Sunday, March 14, 2004

First, Grade Inflation, Now, Salvation Inflation?

My hero—Richard (Kinky) Friedman—has staked out his position: "I'm not pro-life, I'm not pro-choice, I'm pro-football." In the realm of faith, (like the Kinkster and Alan Wolfe) I'm non-judgmental. If this is (fair & balanced) blasphemy. so be it.



[x Christianity Today]
"Salvation Inflation"?
A conversation with Alan Wolfe.
Interview by Michael Cromartie

Alan Wolfe is professor of political science and director of the Boisi Center for Religion and Public Life at Boston College. He is the author most recently of An Intellectual in Public (University of Michigan Press), a collection of his essays and reviews from The New Republic and elsewhere, and The Transformation of American Religion: How We Actually Live Our Faith (Free Press). Many readers of Books & Culture will have seen his October 2000 Atlantic Monthly cover story, "The Opening of the Evangelical Mind." Michael Cromartie spoke with Wolfe in Washington, D.C, last November; John Wilson joined the conversation.

Alan, you say that "in the United States culture has transformed Christ, as well as all other religions found within these shores. In every aspect of the religious life, American faith has met American culture—and American culture has triumphed." Why is this?

Religion is an enormously overpowering force that influences how people think and how they act, what they do, what they think is ethically right and wrong, and so on. But culture has very much the same kind of impact as well. It also shapes who we are and how we act. The question that preoccupies me is what happens when these two gigantic forces clash, as they do in the United States. And I argue in the book that culture tends to win in most such clashes. And so religion finds itself adapting to some characteristic features of American culture that are antithetical to what, for lack of a better term, we call "the old-time religion."

What would be some examples of those adaptations?

The individualism of our culture, the populist quality of our culture, its short attention span, and its anti-intellectualism. All those things influence all the other kinds of institutions we have: they influence sports, they influence politics. Politics today doesn't resemble what it was 50 or 70 years ago; the same is true of sports. How could religion be immune to these cultural forces? It too will take new forms—what some people might call "mutations." I was looking for neutral terms, so I called them "transformations."

I wonder if someone from a megachurch might say in response to your book, "Well, it's true that our services have been influenced by trends in secular entertainment, but look what we've done: we've grown, many people have had their lives transformed by Christ. There are former alcoholics attending our AA groups. People with broken marriages are now healing their lives."

I am very sympathetic to that. I'm not sitting here saying these changes are horrible things. First, I am in no position to do that; I'm not religious myself. I see it more as a dilemma, and I wouldn't want to be in the shoes of the person who has to respond to that dilemma. What do you do if you're strongly convinced that the truth you want to communicate should be expressed in a certain way, yet you recognize that this approach simply isn't drawing many people to it? I'm enormously impressed by Rick Warren at Saddleback and his homiletic style, which I think is extraordinary. I describe him not only as the best preacher, but as simply the best public speaker I have ever heard. As I was sitting there listening to him say, "Avoid sin," and making jokes, the question that occurred to me was this: are these people better off here, or are they better off watching television or a football game? And they are definitely better off in Saddleback. On the other hand, conservative critics of Rick Warren would propose a third alternative: a more old-fashioned church.

You say, "More Americans than ever proclaim themselves born again in Christ, but the lord to whom they turn rarely gets angry and frequently strengthens self-esteem."

I find that a lot. And again, I think there's both a positive and a negative side to that. The positive side is that this self-esteem, the sense of empowerment that so many people talk about, shows a dimension of evangelical religion that my secular friends are completely unaware of. My secular friends will tell me that evangelical Christianity is patriarchal to the core—it's all about men oppressing women, going back to the most traditional kinds of gender roles and so on. And I see something entirely different. I see people being encouraged to develop as individuals, truly experiencing a sense of empowerment. In that sense, I think it's an enormously positive transformation of traditional evangelical religion.

Were you surprised when you found that?

