- Mar 2025
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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He Gave a Name to What Many Christians Feel by [[Ruth Graham]], [[Madeleine Hordinski]]
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In “negative world,” with the safeguards of “Christian moral norms” out the window, it was too late for liberals to make any coherent critique of Mr. Trump’s open licentiousness.
Yet, somehow it's the Christian Right that's voting for Trump?! How is this an argument? It's not for the liberals to make a critique of something the Christian Right should be doing better at.
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Mr. Renn argues that being a Christian, especially in high-status domains, is now seen as a social negative.
Why care unless you're only after the power and the religion is a secondary thing?
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Mr. Renn’s description of the contours of “negative world” range widely, and include the spread of sports gambling, legalized drug use and even tattoos. But the framework might not have electrified evangelical America if not for the perception on the right of a new secular orthodoxy around sex, gender and race. When you ask someone who embraces the term to discuss their own experiences in “negative world,” the answer is almost always connected with this cluster of issues.
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Perhaps it's the creation of a myth whereby a Christian can break the Golden Rule, but still want the power and respect that their religion previously gave them that is causing the friction that modern Christians might be seeing?
Can it really be "Christian persecution" if they're not really Christ-ians?
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About a decade ago, around the time that the Supreme Court’s ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges made same-sex marriage legal nationwide, Mr. Renn says the United States became “negative world."
Why can't Renn point to a more specific issue that actually impacts Christianity directly? How someone else chooses to identify and live, particularly people who are frequently Christian, shouldn't effect Christians in the sort of way he's proposing.
Besides "power over" others, what sort of Christianity is he really espousing? Where is the "love your neighbor?" or "do unto others?" in his religion?
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Mr. Renn’s best-known idea: his warning to Christians that America is in an era of distinct hostility to believers like them, and that they must gird themselves to adapt to, as the title of his recent book put it, “Life in the Negative World.”
Tags
- Aaron Renn
- American Christianity
- hypocrisy
- sex
- gender
- evangelical culture
- negative world
- public transportation
- status
- same sex marriage
- read
- Christian persecution
- Christian Right
- Obergefell v. Hodges
- counterculture
- Donald J. Trump
- American culture
- Golden Rule
- Tim Keller
- race
- Christianity
- Chicago, IL
- Moral Majority
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