Let me explain.
He generalizes. Does he speak to the secular elite on our behalf?
Is he saying I can’t or shouldn’t register GOP? Or Independent and vote conservative? Are confessionalists conservative? I don’t accept any such labels. But am I evoking a stereotype? I never heard him ever mention the word - Constitution. That is pretty convenient. He screams ivory tower. I think celebrity and academic-elite pastors are as much a pitfall as woke and patriot Christianity. What about your average joe Bible believer who doesn’t conveniently fit into any of these categories. Why does Tim Keller need your defending from me more than me needing defending from him? Because he’s a celebrity that believes in academically embraced Theory of Evolution and big government wealth redistribution? Just hypothetical, i think we can all stand for ourselves. I don’t think Keller cares what I think.
I think the art of selling out is becoming an epidemic. As it continues, I’m ok with being a reject.
“the Bible makes it impossible
as a Church to hitch your wagon to one political party, especially in these times. “For Christians just to completely hook up with one party or another is really idolatry,” Keller said. “It’s also reducing the Gospel to a political agenda.” (He pointed me to
an address by Nathan Hatch, president of Wake Forest University, called “The Political Captivity of the Faithful,” with which he concurs.)
When I pressed the point further, Keller admitted he believes that “most Christians are just nowhere nearly as deeply immersed in the scripture and in theology as they are in their respective social-media bubbles and News Feed bubbles. ....The conservative Christians are much more influenced by Fox News and their particular loops. And they’re [both] living in those things eight to 10 hours a day. They go to church once a week, and they’re just not immersed in the kind of biblical theological study that would nuance that stuff.” Too often, he believes, there’s no relationship between a proper Christian ethic and the way it translates into political and cultural engagement. It’s not the doctrine that’s at fault, Keller would argue; it’s the way people are taught and interpret it. It’s a failure of imagination and hermeneutics.
The way I have put it is that faith is often subordinated to partisan politics and political ideology, with the latter being the prism through which too many Christians interpret the former. Too many Christians are characterized by their tribal commitments, rather than an understanding of justice and human teleology.
On Donald Trump, Keller said that unlike a generation ago, many evangelicals are not looking to put Christians into power in order to turn the culture back to God; now they are looking for a protector, a champion.
“Both those evangelical strategies are wrong,” Keller told me. “Both of them are about power and saying,
How are we going to use power to live life the way we want? They’re not enough about service; they’re not enough about serving the common good.
“The proper cultural strategy is faithful presence within,” he added, “not pulling away from the culture, and not trying to take it over. ‘
Faithful presence within’ means being faithful; it means we’re not going to assimilate, [but] we’re going to be distinctively Christian. It’s about an attitude of service, uncompromising in our beliefs, but not withdrawing and not trying to dominate.”