That was one of the biggest surprises. But there's also a dangerous side to this change. There's something wrong with too much self-confidence. I would have expected a little more doubt. Now, I'm married to a Dane, and there's a Kierkegaardian culture in my family. Kierkegaard is largely missing in American religion. I don't think there's enough brooding going on.

You say: "In no other area of religious practice, especially for evangelicals, is the gap between the religion as it is supposed to be and religion as it actually is as great as it is in the area of sin. … Somehow I am not pleased with this retreat from sin." Why is that?

I'm not a great phrasemaker, but there is one phrase in the book I like—Salvation Inflation, which I compare to grade inflation. I define grade inflation by the fact that over the 30 years I've been teaching, every year I assign less and less, and every year the grades get higher and higher. It's a two-stage process. To some degree, we've seen that with salvation as well. People confess fewer and fewer sins, and are rewarded with more and more.

Doesn't your book leave readers with the impression that the trend you are tracking is more pervasive than it actually is?

I do say at various times that what I'm describing has various counters to it. On the question of sin, for example, I do say that the Southern Baptist Convention—which is after all the largest of the Protestant denominations—is one church that has not given up sin. But I think in spite of those caveats, the other impression does come across, and I think that's probably because I didn't pay as much attention to the South as I probably should have. And of course there are seriously committed Orthodox Jews who run against much of what I'm saying.

But the logic of your argument suggests that there's a certain inevitability to the direction of this transformation, that this is the train of American history and if you get in its way you'll be flattened.

In the book, it's true, that would be the main argument. But who can tell for sure? I would put my bets on "probably." "Inevitably" is a strong word. What is inevitable, I believe, is the process by which culture shapes other forces, including religion. It's possible that the culture could change, and in that way, we could go back to an older form of religion. But I admit that it's hard for me to imagine how that would take place.

In some ways your book goes against the grain of what Dean Kelly wrote many years ago about why conservative churches are growing. Those churches were growing, Kelly argued, because they were committed to Christian orthodoxy and to strong doctrine. And you are finding that those same churches have capitulated to the culture.

I believe what's going on in my re-interpretation of the Kelly thesis really has to do with the difference between quantitative and qualitative social science. If you simply look at the numbers, as Kelly did, and find that conservative churches are the ones that are growing, it's easy to conclude that their strict teaching is the critical factor. But when you look at what's happening qualitatively through ethnographic research, and what those churches are really doing, they don't look so strict. They look more and more as if they are fitting the kind of patterns I've described.

In the book, I tell the story of one particular believer who quit her Baptist church because it was so strong on divorce and joined a Pentecostal church, which was much more welcoming. Baptists and Pentecostals are both called conservative Christians; they would not be sharply differentiated in the Kelly thesis. But for this woman, strict teaching was not the attraction. She chose the warmth and acceptance of a more "Spirit-filled" church. Pentecostalism, as you know, is growing rapidly, and yet I wouldn't even know how to classify a Pentecostal church on the "strict vs. non-strict" dimension. Those aren't the crucial categories.

You note that evangelicals have become theologically less combative. Let me quote you again: "Conflict over doctrine is fast becoming a phenomenon of church history. Evangelicals have exchanged orthodoxy for popularity."

My focus is not on denominational leadership but on the ordinary churchgoer. When you see how much switching goes on, you have to wonder: how much does this have to do with doctrine? People are in a different church from the one of their birth, different from the church of their parents, even different from the one they were in five years ago. There is one person in the book who was raised Catholic but then became Baptist. The differences between Catholics and Baptists are things that people used to die for. So what does that history mean when people switch? Do they really know what John Wesley stood for and what Methodism is all about if they drop out so readily for a church with an entirely different tradition?

You comment in your book about the religious origins of non-judgmentalism. What are those?

I was fascinated by that. Again, my secular friends think the United States is filled with fundamentalist Christians who believe that the Bible contains the literal word of God and therefore know the Bible inside out. But what most people know from the Bible is "Judge not lest you be judged." People come away with that lesson and this one: Do not throw the first stone. Especially Christians.

