I was born in 1974.
One year after the 7-2 Supreme Court decision siding with Roe that the State of Texas’ abortion ban was unconstitutional. I grew up in the cultural phenomenon known as the Christian Right, a.k.a. the Moral Majority. This movement started before me and Roe. It began out of resentment and fear over racial integration during the civil rights movement. This is where the right’s contempt for “Activist Judges” originated. These judges were messing with the proper order and ranking of human bodies and it felt ungodly. The massive uptick in private Christian schools was motivated by fear of our country’s meddling with the god of white-Cristo-supremacist-patriarchy. But the crusade to maintain the God ordained society under the standardizing white protestant male needed a better banner than racism.Over the past fifty years, this network of various denominations of Christians was bolstered and held together by this unifying fight for life. Overturning Roe was a mission symbolizing all moral well-being. I mean, how could anyone possibly have anything valuable or true to say if they supported the killing of babies? Abortion rights and their providers exemplified the epitome of moral self-deception, decadence, and the hatred of all that is holy.
I don’t hear evangelicals talk as much about moral relativity as we did when I was growing up. “The ends never justify the means”. This was a proverb that pretty much held the weight of scripture. We believed in moral absolutes and that is what set us apart. We were not like those Hollywood elites constantly shoving all kinds of relative propaganda and debauchery in our faces. Our heroes are the football coaches praying on the high school field with the guys. Godly mentors who instill traditional values of honor, loyalty, sanctity, and respect for authority. The Clintons were the face of everything wrong with America in the 90s. And Bill’s sexual escapades and abuses of power exposed a corrupt leader morally unfit for office.
It is difficult to be an evangelical in America. Constantly feeling shamed and blamed by “the Media”. The punch line of late-night comedians. Scorned by liberal mainline churches in decline, who are probably just jealous of our multi-site ever-expanding ministries. It is hard to endlessly have your faithfulness misunderstood as bigotry, anti-science, xenophobia, homophobia, misogyny, and hate. White evangelicals consistently poll as believing that they face more discrimination than other groups in America. To be an evangelical is to assume that you will be misunderstood, targeted, and discriminated against. The experience of persecution is believed to be the necessary burden and cross that this version of Christianity requires. The good and faithful servant awards may never be received in this life, but they will for sure come in the next. This often makes the evangelical’s experience of persecution a self-reinforcing form of validation.
The leaked Supreme Court draft overturning Roe is an identity boost that evangelicals critically need right now. More than if it actually gets overturned, the draft alone provides the necessary justification for evangelical moral relativity. The harsh internal disequilibrium that they have had to endure the past several years can find a measure of revisionist resolve. “God’s ways are higher than my ways.” Is what an evangelical can say, when they cannot say, “maybe the ends do justify the means?”
The overturning of Roe helps a battered evangelical say, “I did not need to second guess myself.” And “Our cause really is righteous and just.” And “I am playing for the right team.” And most importantly, “I am a baby saver.”
“I am a Baby Saver.“
This is a noble legacy.
“I Saved Babies” is something you can put on your tombstone.
Whereas, “I saved White-Supremacist-Patriarchy”…???
A faithful evangelical tried to explain it to me this way:
“We may not like the pilot, but we like where the plane is going.”
Where is that plane going exactly that feels so right that you would vote for someone so wrong?
Those holding to a belief that there is a Divine Moral Order reflexively see that as being Patriarchal. Evangelicals will refer to it as God’s Creational Design. And this designed patriarchal ordering gets conflated into a concept called Family Values. In patriarchy, you must maintain a strict gender binary. There cannot be any queering of any kind because all bodies must be categorized, ordered, and ranked under a man. To be a man is not to be a woman, or Gay, Trans, Non-Binary, or Intersex. In America, we have a very entrenched kind of patriarchal ranking system. It is white. It is Christian. It is heteronormative. It is cis-gendered, colonizing, capitalistic, and supremacist. Donald Trump and Roy Moore simply do not threaten the American Patriarchy. Threaten the patriarchy and the unilateral power dynamics of the entire universe will unravel. Is there a climate crisis? Well, it cannot be as threatening as offending the god of Patriarchy who could rain down judgment like Sodom at any moment. The supposed God that blesses America is Patriarchal. And HE demands the maintanence of that Patriachy in order for His beneficence to trickle down to the likes of you and me.
