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Michael Novak: a proper target for harsh polemic

April 22, 2010 28 comments

In his recent post “Why Novak is completely worthless in every way imaginable,” Halden criticizes Michael Novak’s outlandish post at the First Things blog in which he calls for not only economic sanctions on Iran but also a ‘preventive’ attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Halden attacks Novak for the absurdity of seeking to violently secure the hill on which Jesus delivered the Sermon on the Mount. Evan has responded critically to Halden in a post entitled “Is Halden Doerge completely worthless in every way imaginable?” Evan doesn’t seem to understand why Halden would be so incredibly harsh in his post. It turns out that Evan actually has a personal connection to Novak and so this is obviously shaping his response.

Evan’s not interested in arguing with Halden about the merits of Novak’s post or Novak’s work in general. Rather, he is ultimately concerned about the harshness of Halden’s style of critique. And so he concludes his post with the following: “My advice to folks who are interested in blogging about theology would be, frankly, to not blog like Halden often does. I think it’s a mistake to do so, and that it can foster a stunted ability to interact with other people.” Now, I am all for reasoned and balanced critique over polemical hyperbole, but the truth of the matter is that Michael Novak is, to borrow Eugene McCarraher’s phrase, one of “Satan’s favorite sock puppets.” And so critique, even polemical critique is necessary. Considering his huge influence on lay Catholics (which is, by the way, comparable to the late Richard Neuhaus), his recent remarks should be called out for what they are: sub-Christian. Evan admits to having never read much of Novak’s work, and perhaps this is the most telling aspect of his post against Halden. Frankly, Michael Novak is doing awful work. This is the bitter truth. Critiques need to be leveled against him, in every forum, whether it be academic or a more informal blogging forum. Now I am sure Novak is a nice guy and a perfectly sincere Christian, which is precisely what makes his work so insidious. I don’t know about you, but as someone who has painfully labored through much of Novak’s work in the past, I’m with Halden on this one. And for the record, my advice to those interested in theology blogging is to learn the art of provocative blogging from the best of them–Halden Doerge–but be sure to take some time to learn from Evan’s “level-headed” blogging too.

Categories: Blogging, Nationalism, Neocons

On dismissing liberals

May 6, 2009 4 comments

One of the many problems with Craig Carter’s reasoning is his constant obsession with labeling views. All positions go through a variety of litmus tests in order to determine where one “fits” in the grand scheme of all things liberal. For instance, Carter tests to see if a position can be called theologically liberal by using the following criteria: 1) a denial of the divinity of Christ, particularly as understood by the early church councils and creeds 2) the denial of penal substituionary atonement 3) a denial of the utter depravity of humanity 4) a historicizing of the eschaton. He calls J. Denny Weaver a liberal for arguing for a nonviolent God! Now, I don’t know where Carter is getting his criteria. But, regardless, I’m not sure I know any theologian in their right mind actually holding such views, but Carter thinks it is rampant. Let’s be honest though, Craig, liberal theologians are practically treated like dinosaurs in the academy. Certainly liberal theology lives on in some quarters, but it is hardly a popular position to hold in the theological world. I mean Barth pretty much single-handedly demolished liberal Protestant theology and as far as the Catholic world goes I’d say in the long run folks like Henri de Lubac and Hans Urs von Balthasar pretty well defeated Karl Rahner or Edward Schillebeeckx. Further, in the theological world “liberal politics” is not at all popular. I mean the true liberals of our day in the theological world are Michael Novak and Christopher Insole. Novak is utterly marginalized and Insole is really swimming upstream.

Now, it is certainly perfectly normal to label views, but such labeling should never function as a way to shut down conversation and dialogue. To call someone a liberal does not amount to an argument against their position. In what sense is so and so a liberal? Why is that bad? One gets the feeling that if you’re labeled a liberal by Craig Carter then he won’t even listen to your point of view. Not only that, you instantly becomes “dangerous” and “fascist” or “heretical” or whatever.


