt to foster dialogue to
- that end. It is not within the scope of this paper (or for that matter the
- competency of its writer) to discuss all aspects of the problem. Indeed, to
- do so properly would demand a concerted effort by scholars from many fields --
- theology, sociology, anthropology, psychology and history for starters.
- Rather, I wish to discuss one aspect of Western society which has contributed
- greatly to the modern Western interpretation of the message of Christ. It is
- at this point that I wish to acknowledge Dierks's analysis of Western society
- in highlighting its four main features. It is not my intent to critique or
- defend the adequacy of his analysis but simply to discuss more in depth one of
- the four features. The features which Dierks sees in Western culture are
- dualism, spiritualism, intellectualism and individualism.[3] It is to the
- last of these -- individualism -- that I wish to speak. Specifically, I wish
- to address American individualism and its formative influence on evangelical
- ecclesiology and social ethics.
-
-
-
-
- II. Individualism
- A. Definition
- 1. Historically
-
- Before we can undertake our primary task it will be necessary to define
- what is meant by individualism. The term, as applied to America and
- Americans, dates back to Alexis de Tocqueville's analysis of American culture
- of the 1830's, _Democracy in America_. In his now-classic work, Tocqueville
- defined individualism as
-
- a mature and calm feeling, which disposes each member of the community to
- sever himself from the mass of his fellows, and to draw apart with his
- family and his friends; so that after he has thus formed a little circle
- of his own, he willingly leaves society at large to itself.[4]
-
- Tocqueville said of Americans
-
- They owe nothing to any man, they expect nothing from any man; they
- acquire the habit of always considering themselves standing alone, and
- they are apt to imagine that their whole destiny is in their own hands.
- Thus, not only does democracy make every man forget his ancestors,
- but it hides his descendents, and separates his contemporaries from him;
- it throws him back upon himself alone.[5]
-
- Tocqueville did not invent the term individualism, but borrowed it from
- post-Revolution France, where it was coined to describe the anti-social
- motivation of self-interest.[6] Tocqueville borrowed the term, but sought to
- divorce from it the negative idea of a force which brought uprootedness,
- social fragmentation, ruthless competition, and lack of ideals and common
- beliefs.
-
-
- 2. Modern Attempts
-
- Though this is the starting point for developing a definition of
- individualism, it is by no means the end. Many studies have attempted
- analyses of the term, and yet it has consistently proven ambiguous and
- elusive. Space does not permit a recounting of the history of the study of
- the concept, therefore it must suffice to mention a few of the more notable
- attempts.
-
- Perhaps the most interesting definitions have centered around attempts to
- develop general typologies. A.D. Lindsay has described individualism as
- having three meanings: a state of mind in which one thinks for himself, a
- theory of the proper relation of the individual to the state, and the doctrine
- of the individual as a self-determined whole with any large whole being merely
- an aggregate of individuals.[7] Konraad Swart, in an article entitled
- "Individualism in the Mid-Nineteenth Century", offered a discussion of three
- "ideas" central to an individualistic world view: 1) the rights of man
- (political liberalism), 2) a tendency toward anti-statism (laissez-faire
- economics), and 3) individuality (what Swart calls romantic individualism).[8]
-
- Steven Lukes, in what is perhaps one of the most comprehensive analyses
- of individualism, has offered a list of eleven "Basic Ideas" inherent in
- individualism: dignity of man, autonomy, privacy, self-development, abstract
- individualism, political individualism, economic individualism, religious
- individualism, ethical individualism, epistemological individualism, and
- methodological individualism.[9] Lukes' analysis, though insightful, is too
- narrow, however, for our purposes here.
-
-
- 3. Hollinger's Typology
-
- Dennis Hollinger offers a new analysis, centered around a typology
- consisting of three types: individualism as metaphysic, as value system and as
- social philosophy.[10] I will be using Hollinger's analysis heavily
- throughout this paper. Though this paper will be most concerned with
- individualism as metaphysic, it will be necessary to understand indiviualism
- as social philosophy and as value system as well.
-
- a. Individualism as Metaphysic
-
- Individualism as a metaphysic is, according to Hollinger,
-
- a view of reality in which the individual is the most basic entity and
- the defining principle of all existence. It is an atomistic conception
- of reality in which a collection has no existence apart from its
- constituent parts....Such a metaphysic regards social and political rules
- and institutions as artifices and modifiable means of fulfilling
- individual objectives. Individual needs, rights and instincts are viewed
- independently of a social context.[11]
-
- Thus metaphysical individualism sees society as simply the sum of its parts.
- To understand social phenomena one need only understand individual actions.
- Society as a living, breathing community is a myth. The Greek philosopher
- Epicurus, caught up in the atomistic world-view of his day, intended exactly
- this in his statement "there is no such thing as society." All organismic
- aspects of society are denied in favor of an atomistic reductionism. This
- view comes complete with an implicit methodology for the analysis of society.