You've written that "liberals threaten to undermine their own liberalism when they write about religion. A liberal temperament ought to be disposed to respect as many points of view as possible, including those that in turn had little respect for liberalism." How do you think this will be perceived among your liberal friends?

One of the examples I cited is actually a good friend of mine, a scholar named Stephen Macedo, who essentially says that religious believers just don't have the right kind of qualities of mind to be good citizens in a liberal democratic society. I'm trying to say that this is not the case. How will such friends receive the book? Well, it has been better received in religious communities than in secular communities. I thought that I would be writing to both. For many secular people, religion remains terra incognita, and I can say, "It's not what you think."

You say "believers are full citizens of the United States, and it is time to make peace between them and the rest of America." Why do you say that?

The "full citizens" comment grows out of a kind of anger that I feel at Stanley Hauerwas, whom I have learned from, and admire in many ways as a person. I've been interacting with him for a long time. But I really was offended by his concept of a resident alien. First, it's very hard for someone who's not a Christian to listen to a kind of Christian victimology that you sometimes get. Even people I respect enormously—George Marsden—can fall into that, or at least it sounds like that to me. I also think that when I'm not writing about religion, I write about citizenship. I am a very strong believer in the idea of citizenship. There's a sense of mutual duty, that societies have to take citizenship very seriously. The notion of a resident alien disturbs me, because it suggests that people really aren't being full citizens, and really shouldn't be. What I want to say to Stanley Hauerwas is: What are you talking about? But I also want to say it to my liberal friends: you also can't go around and talk about these people as not having the right qualities of mind. So, all the energy is focused on that conclusion.

You say, "America's God has been domesticated, there to offer solace and to engage in dialogue with the understanding that, except under the most unusual circumstances, he will listen and commiserate." Again, you notice a theological dilution of firmly held beliefs from the past. But you also seem to find some assurance in this domestication of belief and are not happy with those who hold to the absolute truth claims of historic Christianity. Is that right?

That's right. These things are such a mixed bag. It's not like I've gone religious. Probably some of my friends think that I've gone soft on religion. In fact, Judith Shulevitz wrote a piece about me: Has Alan Wolfe gone evangelical? I still retain a secular edge looking at the history of doctrinal conflict and religious sectarianism.

You know Albert Mohler. There's a quote I've saved from a letter he wrote to The New York Times, where he says that Christians have one idea of the truth and Muslims have another, and the two are not reconcilable. That kind of language bothers me a lot. I prefer the religion of a pastor in Cincinnati, Steve Shogran, mentioned in the book, whose motto is "Love, love, love, truth." I would take that. I think the single most important advantage of the softer kind of religion I found is that it has created much greater religious tolerance. Basically, I think that development is enormously positive, given the history of sectarianism and violence.

Michael Cromartie directs the Evangelical Studies Project at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C.

Copyright © 2004 by the author or Christianity Today

Doonesbury + Bush 41 + Bush 43; Karl Rove Must Be Weeping

The Amarillo fishwrap has a number of deficiencies—journalistically, with the Tulia drug bust nonsense and editorially, with the exclusion of Doonesbury from its Sunday edition—and (F&B) Rants & Raves provides respite from the editorial decision to forego the Sunday Doonesbury strip. If this is (fair & balanced) comic relief, so be it.


Pulitzer Prize for Bob Herbert; Stupider Prize for the Amarillo Fishwrap

NYTimes columnist Bob Herbert began writing about the abortion of justice in Tulia, TX more than a year ago. His series of columns (especially those of 7/29/2002 - 8/22/2002) prompted the Department of Justice to open an investigation of the Tulia drug busts. The Amarillo fishwrap was silent (except to exult about the reign of law'norder in Swisher County) about the curious fact that the drug busts targeted the nonwhite population of Swisher County. The dominos began to topple with the DOJ inquiry. When the dust settled, the City of Amarillo—principal in the Panhandle Drug Task Force that created this travesty of justice—settled the wrongful arrest/prosecution cases for $5M. The Amarillo fishwrap piled on after the settlement. Where was the Amarillo fishwrap when Bob Herbert (in New York City goes the Texas sneer) was calling national attention to the travesty in Swisher County, TX? Nowhere. Now the editorial voice of the Amarillo fishwrap is in full cry to find those responsible. How about the 4th estate in Amarillo? The fishwrap can sell advertising with the best of 'em. When it comes to real journalism, look elsewhere. If this is (fair & balanced) disgust, so be it.



