A century ago, Harvard psychologist William James
rocked the academic world with his insights into the potency of
religious ideals and religious experience. Though a pragmatist and
a skeptic, James was deeply moved by the lives of people
transformed through a profession of faith. "St. Paul long ago made
our ancestors familiar with the idea that every soul is virtually
sacred," James wrote in The Varieties of Religious
Experience. "The belief in the essential sacredness of every
one expresses itself today in all sorts of human customs and
reformatory institutions. … The saints, with their
extravagance of human tenderness, are the great torch-bearers of
this belief, the tip of the wedge, the clearers of the
darkness."
It's a sign of the times that James' unremarkable observations
about religion have become so contested. Critics have assailed
President Bush's "faith-based initiative," for example, not only on
church-state grounds but on the assumption that religious
organizations don't offer any distinctive resources to people in
need. Indeed, many thinkers are agnostic, even cynical, about the
link between faith and social stability. In the wake of 9/11,
theologians and religious studies scholars such as Charles Kimball
(When Religion Becomes Evil) went so far as to label truth
claims in the public square as a telltale sign of the corruption of
religion. Nevertheless, Bush has forced a national debate over
religion and government social policy. "I believe it is in the
national interest that government stand side by side with people of
faith who work to change lives for the better," he told supporters
at a recent White House conference on his initiative. "I'm telling
America we need not discriminate against faith-based
programs."
Three recent books suggest that the argument over the Bush agenda
is far from over. In Of Little Faith: The Politics of George W.
Bush's Faith-Based Initiative, political science professors
Amy Black, Douglas Koopman, and David Ryden recount the twists and
turns of the initiative over a three-year period. Based on
interviews with key players in the White House and Congress, the
book explains in exacting detail why the president's legislative
effort flopped. There's plenty of blame to go around. Supporters
introduced their bill too quickly, the authors claim, and House
Republicans retooled it as a "payoff to the GOP's traditional
religious base." At the same time, liberal Democrats were desperate
to prevent a Bush victory that might draw away African American
voters, who mostly love the idea. "The mischaracterizations and
distortions that marked the debate were more than mere ignorance or
uncertainty about the law," the authors conclude. "They reflected
intentional political strategies designed to ensure defeat of the
proposal." Of Little Faith offers even-handed analysis
that nonetheless rejects the "crabbed version of religion" which
colors so much public discourse.
In A Revolution of Compassion, Dave Donaldson and Stanley
Carlson-Thies deliver a sturdy apologia for the president's agenda.
They sketch the history and accomplishments of the initiative and
examine the obstacles that remain. Carlson-Thies, who served in the
White House Office of Faith-based and Community Initiatives, brings
to the issue a sober and straightforward style. Donaldson, founder
of We Care America, keeps the responsibility of congregations
always in view. The authors take note of the hostility to religion
in public life (with a bizarre story of churches turned away by
grief counselors on 9/11), though they place the burden of reform
on the evangelical community. "Why have so many churches-unfettered
in this country to be as generous as they wish toward their hurting
neighbors-done so little to help the poor?" they ask. Good
question.
A Revolution of Compassion lacks the prophetic bite of Ron
Sider's Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger (aimed at the
church's embrace of capitalism) or the trenchant critique of Marvin
Olasky's The Tragedy of American Compassion (aimed at the
welfare state). Instead, much of the work is a practical guide for
churches and charities seeking government or corporate support for
their outreach. The authors recommend, for example, that
organizations avoid becoming dependent on public funding and offer
a warning: "When it comes time to sign the paperwork for the money,
you need to have an experienced and faith-friendly lawyer looking
over your shoulder." A Revolution of Compassion may not
read like Paine's Common Sense, but it aspires toward a
radical rethinking of America's social-safety net-a rejection both
of the liberal welfare state and the libertarian dream of a
privatized system of charity. "Government does have a proper
place," the authors write. "Yet government is no substitute for
caring neighbors and friends, thriving businesses that provide jobs
and careers … and faith-based organizations that show God's
love as they teach skills or help a person escape an
addiction."