-
- b. Individualism as Value System and as Social Philosophy
-
- In addition to metaphysical individualism, Hollinger sees
- individualism as a social philosophy and a value system. As a social
- philosophy, individualism moves beyond mere description of reality as it is
- and offers a normative evaluation of what society should be, in terms of
- society's relationship to the individual and the individual's relationship to
- society. Individualism as a social philosophy "sets forth political, economic
- and social maxims which reflect the centrality of the atomistic individual
- over every collective."[12]
-
- On the other hand, individualism as a value system offers a set of
- values in which the individual's primacy over the group is asserted.
- Individualism as a value system again moves beyond description into
- proscription, proscribing a set of "oughts", in this case what ought to be a
- part of the individual's existence. Individualism as a value system differs
- from individualism as a social philosophy in that it defines those parts of an
- individual's existence which are valuable and to be preserved and defended,
- whereas individualism as a social philosophy attempts to set forth rules and
- regulations governing individual-societal relations. Probably the most famous
- example of individualism as a value system comes from the preamble to the
- Declaration of Independence:
-
- We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal,
- that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights,
- that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
-
- and conclusively demonstrates that individualism as a value system is to be
- found at the very heart of American culture.
-
-
-
- B. Historical Development
-
- As should be apparent by now, it is the thesis of this paper that
- American Evangelicalism has imbibed, usually unconciously, many of the values
- of Western individualism, and that these values have played a key formative
- role in the development of much of evangelical theology, including (and, for
- the purposes of this paper, especially) doctrines of the church and social
- ethics.
-
- Actually, it is not quite fair to say that evagelicalism borrowed its
- individualism wholesale from Western society. Both evangelical and Western
- individualism find common roots as far back as the Renaissance and the
- Reformation, though each has encouraged and influenced the other over the
- course of the following centuries.
-
-
- 1. Medieval Society
-
- The central tenets of medieval society were hierarchy and
- subordination, tenets which dictated that every member of society has his own
- niche and his own role to fill, and thus maintained and fostered order.
- Society as a whole was conceived to be a large organism and each member of
- society a component part with his own set of functions. Thus social
- philosophy operated under a strongly collectivistic metaphysic, seeing society
- as organismic and hierarchical. Society as a whole was central; the
- individual mattered only as a part of that whole.
-
- The conscience of the medieval individual, according to David Miller,
- "lacked the subjective component; it was, rather, the internalization of an
- external authority."[13]
-
- The individual did not exist for his own sake but for the sake of the
- whole society. This organological thesis was to lead in time to the
- full-fledged integration theory of the corporate body politic, in which
- the individual is wholly submerged in society for the sake of the well-
- being of society itself.[14]
-
-
- 2. The Renaissance
-
- It wasn't until the period of the Renaissance in the 12th and 13th
- centuries that medieval humanists, though primarily interested in a rebirth of
- classical learning and arts, began to alter the perceptions of the
- relationship of the individual to society by elevating the individual above
- society. Their work, however, wasn't to bloom into anything like modern
- individualism for at least another three and a half centuries.
-
-
- 3. The Reformation
-
- In the Reformation of the 16th century we find one of the primary roots
- of modern Western individualism. It was during this period that medieval
- hierarchical and organismic concepts were further undermined and seeds of
- further individualistic philosophies were planted. Though certainly
- unintended by its leaders, Protestantism of the 16th century greatly impacted
- philosophical concepts of the relationship of the individual to society.
-
- Roman Catholicism throughout the Middle Ages had been an institution
- largely built on concepts of hierarchy, sacrement and organism. The context
- and the agent of one's salvation, and the source of one's relationship to God,
- was the mediation of the church. It was Martin Luther and his disciples who
- rebelled against these Catholic doctrines, teaching instead concepts such as
- justification by faith, the priesthood of all believers, and the doctrine of
- vocation, all of which were, relative at least to pre-Reformation thought,
- highly individualistic, containing within them a new conception of individual
- conscience and responsibility before God.
-
- [It was] the great work and divine mission of Protestantism to place each
- individual soul in immediate union with Christ and his Word; to complete
- in each one the work of redemption, to build in each one a temple of God,
- a spiritual church; and to unfold and sanctify all the energies of the
- individual.[15]
-
-
- 4. The Enlightenment
-
- It was during the Enlightenment that individualism really came into its
- own. The Enlightenment was, as much as anything, a rejection of medieval
- values. This can be seen perhaps most graphically in the rise of modern
- science which took as its foundation the philosophies of British philosopher
- John Locke and his concept of the complex idea. Locke declared that any
- complex idea was nothing but a collection of particular ideas which were, in
- turn, further reduceable to particular sensations dependent for their
- existence on the individual. It must be noted that in large part Locke's
- philosophy was simply a harkening back to ancient Greek atomistic notions.
