If Tony Spadaro says Francis disagrees with it, I've got to read this book!
From The Imaginative Conservative
By Bradley J. Birzer
Rod Dreher’s book The Benedict Option, a New York Times
bestseller in 2017, in which he said that “Christians have lost the
culture wars” in what is now a “post-Christian nation,” has become a
major cultural event. And, although it has been ignored by our country’s
elite media and institutions including almost all of the leadership of
the Christian churches, the book has gone on to become an international
cultural event. It has now been translated into eleven languages, a
remarkable accomplishment since both its setting and analysis concern
the United States. Touchstone magazine recently sponsored a three-day conference to examine the options under the Benedict Option.
The book is mainly known for Mr.
Dreher’s conclusion that because Christian politics has been tried and
failed: “Christians are now in a time of decision.” Yet, contrary to
what has been regularly claimed—read or unread—about the book, Mr.
Dreher does not conclude that Christians should completely withdraw from
politics. Instead, he argues that a Christianity-based “parallel polis”
at the local level should be erected, a small counter-cultural
community where social bonds and solidarity can be created, fostered,
and maintained—a decisive turning away from the centralized forces of
media, government, and corporations. His model is St. Benedict of Nursia
and his Rule of St. Benedict, which Mr. Dreher calls “a manual
of practices” available to all Christians. Benedict’s Rule led to the
widespread erection of monasteries in the decisive 6th Century era after
the fall of the Roman Empire. Mr. Dreher includes many direct
criticisms of Christian churches themselves and calls much of church
life today “enfeebled Christianity.” Against the triumph of Eros, Mr.
Dreher argues that Christianity is incarnational, that is, embodied, and
therefore, has everything to do with the body and therefore everything
to do with sex. But pastors of all Christian churches have given up that
subject, with the result that “the church has allowed the culture to
catechize its youth” about sex. He concludes that Christian parents
should remove their children from “the toxic peer culture” of public
schools.
Criticism of the book has ranged from
“Christians should not withdraw from society” to “most of this is what
Christians should be doing anyway.” It was widely discussed in Catholic,
Orthodox, Protestant, and Evangelical publications and websites. Christianity Today, the main Evangelical magazine, devoted a cover story to the book with the general conclusion that is was not for Evangelicals.
Besides the criticisms about withdrawing from society and politics, there have been other criticisms. An essay in Atlantic
magazine expressed appreciation for the benefits of communal religious
life, but questioned Mr. Dreher about “how to live side by side with
people unlike him.” A 2018 New Republic article argued that Mr.
Dreher’s promotion of the old ways and Western Civilization was
exclusive and therefore racist. In an October 2017 speech at Notre Dame,
Jesuit priest Antonio Spadaro, a personal advisor to Pope Francis,
specifically brought up the Benedict Option and said that it did not align with the views of Pope Francis.
Yet, today, it is not clear whether the
book has had any influence on Church institutions and leadership.
Seeking an evaluation of the book and its concepts after two-and-a-half
years, Touchstone magazine held a three-day conference—“Fight
or Flight? The Benedict and Other Options”—at Trinity International
University just outside of Chicago on October 10-12. Touchstone describes itself as a Journal of Mere Christianity
“with editors and readers from each of the three great divisions of
Christendom—Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox.” Mr. Dreher himself was
present and spoke at the conference. (Not every conference speaker will
be considered herein.)
Options for Christians
One of the first speakers, Anthony
Esolen, Catholic essayist and professor of English at Magdalen College
in New Hampshire, added his own bill of particulars to those of Mr.
Dreher in the Benedict Option. Modern man, he said, is alienated but does not know that what
he is alienated from is his past. We work in cubicles, both literal and
metaphorical, because we are worthless. Contemporary man is, as Walker
Percy claimed, “lost in the cosmos,” and from Genesis, we know that “it
is not good for man to be alone.” And this new loneliness is widely
recognized and discussed in both secular and religious writing. No one
is home today; there are more cars on the streets than kids. And the
central ritual, the family meal, of the central institution of the
family is gone and with it God. For, as the Catholic philosopher Joseph
Pieper laid out, feasting has always had a divine invitation and
element.
John Stonestreet, the President of the
Colson Center for a Christian Worldview, argued that our moment in
history must be distinguished from the real “story” and “fact” that
Christ is risen (1 Pet. 1:3). Christ, not the world and its
circumstances, chooses our cultural moment, he continued, going on to
cite Paul’s sermon on the Aeropagus (Acts 17), and will make all things
new. Mr. Stonestreet proposed a Benedict-Kyper Option. Abraham Kyper was
first a Calvinist theologian and then journalist who, in addition, had a
long public career, including a term as prime minister of the
Netherlands from 1901-1905. In his several careers, Kyper, Mr.
Stonestreet asserted, evaluated each moment in terms of the “story.”
