Category: Guest Column


Sightings, “Historians and Religion”

Historians and Religion
— Martin E. Marty

“Sightings” of religion in the academy, we are regularly told, are rare. “Secularism” is the villain. You wouldn’t know it if you attended programs or visited publishers’ displays at historians’ conventions, where, by all reports, religion never had it so good. That was the word at meetings of the American Historical Association and allied organizations which met in Chicago January 5-8. You would expect religious topics to preoccupy the American Catholic Historical Association and the American Society of Church History. Of course, of course. But there is much change within the latter two, and an annual opportunity to check in is valuable to provide background and perspective.

The timings of their meetings make my transition, after two weeks of non-sighting, fortuitous. While we were “off,” there was plenty of coverage of religion in public life, thanks especially to the non-stop headlining and prime-timing of political campaign religion. It is so over-covered that we think we do a service by under-covering it here. So, here is stuff for background and perspective. My vantage? I’ve been attending the ACHA and ASCH for fifty-five years, (having been president of both organizations long ago). And over coffee we older-timers like to reflect on change, of which there is plenty. We were also reminded that there is plenty of continuity, a theme stressed by Yale’s Harry “Skip” Stout, on a panel celebrating his influential work. An expert on New England, he came on the scene decades ago when Titan Perry Miller dominated with studies of “declension” on the religion-and-society scene as the decades passed in Puritan New England. Listen to the factional and fictional representations of that past in contemporary politics, urged Stout and others, and you will see how versions of that past are invoked and distorted today.

Hurrying on: what are some of the changes? Many of them have to do with the make-up of the casts of historians, as ambitious and innovative lovers of their craft as “we” were fifty-five years ago and remain today. Most obvious is a matter of the identity of the researchers, writers, job-seekers, adjuncts, and accomplished veterans. In 1956 almost the only women on the program rosters were Catholic sisters. Today Catholic non-sisters and non-Catholic women are “all over the place,” at breakfasts and in book display titles and on programs.

Topics also have changed, and for the better. A half century ago we chronicled comings and goings of bishops and pastors, denominations, orders, synods and seminaries. Today, in societies of people who are and want to be alert to their times but seek to shun faddism, words like these leap out: “Reports of Weeping,” “Repentant Bodies,” “Scrutinizing the Household,” “The Rhetoric of Place,” “History of Gender in Southern Baptist Battles,” “Stephen’s Relics,” “A Chinese Guest of the Pope,” “The Myth of the Judeo-Christian Culture,” “Even If You Stayed Long, Who Would Have You for a Sweetheart—You are a Korean,” “Rescuing Prostitutes and Wayward Women,” etc.

The picture of religious faith and practice today, as chronicled by historians, will bring students and readers and viewers much closer to what religion really looks like “close to home,” “close to heart.” When asked why I am an historian, I like to quote a British historian: “I find the world very odd, and I want to know how it got that way!” All aboard as we go observing the oddments of religion in a new year, with the aid of quotes from journalists and their kin and kind.

 

References
The American Catholic Historical Association Annual meeting program can be found here and the American Society of Church History winter meeting program can be found here.

Searching for a Liberal Church

A few Facebook friends and my RSS feed pointed me to this article, “The Liberal Church Finding Its Mission: It’s Not About You.”  These thoughts from a Unitarian Universalists minister are applicable to the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and our lack of denominational clarity about who we are and what our expression of Christianity stands for or for whom.  It begs to question what a movement for wholeness in a fragmented world means?

A couple of paragraphs and a link.

The Liberal Church Finding Its Mission: It’s Not About You
by THE REV. PETER C. BOULLATA | Held in the Light Blog

At one point he said to me, “You know, I should tell you this story. I have a thirteen-year-old son who has been asking a lot of religious questions lately. I was raised Catholic, but we’re not involved at all, and haven’t really given him a religious education. One day, my son was with me in the car when we drove by another Unitarian Universalist church. He asked me, because he knew that I had done some work for them, what kind of a church it was. When I told him, he asked what Unitarian Universalists believe. So I told him, ‘Well they don’t really believe anything specific. It’s a religion where whatever you think or believe or feel is what the religion is all about.’ And my son said, ‘That’s the kind of church I want to go to!’”

But my pleasant façade betrayed the bomb that had just gone off in my head. Oh dear God, it’s true. We have institutionalized narcissism. Here was a person that was not involved in a Unitarian Universalist church, and yet knew something about us. As an outsider, the message he received about what we stand for is: It’s about whatever you want it to be about. It’s all about you.

There is a contradiction inherent in liberal religion. We are free, autonomous individuals in community with one another. Tension exists between freedom and connection, autonomy and community. There is no getting around it. Our calling is to live gracefully in that tension, holding them with equanimity, without being weighted as we are now toward individual freedom and autonomy. Our capacity for being a transformative presence in the world is diminished when we neglect the communal, connected, covenanted aspect of our life together and when we focus primarily on the individual and their freedom. Our institutions suffer.

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