-
- Locke, in turn, was highly influential in the development early in the
- 18th century of the philosophies of Voltaire and Rousseau. Voltaire and
- Rousseau both came to reject all claims for an independent status for
- universals, denied the existence of abstracts, and declared that societies
- existed merely for the convenience of the individual. It was Rousseau's
- theory of the social compact -- that society is merely a contractual form
- agreed to by individuals -- which was most influential during the French
- Revolution. General societal will, Rousseau declared, was nothing more than a
- collection of individual wills. Freedom, autonomy, privacy, dignity, self-
- determination -- these were the new values of the Enlightenment. They were
- also among the biggest influences on 18th century American thought. The
- Declaration of Independence could almost have been pulled direct from the
- pages of Locke's _Two Treatises on Government_. Though the Enlightenment was
- spawned in Europe, it only really took root when it was transplanted to
- American soil.
-
-
- 5. Puritanism
-
- Puritanism played a key role in the development of American life and
- thought. The concept of the Protestant Ethic, most closely associated with
- the work of Max Weber, saw the Puritans as the epitome and paradigm of
- individual hard work, discipline and thrift. It was in Puritan thought that
- individualistic motifs were most fully developed. This is amply illustrated
- by John Bunyan's classic work, _Pilgrim's Progress_. In it the call to begin
- the Christian pilgrimage came to Christian alone and, though greeted from time
- to time by other travelers, it was above all Christian's own isolated,
- individual journey.
-
- Louis Hartz has dubbed individualism the great gift of Puritanism to
- Western society[16]. Mecklin maintains that for Puritanism deepest community
- was found not in groups or in institutions but in the secrets of the solitary
- heart[17]. And church historian John Mulder states that Puritanism "tended to
- be highly individualistic, emphasizing the necessity of strenuous, solitary
- effort to tame the wilderness and eventually one's competitors."[18]
-
-
-
- III. Evangelical Individualism
-
- Modern evangelicalism claims to be the successor to and the preserver of
- 16th century Reformation thought. If this is true, and I believe it to be in
- large part accurate, it is also true that 20th century evangelicalism owes
- many of its distinctives to the Puritanism of the 17th and 18th centuries.
- Therefore it must be asked To what extent has modern evangelicalism inherited
- the latent individualism of the Reformation and Puritan movements? Thus falls
- to us next the task of analyzing the extent to which the individual ethic has
- shaped modern evangelical ecclesiology and social ethics. We will begin with
- ecclesiology and conclude with an analysis of the ways in which it has
- influenced evangelical social ethics. It must be noted, however, that due to
- the interrelatedness of the themes, there will be a great deal of overlap in
- our discussion.
-
-
-
- A. Ecclesiology
-
- What, according to evangelicals, is the mission of the church? Has the
- evangelical conception of the church's mission been individualistically
- conceived? Does evangelical ecclesiology relate to the social order? How?
- It is the thesis of this paper that evangelical ecclesiology has failed to
- incorporate evangelicalism's stated concern for social issues.
-
- The church's primary task as evangelicals see it is evangelism, but it is
- evangelism as proclaimed to individuals. Addison Leitch, in commenting on the
- role of the church in society, said, "there is no salvation by way of the
- social gospel, but only in the individual's call to Christ. But there is no
- such thing as an asocial Christian."[19] Evangelism, Leitch declares, will
- result in social action on the part of the individual Christian. Thus the
- church's primary task is the evangelization of individuals who will, as a by-
- product of their salvation, then demonstrate social concern.
-
- Billy Graham, critiquing the 1967 NCC Conference on Church and Society in
- Detroit, argued that the mission of the church is to change individuals, not
- society:
-
- The government may try to legislate Christian behavior, but it soon finds
- that man remains unchanged. The changing of men's hearts is the primary
- mission of the church. The only way to change men is to get them
- converted to Jesus Christ. Then they will have the capacity to live up
- to the Christian command to "love thy neighbor".[20]
-
- Thus the primary task remains individual redemption. One cannot change
- society without first changing the individual, for you "cannot carve rotten
- wood".[21] The church is called primarily to the task of redemption not
- reformation.
-
- Again, it is the church's task to prepare men for the next world, not
- this one. The church, it is claimed, is to minister to the soul, not the body
- (though the body is acknowledged to be important, it is not considered the
- primary need of the individual). L. Nelson Bell, in an early article, states
- explicitly that "the church exist[s] primarily to prepare men for...the next
- world, for no man is fit to live in this world until he is prepared to live in
- the next." He then continues on to say that "the church's primary task has to
- do with redemption, the world to come, the making of new men in Christ, the
- ultimate destiny of the soul, the proclamation of truth...."[22] Thus it is
- apparent that for the evangelical the church's primary task is redemption, but
- not redemption of society but of individuals. It is an individualistic task.
