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Travis Monteleone's avatar

I think the reports of liberalism's death have been greatly exaggerated. Liberalism has misstepped before (looking at you, eugenics), but the strength of liberalism is its ability to be highly adaptive and self-correct organically. The fact that Deneen was celebrated for his illiberal proclamations just 26 years after Fukuyama's victory celebrations for liberalism shows our collective short memories and love of pessimistic criticism more so than it shows any true rot within the liberal worldview.

I agree that the current disillusionment with liberalism can be an effective onramp to Christianity for many, but the more Christianity is positioned as an alternative to liberalism rather than liberalism's complement, the more authoritarian illiberal Christianity benefits. Liberalism and Christianity have worked well together for most of the US' history. Splitting up now risks a house divided just as illiberal regimes around the world are posing threats we haven't seen in decades. The US has always had a gyrating balance between Christianity, national tradition, and liberal rationality. We sacrifice one leg of that stool for the benefit of the other two at our extreme peril.

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Ian McKerracher's avatar

I have been looking at the dichotomies of our Western Culture through the lens of a Christian worldview (in what I believe to be the proper pursuit) for almost 50 years, having been captured by its holistic solutions to my personal mess (which was a life of being an itinerant hippie, dealing with serious issues with guilt over the death of a baby in my teens through alcohol and drug abuse) Redemption looks pretty good from that hole.

The last decade or so has brought great changes to Western Culture, with every step taking us some distance away from the foundation of Christian biblically-based thinking. The new evangelists of Woke Liberalism chipped away at that foundation with, strangely enough, no interest in delineating their idea of a replacement. Having been in the construction trades for 40+ years, I know what happens to a structure without a foundation.

Given that the Woke Worldview is a departure from rationality, I was convinced from the start that it cannot last very long. Watching in horror as the steadfast institutes of civilization were overrun with this madness, I saw the Centres of Politics, Education (first higher, then lower), Justice, Media, and Healthcare, among others, take on these new ideas on how to create the Perfect Enlightenment Society and apply them to their purview. Even some corners of Mainline Christianity fell to these new ideas, notably without regard to the clarity of our supposed objective source of truth in the Bible. I knew from the start that totalitarian methods would be needed to move it forward in any significant capacity.

If it is true that, as you say, it is starting to crack, it is a reasonably good sign. I am hesitant, though. With all the necessary building blocks of Society compromised, who is going to look after the great swell of victims of the fall from both sides of the debate? The mistrust permeating through the culture due to the soft totalitarianism of the institutes mentioned above, disqualifies them from the task. What can we do?

The only institute that remains, though battered and bruised, is the Essential Christian Church. Members will be found in most congregations, some with higher percentages and some with lower. In the mature expression of a biblical worldview, those Christians are able to subsume their own lives for the greater purpose of the Kingdom of God and engage in the common good. They have learned to serve their generation by the Will of God, regardless of who it is who needs their ministry. They have been volunteering in that capacity for years. (about 2000, to be exact)They have earned the limited tax exemption given to their organizations, giving $5 to $8 back to the community for every $1 they get, according to many demographic studies.

The hesitation in my response is the question of whether the Church is ready to respond as I believe it must. I also have lost all hope in the institutes of our lives. Once I believed in them to provide much-needed social change. I no longer can see them in that capacity. All my sources of hope have dried up except One, and He is enough. He is fully capable of creating something new out of this mess. He is able to make the Church ready.

In the words of Isaiah, the prophet, “Here I am, Lord. Send me."

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