Joining the essential consensus of all
the speakers at the conference, Mr. Stonestreet said that public and
social involvement, should be de-centralized and de-professionalized. It
has three elements. First, it is the job of ordinary Christians, not
the clergy. Second, there should be a discernment between what is good
“to celebrate” and what is “missing.” And Christians should look to what
they can contribute to the missing. Third, what evil should Christians
resist? And what can Christians restore? For the Christian, the
restoring will always be the restoration of the Word.
“We have home-field advantage,” Mr.
Stonestreet stated, the world is created good. Everyone is made in the
image of God, and morality is universal. The higher order of love must
be restored as an antidote to our culture’s regarding of love as either
just bodily sex or mere sentiment. Christians have wrongly “outsourced”
their job to the culture. And this “anthropological shift” and cultural
identity crisis is within the Church as well.
A Culture for Christians
Erin Doom of the Eighth Day Institute,
which sponsors an annual Inklings Festival, declared that we need a
theology of culture. Basing a substantial part of his talk on an essay,
“Faith and Culture,” by Orthodox priest Fr. George Florovsky, Mr. Doom
distinguished four kinds of Christian cultural and historical
“pessimism.” First, are pietists, private Christians, for whom culture
is incidental and who seek release from the world. Second, Puritans
focus on man as miserable sinner. For them, culture must be endured and
no creative energies are directed to it. The third group may be called
Christian existentialists who think that the world is meaningless, man
is nothing, and God is all. Last is the “quiet man” for whom culture is
useful but not connected to religion.
As his major point, Mr. Doom argued that
the destiny of human culture is not irrelevant to man’s final destiny.
But true culture is essentially internal to the Church. Mr. Doom made
the dramatic statement that the Age of the Apostles and with it the
“missionary” teaching purpose of the Church ended in the second century.
Since then and right up to the present, the mission of the church has
been and continues to be “pastoral,” that is, preservative of
Christianity rather than evangelizing the world. Christian “culture” is
accomplished by miracles which show God’s power, martyrs who are
witnesses, and virginity as the sign of the kingdom. The models and
archetypes are the Church Fathers and monks—of whom Benedict is one.
Russell Moore, president of the
Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, the
nation’s largest Protestant denomination, delivered what was in every
respect a sermon and an enigmatic one at that. With the work of the
Commission that he heads being concerned with morality and public
policy, Dr. Moore is and has been a highly visible public figure. He has
been a vocal critic of President Trump and refused to support him in
the 2016 elections.
The spotlight of Dr. Moore’s talk was
Hezekiah, one of the good kings of ancient Israel, who purified the
temple and rid the kingdom of idolatry. But Isaiah warned him that his
alliance with the Babylonian king would lead to the destruction of his
house in the future, Hezekiah replied that he accepted that fate in
exchange for “peace and security” in his day (2 Kings 20, 12-19).
Without using the word, Dr. Moore essentially said that it was a devil’s
bargain: Hezekiah’s accommodation and peace with the pagan Babylon
later became a “critical fracture in the integrity of the Jewish
kingdom.” Thus should Christians today be wary of worldly success. In
our country, according to Dr. Moore, there is “a simmering rage” against
people of faith, but what about the Church’s own integrity? Do
secularists think that Christians truly believe in what their faith
teaches? Even good Hezekiah accepted things like “peace and security”
can undermine the truth of the suffering and resurrected Christ.
Dr. Moore made no direct references to
the Benedict Option and its fundamental question of how Christians
should specifically respond to and live in contemporary culture.
Obviously, he meant that they should not accept the peace and security
offerings of the world, but any such offerings seem far from the present
cultural and political reality on the ground. His talk puzzled many of
the attendees, and that puzzlement was not reduced in any way since Dr.
Moore immediately left without taking questions.
What Is To Be Done
As for what is to be done, Anthony
Esolen pointed out that you can’t give what you don’t have. Today, what
we need is literature instead of more calculators. Build the
imagination, he said. Read real books. Culture must be reconstructed at
the local level. Build families; unmarriage is worse than divorce; raise
kids specifically to be married. Have socials; have dances every week.
Most college students have never read a real book or watched a good
movie. Those students don’t know what they don’t know. Dr. Esolen said
that some males have never had a male friend. Work in politics because
we love our country. Worship should be public whenever possible.
John Yocum, theology professor at Sacred
Heart Seminary of Detroit, spoke as a leader of the Servants of the
Word and Sword of the Spirit, an ecumenical brotherhood of Christian
celibate men who live in over 100 communities in 30 countries. Dr. Yocum
gave a report of the experience of his and other Christian “intentional
communities” in the world today. First, he stated that such communities
are based on a common course of teaching and personal formation. The
premise and basis of the Servants of the Word is that we are rational
beings and that reason must rule over the passions. Second, he
maintained that intentional communities must be intergenerational, that
is, enroll members of the next generation and have the distinct purpose
of passing on the community to the next generation.
