Over the last several decades, the political climate in the U.S. has turned bitter and disastrous. A new book I'll introduce you to today can help us understand why. And although I recommend that you read it, I am dissatisfied with it in several ways, both large and small.
It's The Politics of Hate: How the Christian Right Darkened America's Political Soul, by Angelia R. Wilson, a professor of politics at the University of Manchester in England. Its publication date was yesterday.
The book is deeply researched over a long period of time. It offers insight into the causes of our politically divisive climate and it's sweeping in its knowledge of the almost-countless organizations the author identifies as part of the "Christian Right."
Before I give you more detail about what is right with this book, let's start with what's wrong. First, the title. It offers a smack-down conclusion before any argument has been made that can sustain such a stark title. Yes, yes, every book needs a title that draws in readers, but to call the work of the "Christian Right" hate without some kind of nuance is misleading and can only add to our division. Perhaps it would have been better to use a question for the title, such as Is This What the Politics of Hate Looks Like?
In the text, Wilson does carefully describe what she means by the "Christian Right," but as a subtitle without such descriptions it's merely a provocative label that may hide as much as it reveals. Beyond that, it turns out that almost nowhere in the book does Wilson point to any "politics of hate" emanating from what might be called the "Radical Left," if we have to label things -- groups like Antifa or the John Brown Gun Club.
No doubt that would have required more years of research and documentation, but making (almost) no mention of -- or examples of -- hateful politics from that end of the political spectrum seems like a mistake of imbalance.
Finally, among my criticisms of this book, there's this: The index is simply awful. It leaves out a great deal and is next-to useless despite there being a need for a good index in such a book full of tons of names of organizations and names of their leaders and followers. An example: The first chapter of the book introduces us to the work of "security strategist Colin Gray." Wilson returns to Gray's work over and over throughout the book. But he's nowhere in the index. Sigh.
I hope Temple University Press takes note of this inexcusable incompetence and fixes this problem for future books that are based on such thorough research -- and indeed for all the books it publishes.
It takes Wilson until near the end of the book to offer a definition of what "the politics of hate" means, though by then most readers will understand that she's talking about a fundamentalist approach to religion that accepts only certain answers and that defines those not part of the in-group as dangerous, unpatriotic and worthy of deep disdain -- indeed, at times almost not human at all.
It would have been helpful to offer something like that definition early in the book with an explanation that readers soon will begin to see how she came to such a conclusion through her long research. That would have made more palatable this observation in the book's introduction: ". . .over time, the American Christian Right has morphed into a political industry justifying hate. Do all individuals who espouse a social conservative Christian theology hate? No, not in my experience. . .Do Christian Right political leaders use hate to motivate social conservative voters? Yes." She does then acknowledge that some "on the left use hate to motivate voters," but offers no examples.
Wilson has spent years not exactly embedded in the so-called Christian Right but at least as a dedicated researcher into it. She has attended lots of events put on by Christian Right groups. She has read and saved years worth of emails and other publications to document sometimes-subtle shifts in positions. She has interviewed Christian Right members and others who have studied the movement and its dozens and dozens of organizations that make it up. She really does know what she's writing about, despite my several complaints about the book.
So she can prove it when she writes that "Christian Right organizations advocate for a fundamental shift in the ideological basis for policymaking -- an all-encompassing worldview."
In the end, her research leads her to conclude that "Christian Right groups may express hate in different ways, and rarely do Christian Right political leaders publicly endorse 'burning hate' (although televangelists adopt this stance more regularly). Nevertheless, the evidence. . .demonstrates that at least one effect of their grand strategy is to evoke disgust, anger, devaluation and diminution of those deemed the 'other'"
One way they do that, she writes, is by a heavy reliance on war language and imagery: "The strategic effect of Christian Right leaders deploying the grammar of war is a politics driven by us/other where there is no space for compromise or permeable boundaries or complexity. You are either for us or against us. And that binary becomes a biblical truth. The grammar of war locks the Christian Right in an unwinnable war of good and evil, producing and reproducing enemies and normalizing a politics of hate."
That seems especially true when organizations aligned with the Christian Right do their best to argue against abortion and against equal rights for LGBTQ+ people. And those two issues often are at the center of such groups' focus. As Wilson points out, at its base, Christian Right politics preaches that doing nothing is not an option: "To get to heaven, and, importantly, to avoid hell, one must stand and fight. Avoiding God's conscription is damnation," which, in a remarkable understatement, she calls "an impressive incentive."
The book is full of much more detail about how many of these organizations operate and who leads them. In that sense, it's also a reference book. Once you've read the book, tell me, in turn, what you think I got wrong about it (or right). And if you want a great example of someone in politics who held conservative Christian views but did not degenerate into hate, watch the late Jimmy Carter's funeral and listen to the ways he's described.
If you also want more detail about the the New Apostolic Reformation, or NAR, one of the Christian Right groups Wilson covers in her book, read this new Atlantic magazine article, "The Army of God Comes Out of the Shadows." It mentions a group called "The Kansas City Prophets," with roots in the 1980s. The link on the group's name will take you to Wikipedia's entry on that subject. The author of the Atlantic piece, Stephanie McCrummen, writes this: "I came to understand how the movement amounts to a sprawling political machine. The apostles and prophets, speaking for God, decide which candidates and policies advance the Kingdom. The movement’s prayer networks and newsletters amount to voter lists and voter guides. A growing ecosystem of podcasts and streaming shows such as FlashPoint amounts to a Kingdom media empire. And the overall vision of the movement means that people are not engaged just during election years but. . .24/7."
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FIRES DESTROY CALIFORNIA HOUSES OF WORSHIP, TOO
The devastating wild fires in California have destroyed many homes, as we all know, but they've also destroyed a number of houses of worship -- Jewish, Muslim and Christian, as this RNS story reports. Among many other reports of loss, the story says this: "At least two United Methodist churches were destroyed: the Community United Methodist Church in Pacific Palisades, whose burning building was photographed by the LA Times, and the Altadena United Methodist Church, according to an update from the California-Pacific Conference of the UMC." Sometimes it's the helpers who need help.
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P.S.: In the city in India in which I lived for a time of my boyhood, a huge religious festival, the Kumbh Mela, starts tomorrow. My friend Markandey Katju, a former justice on India's Supreme Court who writes a lot about what's wrong with India these days, has written this column protesting government funding of the festival. That government, he writes, has no business funding religion in a secular nation like India and the money instead "should be spent on the welfare of our people like building good schools and hospitals." True, but India's current Hindu Nationalist regime has no interest in avoiding ways to support Hindus and crush Muslims. India, under Prime Minister Narendra Damodardas Modi, has become an increasingly autocratic country that treats Muslims as outsiders and second-class citizens. And American political leaders should be protesting, too.
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ANOTHER P.S.: My friends at ReadTheSpirit.com online magazine have put together a year-long list of religious holidays that you can find here. It shows that this Sunday is the day Christians will celebrate the "Baptism of the Lord." And on Monday Sikhs will celebrate Maghi Lorhi. You could look 'em both up.
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A FINAL P.S.: Several organizations are sponsoring "The Pro-Life Call to End the Death Penalty" webinar online this Tuesday evening. You can read details about it here and register to attend.