How to talk to a liberal

May 5, 2009 6 comments

Craig Carter’s central enemy is “liberalism.” In Carter’s view, “liberalism” manifests itself in a variety of ways. He speaks of “liberal modernity,” “left-liberalism,” “the liberal state,” “liberal theology,” and “liberal fascism.” For Carter, modernity is a thoroughly liberal affair. Liberal modernity has caused capitalism and liberal democracy, socialism and communism, atheism and secularism. Liberalism spawned the “sexual revolution”  has led to a “theocracy in Iowa” on the issue of gay marriage, and is the reason why so many fetuses are aborted. According to Carter, Walter Wink is a liberal because of his “demythologizing” of the principalities and powers. And, although he doesn’t say it out right, John Howard Yoder would be a liberal on this point as well. But, of course, it has become extremely questionable as to whether Carter understands Yoder at all. But, that is for another post.

For now, let’s talk a little more about Carter’s enemy: liberalism. Carter is enthralled with liberalism–he really thinks it is the root of everything wrong in the world. Although Carter goes to great pains to understand and define liberalism, he nevertheless necessarily equivocates when he applies the term to both “neoconservatives” and people like Obama. On the one hand, Carter wants to talk about liberalism in the classical sense of the word. On the other hand, he wants to talk about liberalism in the popular North American sense. So, we have liberalism in the classical sense: key representatives are people like Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, etc. Today, liberalism is the dominant viewpoint–it is the implicit framework of both the Republican and Democratic parties in the U.S. But, in trying to find the roots of this political viewpoint, Carter stretches back to the very foundations of “modernity.” Despite his Baptist affiliation, more and more, Carter is becoming convinced that the Protestant reformation and the nominalists before it really spurred on modernity and therefore all of the problems Carter sees in the world. Next, we  have liberalism in the popular North American sense: liberals are people like Obama and Jim Wallis. Although Carter thinks that the Republican party and particularly the neoconservatives work within a broadly liberal framework (in the classical sense), in his mind they are less liberal. Or, at least they oppose abortion and gay marriage. For Carter, abortion and gay marriage is the height of what he calls liberal fascism–the word “liberal” here is used in the classical and popular sense. One thing is certain in all of this: Carter is decidedly not a liberal.

A few comments are in order. To be against liberalism in the classical sense is not necessarily to make one a conservative, because we’re talking about a particular philosophical viewpoint not a place on a spectrum. In contrast, in the popular sense the opposite of liberalism is indeed conservatism. And so we have the Democrats and the Republicans. But, let’s be clear on this: both parties are liberal in the classical sense. Carter, however, does in fact believe that the opposite of liberalism in the classical sense is conservatism, but if liberalism is not a place on a spectrum, what is conservatism in this context? For Carter, “true conservatism” is basically anything pre-modern. In Carter’s own words, “What I call true conservativism is a political philosophy that historically and logically precedes modernity and calls into question all the nominalism, individualism, rationalism and materialism that flows from the Enlightenment and is expressed in the two great Enlightenment religions: Capitalism & Marxism. True conservatism emphasises the family, localism, agrarianism, tradition, religion, duty & natural law.” So, there you have it, true conservatism in one word is a magical view of something called Christendom.

Carter loves all things genuinely conservative and hates all things liberal. He despises the “evangelical left” for their “socialism” and for their pro-choice politics. He despises Obama because he’s a liberal fascist baby killer. He really despises what he calls “liberal theology” which as far as I can tell is pretty much anyone he disagrees with or anyone who draws at all from modern critical methods. What he identifies as liberal theology is highly problematic in my view. Rowan Williams is a liberal? Oh come on… However, he talks about how he likes Milbank, MacIntyre, Yoder, Barth, de Lubac, von Balthasar, even William Cavanaugh! Yet, he doesn’t seem to be at all aware that all of these folks accept and use modern critical methods. He opposes socialism, but seems totally unaware that many of these folks were or are in fact socialists!