-
- This individualism is clearly reflected in that unique phenomenon of the
- 19th century, revivalistic religion. The Second Great Awakening of the early
- 19th century stressed renewal of the individual, not the church or the
- community. One was called to find God alone, without mediation, without
- hierarchies, without liturgies. Each individual had direct access to God, and
- even the church became non-essential in his search for salvation. This became
- perhaps most apparent not only in the growing popularity during the 19th
- century of congregational church piety but also in the shift from Calvinism to
- Arminianism, or at least to a modified version of Calvinism, and was
- exemplified by the great revival preacher Charles G. Finney with his emphasis
- on the immanence of God and the personal free choice of man, and consequent
- de-emphasis on God's sovereignty and transcendence. This new revivalistic
- theology declared that
-
- man was active not passive in his salvation, that grace was not
- arbitrarily or capriciously dispersed like the royal prerogative of a
- sovereign, but offered freely to all men as the gift of a loving father
- to his children; that God wants men to help themselves, not to wait on
- Him, and that He is a God of love not a God to be feared.[23]
-
- It is to be remarked that the spread of congregational polity, and the
- emphasis on the individual as his own master fit in well with the Jacksonian
- Democracy of the day.
-
- In addition, revivalism tended to stress an individualistic piety.
- Though there were exceptions -- most notably the issue of slavery --
- revivalistic religion emphasized issues such as temperance, card-playing,
- dancing, gambling and the like. Social ethics for revivalists was not a major
- concern.
-
- Because of its origins in frontier religion American Protestantism was
- almost from the beginning geared to individualistic piety, in which right
- living by the individual was stressed, with the expectation that social
- justice would follow.[24]
-
- What then does evangelicalism have to say about church mission and social
- and political involvement? Howard Kershner, in response to the liberal call
- for the church to take positions on issues of social and political importance,
- wrote that "Jesus commanded us to go into all the world and preach the gospel
- to every creature. He did not command us to go into the world and organize a
- peace corps or civil-disobedience demonstration."[25] For evangelicalism (and
- here I am painting with a broad brush) the church has no mandate to engage in
- socio-political affairs; to do so damages historic Christianity's witness.
- The task of the church lies in the spiritual not the secular domain.
- Evangelicals developed four basic arguments for the church's non-involvement
- in social and political affairs: there is no Biblical mandate; the church will
- pervert and lose the gospel message; it will split the church over divisive
- issues; and the church lacks the competence to speak to many of these areas.
- The conclusion is that the church can speak to the issues in general terms,
- but it must not be allowed to develop political or economic platforms, or to
- dictate public policy. However, evangelicals have been unable to agree on
- where the former leaves off and the latter begins.
-
- Let the church speak with authority about the gospel committed to it.
- Let it denounce evils that the light of revealed truth exposes. Let it
- cry out for economic justice, racial good will, social order and decency,
- and a dozen more ends to be desired by the Christian man. But let it
- refrain from attempting to legislate these issues; from assuming a pose
- of worldly wisdom in order to dictate terms to which government must
- capitulate; from concerning itself so directly with the kingdoms of men
- that the cause of the kingdom of God is neglected.[26]
-
- The Christian individual, on the other hand, is encouraged to involve
- himself in social and political affairs, but _only_ as an individual, _not_ as
- a member of the church. Thus a distinction is made between the actions of the
- church and of its individual members, and evangelicalism is again maintaining
- an implicit dualism, with the individual being viewed as an autonomous unit of
- action and no continuity seen between personal and corporate activity.
-
- This position was summed up in a Christianity Today editorial:
-
- No responsible Christian citizen can remain oblivious to social and
- political problems. He must actively work to solve them. Yet he must
- not make the organized church the political instrument for solution of
- these problems.[27]
-
- And J. Howard Pew explains
-
- No one would seriously deny that the individual Christian must relate his
- Christian convictions to the society of which he is a part in the
- economic, social, and political life about him. He must live out his
- Christianity in every phase of life, showing that he is salt and light in
- an unbelieving world.[28]
-
- Pew then goes on to argue that a clear distinction must be made between
- temporal and spiritual kingdoms. It is only in the latter, he says, that the
- church has the right to engage itself directly.
-
-
-
- B. Social Ethics
-
- What implications, then, does this evangelical view of church mission
- have for an evangelical social ethic? How accurate are the critics of modern
- evangelicalism in their attempts to portray the movement as being overly
- concerned with personal piety -- issues such as card-playing, dancing, sexual
- morality, and stewardship -- to the detriment of social issues such as
- economic justice or labor? What issues _are_ evangelicals most concerned
- with?
