Recently my son and I watched and enjoyed the new Ryan Reynolds movie Free Guy. I’d describe it as “The Trueman Show” meets “Ready Player One.” Spoiler alert, basically a man named “Guy” realizes that he’s a non-playing-character in a video game by putting on a pair of sunglasses that the playing characters wear. At one point, Guy tries to get his best friend “Buddy” to put on a pair of sunglasses too so that Buddy will see what Guy sees, know what Guy knows, and see the true nature of the reality that they are both in. But Buddy refuses to, he’s either too scared, or too comfortable with how things are.
To be honest, I feel like I’m Guy and parts of American Complementarianism and Evangelicalism are Buddy.
What many of us have long suspected, and what authors like Kristin du Mez, Beth Allison Barr, and Aimee Byrd show, is that there is another way of looking at the history and culture of American evangelicalism and esp. complementarianism (i.e., AmEvComp).
AmEvComp has a backstory, it has cultural forces that have shaped it, it has political connections, local and parochial qualities, key personalities with issues and failings.
As a result, the teaching of AmEvComp is not based purely and simply on a plain reading of Scripture, they are shaped by other things too like plantation patriarchy, figures like Ted Roosevelt and Ted Nugent, movies like Brave Heart, books like Wild at Heart, opposition to books like The Feminist Mystique, opposition to the Equal Rights Act. And yet, if you point out how AmEvComp are products of a situated history and are producers of a type of culture with things like “Focus on the Family,” purity-rings, Promise Keepers, the AmEvComp bros overreact like Reagan in Grenada.
AmEvComp be like “The culture is out to get us,” but I wanna say, “Brother, but you don’t see the culture within you.”
I do not expect my AmEvComp friends, and I genuinely call them friends, to abandon everything they’ve known and to join Christian for Biblical Equality. But maybe authors like du Mez, Barr, and Byrd can lead you to a more self-aware, self-critical, and humbly chastened view of complementarian manhood, marriage, and ministry.
Neil Shenvi has produced a friendly response to my post CBMW and the Heresies of ‘Sociology’ and ‘History’ which responded to his initial piece Sociology as Theology: The Deconstruction of Power in (Post)Evangelical Scholarship. So many responses to responses to responses.
Shenvi chides me for supporting the du Mez and Barr thesis that AmEvComp is a white male protection racket. But if you look at the networks within AmEvComp and their defense of Donald Trump and Paige Patterson, how do you draw any other conclusion? But it gets even worse, Shenvi is kind of blatant about what he’s trying to protect.
I’m immediately left wondering what, exactly, is keeping someone from slipping “heterosexist, cisnormative” in between “white” and “middle-class” and then using precisely the same reasoning to dismiss Prof. Bird’s own stance on sexuality or gender identity as a “product… of a specific culture, in a specific place, with a specific set of values.”
He worries that the same exposure of the ills and power dynamics behind AmEvComp patriarchy could also be applied to white-ness, to heterosexuality, or to middle-class-ness. But this is exactly the point. He’s not worried as to whether white-ness, heterosexuality or middle-class-ness - I’m all three by the way - have done any harm or contributed to any suffering or disempowerment, he’s only interested in protecting them, history and reality be damned. In effect, he is worried, “Don’t let them do to my race, class, and gender what they did to my manhood!”
Even Shenvi’s critique proves du Mez and Barr’s point, AmEvComp doesn’t operate from exegesis to application, it is its own culture, that is propped up with a mixture of scriptural appeal, pop culture, personalities, and networks of patronage and power, and he wants it defended.
Let me offer an olive branch to Shenvi, should we do theology based just on sociology? No, of course not. If I were teaching a course on Bible, Church, and Gender, I’d have du Mez, Barr, and Byrd on the reading list, along with some diverse biblical commentaries, works by Rosner and Trueman on “identity,” stuff from CBMW and CBE, some recent treatments on anthropology, and some things on culture-making, and ethics. I would say with great confidence that I think du Mez, Barr, and Byrd will agree with me on this.
