A Calmer Response to the Tea Party

A Calmer Response to the Tea Party

by Philip Clayton

The newspapers, TV, and religious talk shows are dominated of late by battles between liberals and conservatives. The Tea Party is a lightning rod that raises these disagreements to a fever pitch. Most of us know the hostile words that mainline Protestants are inclined to say about the Tea Party movement. (To be honest, I’ve also experienced this temptation.)

So what would a more balanced response look like? I asked myself this question as I read the three installments of Tim Dalrymple’s defense of the Tea Party on Patheos: “Is the Tea Party a ‘Social Justice’ Movement?”, “Is the Tea Party a Christian Movement?”, and “Is the Tea Party Racist?”. Tim is a rational guy (after all, he’s taught at Harvard). His tone is not vindictive or mean. He thinks the Tea Party is a necessary corrective for a government that’s grown overly large. He worries about the national debt. Sure, he says, we should be concerned about the poor and needy. But individuals and churches should care for them, not government programs.


In the end, Tim and I disagree. Still, it’s not like he doesn’t have reasons for his views, as I have reasons for mine. Merely adding more incendiary remarks to the fire isn’t particularly helpful. So let’s do something different. What happens if I step back from the details and think more about the general thrust of these three blogs (and about the statements on record from leading figures in Tea Party)? What general features do you see when you read them through altogether? Here’s what I see:

First, one notices that the tone is pretty defensive. Tim (and the scores of people who responded on the Patheos site) feel under attack. Tim bemoans how the movement has been “misrepresented and mocked.” He makes a good case that some of these criticisms have been unfair. The cost of the defensive blogs, however, is that the series is a bit thin on concrete proposals and theological grounding.

Second, the protests notwithstanding, the primary stress is still on the Tea Partyers. They say they are tired of seeing taxes go up, fed up with the government wasting too much of our money. It may well be that some conservatives genuinely “believe that their policy preferences are for the betterment of all society and not only for themselves.” But I cannot agree that it is “concern for the common good that animates the Tea Party movement.” I just don’t see it.

Tim wants to be calm, rational, and measured. Still, he finds liberals irritating. He attacks back. At times he tends to stereotype the same liberals whom he’s accusing of stereotyping the Tea Partyers. This is a widespread feature of American political debate today, on both sides. Even those of us who resist it remain guilty of it.

The answers coming out of the movement tend to be private answers. Tim would prefer that “Jobless Joe” receive the funds he needs “from the members of the church down the street.” But many of those with the most severe needs are just not going to make it through the doors of Tea Partyers’ churches. Oppression, poverty, racism, lack of access to educational opportunities — these are systemic problems that require systemic intervention.

And that brings me to the bottom line. Many of us who disagree with the Tea Partyers don’t do so because of ad hominem arguments. We can even say, with Tim, that some people in this movement are motivated “by sincere concern for the good of their country.” But we do disagree with their political philosophy. We believe the policies of conservative Republicans benefit business and middle-class Americans more than our country’s weakest and most vulnerable. We think that the New Testament and the history of the Christian tradition point in a very different direction . . . require a very different set of priorities for Christians . . . encourage us to support very different social and political policies on matters of race, immigration, health care, and the environment.

Daniel Schultz discusses the origins of the word “progressive” in an American political movement from the early 20th century:

Progressive in that sense meant a kind of pro-government populism, not quite socialism, but the belief that “that the business of government was to serve the people.” The most lasting legacy of that commitment has been a higher education system at the forefront of economic development of the state, but there were other items on the agenda: primary elections, worker’s compensation, state regulation of the railroads, direct election of Senators . . .

This is the direction in which we need to move. I don’t have to vilify the Tea Party movement or insult everyone who goes to its rallies. But we really do disagree about “the policies that best serve the poor and the rest of society.” Nothing I’ve seen in the statements emanating from the movement shows me policies that in fact “better serve the poor” than the policies that progressive Christians today are advocating.

Philip Clayton is Professor of Religion and Philosophy at Claremont Graduate University and Ingraham Professor at Claremont School of Theology. He is primarily known for his work in constructive theology and the religion-science debate.  He is the author or editor of over 100 articles and eighteen books, most recently The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Science, Adventures in the Spirit, In Quest of Freedom, and Transforming Christian Theology. Visit his blog here.

Read other articles by Philip Clayton at Patheos:

Theology After Google

Living in the Intersections: Asking the Big Questions of Science and Religion

Tags: Christianity, politics


Browse Our Archives