I lost my good evangelical credentials almost as soon as I started as a pastor. I remember my first year in 2005. Christmas Day was going to fall on a Sunday. I polled the congregation to see if we would prefer celebrating Christmas Day with our friends and families, rather than in the church building? Would we be satisfied with the Christmas Eve service the night before? Most affirmed and our church had its first Sunday off in 107 years.
I did receive one dismayed letter from a Dear Saint announcing that they would be leaving the church over this. The letter read… “No church on Christmas? What’s next ABORTIONS!?”
I did prove to be a slippery slope out of evangelicalism. We ordain women. We ordain queer folk. We marry gay couples and even will perform straight weddings. We march for black lives and support spouses needing a divorce. And yes, I believe that access to abortion is ethical and just. I believe that sometimes an abortion is the most loving option available and that those laboring with these decisions are in the best position to make them and should be granted the full agency and ability to do so.
Q: Do I believe Jesus would drive someone across state lines in order to get a safe and legal abortion?
A: I believe Jesus would do more than drive. I believe Jesus would cover all the expenses. Well, I believe that Jesus would at the very least make the rich dude cover all the expenses. It would be far better though if Jesus wasn’t needed to drive or pay in this scenario at all. That driving across state lines is back on the table is an absolutely ridiculous breach of justice. It’s wrong.
We need to update our love thy neighbor and love is the fulfillment of the law parables for today. I believe the Good Samaritan might look like someone walking in solidarity with all pregnant humans. I want all those the priests have disdained, the politicians scapegoated, and the judges ruled against, to have a good friend accompany them to the Planned Parenthood appointment. And hear that friend reassure them with these words, “I am with you. I will support you. This is your decision, and no one else’s. God has given you the authority to decide when and if your body brings another human into this world. So, remember that I love you, God loves you, and She honors you and your decisions, and so do I.”
Jesus did not offend many Lost people. He did offend religious people. And to the tribe that raised me…who reflexively quotes Paul in saying that we are the worst of all sinners, but continue to live Lording it over others with the blindness of our own self-righteousness: We need Jesus to offend us out of worshiping the god of the American patriarchy.
I have a great deal of compassion for how my transgressing of evangelical boundaries feels betraying, threatening, and scandalizing. These boundaries provide an entire life, a sense of security, and a group in which to belong. This kind of tampering can feel absolutely unmooring. For which, I can only be a witness to my own story and testify that there is an entire life outside of that small construction of reality. There are new communities of people that provide generative, wise, and enduring friendships, as well as, a flourishing relationship with the Creator of Love waiting for you. But yes, there is often a long and lonely space between. It is not easy being an evangelical and it can often feel harder to have been one.
I do believe Jesus is really there in the Truman Show which is evangelicalism. We tend to be so focused on winning people into it, however, that we miss Jesus inviting us out.
This is not to say that if you follow Jesus, then you will come to the same convictions as me. But I do believe that as a movement, evangelicals have been convinced that they are enlisted in a righteous mission to save babies and I think that is a foil. It is an unmarked grave. I have found it to be a movement co-opted into upholding some of the world’s most devastating and unjust systems of power while calling it faithfulness to God and the Bible. But I also believe in the good news. I believe in repenting and turning for the kingdom of God is already among us. I believe that Jesus is right here with you and me, ready to lead us out of this death-yard into new flourishing life.
"Wake up, sleeper, rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you." (Ephesians 5:14)
Do Justice, Love Mercy, and Walk Humbly... (Micah 6:8)
~David
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