Making Sense of the New American Right

Keeping track of the Jacksonians, Reformicons, Paleos, and Post-liberals.

I like to start my classes on conservative intellectual history by distinguishing between three groups. There is the Republican party, with its millions of adherents and spectrum of opinion from very conservative, somewhat conservative, moderate, and yes, liberal. There is the conservative movement, the constellation of single-issue nonprofits that sprung up in the 1970s

  • gun rights,
  • pro-life,
  • taxpayer,
  • right to work

— and continue to influence elected officials. Finally, there is the conservative intellectual movement: writers, scholars, and wonks whose journalistic and political work deals mainly with ideas and, if we’re lucky, their translation into public policy.

A diary of charismatic winds blowing at Metzlers Mennonite Church Skip to content

Why would we be attracted to charismatic expression, ideas and theology?

Maybe we’re bored with being radical followers of Jesus… like the early Anabaptists who focused on Jesus AND His teachings; like loving your enemy, not accumulating wealth, not participating in the state religion (or the religion’s chosen state), or like emphasizing community over individual… These are all things our culture disdains and most christians do to. But we’re not interested in being that countercultural… so we chase after faux “radicalness”… (and continue living the same lifestyle and believing most of the same cultural assumptions that every other white suburban/rural generic evangelical does and believes…
Maybe we want things instantly – we want magic tricks – we want excitement? Problem is, that looks/feels a lot like our culture and times… our religious longings mirror the world’s; give me, give me and give it to me instantly! (charismatics promise this kind of religion constantly; self-empowerment and instant everything!) I thought we’re supposed to follow Jesus, not the winds of our culture…
Maybe we want to be like the Pharisees and make public spectacles of our religiosity? (Again a defining element of charismatics… noisy, ecstatic, public displays of religious experience sometimes seems to be The only thing they care about; not really a very good imitation of Jesus Christ btw)
But I’m sure some people have good and righteous reasons for seeking charismatic expression/experience. May they prosper in the Lord and use the energy they receive from charisma to further the restorative mission of God to His creation and humanity.

If charismatic expression, ideas and theology blows through Metzlers and it quickly translates to the hungry being fed, the poor being served (Matt. 25: 21-46) then I have no problem with that; couldn’t have a problem. But, if it its immediate effects and aftermath are anything else or if it keeps people focused on themselves, then I’ll believe it’s a lost cause or worse…