-
- Hollinger, in his analysis of the content of evangelicalism's most
- influential mouthpiece, _Christianity Today_, has convincingly refuted this
- notion of evangelical pietistic overkill, demonstrating in an analysis of the
- periodical's first twenty years that treatment within its pages of social
- issues has outweighed personal issues by a ratio of almost six to one.[29]
- Thus it can be seen that, at least in the pages of _Christianity Today_,
- evangelicals have paid far greater attention to social issues than to personal
- ones.
-
-
- 1. Historically
-
- As the self-professed inheritors of such men as Calvin, William
- Wilberforce, and R.A. Torrey, evangelicals are quick to point to the records
- of history to demonstrate their long heritge of social involvement. F. Leahy
- highlighted John Calvin's social conscience, noting that he continually
- addressed the issue of the role of civil government in his _Institutes_, and
- holding up for inspection his reformative work in the city of Geneva, to show
- that Calvin and his fellow Reformers were intensely concerned to respond to
- the social disintegration of their day.[30] Others mention the social reform
- impact of the 18th century evangelical revivals, or the success of the British
- Clapham Sect and its leaders William Wilberforce and John Venn in ending
- British involvement in the slave trade, shortening the work week, and
- establishing child labor laws, or 19th century American evangelicalism's
- battle for prison reform and the abolition of slavery.[31] Still others have
- pointed to the work of the International Christian Workers Association and its
- leaders -- men such as R.A. Torrey, A.J. Gordon and James Gray -- in targeting
- urban poverty and social outcasts in the late 1800s.[32]
-
- In addition, the history of Christian missions shows a strong social
- conscience among evangelicals. Many missionaries "stood for social justice,
- fought against inhuman practices in traditional societies, and resisted the
- worst features of advancing European imperialism".[33]
-
-
- 2. Modern Trends
- a. A Cursory Glance
-
- Writers in _Christianity Today_ have, in fact, since early in the history
- of the periodical, warned against a perceived trend of evangelical neglect of
- personal morality. Complained one editorial, "Raise in a church council a
- question on Christian race relations and an almost unanimous response is
- assured. Raise the question of moral conduct, and often there is little
- effective reaction".[34] A false public/private dichotomy was perceived in
- which public behavior was more strongly stressed than private morals, and
- consequently a call was sounded for a greater evangelical personal ethical
- concern.
-
- This must be seen, however, in light of the fact that a significant block
- of evangelicals saw the source of all societal ills in the decline of personal
- ethics. Frank Coloquhoun pointed to the decline of British society and blamed
- it on the erosion of personal values -- sexual immorality, juvenile
- delinquency, prostitution and the like. In fact, the only overtly social
- factor targeted by Caloquhoun was the growth of the welfare state, a trend
- which directly challenged one of the pillars of an individualistic social
- philosophy, laissez-faire economics.[35] Other writers targeted neglect of
- Sabbath observance as a major factor in societal decline.[36] All these
- writers, however, placed the blame for Western society's moral decline
- squarely on the shoulders of the personal morality of the individual.
-
- These writers, however, were in the minority. The majority of
- evangelical writers were calling for an evangelical social ethic. Does this
- contradict the thesis of this paper? Before we answer that question, let's
- take a closer look at what they were calling for.
-
- b. An Indepth Look
-
- Though these writers were calling for an increased social ethic, their
- distinction between the personal and social dimensions of this ethic was fuzzy
- and blurred. For the most part they continued to view social problems as
- merely magnified personal problems. This is in keeping with their continued
- subscription, often stated explicitly, to an individualistic metphysic. For
- example, Richard Bodey, in commenting on the problem of gambling, stated that
-
- Although its greatest temptations are introduced through society,
- gambling is, oddly enough, undeniably anti-social. This, of course,
- follows naturally upon its corruption of individuals, for society is but
- the sum of individual human beings.[37]
-
- Bodey's comments are typical of the way evangelicals often approach
- social problems. Evangelicals emphasize non-political, non-social approaches
- to social problems since social problems at their root are seen to be only
- personal problems. L. Nelson Bell, in a discussion of race relations during
- the heyday of the civil rights movement, claimed that the proper solution to
- the problem was not through public policy change but by changing individuals'
- attitudes. "The church", said Bell, "should concentrate greater energy on
- condemning those sinful attitudes of mind where hate, prejudice and
- indifference continue to foster injustice and discrimination."[38]
-
- c. The Two Kingdoms
-
- The concept of the two kingdoms -- temporal kingdoms versus the kingdom
- of heaven, with the church's activities confined to the latter -- exemplifies
- much of evangelicalism's approach to social ethics. This two-kingdoms
- approach actually finds its roots in the writings of Martin Luther, who said
- that human governments were ordained by God to rule the socio-political realm
- with the sword, coercion and law, while the kingdom of God ruled the spiritual
- realm through the administration of the Word of God. Modern evangelicals,
- carrying on in the tradition of Luther, insist that the two kingdoms must not
- be confused; it is the kingdom of the world which is political, not the
- kingdom of heaven. Though the presence of the kingdom of heaven is to be felt
- in the kingdom of the world, it is _not_ to be politicized. In a critique of
- the NCC's call for increased involvement of the church in political affairs,
- Edmund Clowney stated that
-
- life in the state -- indeed, in all the world -- is permeated by the
- leaven of the kingdom; but no political ruler has the right to raise the
- banner of Christ's name over his armies. Neither has the church the
- right to reorganize itself in the secular pattern of this worldly power.
