US Political Christianity II: Why Isn’t It Global?
Sojourners magazine has been a favoured read of mine for many years. For a while I was worried that the magazine was getting a little light and caught up in its own rhetoric. However, in the past year it feels as if it has gotten meatier, clearly inspired by the political climate in the US. […]
Sojourners magazine has been a favoured read of mine for many years. For a while I was worried that the magazine was getting a little light and caught up in its own rhetoric. However, in the past year it feels as if it has gotten meatier, clearly inspired by the political climate in the US.
However, in the pages of Sojourners I frequently sense something that feels uneasy. When the world outside the borders of the US is addressed, it seems only to be framed in the context of povery and suffering (injustice) or in terms of perceptions of the US. Whilst both of these should concern the US Christian, as a framework, they are clearly the grid of localism. Could it be that Sojourners is beset by the same kind of localist thinking that burdens the fundamentalist end of American Christianity?
I’m not sure, but it seems a hypothesis worth investigating further.