EDITORIAL DESK | July 29, 2002, Monday
Kafka In Tulia

By BOB HERBERT (NYT) 799 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 19 , Column 6

ABSTRACT - Bob Herbert Op-Ed column on prosecution of 46 black residents of Tulia, Tex, following their arrest by white policeman Tom Coleman--officer with questionable history--who charged them with being drug traffickers; many have been convicted and sent to prison even though Coleman provided almost no evidence at trials to substantiate charges (M)

EDITORIAL DESK | August 1, 2002, Thursday
'Lawman Of the Year'

By BOB HERBERT (NYT) 794 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 25 , Column 6

ABSTRACT - Bob Herbert Op-Ed column on charges of police abuse of blacks in Tulia, Texas; relates wrongdoing of Tom Coleman, 'clownish and inept officer' who was nevertheless given state 'Lawman of the Year' award (M)

EDITORIAL DESK | August 5, 2002, Monday
Tulia's Shattered Lives

By Bob Herbert (NYT) 768 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 15 , Column 6

ABSTRACT - Bob Herbert Op-Ed column describes devastation of tiny black community Tulia, Tex, stemming from convictions and sentencing of many black residents to long prison terms for drug dealing following allegations by white narcotics detective, Tom Coleman; defendants were convicted even though no drugs, money or weapons were found in drug raids, and although evidence against suspects consisted almost solely of Coleman's uncorroborated, unsubstantiated word (M)

EDITORIAL DESK | August 8, 2002, Thursday
Railroaded in Texas

By BOB HERBERT (NYT) 816 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 25 , Column 5

ABSTRACT - Bob Herbert Op-Ed column says 1999 drug arrests of black residents of Tulia, Tex, had clear malicious intent; says arrests were followed by assembly-line trial in which guilty verdicts were foregone conclusions; says Tom Coleman, narcotics agent on whose testimony defendants were convicted and given long prison sentences, had atrocious employment history and penchant for making criminal allegations against innocent people; cites prosecution of Kizzie White and Freddie Brookins (M)

EDITORIAL DESK | August 12, 2002, Monday
Justice Goes Into Hiding

By BOB HERBERT (NYT) 740 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 15 , Column 6

ABSTRACT - Bob Herbert Op-Ed column says top law enforcement officials in Texas and at Justice Dept in Washington know of hateful treatment of black people caught in drug sting gone haywire in Tulia, Tex, but no one has bothered to do anything about it; says more than 10 percent of Tulia's black population was arrested in 1999 and several are serving unconscionably long prison sentences; says right thing to do would be for local authorities to admit that there was not sufficient evidence to justify these cases, but Texas authorities are deferring to Justice Dept in this matter and Justice Dept under Atty Gen John Ashcroft has closed its investigation without doing anything (M)


EDITORIAL DESK | August 22, 2002, Thursday
A Confused Inquiry

By BOB HERBERT (NYT) 737 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 23 , Column 5

ABSTRACT - Bob Herbert Op-Ed column welcomes Justice Department's announcement, after much external pressure and much internal confusion, that it is continuing its criminal investigation into drug sting in Tulia, Tex, that rounded up more than 10 percent of town's black population; says department should not confine its investigation to Tom Coleman, on whose testimony so many defendants were sent to prison, but to entire criminal justice hierarchy that worked in concert in this injustice (M)

DITORIAL DESK | December 26, 2002, Thursday
The Latest From Tulia

By BOB HERBERT (NYT) 705 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 39 , Column 5

