Book review
by Terry Akers
Divided by Faith—
by
Michael O. Emerson
and Christian Smith
As a new century emerges in black-white relations in America,
sociologists Michael O. Emerson of Rice University and Christian Smith of the
University of North Carolina have written a book examining evangelicalism’s role
in this 300-year-old American dilemma.
Divided by Faith: Evangelical Religion and the Problem
of Race in America, published by Oxford University Press in 2000, is not a
theological book, but it seeks to expose certain theological weaknesses in
American evangelicalism.
The purpose of this study is to educate American evangelicals
toward a deeper thinking regarding race relations—beyond the cultural tools and
what they view as simplistic solutions that have shaped a mostly one-dimensional
worldview over the last several centuries.
Emerson and Smith discuss how evangelical preconceptions
cause them to miss the fuller picture in the multifaceted and complex nature of
this sociological condition that exists despite government’s and religion’s best
intentions and efforts to heal it. Their analysis argues that certain weaknesses in evangelical
thought actually cause, to some extent, the perpetuation of the very racial
divisions they minister against and oppose.
As stated in the front flap, "despite their good intentions,
evangelicals may actually be preserving America’s racial chasm." It goes on to
say that "most white evangelicals see no systematic discrimination against
blacks; indeed, they deny the existence of any ongoing racial problem in the
United States."
Evangelicals blame such things as the liberal media, the
black culture, unethical black leaders and the inability of African Americans to
get over the past. The authors argue, however, that these attitudes are the
natural outgrowth of their theological worldview rooted in individualism, free
will, personal relationships, anti-structuralism and premillennial
eschatology—the belief that world conditions will only worsen until Christ
returns—so there is no need to bother with social issues.
This, along with the isolation experienced in their mostly
segregated churches and neighborhoods, makes it difficult for white evangelicals
to see the pervasive and systematic injustice that perpetuates inequality, going
on every day in the real world of Black America.
Since the great civil rights legislation of the 1960s, the
authors contend that there has been little improvement in black-white relations
in America. They seek, through education, to engage the evangelical community
sociologically, in the issue of race in America, so they will become a more
dynamic force toward an eventual real solution. They point out, on the one hand,
the ineffectiveness of the structural remedies of government-administered
programs, but also the incomplete spiritual resolutions offered by evangelicals.
This, they claim, is the result of their honest but
simplistic, one-dimensional thinking. The professors suggest that evangelicals
incorporate the sociological dimension into their spiritual faith, and begin
challenging the social systems that promote discrimination and racialization.
The authors recognize the importance of racial reconciliation
(repentance and forgiveness) as a critical first step to improving race
relations in America. They go on to demonstrate that the real healing and peace
that occur beyond initial reconciliation can come only through the internal
healing that is provided in the gospel of grace.
For evangelicals, this means moving beyond a mere
identification of the gospel to its internalization. For secular society, it
means realizing that all human-based efforts will fail and the pain of
racialization can only be relieved through the cross of Christ. After
conversion, the old ways no longer work—true racial healing comes only through
God’s redemptive work in new creation.