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Thomas D. Kennedy


Broken Words

The scandal of a post-evangelical mind.

In 2004, reflecting back on his 1994 The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind, Mark Noll perceived some auspicious developments: " "increasing engagement between evangelicals and Roman Catholics," an "ongoing renascence of Christian philosophy," evangelical colleges "season[ing] their sectarian certitudes with commitment to 'mere Christianity,' " breakthroughs in engagement with the sciences, "multiplying Christian presence in the nation's pluralistic universities," and serious efforts in Christian publishing." Noll's hopefulness was lost on Randall Balmer, who, two years later, excoriated evangelicals for being dumb and hypocritical, to list but two of their lesser vices, in Thy Kingdom Come: How the Religious Right Distorts the Faith and Threatens America.

Jonathan Dudley, native of Grand Rapids, Michigan was raised in the evangelical setting decried by Balmer. He learned, growing up, about the "big four": "that abortion was murder; homosexuality, sin; evolution, nonsense; and environmentalism, a farce"—and, from some in his community, that his eternal salvation hinged on sharing these views with others. All this would be bad enough, but add to this injury the insult of how cocksure evangelicals are of everything and the immoderation and partisanship that follows such certainty and you get the nasty and oppressive right-wing movement we've known pretty much since Francis Schaeffer's politicization in the mid 1970s. That is to say you get the combined ignorance and arrogance that characterize contemporary evangelicalism according to Balmer and, now, Dudley.

Having earned his bachelor's degree in biology from Calvin College and his master's degree in religion from Yale Divinity School, Dudley has not only been liberated from the shackles of his evangelical upbringing, he has found himself "in a unique position to dispute evangelical thought" on biology and the Bible. Thus, Broken Words: The Abuse of Science and Faith in American Politics, and this reformer's thesis: "Evangelicalism has defined itself by weakly supported boundary markers"—the "big four" non-negotiables identified above—"which are justified by a flawed understanding of biblical interpretation and maintained by suppressing those who disagree. Further this fact has significant implications for American politics."

I say "reformer", but that now requires some qualification. In his final chapter, Dudley speaks of reforming neo-evangelicalism or, failing that, starting "a new kind of evangelical Christianity … worth believing in. It hasn't existed for a long time now. But it might exist again someday—hopefully soon." That hope has since dissipated, apparently, as he tells us on his webpage that he no longer considers himself an evangelical Christian.

Readers who share with Dudley a dismay at the alliance of Christianity and right-wing politics, even readers very impressed with Dudley's undergraduate biology degree and his master's degree from Yale Divinity School, may nevertheless find it surprising that Dudley thinks himself uniquely positioned "to dispute evangelical thought," especially given that his arguments are rather derivative. One might helpfully ponder, in fact, just what is new here. Dudley's conceit, it would seem, is his understanding of biblical interpretation.

Dudley argues that the Bible does not teach that human life begins at conception, that Paul's arguments about the "unnatural" acts of homosexuality should be read alongside Paul's claims about the unnaturalness of long hair on men, that the Bible is not nearly so green as evangelical environmentalists maintain, and that the Bible is uninterested in evolution. Why, if the Bible really does not speak to any of these issues with a clear and compelling voice, are evangelicals (and others) so sure that it does? Because we fail to recognize the implications of neo-Kuyperian epistemology for biblical interpretation. We read into Scripture what we want, for other reasons, to find there. The problem is the "naïve belief in lens-free biblical interpretation," the failure to recognize that we bring to our reading of Scripture "a very human set of assumptions, cultural values, and interests." The problem is that we fail to recognize how our experiences form our interpretation and how contemporary experiences of the world should form biblical interpretation.

Exactly how the realization that all interpretation is through the lens of experience is helpful in matters of moral discernment, though, is far from clear. Such an acknowledgment might very well lead me to a greater humility with respect to the truth of some of my views; but it might not. And, of course, experiences themselves require interpretation, and we bring our lenses to this interpretation as well. In short, Dudley's account of interpretation and experience ought to provide more than just a baptized relativism, however welcome the increase in toleration and humility that might follow from such relativism.

Readers of Broken Words may wonder just how different Dudley's new boss is from the old one. To be sure, their substantive views about what the Bible teaches about certain issues differ. But their styles of argument and their rhetorical moves are strikingly similar. Thus, the evangelicals/neo-evangelicals and Dudley both place what many would consider inordinate emphasis upon individual biblical texts and more or less ignore what the Christian tradition—both historical and contemporary—says about an issue. Dudley may at first appear to differ as he mines pre-modern, "pre-scientific" Christianity to support his case that major figures of the Christian tradition (Augustine and Aquinas) did not believe human life (or personhood) begins at conception. But to appeal to Augustine and Aquinas, despite their relative biological ignorance, on when human life begins is an odd move for the biologically sophisticated. Likewise, one might more plausibly argue that the absence of a clear and unified position on the status of fetuses and embryos in the evangelical community pre-1980 is evidence of the scandal of the evangelical mind than that this is germane to how contemporary Christians should think about embryos.

Not only does Dudley cherry-pick from the Christian tradition (but always from the historical Christian tradition rather than what contemporary Roman Catholics and Orthodox Christians believe about his "big four"), Dudley, like the evangelical/neo-evangelical community he criticizes, does an awful lot of cherry picking in general. By this I mean that the opaque title of the book permits Dudley to shift between the rhetoric and claims of evangelical preachers and other evangelical leaders (and the specific contexts in which they are speaking, to which Dudley pays no attention) and the quite different target of evangelical thinkers. Dudley seems completely ignorant of or uninterested in the moral thought of evangelical scholars of bioethics (generally folks with some affiliation with the Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity), scholars like Scott Rae, Dennis Hollinger, John Kilner, and Ben Mitchell. Furthermore, close readers of this book may perceive a readiness to present the words and views of a number of his adversaries in ways that support his purposes rather than their intentions.

Neo-neo-evangelicalism or post-evangelicalism (or whatever) is but nascent, however dispiriting some may find the early years of the movement, if a movement it is. That it currently preserves the best and avoids the worst of its parent movement is less than clear from the example of Broken Words.

Thomas D. Kennedy is professor of philosophy, Dean of the Evans School of Humanities, the Arts, and Social Sciences, and Acting Dean of the School of Mathematical and Natural Sciences at Berry College in Mt. Berry, Georgia.


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