- The church cannot redeem society by political action; when evangelicalism
- becomes politics, it is no longer the gospel of Christ's kingdom.[39]
-
- The Christian's duty, then, is to be a dynamic link between the two, involving
- himself in the state and bringing his Christian values to bear on the state,
- but _only_ as an individual, _not_ as a member of the church.
-
- In this two kingdoms approach, then, personal ethics become the exclusive
- domain of the kingdom of God. Social ethics are placed under the domain of
- the kingdom of the world, and thus, being subject to law, escape the scrutiny
- of Christian standards which is reserved for the realm of personal morality.
-
- Thus it can be seen that what appears at first glance to be a consistent
- call for a modern evangelical social ethic turns out upon closer examination
- to be simply a disguised form of individualism-as-social-policy.
-
-
-
-
- IV. Conclusion
-
- Modern evangelical ecclesiology and social ethics are infused with a
- strong implicit individualism -- as metaphysic, as social philosophy and as
- value system. This latent individualism greatly affects not only evangelical
- ecclesiology -- in its views not only of the nature and mission of the church
- but also in its conceptions of the nature and methods of evangelism -- but
- evangelicalism's approach to social ethics as well. An implicit
- individualistic social philosophy, coupled with the two-kingdoms concept, has
- effectively limited evangelicalism's field of activity to the spiritual realm
- and Christian critique of society to personal morality.
-
- A proper understanding of the philosophical underpinnings of modern
- evangelicalism vis-a-vis its social philosophy and metaphysic has tremendous
- implications for many areas of evangelical thought -- areas such as the nature
- and mission of the church, an understanding of church-state relations,
- concepts of the nature and methodologies of evangelistic activity, and
- Christian critiques of societal problems and systemic sins, to mention but a
- few. It was the original intent of the author to discuss briefly some of
- these areas, but constraints of time and space have made that impossible for
- the time being. It is hoped, however, that the foregoing discussion will have
- stimulated in the reader ideas of his own with respect to some of these areas.
- For those who have an interest in further exploration of this topic, or are
- interested in the response of a growing minority of evangelicalism to the
- issues-at-hand which incorporates a society-as-community metaphysic and
- recognizes a need for an involvement of the church in political and societal
- activities, a bibliography has been included.
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
- [1]Frederich Dierks, "Communication and World View", _Missionalia_, Vol. 11,
- No. 2, Aug. 1983, pp. 43-56
-
- [2]Ibid.
-
- [3]Ibid.
-
- [4]Alexis de Tocqueville, _Democracy in America_, 2 vols., ed. Phillips
- Bradley, trans. Henry Reeve (New York:Alfred Knopf Inc, 1945), 2:98.
-
- [5]Ibid., 2:99.
-
- [6]John W. Ward, "The Ideal of Individualism and the Reality of Organization",
- _Business Establishment_, ed. Earl F. Cheit (New York: John Wiley and
- sons, 1964), p. 42
-
- [7]_Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences_, 1932 ed., s.v."Individualism", by
- A.D. Lindsay
-
- [8]Konraad Swart, "Individualism in the Mid-Nineteenth Century (1826-1860),
- _Journal of the History of Ideas_ 23 (January-March 1962):77.
-
- [9]Stephen Lukes, _Individualism_, (New York:Harper and Rowe, 1973), pp. 49-
- 114.
-
- [10]Dennis P. Hollinger, "American Individual and Evangelical Social Ethics: A
- Study of Christianity Today 1956-1976", Ph.D. Dissertation, Drew
- University, 1981, p. 20.
-
- [11]Ibid., p. 21.
-
- [12]Ibid., p. 25
-
- [13]David Miller, _Individualism: Personal Achievement and the Open Society_
- (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1967), p. 75.
-
- [14]Walter Ullmann, _The Individual and Society in the Middle Ages_
- (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1966), p. 17.
-
- [15]Phillip Schaff, _America, a Sketch of Its Political, Social, and Religious
- Character_, ed. Perry Miller (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1961),
- p. 101.
