The Daily Offload #3

Shorter, this time.

Is evangelicalism dead? Basham’s Shepherds for Sale continues to dominate my feed on Twitter. It’s popular, I suspect, because it makes a case that Protestant theological conservatives have been waiting to be made: that their ranks have been infiltrated by the left, just as mainstream denominations were a few generations ago. Sometimes the situation is described by saying evangelicalism is a “mess” or “in disarray,” etc. The problem is more serious than that, I think—it is existential.

I don’t deny that there are plenty of liberal Christians, who really deserve to be called Christians, despite being, perhaps, wrong about any number of issues. The problem is that when they come to dominate a church or a whole denomination, either in numbers or in influence (frequently the latter rather than the former), the conservatives quit in disgust. In this way, many former Presbyterians have been driven to Independent Baptists, and former Lutherans have gone over to the more conservative Orthodox (etc.).

For their part, the liberals are utter fools on this subject. They actually think that it’s simply about politics, that the “evangelicals” (a term they use with great contempt, when they’re not among them) are just unhinged MAGAs, part of a political cult, etc. This is of course a silly diagnosis. The fact is that theological conservatives tend to read—and understand, more or less—the Bible, and they note massive discrepancies between doctrines clearly expressed in scripture and the attitudes inculcated by liberal clergy and most seminaries. Nothing less than the very nature of organized Christianity, our various church institutions, is at stake.

Maybe “evangelicalism” as an identifier for non-“mainline” Protestant denominations is outliving its usefulness. I don’t like the word myself. “Traditional” seems much clearer. I could go on, but I will forbear.

69,020 books on a thumb drive. Soon. Just need to get a few things ready and then take pre-orders. I’ll be posting more info here.

Kamala is the ultimate left-wing Establishment talking head. I don’t actually like talking partisan politics that much, but I have to get this off my chest: I grew up hearing about politicians described as “empty suits,” wondering what it meant. I know now; and Kamala Harris is the perfect embodiment. I say this because, if you have heard her speak coherently in the Senate before she became quite so famous, you know she’s actually pretty smart and knows how to string a sentence together. But when she gives speeches, she drops into an extremely condescending “let’s talk down to the people” mode in which she simplifies everything and, as a result, makes herself sound like an idiot. When she becomes the Giggling Simplifier, as it turns out, she frequently speaks slowly, hunting for words, constructing just what she thinks is expected of her. She is basically a paid actor, unusually and constantly insincere—and appearing rather stupid, stupider than she really is, as a result. (Whatever his faults, with Trump you get something much closer to an unexpurgated version.) She is, in short, an empty suit. And her views align 100% with the leftists that dominate the Establishment media, who absolutely adore her, of course; she is more “liberal” (i.e., leftist authoritarian) even than Bernie Sanders. The Democrats couldn’t have picked a worse candidate. Anyway, I could say much more about her, but won’t. I just wanted to say this: I just can’t listen to her because I don’t like being talked down to as if I am a child. She’s an enormous phony.


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Please do dive in (politely). I want your reactions!

4 responses to “The Daily Offload #3”

  1. Michael Towns

    I agree with you that Kamala Harris is an enormous phony; she always has been. She got her start in California politics by being Willie Brown’s side piece. Without that patriarchal patronage, she never would have risen far.

    But I would like to suggest that Barack Obama was — and still is — the biggest empty suit in American politics. This, despite the fact that he has, as he declared he wanted to do in 2008, “fundamentally transform[ed] America.”

    TabletMag has a longform article interview with his biography — one that pissed Obama off majorly — where he says that his book, Dreams of My Father, is essentially a made up work of fiction.

    I could go myself, but I guess that’s enough partisan politics for now. I have admired your blog and essays for many years. I’m happy to see you writing more often.

    1. We agree on these things. Fair play, Obama is probably the bigger empty suit.

  2. Pawel

    Hi Larry,
    It’s Pawel here , I’m a polish guy living here in the UK.
    It is maybe easier for me to see the phenomenon mentioned in he book as I can move quickly in and out of the anglosphere.
    Here is the thing :
    My (polish) wife is a protestant and I ‘m a catholic .
    Yes we don’t always agree with each other but I don’t care ( I was given a second life when I was teenager and that’s what I celebrate everyday).
    We both can see the same left agenda being pushed everywhere (geographically and by denominations).
    From the catholic side, as a proof , I can only advise Polonia Christiana service .
    https://pch24.pl/
    It is right wing , conservative catholic .

    At the moment they are trying to raise funds for ‘the Credo’ documentary on the very same subject.
    https://credo.pch24.tv/?ka=007525

    I bet you won’t understand a thing :-))) but you may try to translate it.
    Best regards
    Pawel

  3. Actually during the Charismatic renewal of the 1950s & ’60s ‘traditional’ was how opponents of the renewal were known. It also designated older opponents of Pentecostalism. The term has went into disuse as some form of revivalism became a staple in almost all denominations, eventually forming an uneasy but real unstable balance with liberalism on one side and theological orthodoxy on the others. Evangelical may be a tainted term, but short of identifying orthodoxy with something more specific (I would tend to identify it with at least four points of Tulip), it seems to be the only widely understood identifier.

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