ABSTRACT - Bob Herbert Op-Ed column welcomes tentative, preliminary steps being taken to correct injustice done to dozens of black men and women in Tulia, Tex, who were arrested, convicted and imprisoned on specious drug trafficking charges; says Texas would still be ignoring this travesty were it not for media; notes that John Cornyn, state attorney general who presented Texas Lawman of the Year to Tom Coleman, 'clownish undercop' responsible for roundup, has been elected to US Senate

EDITORIAL DESK | April 3, 2003, Thursday
Mugging the Needy

By BOB HERBERT (NYT) 812 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 21 , Column 5

ABSTRACT - Bob Herbert Op-Ed column says Bush administration and its allies in Congress are close to agreeing on set of budget policies that will take terrible toll on nation's poor, young, elderly, disabled and others in need of assistance and support from their government; says budget passed by House mugs the poor and helpless while giving unstintingly to the rich; says Senate plan is not as egregious, but it still is not a reasonable budget; says House and Senate conferees will try to resolve differences in two budget proposals, and do all they can to minimize public relations hit bound to come when it becomes obvious that money is being given to rich at expense of poor (M)

EDITORIAL DESK | April 28, 2003, Monday
The Tulia Story Isn't Over

By BOB HERBERT (NYT) 735 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 23 , Column 1

ABSTRACT - Bob Herbert Op-Ed column says Thomas Coleman, self-styled 'deep undercover' narcotics agent, has been indicted for perjury for concocting one of worst criminal justice atrocities of recent years, leading to wrongful convictions of many black residents in Tulia, Tex; says it would be outrageous if he is nailed for perjury but higher-ups who enthusiastically encouraged his activities were allowed to escape all responsibility for their actions; says Texas Court of Criminal Appeals should release on bail 13 people still incarcerated pending final ruling of appeals court (M)

EDITORIAL DESK | June 16, 2003, Monday
Partway To Freedom

By BOB HERBERT (NYT) 775 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 19 , Column 1

ABSTRACT - Bob Herbert Op-Ed column lambastes Texas Court of Criminal Appeals for failing to overturn convictions of those falsely imprisoned on felony drug charges in Tulia, even though District Judge Ron Chapman has recommended that all convictions be vacated and prisoners released (M)

EDITORIAL DESK | June 19, 2003, Thursday
A Good Day

By BOB HERBERT (NYT) 792 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A , Page 25 , Column 5

ABSTRACT - Bob Herbert Op-Ed welcomes release of 12 inmates sent to prison as result of discredited drug prosecutions in Tulia, Tex; says that while their convictions are likely to be overturned, their future is less certain (M)

Copyright © 2004 The New York Times






[x Amarillo Fishwrap]
Editorial: Lack of oversight lesson for Amarillo

Now that Amarillo has reached a $5 million settlement with the victims of the infamous 1999 Tulia drug sting, the city needs to ask itself what it has learned.

Call it the $5 million question. The answer is accountability.

The city and the Amarillo Police Department made a costly mistake in not being more aware of the liability and legal issues of being the lead agency in the Panhandle Regional Narcotics Task Force.

Granted, the city and the APD may have been stiff-armed by counties and cities wanting their own authority of how to carry out drug investigations, but there should have been the foresight to see how the city could take the financial fall for this lack of authority.

Amarillo police officers Lt. Mike Amos and Sgt. Jerry Massengill were administrators of the task force. They will retire at the end of the year. It was unclear whether the retirements were related to the settlement, although that assumption can be made.

Retirement, forced or not, is a small price for these officers to pay.

Amarillo's decision to pull out of the PRNTF effective May 31 will likely spell the end of the task force, but the city had almost as little choice as it did authority in the matter.

Any future involvement by the APD, no matter the degree, with neighboring law enforcement entities needs to be scrutinized thoroughly.

As for the $5 million, that also is a small price to pay. The legal and liability costs alone to Amarillo could have easily been 10 times that amount. And thanks to the city's self-insurance fund, taxes and public services are immune to the settlement.