-
- [16]Louis Hartz, "The Liberal Tradition", in _Failure of a Dream?_, ed. John
- Laslett and Seymour Lipset (Garden City, New York: Anchor Press, 1974),
- p. 423.
-
- [17]John Mecklin, _An Introduction to Social Ethics_, (New York: Harcourt,
- Brace and Howe, 1920), p. 45.
-
- [18]John Mulder, "Pursuing the Puritan Ethic", _Theology Today_ 32 (January,
- 1976), p. 341
-
- [19]Addison Leitch, "The Primary Task of the Church", _Christianity Today_,
- vol. 1, no. 1 (October 15, 1956), p. 19
-
- [20]Billy Graham, "False Prophets in the Church" _Christianity Today_, vol.
- 12, no. 8 (March 15, 1968), p. 4
-
- [21]L. Nelson Bell, "Lay Concern", _Christianity Today_, vol. 12, no. 12
- (March 15, 1968), p. 19
-
- [22]Idem, "Reversing the Order", _Christianity Today_, vol. 8, no. 21 (July
- 17, 1964), p. 19
-
- [23]William Mcloughlin, _The American Evangelicals, 1800-1900_, (New York:
- Harper and Row, 1968), p. 4
-
- [24]Will Herberg, _Protestant, Catholic, Jew_, (New York: Doubleday, 1955), p.
- 116
-
- [25]Howard Kershner, "The Church and Social Problems", _Christianity Today_,
- vol. 10, no. 11 (March 14, 1966), p. 34
-
- [26]Thomas McDormand, "Church and Government", _Christianity Today_, vol. 9,
- no. 15, (April 23, 1965), p. 15
-
- [27]Editorial, "The Church, Politics, and the NCC", _Christianity Today_, vol.
- 11, no. 1 (October 14, 1966), p. 36
-
- [28]J. Howard Pew, "The Mission of the Church", _Christianity Today_, vol. 8,
- no. 20 (July 3, 1964), p. 14
-
- [29]Hollinger, "American Individualism", pp. 122-123. In his count, Hollinger
- classified issues such as sex, alcohol, cheating, Sabbath observance,
- gambling, citizenship and the like as personal ethical issues, while
- issues like labor, economics, political affairs and general social
- problems were labeled social issues. He noted however, that "such a
- categorization cannot be absolutistic, for there are social ramifications
- to all personal issues and personal ramifications to all social issues".
- ("American Individualism", p. 122)
-
- [30]Frederick Leahy, "John Calvin's Social Consciousness", _Christianity
- Today_, vol. 3 no. 7 (January 5, 1959), pp. 7-9
-
- [31]See Earle Cairns, "Saints and the Social Order", _Christianity Today_,
- vol. 3, no. 24 (September 14, 1959), pp. 9-10
-
- [32]George Marsden, "Evangelical Social Concern -- Dusting Off the Heritage",
- _Christianity Today_, vol. 16, no. 16 (May 12, 1972), p. 8
-
- [33]Richard Pierard, "Social Concern in Christian Mission", _Christianity
- Today_, vol. 20, no. 19 (June 18, 1976), p. 7
-
- [34]Editorial, "Is the Church Too Silent About Personal Morality?",
- _Christianity Today_, vol. 1, no. 3 (November 12, 1956), p. 23
-
- [35]Frank Caloquhoun, "Great Britain: The Spiritual Situation Today",
- _Christianity Today_, vol. 5, no. 22 (July 31, 1961), pp. 3-4
-
- [36]cf. Charles Koller, "Is Sunday Observance Obsolete?", _Christianity
- Today_, vol. 7, no. 12 (March 15, 1963)
-
- [37]Richard Bodey, "A Bag with Holes", _Christianity Today_, vol. 2, no. 6
- (December 23, 1957), pp. 17-18
-
- [38]L. Nelson Bell, "Christian Race Relations", _Christianity Today_, vol. 7,
- no. 24 (July 19, 1963), p. 23
-
- [39]Edmund Clowney, "A Critique of the Political Gospel", _Christianity
- Today_, vol. 11, no. 15 (April 28, 1967), p. 10
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
- These books and articles are in addition to those cited in the text.
-
- I. Individualism
-
- Arieli, Yehoshua. _Individualism and Nationalism in American Ideology_.
- Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1964.
-
- Bettelheim, Bruno. _The Informed Heart: Autonomy in a Mass Age_. Glencoe,
- Ill.: Free Press, 1960.
-
- Brunner, Emil. _The Divine Imperative_. Philadelphia: Westminster, 1947.
-
- ________. _Justice and the Social Order_. New York: Harper and Brothers,
- 1945.
-
- Burkhardt, Jacob. _The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy_. New York:
- Mentor, 1960.
-
- Dewey, John. _Individualism, Old and New_. New York: Capricorn Books, 1924.
-
- Friedman, Milton. _Capitalism and Freedom_. Chicago: University of Chicago
- Press, 1962.
