Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Bracing thoughts and words from Stanley Hauerwas

In this essay, "The End of American Protestantism," Stanley Hauerwas has some characteristically provocative things to say about America, Americans, liberalism, and Christianity.  Here's a taste:

. . . Protestantism came to the land we now call American to make America Protestant. It was assumed that what it meant to be American and Protestant was equivalent to a faith in the reasonableness of the common man and the establishment of a democratic republic. But in the process the church in America became American - or, as Noll puts it, "because the churches had done so much to make America, they could not escape living with what they had made."

As a result Americans continue to maintain a stubborn belief in a god, but the god they believe in turns out to be the American god. To know or worship that god does not require that a church exist because that god is known through the providential establishment of a free people. This is a presumption shared by the religious right as well as the religious left in America. Both assume that America is the church.

Noll ends his account of these developments with the end of the Civil War, but the fundamental habits he identifies as decisive in the formation of the American religious and political consciousness continues to shape the way Christians - in particular, Protestant Christians - understand their place in America.

Yet I think we are beginning to see the loss of confidence by Protestants in their ability to sustain themselves in America, just to the extent that the inevitable conflict between the church, republicanism, and common sense morality has now worked its way out. America is the great experiment in Protestant social thought but the world Protestants created now threatens to make Protestantism unintelligible to itself. That is an obscure remark I must now try to make clear. . . .

 

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Garnett, Rick | Permalink

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A well formed conscience is one that is in communion with The Word of God. There Is only One Christ, and thus only One Spirit of Perfect Love Between The Father and The Son. Within The Seamless Garment, there is only one common thread; there cannot be multiple denominations of Christianity because there is only One Truth of Love.