Princeton sociologist Robert Wuthnow isn't as sanguine. In
Saving America? Faith-Based Services and the Future of Civil
Society, Wuthnow uses survey data and qualitative research to
explore the character and capacity of faith-based organizations. He
frames his research findings as a challenge both to advocates and
to critics of the president's initiative. Yet his tortuous
arguments cast doubt on nearly every important aspect of
religiously inspired social outreach.
One of Wuthnow's main conclusions, for example, is that
church-state watchdogs don't have much to worry about-because most
faith-based organizations aren't very religious after all. He
suggests that the most valuable asset of church-based charities is
that they foster social relationships, not that they inculcate
religious ideals. Wuthnow is right to emphasize the relational
aspect of social ministries, and hardly any researcher has explored
this dimension of religious commitment as carefully as he has. But
his broad conclusion, that these organizations function in ways
which "depend little on their connections with religious
traditions," is grossly overstated. Wuthnow relies too heavily on a
survey of human service agencies in New York City, which found
scant evidence that groups were engaged in "religious
advocacy"-meaning evangelism or discrimination of recipients on
religious grounds. That's a shallow view of how religious values
might inform programs for the poor. Another problem is a skewed
sample: New York, arguably a command post for secularization, is
militant about enforcing church-state separation in publicly funded
services.
Behind Wuthnow's work creeps an assumption: that neither churches
nor faith-based charities are adept at assuming a much greater role
in meeting social needs. Indeed, at times he seems to denigrate the
emphasis on character and personal responsibility that typifies
evangelical organizations. He slights groups that assist prison
inmates, for example, because they believe that convicted felons
"are supposedly there as a result of their own actions." He laments
the fact that many people view religious truths as "an unrivaled
source of personal meaning and purpose" in life. He downgrades the
importance of small-scale acts of service compared to the
organizational capacity of the welfare state. "Religious programs
… often encourage people to think more compassionately about
the poor," he writes, "but they channel this thinking in
individualistic ways that may encourage charity more than public
advocacy on behalf of the poor." Does Wuthnow really think that an
unwed mother facing eviction prefers the help of a welfare lobbyist
over that of Mother Teresa's Sisters of Mercy?
It all makes the reader wonder what kinds of organizations find
their way into Wuthnow's research-and why. They don't bear much
resemblance to the tough-minded poverty-fighters profiled in the
works of Marvin Olasky (Renewing American Compassion),
Charles Glenn (The Ambiguous Embrace), Joel Schwartz
(Fighting Poverty With Virtue), or Barbara Elliott
(Street Saints). Nor do they look like those this reviewer
has encountered over the last ten years of research and interviews.
Social scientists rightly believe that many "faith-based"
organizations are about as religious as fly-fishing clubs along the
Great Basin stillwaters. Wuthnow acknowledges great diversity among
charitable groups, but he seems to camp on the most secularized
varieties, those heavily involved with public funding. Left
unexamined, however, is what his data suggest about the vast number
of religious programs unattached to government-the very groups the
Bush initiative hopes to engage.
What might all of this mean for policymakers? The books reviewed
here reflect the current argument, ranging from those who want a
vast expansion of church-state partnerships to those who see only a
marginal role for religion in social services. A recent front-page
article in the New York Times, about a ministry to
California prisoners led by Saddleback Community Church, suggests
where the tide might be heading. The article quoted a prison
official impressed by evangelical Christians helping inmates
abandon careers in crime and drug abuse. "We manage behavior very
well," he told the Times. "But we've not done as much
trying to change and shape behavior. That's what these guys are
doing effectively." That sounds a lot like the observations of
William James. What captured his interest most were stories of
encounters with the divine: a religious experience that transforms
the human heart and makes possible an entirely new set of choices
about one's life.
Government may not be able to finance this kind of work, but
neither should it hinder or demean it. "Let us agree, then," James
wrote, "that Religion, occupying herself with personal destinies
and keeping thus in contact with the only absolute realities which
we know, must necessarily play an eternal part in human history."
Religion as an eternal part of the human story. Yes-for all the
public disagreement, let us agree on that.
Mr. Loconte is
a fellow at the Heritage Foundation and editor of "The End of
Illusions: Religious Leaders Confront Hitler's Gathering Storm"
(Rowman & Littlefield).
First appeared in ChristianityToday.com