Third, Dr. Yocum said that the key to a
Benedict Option outlook and purpose is for Christians and Christian
families to deliberately and specifically schedule and “choose religious
events over other events” in their daily lives. This means daily and
weekly events and occasions—fraternal gatherings, group prayer, feasts,
scripture reading, and study—well beyond going to church on Sunday. Such
communal life is the heart of intentional communities, and Dr. Yocum
was recommending it for all Christian families and friends as well.
After observing that none of the speakers at the conference had counseled “flight,” Leah Lebresco Sargent, author of Building the Benedict Option and
a former atheist, proposed herself as “the foot” to the other speakers’
thoughts. Begin building the Benedict Option immediately, she insisted;
don’t wait. What social goods do people really want? The answer,
according to Mrs. Sargent, is the small things, not the larger social or
political culture. She has given her book the subtitle of A Guide to Gathering Two or Three in His Name.
Invite people over! The regular gatherings of friends is essential.
Mrs. Sargent pointed out that friendship itself has declined and is
considered a lesser order than the particular friendship of marriage.
And when marriage happens, other friendships tend to wither. Christians
should invite people both to the good part and the bad part of their
lives. Everyone has something to give. We can even offer our suffering
as a gift to friends. Her instinct for the gathering of friends has led
her to invite individuals into her group to share weighty and very
personal matters, which has included alcoholism, anorexia, and
depression. “When I am weak, then I am strong.” (2 Cor. 12:10).
Friendship is direct, not mediated.
In the Q-and-A session in which Mrs.
Sargent participated, it was pointed out that priests and ministers are
always busy and don’t have much extra time. Thus, it is friends who must
be available to hold each other accountable.
Allan Carlson, senior fellow at the
International Organization of the Family and founder of the World
Congress of Families, spoke of the efforts in some Eastern European
countries today to have public policies preservative of Christian
tradition and of the family. He related the substantial attempts in
several Western European countries after World War II to effect a moral
and religious revival. Proposing affirmative public polices to support
work and the family, Christian parties came to power in an attempt to
form Christian democracies. But that those initiatives fell apart in the
1960’s. As for Eastern Europe, when communism collapsed in 1989-91,
hedonism set in with resulting low marriage and birth rates. Today,
there are efforts in Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, and Serbia to revive
Christian society. Those countries assert that they have not lost the
culture wars. In Poland and Hungary, marriage and fertility rates have
increased.
Remarks of Rod Dreher
In his own talk and additional comments,
Rod Dreher said that the world is run by corporations and money. And
the challenges of the world cannot be solved by politics, for politics
gives no meaning. People desire meaning, he said. His position is that
politics should not be given too much or too little importance. A spirit
of permanence which is an organizing principle of monasticism should be
primary in every Christian’s life. He counseled a “strategic retreat”
because the resources of Christians have been widely scattered. Church
leadership, even at the parish level, cannot be counted on. St. Benedict
of Nursia should be every Christian’s common father.
Concerning his current project visiting
Eastern European countries and preparing a book about their experience
before and after communism, Mr. Dreher related several meetings and
conversations with people in his visits to those countries comparing the
totalitarianism of communism with imported, Western, secular,
materialist, individualist democracy. Some aver that social life is
worse today. Among other anecdotes from his Benedict Option
travels: A Nigerian Anglican bishop told him that the Benedict Option is
needed in Nigeria because the young now have cellphones. His recent
talk on the Benedict Option in Rome was attended by former Pope
Benedict XVI’s personal secretary who made a point of praising the
Benedict Option. Mr. Dreher had been informed that certain people in the
Vatican had discouraged others from attending his talk.
As for what the attitude of Christians
should be towards politics, Mr. Dreher offered the familiar story of the
martyrdom of Shadrack, Meshach, and Abenego in the book of Daniel (3).
Those three Jewish youths were public officials commissioned by King
Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon. They were part of that segment of the Jews
that Nebuchadnezzar had captured—the Babylonian captivity—with the
purpose of assimilating them into his kingdom. The king had an image of
gold fashioned and commanded all to worship it. When the three refused
that idolatry, he had them thrown into a fiery furnace. Instead of the
usual emphasis on the youths’ trial by fire, Mr. Dreher used the story
to point out that for Christians there are inevitable limitations on
allegiance to the state.
To that point, he seemed to echo Russell Moore
about king Hezekiah.
A constant theme, explicit and implicit,
of not only the speakers but also the audience was the lack of
references to the institutional structures of American Christian
churches. No one expressed any praise for the leaders of any of their
respective Christian churches concerning the adequacy of their job
performances addressing contemporary American culture or, as needed,
fighting it.
Benedict went to the hills to save faith and culture. Rod Dreher did the equivalent of leaving Italy and going to Constantinople, where he could safely observe the fall of Rome and have clout at court at the same time.
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