I thought I would give C. S. Lewis’ “Mere Christianity” a
try. I found a copy for free, and it is short, so, what the heck. I was
unimpressed. His argument depends on regressing your thinking back to near
prehistoric notions of “Laws of Nature”. Not the Newtonian kind, where math can
explain and predict objects in motion, but the mystical kind, where notions of
right and wrong are somehow placed into our minds. He does a better job of this
than many modern theologians, even though he was not theologically trained. If
you don’t stop to question his assumptions, or add some knowledge where he
makes an argument from ignorance, you could be convinced.
His introduction however showed some insight. Written in the
1950’s, he predicted the degradation of the word “Christian”. At the time he
was speaking, Christians were much more interested in their identity as
Baptist, Lutheran, Catholic or Episcopalian. They could tell you why they stuck
with their denomination and what they didn’t like about the others. What Lewis
saw beginning to happen, and what is quite common now, is people saying they
don’t care about the denomination of the church, they just like the community
they find there. They prefer their children’s program to the church around the
corner, or they like the music.
What Lewis predicted is that the word “Christian” would
change from meaning someone who believes in specific things, including some
rules about what is right or wrong, good or bad, to mean someone who is
right and good. The problem he said, is that the word is then no longer
descriptive. It no longer describes a person’s beliefs, it is a judgment made
by the speaker, the one who applies the label. If we don’t know what the
speaker means by right and good, we don’t know what they mean when they say
someone is Christian.
They have to qualify the term that no longer has meaning. They
have to say “good Christian” or “bad Christian”. “Good” and “bad” can be
applied to anything. I could say someone was a “good mass murderer” and people
would know I meant they were successful at murdering many people. We don’t have
one universal notion of what “Christian” is, a standard by which we can judge
someone to be Christian or not. The word “Christian” could just be dropped. If
someone is asked to explain what they meant by “good Christian”, they would
spend most of the effort explaining what they meant by “good”.
What I have described so far may seem to just be semantics,
but we know that dropping the word “Christian” is not a popular idea. In the
above scenario of someone explaining what is meant by “good Christian”, they
may appeal to universal notions of “good”, but they are likely more attached to
defending their version of Christianity as the right one. If they are
Christian, they are likely working from the premise that first one should
follow Christ, learn his ways then you will be good. The idea that one could
first figure out what is good, then shop around for a church that expresses
those notions is probably foreign to them. Even parents who are unsure of their
Christianity send their children to Sunday School. Their argument may not be
theological either. They may focus on “good” Christianity by explaining what
the people at their church do that sets them apart as good and what other people
at some other church do that is less good or even bad.
Do we consider Christianity when thinking about a moral
dilemma, either a simple one like “is it right for a starving person with no
available money to steal a banana?” or a complicated one “if you could go back
in time to kill Hitler, would you do it?” We would need to consider basic human
needs, consequences of actions and how an individual affects society. Interpretations
of scripture would be of little help. Common elements of Christianity like
fellowship and ritual won’t even come into consideration. Now that we have
conflated “good” with “Christian”, it seems what is “Christian” gets in the way
of what is good.
We need to be having these moral discussions without the
interference of non-descriptive terms like “Christian”. We need to be
discussing non-hypothetically about how much welfare is too much and which starving
population deserves our attention. If we attempt to use scripture, it just
turns into what Brian McLaren calls “theological football”. Two sides dig in
their heals, and one says “go, sell your possessions and give to the poor”
(Matthew 19:21), the other says, but “The poor you will always have with you.”
(Matthew 26:11). The referee calls foul because the original context says “give
generously to them and do so without a grudging heart” (Deuteronomy 15). The
challenge flag comes out, the referee goes under the hood. Time to change the
channel.
It appears to me that C.S. Lewis was right. Christians tried
to define themselves as one big group, they tried to unite against
abortion, against government making rules about morality, against war. Oh, wait
a minute, or was that for war. C.S. Lewis was right that there was a trend
toward unity, but that unity has not worked out so well. As soon as you start
to define what Christianity is in terms of actual events going on in the world
and real policies that affect real people, you find divisions, not unity. You
find people saying, “That person is not a real Christian, a real Christian
would fight for freedom.” Lewis did not define what Christianity “merely” is then
and no one has improved on it since.
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