Too Conservative

Too Conservative

Fred Clark has a post about the fact that conservative Evangelicalism's language gives the impression that there is only one direction in which one can move too far. He writes:

Gatekeepers police the fortified boundaries of evangelicalism, but only on the โ€œliberalโ€ border. There is no conservative borderโ€ฆ

The tribe only has โ€œliberalโ€ boundaries. Conservatism is unboundedโ€ฆ

Thatโ€™s not to say that most white evangelicals are comfortable with Wilsonโ€™s Neo-Confederate nonsense. Theyโ€™re not. But the subculture lacks any useful vocabulary for speaking or thinking of something as too conservative.โ€œConservativeโ€ occupies the same space in the evangelical imagination as โ€œsexual purityโ€ does. To say someone was โ€œtoo conservativeโ€ โ€” theologically, politically, socially โ€” would be like their saying a bride was too much of a virgin.This is tied up with the distorted notion of holiness as meaning the avoidance of contamination. In this view, spirituality โ€” like sexuality and all the rest of life โ€” is like a spotless, undefiled white bed sheet. Our task is to conserve the cleanliness of that sheet from all potential defilement. Holiness is a matter of being conservative.This idea of holiness-as-non-contamination is profoundly un-Christlike. Nothing in the life or teaching of Jesus Christ suggests that avoiding contamination has anything to do with holiness. From the manger to the cross, Jesusโ€™ whole story is about getting down in the dirt with the shepherds, fishermen, tax-collectors, prostitutes, Gentiles, women, Samaritans, zealots, lepers and other โ€œuncleanโ€ outcasts of every kind. โ€œFollow me,โ€ Jesus said, but the idea of holiness-as-purity forbids us from doing that.

This view of holiness creates a bias favoring everything perceived or purported to be โ€œconservative.โ€ As long as any given โ€œstanceโ€ can be framed or positioned or spun as the conservative option, it will be perceived as the purer choice. Conversely, anything that can be framed or positioned or spun as โ€œliberalโ€ will be perceived as less pure โ€” as tainted, suspect and dangerous.This framework of conservative = pure, liberal = impure also becomes the basis for determining and defining what is or is not โ€œbiblical.โ€ No need to go to the Bible itself to figure that out. No need to read the Bible at all. Whenever youโ€™re presented with two conflicting or competing interpretations, just ask which one is more โ€œconservativeโ€ and which one is more โ€œliberal.โ€ The conservative one must be purer and holier, so it must be right. The more liberal view must stray from such purity and holiness because anything that is โ€œliberalโ€ is, by definition, a form of strayingโ€ฆ

The danger of this approach is articulated well. If the fact that it is the opposite of Jesus' view and approach doesn't persuade you of that, perhaps this will:

Doug Wilson is obviously not a liberal. So therefore his views must be purer and more biblical even if they seem repugnant. The spotless white sheet of his holiness may have eye-holes cut in it, but as long as it remains uncontaminated by the stain of liberalism his status and standing within the tribe will go unchallenged.

The gatekeepers of evangelicalism do not patrol the tribeโ€™s right-wing boundary because there is no right-wing boundary. Their ideal of holiness prevents them from imagining that there ever could be one.

Click through to read the whole thing.

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