Friday, May 01, 2009

Christ Against Culture?

Forgive me while I psychoanalyze...

I'm reading Christ and Culture by H. Richard Niebuhr--I'm about half way through and it is excellent. Niebuhr pieces together historic Christian approaches to how Christians ought to live in the World (which he calls culture and spends a chapter defining. Niebuhr in short: the World is the value systems, philosophies, art forms, politics, and economics that make up a culture).

The problem, it seems, is that Jesus promises eternal salvation, but we're not dead yet. How ought Christians live (and how should I live) in the interim?

Niebuhr examines five answers that Christians have posited to this question, and each answer is fascinating. Each approach has taught me more about my self and my faith.

Of particular interest has been the approach that Niebuhr calls 'Christ against Culture' or the 'radical' approach. These Christians--represented by groups like the Benedictines (back in the day) and the Mennonites, and people like Leo Tolstoy--were convinced that the Christian must separate from culture in a radical way, either through vows of poverty, disavowal of political action, or, in Tolstoy's case, disengagement with culture altogether. These men and women are to be commended.
"In history these Christian withdrawals from and rejections of the institutions of society have been of very great importance to both church and culture. They have maintained the distinction between Christ and Caesar, between revelation and reason, between God's will and man's."
Amen.

I have been drawn to this approach in the past and am drawn to it now. I dream of living a radical life and were it not for video games and girls I might pursue it more seriously. It seems to me that Christ is worth being radical for. Some people are radical Marxists or radical libertarians--that's fine--but those ideologies have very defined material ends, while Christ promises change and transformation that transcends politics, culture, and economics; affecting and saving the soul. He promises a new society, a new ethics, a new life, and a second chance for anyone who has failed. What a Man to follow radically!

But at times the 'radical' approach is not the right approach:
"Now that we have recognized the importance of the role played by anticultural Christians in the reform of culture, we must immediately point out that they never achieved these results alone or directly but only through the mediation of believers who gave a different answer to the fundamental question. Not Tertullian (a radical), but Origen, Clement of Alexandria, Ambrose, and Augustine initiated the reformation of Roman culture. Not Benedict, but Francis, Dominic, and Bernard of Clairvaux accomplished the reform of medieval society often credited to Benedict...in every case the followers did not so much compromise the teachings of the radicals as follow another inspiration than the one deriving from an exclusive loyalty to an exclusive Christ (against culture)."
Augustine, Francis, and the other followers took ideas and values from the radical approach and used them to engaged culture. They saw tremendous change. Whole countries, whole empires became more just and more God-fearing because of their work.

Now, I'm trying to figure out how I want to live my life, and I keep getting pulled back to this desire to be a radical Christian. For some reason, I can't pull it off. I try to be a radical, but lose my desire after about 45 minutes. It seems like I just wasn't made to be a radical. In light of this struggle, I appreciate Niebuhr. Perhaps I can live for Christ as a radical-inspired non-radical. Perhaps I can take the ideas of Benedict and St. Antony and apply them in the context of my normal life. And as Niebuhr suggests, perhaps living this way I can have more of an impact than if I were a radical.

What do you think?

6 comments:

Hsquared2 said...

Why don't you ask Him? He knows what's best for you, and I know you know how to receive personal revelation.

I think different people have different answers in part because Christ calls them on different paths to do different things, and so what may be right for one person, may not be right for another.

Unknown said...

If you want to live radically (in a sustained way) for Christ in the culture, come to a small group called "Unfashionable!" You know where it meets. :)

There are many good books on this subject, among which I recommend... surprise... a book called Unfashionable.

Daniel Groot said...

To follow Andy Crouch's idea in Culture making, I think that different parts of culture require different types of engagement. But ultimately we need to radically engage culture.

If our faith is ultimately reactionary, it will not have the impact we desire right? At least that is how I read the christ against culture folk. I would desire that we, as Christians, can create culture that is gospel. The good news that Jesus is more beautiful, insightful, compassionate, and just than anything the world has to offer.

Forgive the idealism! ;)

Great post david.

Caroline said...

Yeah, I really enjoyed this too.

I've also been thinking about the radical life recently. I'm reading the Irresistible Revolution by Shane Claiborne - something about his radical lifestyle is incredibly attractive to me... irresistible even. But like you David, I'm not sure if that's who I am. Well, I guess I'm still learning lots of new things about myself, so it's hard to say...

Anyway, I like the idea of a radically-inspired non-radical! We need people to inspire future radicals, or support them, or incorporate their ideas/lifestyle into culture so that they're not so arcane! Go for it David!

Davidthird said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Davidthird said...

Thanks for the responses, guys.

A couple of notes:
1. The semantics of this post are messy. I refer to the Christ against culture position as the radical position, but I don't think that is right. Being a radical Christ follower involves obedience, love, hope, faith, and joy--and these traits can be employed in any context and with any posture toward culture.

2. I'm not sure that I communicated this, but I really think the Christ against culture position is a valid and important approach for Christians to take. I think there are times when Christians must emphasize our differences with the world--to the point of refusing to engage. However, I take issue with anyone who would suggest that any one Christian ought always to refuse to engage with culture. That position is neither biblical nor practical.