Carter’s criticism of liberalism leads to his criticism of capitalism, but the alternative is not socialism. For him, in economics and increasingly on political and ethical issues the alternative is Catholic social thought. Interestingly, what Carter finds in Catholic social thought is a way out of his predicament between capitalism and socialism. But, what he fails to understand is that the strands of Catholic social thought upon which he draws is thoroughly influenced by liberalism and modernity. In his opposition to socialism, John Paul II took a decidedly liberal path–he advocated some form of tempered capitalism, even at a global level. Indeed, whereas much of previous Catholic social thought had been ardently anti-liberal and anti-capitalist, in many ways he opened the door for a Catholic acceptance of the liberal order, including democracy and capitalism.

So, there is a great deal of irony in all of this. As Carter has opposed liberalism in the classical sense he has found himself opposing liberalism in the popular sense. He wants to be a “true conservative” which places him both on the pre-modern side of things and the conservative side of things on the popular political scene. But his move toward a popular political conservatism, which stems from his hatred of the “evangelical left,” ironically leads him to tacitly accept a sort of tempered liberal politics in Catholic social thought. Thus he finds himself in line with the First Things crowd because they complain and equivocate a lot about liberalism and they oppose abortion and gay marriage.

In my last post I pointed out that he distorts the views of the dead. By this I mean he misinterprets and distorts the views of theologians like Yoder, Barth, de Lubac, and von Balthasar. Yet, even these folks are beginning to feel unsafe for Carter because of their liberalism or modernism or whatever. So, reaching back to Augustine and Aquinas and the pre-moderns is the only answer.

Now, the more serious point that I would like to make is related to the reception of John Howard Yoder. If Carter thinks his politics are in line with Yoder’s then he is out to lunch. Carter’s nostalgia for Christendom, his appeals to natural law, his anti-socialism, his anti-modern stance, his apparent acceptance of capitalism, is not in line with Yoder’s thought at all. Moreover, Carter’s entire theological framework is the epitome of what Yoder called Constantinianism.

Distorting the views of the dead

May 1, 2009 6 comments

I think both John Howard Yoder and St. Augustine are crying in their graves at the sight of this man’s distortion of their politics.

What are the neocons up to?

March 28, 2009 Leave a comment

From the folks who brought you the Project for the New American Century, check out The Foreign Policy Initiative.

What they promote across party lines:

The Foreign Policy Initiative (FPI) is a newly formed, non-profit, non-partisan organization intending to qualify as a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code that promotes:

  • continued U.S. engagement–diplomatic, economic, and military—in the world and rejection of policies that would lead us down the path to isolationism;
  • robust support for America’s democratic allies and opposition to rogue regimes that threaten American interests;
  • the human rights of those oppressed by their governments, and U.S. leadership in working to spread political and economic freedom;
  • a strong military with the defense budget needed to ensure that America is ready to confront the threats of the 21st century;
  • international economic engagement as a key element of U.S. foreign policy in this time of great economic dislocation.
Categories: Empire, Neocons, The Right

Michael Novak at St. Thomas

October 23, 2008 7 comments

Michael Novak, the Catholic neoconservative theologian comes to town on Wednesday, October 29 to deliver a lecture at 7:30 p.m. entitled, “Career or Calling? Business as a Vocation” at the Thornton Auditorium of Terrence Murphy Hall on St. Thomas’ downtown Minneapolis campus. It is free and open to the public.

Novak is one of the most painful theologians to read, and I’m sure it will be worse listening to him spout off on how capitalism and America are God’s gifts to the world. In his perspecitve, America is not quite the kingdom of God, but it is damn close. Novak has been a staunch supporter of U.S. involvement in Iraq, Afghanistan, and indeed all over the world, militarily and economically.

If you want to join me let me know! It will be great fun!