Am I a product of my Aussie context? Undoubtedly, and many friends will have much fun pointing out how it jaundices my view. You could point out how Australian’s lean towards egalitarianism, which is why my students call me “Mike” rather than “Prof. Bird,” we could talk about Australian male mythology with the epic poem “The Man from Snowy River,” we could discuss “The White Australia Policy,” Kevin Rudd’s “Apology” to first peoples, Anglican debates about women and ministry in the 1990s, and the influence of Aussie feminist Germaine Greer on Aussie culture. Fair game!
But to my AmEvComp friends, Buddy, just put on the glasses for a minute, you don’t have to keep them on, you can take them off, but you’ll never be the same! And you’ll learn some painful truths: You’ll learn that the men you thought were like Cliff Huxtable acted more like Bill Cosby, it is a sad truth, confronting yet liberating!
Debated whether or not to write this. But I’m getting nowhere trying to understand the other side without someone to help me through their thinking. It’s a long comment! Sorry for that! But I’m fighting hard to understand those who I currently disagree with, so this is a genuine question. How does Shenvi’s response force the conclusion that, “In effect, he is worried, ‘Don’t let them do to my race, class, and gender what they did to my manhood!’”? Let me lay out my understanding of things so it’s clear why this line confuses me and also so you can correct me.
I take Shenvi to mean this: (1) Scripture does not permit homosexuality or transgenderism (as all sides agree). (2) The current egalitarian argument (CEA) of du Mez, Barr, yourself, etc. that is being used against AmEvComp can be employed in defense of homosexuality and transgenderism. (3) Therefore, we should reject CEA. (To be clear, point #3 doesn’t necessitate that the conclusion of CEA [that AmEvComp is unscriptural] is wrong. It only necessitates that the argument used to support this conclusion is wrong.)
Like Shenvi, the use of CEA also concerns me, *not* because I’m worried about my own interests, but because of the students I pastor. (I use “pastor” loosely, because none of the students are believers nor do their parents even attend church. I’m more an evangelist.) For them, being part of the LGBTQ+ community is integral to their identity. This is one of the biggest obstacles between them and Christ. It is very personally painful to watch them make so many self-destructive choices. This is why I do not want to see an illegitimate argument advanced that strengthens what is harmful to these students.
Yes, like Shenvi I’m admitting the current culture war plays into my concern of CEA. But before I’m charged with using the current culture war as my *reason* for rejecting egalitarianism, note that I’m *not* *necessarily* rejecting egalitarianism itself. I’m rejecting *this* argument for egalitarianism because of other givens (points #1 and #2 above) which I have a heightened awareness of because of the current culture wars. So while I am unpersuaded of egalitarianism at the moment, that does not mean I’ve shut the door on the position altogether, only on this argument for it. If egalitarianism is correct, I’m looking for another argument to convince me, since I don’t reach this conclusion in my own reading of Scripture and since I find CEA faulty.
Finally then, back to my question: How does Shenvi’s response force the conclusion that, “In effect, he is worried, ‘Don’t let them do to my race, class, and gender what they did to my manhood!’”? Let me continue to lay all my cards on the table. While you think Shenvi’s post only serves to reinforce your conclusion, from my vantage point, your post only serves to reinforce *his* conclusion, that Boulverism is being used against him. He’s made an argument in good faith and the response was to question his motives. (And if it is said that explained his motives himself, that’s exactly why I included my thought process above, to demonstrate that one can be concerned about the use of CEA without it being for self-serving reasons. I don’t take Shenvi to have self-serving motives, I take him to be someone who is concerned not to advance arguments that could be used to undercut what we all believe to be the teaching of Scripture, that homosexuality, etc. are not permitted.)
Since I’ve written so much already, one final caveat: I agree and share concerns that there are strands (I don’t have the knowledge to say how many or few) in my camp who have seriously abused complementarianism. I have listened to the Rise and Fall of Mars Hill and find Driscoll’s approach to many things abhorrent. Wherever that exists, I want it stamped out. Yet it does not *necessarily* follow (it could! It could not!) that complementarianism is wrong or that CEA is an argument we should use.
Again, genuine question! I’ve only laid out my thinking so that you can address it. Please, show me where I’m wrong!
Yep. Most AmEvComps I speak to aren't even aware that sunglasses exist!