There is no other way to describe it: Amarillo got burned because of what happened in Tulia nearly five years ago. However, because of a lack of authority and direction by those who should have known better, the city paid the price.



Copyright © 2004 Amarillo Globe-News




[x Amarillo Fishwrap]
Regarding Tulia, Amarilloans need answers
By Ralph Routon

Through all the painful details of Amarillo paying $5 million to settle a lawsuit over the Tulia drug sting of 1999, one vital point appears to have eluded many city officials.

Somebody has to be responsible.

This cannot be swept under the nearest rug, simply by writing a $5 million check and hearing attorney Jeff Blackburn say how admirable Amarillo's actions were.

It's not just a bad dream that will go away, simply because Amarillo agreed to effectively shut down the Panhandle Regional Narcotics Trafficking Task Force.

Somebody has to be responsible.

We're going to continue saying that, in part because so many Amarillo residents feel the same way.

We're not satisfied, being told how much worse this outcome could have been. We're not relieved that our city government has to shell out $5 million of our money instead of $53 million, $200 million or whatever.

We're not content with the explanations so far, especially the one insisting Amarillo's responsibility and legal exposure were mainly the result of being the task force's lead agency.

That's not good enough.

Somebody has to be responsible.

This is not to suggest corruption is running rampant in Amarillo city government. It's not. In fact, after the settlement went public, the prevailing mood inside City Hall was gloomy, somber, even depressed and embarrassed, starting with City Manager John Ward.

Still, it's amazing that not one elected city official attended the news conference Thursday announcing the settlement. Just lawyers.

It's amazing that nobody involved, either in city government or with any aspect of the task force, has openly acknowledged the threat of a public revolt here. Nobody seems to realize that people will blame somebody - and if they don't get answers, they'll want scapegoats.

It's even more amazing that no elected official has called for a full, complete accounting of what went wrong inside the task force, since the operation was being run by two Amarillo Police Department officers. We're not talking about just an internal investigation, because that already has been done, but the sincere promise of a speedy, thorough, unbiased public report to the people of Amarillo.

It's mind-boggling that nobody has demanded anything like that.

Somebody has to be responsible.

And every Amarilloan deserves to know the details.

We know the task force has had many positives, many successes. But we also know it had little if any outside supervision. We know that Lt. Mike Amos, head of the task force, could have prevented the hiring of agent Tom Coleman. We know that Sgt. Jerry Massengill was supervising Coleman and the discredited Tulia investigation.

Yet, we hear Amos and Massengill are retiring "voluntarily," and nobody is holding them publicly accountable in any way.

Why not? And if not them, then who?

Somebody has to be responsible.

Somebody has to explain why nobody was watching the task force more closely. Somebody has to explain why, if Coleman and the Tulia investigation weren't up to Amarillo and APD standards, nobody raised a red flag and nothing was done - long ago.

Somebody has to explain why, after Coleman himself was charged with a felony in 1998, early in his Tulia investigation, nobody saw the prospect of a damaging credibility problem for Coleman. And nobody made any effort then to remove him from the task force.

Somebody has to explain why, even after Coleman's cases began falling apart at least two years ago (surely, the task force and APD knew before that), nobody viewed it as a shortcoming of task force leadership.

Somebody has to explain why nobody considered doing anything about the task force - or Amarillo's participation in it - until now. Also, please tell us how nobody saw or feared the possibility of the city being legally culpable for the task force's actions.

Somebody has to explain what has been or will be done to make sure nothing resembling this happens again - ever.

Somebody has to investigate the situation and make sure this Tulia debacle is the task force's only legal albatross. Somebody has to find out for sure whether any other potential lawsuits might be lurking out there.

If anyone in Amarillo city government honestly thinks the worst is over, and that the best strategy is to use the $5 million settlement and abandoning the task force as cover to ride out the storm, that's a serious mistake.

Somebody has to be responsible.

People won't forget this one. And neither will we.


Copyright © 2004 Amarillo Globe-News