Novak on the (Christian?) hope for the universal spread of capitalism

August 18, 2008 Leave a comment

Even though the best hope of the poor on earth lies in the universal spread and deeper development of democratic capitalist systems, much fresh thinking is needed to deepen the present intellectual and moral foundations of democratic capitalist societies. . . .Within a Jewish and Christian horizon, the road toward an earthly approximation of the kingdom of God streches very far into the future. There is no danger of confusing sin, imperfection, and suffering that characterize democratic capitalist societies with the kingdom of God. For humans, given their liberty, do often what they should not do, and do not do what they should. What can at least be said, though, is that no existing alternative seems more adequately suited both to eliciting human creativity and to deflecting human weakness into watchfulness. It does the former by adding to the tinder of talent “the fire of interest,” and the latter by assigning private interest to be a sentinel to public good.

Michael Novak, The Catholic Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (New York: The Free Press, 1993) 60-61.

Michael Novak on globalization

July 20, 2008 15 comments

If a Catholic cannot feel confident in a time of globalization, what is the point in bearing the name ‘Catholic,’ which is another name for global? (The imperative for globalization began with the commission ‘Go preach the gospels to all nations,’ which turned Christianity away from being the religion of one tribe or one people only, and commanded it to see the whole human race as one people of God.) Globalization is the natural ecology of the Catholic faith.

Michael Novak, “Catholic Social Teaching, Markets, and the Poor,” in Doug Bandow and David Schindler, Wealth, Poverty, and Human Destiny (Wilmington: ISI Books, 2003) 56.

Liberalism’s project of universal redemption

June 10, 2008 1 comment

“The violence at the heart of liberal political doctrine makes this clear: the right to self-defense eventually calls for a project of universal redemption. Another way of putting this is to say that some humans have to be treated violently in order that humanity can be redeemed.”

Talal Asad, On Suicide Bombing (New York: Columbia University Press, 2007) 62-63.

Pat Robertson Supports Terrorism?

November 7, 2007 Leave a comment

After hearing word that Pat Robertson endorsed Rudy Guiliani this morning, I can’t help but think of Robertson’s infamous interview of Jerry Falwell two days after September 11, 2001. In case you don’t remember, in reference to the 9/11 attacks Jerry Falwell claimed that abortionists, gays and lesbians, and feminists “helped this happen.”

In his words,

JERRY FALWELL: And, I know that I’ll hear from them for this. But, throwing God out successfully with the help of the federal court system, throwing God out of the public square, out of the schools. The abortionists have got to bear some burden for this because God will not be mocked. And when we destroy 40 million little innocent babies, we make God mad. I really believe that the pagans, and the abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays and the lesbians who are actively trying to make that an alternative lifestyle, the ACLU, People For the American Way–all of them who have tried to secularize America–I point the finger in their face and say “you helped this happen.”

In response Pat Robertson said,

“Well, I totally concur, and the problem is we have adopted that agenda at the highest levels of our government. And so we’re responsible as a free society for what the top people do. And, the top people, of course, is the court system.”

Of course, Falwell and Robertson are best known by terms like the Moral Majority and the Christian Right. With Falwell dead, Robertson has become the symbol of anti-abortion, anti-gay marriage, militant rhetoric of the Christian Right.

The Christian Left has always thought of the Right as approaching moral issues too narrowly. You will often hear the Left say, “Yes, abortion is wrong, but be consistent with your focus on the right to life. What about war, the death penalty?” We all know the debate. Although the Christian Right has also been known to support US military operations around the world, I think the Left thought that it was really the social conservatism that held the Christian Right together (i.e. pro-life, anti-gay marriage).

Okay, do you see the irony…the man who once agreed with Jerry Falwell that the gays and abortionists helped 9/11 to happen, has just endorsed a candidate for president that is both pro-gay and pro-choice. Why? I assume it is what Guiliani said, “He supports me because we agree on what we think are the primary issues facing Americans: dealing with Islamic terrorism, dealing with the war on terror, dealing with the out-of-control spending in Washington.” But, wait, wouldn’t endorsing Guiliani actually have the reverse effect. I mean if the gays and the abortionists are given more room to spread their agenda, doesn’t this help the terrorists – like on 9/11?
kissykissygiuliani.jpg

I just don’t get Robertson’s shift in foreign policy. It seems like he supports terrorism.

WWJD? …What Would Jerry (Falwell) Do?

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