Loyalty Without Idolatry: Religious Vibe Shift and a Theology of Democratic Life / Luke Bretherton cover art

Loyalty Without Idolatry: Religious Vibe Shift and a Theology of Democratic Life / Luke Bretherton

Loyalty Without Idolatry: Religious Vibe Shift and a Theology of Democratic Life / Luke Bretherton

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Summary

Increasingly, it seems that a very public and nationalized Christianity is bouncing back as a live, contested question around the world, and there’s a temptation to exist on the extremes of either loyalty to the point of idolatry, or total opposition to the point of suspicion of the human beings we need to get along with every day. That creates a dilemma for Christian witness, one that can perhaps only be solved by the courage and fortitude to live in the tension this creates, honoring everyone’s dignity, and not falling into a gross idolatry of the state. Oxford's Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology Luke Bretherton joins Ryan McAnnally-Linz to name what's happening as Christianity sees a resurgence in democratic public life, and what faithful witness demands. In this episode, Bretherton reflects on Christianity's re-emergence and the theology it requires. Together they discuss the real-time collapse of secular progressivism, democratic agency, Augustine on glory and shame, how media monetizes suspicion, why community organizing outlasts protest, and how the church might tell a truer—and more costly—story about common life. Episode Highlights "The plausibility structure of Christianity is kind of back in play in the post-progressive vibe shift." "We want to have enemies—it's really hard to organize the world around love of enemies, and it's hard to make money off love of enemies." "How do you express loyalty to your particular political community—loyalty without idolatry?" "The giving over of responsibility is itself an act of self-dehumanizing." "The uncle who drives you crazy at Thanksgiving is also the one who turns up with a bake when your child is ill—that's how idolatry works." About Luke Bretherton Luke Bretherton is Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology at Oxford, director of the McDonald Centre for Theology, Ethics, and Public Life, and a canon of Christ Church. Previously at Duke University and King's College London, his work spans political theology, democracy, and grassroots politics. He hosts the Listen, Organize, Act! podcast. Books include A Primer in Christian Ethics (Cambridge, 2023), Christ and the Common Life, and Christianity and Contemporary Politics. Learn more at https://www.theology.ox.ac.uk/people/rev-canon-professor-luke-bretherton and @WestLondonMan https://x.com/WestLondonMan Helpful Links and Resources A Primer in Christian Ethics: Christ and the Struggle to Live Well (Cambridge, 2023) https://www.amazon.com/Primer-Christian-Ethics-Christ-Struggle/dp/1009329022 Listen, Organize, Act! podcast https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/listen-organize-act-organizing-democratic-politics/id1553824477 Luke Bretherton at Oxford https://www.theology.ox.ac.uk/people/rev-canon-professor-luke-bretherton Show Notes “Post-progressive vibe shift”; Christianity newly plausible across UK and EuropeBible Society "quiet revival" research; young people back in Oxford churches"The plausibility structure of Christianity is kind of back in play in the post-progressive vibe shift."Meaning, purpose, character; religion in government policy commissionsTom Holland; civilizational Christianity; the post-new-atheist turnPolitical theology replacing secular ideology: Ukraine, Gaza, India-PakistanTwo dominant scripts: total shame vs. lost gloryAugustine's third way: grace, ambiguity, open wounds"How do you express loyalty to your particular political community—loyalty without idolatry?"Local social trust still holds; national trust collapsedSocial media systems that profit from suspicion: monetized idolatry"We want to have enemies—it's really hard to organize the world around love of enemies, and it's hard to make money off love of enemies."Think with the body, from place; neighbors before scripts"The uncle who drives you crazy at Thanksgiving is also the one who turns up with a bake when your child is ill."Mass mailing dissolved federated civil society: unions, denominations, guildsMoses's challenge: atomized crowd to covenantal peopleStrongmen and unmediated belonging; technology and concentrated powerPolanyi's two responses: strong man or democratic organizing"The giving over of responsibility is itself an act of self-dehumanizing."Mobilizing vs. organizing; the Arab SpringThe Westfield story: a teenager discovers her democratic agencyThick vs. thin trust: the only metric that matters #PublicTheology #PoliticalTheology #ChristianWitness #Democracy #CommunityOrganizing #FaithAndPolitics #ChristianEthics #PostProgressivism #ChurchAndState #Secularism Production Notes This podcast featured Luke BrethertonInterview by Ryan McAnnally-LinzEdited and Produced by Evan RosaHosted by Evan RosaProduction Assistance by Noah SenthilA Production of the Yale Center for Faith & Culture at Yale Divinity School https://faith.yale.edu/aboutSupport For the Life of the World podcast by giving to the Yale Center for Faith & Culture: https://faith.yale.edu/give
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