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You Will Be Assimilated?

Thoughts on the Current State of Evangelicalism in America

Copyright, 2011, Richard Heyduck

Provoked by my current sermon series, Looking at Jesus, and reading Mark Noll and Bruce
Hindmarsh’s retrospective on the life and scholarship of W.R. Ward in Books and Culture, I’m
spurred to think about the current status of evangelicalism in America.

This past Sunday my message was Jesus is Jewish. While this isn’t a surprise to anyone who has
read the Bible, we’ve often been led to think of Jesus as primarily one of us, culturally thinking.
Some of this comes from our tendency to remake Jesus in our own image. Sure, he’s perfect and
we’re not, but his perfection is a perfection of our ideals.

Jesus had no intention of doing what we would call “starting a new religion.” neither did Paul,
for that matter. Jesus understood himself to be the fulfillment of God’s promises to and action
with Israel. Paul, though he used somewhat different language, interpreted Jesus this way also. In
this light, being “Christian” during these first couple of generations was one way of being
Jewish.

As I teach this to my congregation, I briefly compare Jesus with other ways of being Jewish in
his time: the Pharisees, the Sadducees, the Zealots and the Essenes. We don’t think too much
about the Sadducees and the Essenes today. If we do think of them the former are the folks who
used to rule the temple and the latter are mysterious enough we can load them with whatever
baggage we like. Zealots we find everywhere, if we’re willing to abstract the term from its
original anti-Roman context. But Pharisees? Everyone knows the Pharisees. They’re the
hypocrites. They’re the holier than thou moral police. Nobody would like a Pharisee.

Can we find any Pharisees today? I’ve gotten the idea from time to time that some folks think of
Evangelicals as contemporary Pharisees. Hypocrites? Check. Holier than thou? Check. Act like
moral police for the community? Check. There you have it: Evangelicals are Pharisees.

In my teaching I go beyond the usual stereotype of Pharisees. I briefly summarized them


yesterday as a group of Jews concerned about assimilation to the dominant Hellenistic – Roman
culture. They wanted Jews to stay faithful to the God of Israel in belief and practice. From one
angle they didn’t want to see Israel draw God’s judgment down upon themselves. From another
angle, they truly believed that God’s ways, i.e., the ways of Israel, were truly the best ways.
Good goals and values, wrongly pursued, at least according to the reckoning of Jesus.

Noll and Hindmarsh address Ward’s contribution to our understanding of the origins of
Evangelicalism. The first point they mention:

[B]y situating evangelical history against the backdrop of 17th-century European political
history, Ward demonstrated that distinctly evangelical beliefs and practices emerged in
response to political pressure from powerful states, such as those in the Habsburg empire,
or powerful state-churches, both Protestant and Catholic. What he summarized as “the
almost universal history of revival as resistance to assimilation” led Ward to Central
European beginnings for such essential evangelical themes as the opposition of “true
Christianity” to formulaic, systematic, or imposed orthodoxies; and to small-group
enclaves as the necessary nurturing medium in which “true Christianity” could flourish.
By showing how the political power of nation-states and state-churches played a defining
role in the earliest evangelical movements, he showed all scholars the often covert
political protests found in almost all evangelical movements of the 17th and 18th
centuries, and probably later as well.
(http://www.booksandculture.com/articles/2011/marapr/historyevangelicalism.html?paging=off)

What we know as Evangelicalism had its roots in “resistance to assimilation.” I read that and
thought, “Wow – that sounds like the revisionist account of the Pharisees!” So I put together
these two thoughts, a more charitable way of understanding the Pharisees and a common
perspective on the nature of Evangelicalism. What happens if we push this a little bit, and see
this “resistance to assimilation” not merely in the origins of Evangelicalism but also in the
continued mind-set of Evangelicalism?

If “resistance to assimilation” is part of the Evangelical ethos, one can easily connect this with
the separationism of American Fundamentalism. As a theological strategy, The Fundamentals
were a claim to the essentials of the Christian faith. But Fundamentalism went further than
claiming a set of doctrines. Their political strategy was to avoid “fellowshiping” not only with
liberals (they read J. Gresham Machen who had identified liberalism as a religion distinct from
Christianity) but with Christians who associated with liberals (secondary separation). I remember
reading some of their literature thirty years ago. Where our broader culture thought of Billy
Graham as the paragon of Evangelical Christianity, the folks I read considered him a traitor for
associating with liberals. The big disaster happened when Jerry Falwell, the paragon of
Fundamentalist Christianity for the broader culture led his Moral Majority to engage with people
outside the bounds of fundamentalist churches.

One of the defining characteristics of what some have called “neo-Evangelicalism” is its
rejection of this separationist strategy. For these folks Evangelism out-weighed the urge toward
separation. Since they wanted to reach the world for Christ, they had to stay engaged with the
world rather than retreating to their own enclaves. This was always a dangerous strategy,
however. However much they may have wished otherwise, engagement is a two-way process.
Influence goes both directions. Even with a rejection of the separationist strategy of
Fundamentalism, there was still a fear of “going liberal.”

