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It is in Latin America where the three forces contending for the support of the migrant from country to city are most clearly represented. First, there is the tug of spiritism, an African and aboriginal American mélange of rural power spirits. Then there is the liberationist theology of the Catholic Church, the conquistadors’ Christianity allied with elitist leftism to confirm the lower orders in a red culture of powerlessness and victimization. These forces offer relief from oppression by placating the spirits or by enrolling as the rank-and-file of a political religion that leaves the educated leaders to call the big shots and organize the post-revolutionary pensions and benefits. The former offers respite from the elitist political powers that talk of empowerment but deliver corruption and cronyism. The latter offers the cathartic miracle of revolution, of cleansing violence that will sweep away in a single transcendent moment the dreadful powers that oppress, and provide for its middle-class leaders the blissful pleasures of “social engineering from above in the name of those below.” (Martin 2002 p171) It is these possibilities that come most easily to the modernist and the postmodernist temperament. The one presents it with a comfortable, non-threatening tableau of picturesque pre-modern culture, waiting to be rescued by the compassion and caring of an enlightened elite. The other flatters the saviors into believing that their narcissistic self-promotion to political power is not an act of pure self-interest, but an act of selflessness and altruism. The third force, enthusiastic Christianity, liberates the people from both spiritist and leftist witch doctors. It is entirely appropriate, and demonstrates the irreducible playfulness of the universe, that this authentic movement that really prepares people for life in the city, that really empowers them by promoting them to responsibility and trust, is precisely the movement most reviled and rejected by the better classes as a sink of bigotry and superstition.
There is another area of the world that is about to surprise the western elites with its Christianity. It is China. Beginning in the desperate years of the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s, the Han people have experienced a vast religious awakening that is only now coming to light. It has been reported by David Aikman in Jesus in Beijing. At the turn of the twenty-first century there are perhaps 80 million Christians in China including 70 million Protestants, chiefly members of the house church movement. Actually, nobody knows for sure, since the unofficial “house churches” function outside the law, defiantly separate from the government-sanctioned, government-controlled Three Self Patriotic Movement (of Protestants) and the Catholic Patriotic Movement.
All we know is that Christianity has grown at a staggering speed since 1979, when China began to relax the fierce restrictions on religious activity that had been imposed during the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s (Aikman 2003 p8).
Paradoxically, the twentieth century convulsions of revolution, civil war, invasion, and economic failure seem to have provoked China into a Christian outburst, by purifying its existing Christian culture into a refiner’s fire. The western missionary presence, symbolized for us by Eric Liddell, the muscular Christian missionary athlete of Chariots of Fire, was severely damaged by the Japanese occupation of the 1930s and 1940s (Liddell, for instance, died in a Japanese internment camp in 1945). It was finished off by Mao’s victory in 1949 when westerners were chased out of China and all religious activity was subsumed under the totalizing political power of the Chinese Communist party.
But the precipitate from all this violence was a residue of extraordinary Christians, the generation of “patriarchs:” Wang Mingdao, Allen Yuan, Samuel Lamb, Moses Yie, and Li Tianen. To read of their sufferings—the imprisonments, the beatings, and the humiliations—is to understand the power of the human spirit. When Mao had finally brought China to cultural despair under the rule of teenage gangs in the Cultural Revolution of 1966-76, the Chinese people ached for something to succor them in their need. These brave Chinese Christians lighted a fire of hope that has burned brightly ever since.
One of the sparks that began the fire landed in Fangcheng County in the province of Henan. Christian conversions began in the 1940s, but the new Christians suffered extreme persecution in the 1950s and the Cultural Revolution. The intensity of the persecution only served to encourage them into secret meetings in their homes for prayer and worship. Then there were miracles: the boy lifted up by “a man in white” after falling down a well. And there were “healings” of people who recovered after being prayed over by their Christian fellow villagers. In 1970, the “patriarch” Li Tianen traveled through Henan after his release from labor camp training a new generation of Christian leaders. Then things started to get out of hand. By the 1980s local “Communist cadres would commonly refer to Fangcheng county as ‘the Jesus nest’ and the whole problem of rapid evangelization in the rural areas as ‘Christianity fever.’” (Aikman 2003 p77)
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©2005 Christopher Chantrill
[W]hen I asked a liberal longtime editor I know with a mainstream [publishing] house for a candid, shorthand version of the assumptions she and her colleagues make about conservatives, she didn't hesitate. Racist, sexist, homophobic, anti-choice fascists, she offered, smiling but meaning it.
Harry Stein, I Can't Believe I'm Sitting Next to a Republican
Families helped each other putting up homes and barns. Together, they built churches, schools, and common civic buildings. They collaborated to build roads and bridges. They took pride in being free persons, independent, and self-reliant; but the texture of their lives was cooperative and fraternal.
Michael Novak, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism
For [the left] there is only the state and the individual, nothing in between. No family to rely on, no friend to depend on, no community to call on. No neighbourhood to grow in, no faith to share in, no charities to work in. No-one but the Minister, nowhere but Whitehall, no such thing as society - just them, and their laws, and their rules, and their arrogance.
David Cameron, Conference Speech 2008
Imagining that all order is the result of design, socialists
conclude that order must be improvable by better design of some superior mind.
F.A. Hayek, The Fatal Conceit
[Every] sacrifice is an act of impurity that pays for a prior act of greater impurity... without its participants having to suffer the full consequences incurred by its predecessor. The punishment is commuted in a process that strangely combines and finesses the deep contradiction between justice and mercy.
Frederick Turner, Beauty: The Value of Values
But the only religions that have survived are those which support property and the family.
Thus the outlook for communism, which is both anti-property and anti-family, (and also anti-religion), is not promising.
F.A. Hayek, The Fatal Conceit
[T]he way “to achieve a system of determining admission to the public schools on a nonracial basis,”
Brown II, 349 U. S., at 300–301, is to stop assigning students on a racial basis. The way to stop
discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.
Roberts, C.J., Parents Involved in Community Schools vs. Seattle School District
A writer who says that there are no truths, or that all truth is merely relative, is asking you not to believe him. So dont.
Roger Scruton, Modern Philosophy
Paul Dirac: When I was talking with Lemaître about [the expanding universe] and feeling stimulated
by the grandeur of the picture that he has given us, I told him that
I thought cosmology was the branch of science that lies closest to religion.
However [Georges] Lemaître [Catholic priest, physicist, and
inventor of the Big Bang Theory] did not agree with me. After thinking it over he
suggested psychology as lying closest to religion.
John Farrell, The Creation Myth
Within Pentecostalism the injurious hierarchies of the wider world are abrogated and replaced by a single hierarchy of faith, grace, and the empowerments of the spirit... where groups gather on rafts to take them through the turbulence of the great journey from extensive rural networks to the mega-city and the nuclear family...
David Martin, On Secularization
©2007 Christopher Chantrill