-
- Gross, Ronald and Osterman, Paul, eds. _Individualism: Man in Modern Society_.
- New York: Dell Co., 1971.
-
- Hoover, Herbert. _American Individualism_. New York: Doubleday, Page and Co.,
- 1963.
-
- Hsu, Francis. _Clan, Caste and Club_. Princeton: D. Van Nostrand Co., 1963.
-
- Johnson, Ellwood. "Individualism and the Puritan Imagination". _American
- Quarterly_ 22 (Summer, 1970), pp. 230-237.
-
- Moulin, L. "On the Evolution of the Meaning of the Word 'Individualism'".
- _International Social Science Bulletin_ 7 (1955), pp. 181-185.
-
- Robertson, H.M. _Aspects of the Rise of Economic Individualism: A Critique of
- Max Weber and His School_. New York: Kelley and Millman, 1959.
-
- Rousseau, Jean Jacques. _The Social Contract_. New York: E.P. Dutton and Co.,
- 1950.
-
- Smith, Adam. _The Wealth of Nations_. New York: Random House, 1937.
-
- Stroik, Raymond. "Ideas of Individualism: A Twentieth Century Social
- Critique". Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Wisconsin, 1968.
-
- Tawney, R.H. _Religion and the Rise of Capitalism_. New York: Mentor, 1926.
-
- Varenne, Herve. _Americans Together: Structural Diversity in a Midwestern
- Town_. New York: Teacher's College Press, 1977.
-
- Ward, John W. "Individualism Today". _Yale Review_ 49 (Spring 1960), pp. 380-
- 392.
-
-
-
- II. Evangelicalism
-
- Bloesch, Donald G. _The Evangelical Renaissance_. Grand Rapids, Mich.:
- Eerdmans, 1973.
-
- Ezell, Marcell. "The Evangelical Protestant Defense of Americanism 1945-1960".
- Ph.D. Dissertation, Texas Christian University, 1969.
-
- Henry. Carl F.H. _Aspects of Christian Social Ethics_. Grand Rapids, Mich.:
- Baker Book House, 1971.
-
- ________. _The Uneasy Conscience of Modern Fundamentalism_. Grand Rapids,
- Mich.: Eerdmans, 1947.
-
- McLoughlin, William. _Modern Revivalism: Charles Grandison Finney to Billy
- Graham_. New York: Ronald Press, 1959.
-
- Magnuson, Norris. _Salvation in the Slums: Evangelical Social Work: 1865-
- 1920_. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1977.
-
- Moberg, David. _The Great Reversal: Evangelicalism Versus Social Concern_.
- Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1972.
-
- Mott, Stephen C. "Socially Active Evangelicals and Fundamentalism". _Metanoia_
- 7-4 (December 1975), pp. 3-9.
-
- Pierard, Richard V. _The Unequal Yoke: Evangelical Christianity and Political
- Conservatism_. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1970.
-
- Smith, Timothy L. Revivalism and Social Reform in Mid-Nineteenth Century
- America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980.
-
-
-
- III. Evangelicalism and Society-as-Community
-
- Eels, Robert. "Mark O. Hatfield and the Search for an Evangelical Politics".
- Ph.D. Dissertation, University of New Mexico, 1976.
-
- Erickson, Millard. _The New Evangelical Theology_. Old Tappon, N.J.: Fleming
- Revell, 1968.
-
- Henry, Paul B. _Politics for Evangelicals_. Valley Forge, PA.: Judson Press,
- 1974.
-
- Kraus, Norman C., ed. _Evangelicalism and Anabaptism_. Scottdale, PA.: Herald
- Press, 1979.
-
- Leightner, R.R. _Neo-Evangelicalism_. Findley, Ohio: Dunham, 1961.
-
- Mouw, Richard J. _Political Evangelism_. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1976.
-
- Nash, Ronald. _The New Evangelicalism_. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan, 1963.
-
- Nisbett, Robert. _The Quest for Community_. New York: Oxford University Press,
- 1953.
-
- Padilla, C. Rene. _The New Face of Evangelicalism_. London: Hadder and
- Stoughton, 1976.
-
- Pierard, Richard V. "Needed: An Evangelical Social Ethic". _Evangelical
- Quarterly_ 44-2 (April-June 1972), pp. 84-90.
-
- Quebedeaux, Richard. _The Young Evangelicals_. New York: Harper And Rowe,
- 1974.
-
- Riesman, David. _Individualism Reconsidered_. New York: Doubleday, 1954.
-
- Sellers, James. _Warming Fires: The Quest for Community in America_. New York:
- Seabury Press, 1975.
-
- Sider, Ronald J. _Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger: A Biblical Study_.
- Downer Grove, Ill.: Intervarsity Press, 1977.
-
-
-