Through the 1980s and 1990s the Evangelical strategy of engagement paid off. The movement
reached its cultural high at this time. The problem with reaching a cultural high mark was that
their perceived success evoked a “resistance to assimilation” by others – individuals and groups.
Apparently Evangelicals were not the only ones who didn’t care to be assimilated. So insofar as
Evangelical beliefs, values and practices were perceived to be in the ascendancy, opposition
coalesced.

Evangelicals sometimes made the mistake of reading this opposition as confirming their
underlying conviction that they were still weak and threatened. As opposition groups developed
and started vying for greater cultural influence, it was natural for Evangelicals to harden their
own resistance to assimilation.

As long as Evangelicalism was strong – or relatively comfortable vis-à-vis the broader culture,
there was some softening of the identity of movement. As Evangelicalism returns to “resistance
to assimilation” I see a hardening taking place. In safer times, more flexibility was allowed. Now
as new interpretations of fundamental doctrines are arising, pioneers of different ways of
thinking are being cast out. I think of Peter Enns (inspiration and inerrancy) and Rob Bell
(atonement) as two examples. How this will work out for the whole movement in the future, we
will have to wait and see. But prognostication is not my goal here. Rather, I’d like to address the
anti-assimilationist strategy.

First, the idea of resisting assimilation is profoundly biblical. At the time of the Exodus the
Israelites were repeatedly warned against taking up the ways f the surrounding nations. The Old
Testament idea of being “a peculiar people” was taken up and adopted in the New Testament.
Followers of Jesus, like their ancestors in the faith, were to be distinctive, different in a multitude
of ways from their neighbors. So when the Pharisees – and later the Evangelicals – took up the
practice of resisting assimilation, they were on solid ground.

Second, the idea of maintaining a difference is not the peculiar property either of ancient Israel,
the Pharisees of Jesus’ day, or modern Evangelicals. Looking at cultures through history, it
seems perfectly normal for groups to seek to maintain and defend “our way of life” against
threats of change. Resistance groups err when they imagine themselves to be the only ones with
reason to resist assimilation.

Third, purity is a very difficult thing to achieve. Even though resistance to assimilation was a
core commitment of the Pharisees, they were unable to completely isolate themselves from the
non-Israelite world, and thus from all change. Their resistance to Hellenization could not be
total. In the same way, Evangelical resistance to broader American culture could not be total. In
fact, in the eyes of some, even while resisting some aspects of American culture, Evangelicals
seemed to adopt completely other aspects of that culture (Americanism and consumerism are two
examples).

Fourth, some varieties of postmodern philosophy – and the cultural ethos that accompanies it –
have strengthened and generalized the resistance to assimilation. Anti-colonialist discourse and
the rise of hyper-individualism are two flavors of thought leading in this direction.

I say all this as one who claims the Evangelical heritage, not merely as an heir of John and
Charles Wesley, pioneers in English Evangelicalism, but also as an intentional participant in the
current American version. I would like to see the Evangelical movement prosper. To do this, the
movement must retain its awareness of the need to resist assimilation. At the same time, it needs
to do two additional and related things.

First, Evangelicalism needs to be more self-critical in its relationship to culture. Its selective
focus on some aspects of culture (“resist this!”) have blinded it to its assimilation of other areas. I
am reminded of Tertullian who mockingly dismissed the tools of Greek culture, “What does
Jerusalem have to do with Athens?” while using some of those very tools to accomplish his
“rejection.” This is not to say that we need to become so defensive that we see devils under every
bed. Such an attitude will be the death of us.

Second, and more importantly, we need to subordinate our resistance to assimilation to culture to
our pursuit of assimilation to Jesus. The Pharisees were so committed to resisting assimilation
that they missed Jesus and what God was doing in and through him. We want to model ourselves
on Jesus, who while highly resistant of assimilation to the ways of the world (so resistant they
kill him for it), yet even more intent on conformity to the ways of the Father.

If we take up assimilation (or conformity) to Jesus as our priority, what might our Jesus-inspired
resistance to assimilation to the world look like? One the one hand, I think our resistance will
look more like play than like work. Because we follow one who “for the joy set before him” took
up the cross, our resistance will be rooted in joy, not anger. It’s not that we’re primarily afraid of
the world – and their is plenty of death and destruction to fear – but that we have something so
much better that completely relativizes those evils. On the other hand, our resistance will become
even more dangerous. Because we will be so infatuated with Jesus and his ways, we will give
less and less credence to the ways of the world – and (some of) the world won’t like it. Our
witness will become more martyr like – and we won’t care, as long as we have Jesus.

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