Seeking Redemption in the Age of Oprah

Seeking Redemption in the Age of Oprah

Michael Knox Beran has an outstanding essay in City Journal about the attractions of secular Messianism, where it is easy and comfortable to place blame for present discontents far away from moral deficits. The search for redemption through politics is nothing new, but it is particularly noteworthy during this campaign season. A sample:

The solution, he says, lies in a political reformation. Unless we “begin the process of changing politics and our civic life,” we will bequeath to our children “a weaker and more fractured America” than the one we inherited. Hence his mantra, “Change we can believe in.” Like the Nicene Creed, Obama’s doctrine begins in belief. Credo. Once we believe in the possibility of a transformative politics, “the perfection begins.” The selfish politics of the present yields to the selfless politics of the future. We discover that “this nation is more than the sum of its parts—that out of many, we are truly one.” So believing, we can replace a politics that breeds division, conflict, and cynicism with a politics that fosters unity and peace. In Obama’s “project of national renewal,” government can become an expression of “our communal values, our sense of mutual responsibility and social solidarity.”


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