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The New Faithful: Why Young Adults Are Embracing Christian Orthodoxy by Colleen Carroll

Colleen Carroll’s book _The New Faithful_ is an attempt to exam­ine the reli­gious phe­nom­e­non of Chris­t­ian the­o­log­i­cal “ortho­doxy” among cur­rent twenty and thirty-somethings. We pur­chased this book out of a sense of long­ing to hear the sto­ries of fel­low young Chris­tians sym­pa­thetic to the issues we face. We opened _The New Faithful_ eager to hear the voice of some­one in our age bracket cry­ing from the rooftops. But her book is hardly unprob­lem­atic: she weak­ened the book when she decided to make it a Republican-Party call­ing card…
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Now read­ing with Julie. The author is Colleen Car­roll, a jour­nal­ist in her late twen­ties. Another “Emer­gent Church” book, it focuses on Catholic renewal. Dis­cov­ered via “Ortho­dox Twenty-Somethings”:http://www.theooze.com/articles/article.cfm?id=590, a review in TheOoze.
h4. Review/Thoughts By Julie & Mar­tin
Colleen Carroll’s book _The New Faithful_ is an attempt to exam­ine the reli­gious phe­nom­e­non of Chris­t­ian the­o­log­i­cal “ortho­doxy” among cur­rent twenty and thirty-somethings. Her goal is to con­sider two groups: the young evan­gel­i­cal Protes­tant and Roman Catholic devout. Con­sid­er­ing that this demo­graphic is vir­tu­ally invis­i­ble to the reli­gious and social estab­lish­ments dom­i­nated pre­dom­i­nantly by white, upper mid­dle class/upper class Baby Boomers, Carroll’s book rep­re­sents a wel­come and refresh­ing endeavor.
We pur­chased this book because we long­ing to hear sto­ries of fel­low young Chris­tians sym­pa­thetic to the issues we face as two the­o­log­i­cally con­ser­v­a­tive, post-liberal twenty/thirty-somethings. In an age ded­i­cated to progress, open­ness, post-modernism, sub­jec­tivism, and, of course, metaphor, we’re often writ­ten off as reac­tionar­ies, as if sim­ply believ­ing some­thing too much is a form of vio­lence or big­otry. We find we often have a lot more in com­mon with those of other faiths who also take care to root them­selves in their tra­di­tion.
We opened _The New Faithful_ eager to hear the voice of some­one in our age bracket cry­ing from the rooftops, “There IS objec­tive truth, and there are young peo­ple who believe his name is Jesus!” In this sense, Carroll’s book has served as a reas­sur­ance that this demo­graphic does, in fact, exist. But her book is hardly unprob­lem­atic.
The book started off great: Carroll’s writ­ing style not only held our atten­tion but was also insight­ful. We iden­ti­fied with much of what she was relat­ing. So much so, in fact, that we found our­selves under­ling para­graph after para­graph:
bq. These young adults are not per­pet­ual seek­ers. They are com­mit­ted to a reli­gious world view that grounds their lives and shapes their moral­ity. They are not luke­warm believ­ers or pas­sion­ate dis­senters. When they are embrac­ing a faith tra­di­tion or deep­en­ing their com­mit­ment to it, they want to do so whole­heart­edly or not at all. When they are attracted to tra­di­tion in wor­ship or in spir­i­tu­al­ity, they want to under­stand the under­ly­ing real­ity of that tra­di­tion and use it to trans­form their lives. That sense of com­mit­ment and total accep­tance of ortho­doxy sets them apart from many of their peers and fel­low believ­ers who share their affec­tion for the trap­pings of reli­gious tra­di­tion but reject its the­o­log­i­cal and moral roots. p. 11
Not far into the book, how­ever, an annoy­ing ten­dency soon became man­i­fest. It appeared as if Car­roll has a rule of not talk­ing to any­one who isn�t an Ivy League grad­u­ate with Tom Cruise looks and a stock bro­ker past. A remark­able num­ber of inter­vie­wees were described as hav­ing movie star fea­tures. They were from elite col­leges. They were the trend-setters of the future.
At the first rep­e­ti­tion of this for­mula, we thought she had prob­a­bly writ­ten the book too fast and got­ten care­less with a repeated asser­tion. At the sec­ond rep­e­ti­tion we grum­bled that she needed a good copy­ed­i­tor. By the third time, we con­cluded she just had major class inse­cu­ri­ties and needed to spend a lit­tle one-on-one time with ther­a­pist.
Finally, we began to sus­pect some­thing else was at work. Many of these inter­vie­wees worked, lived, and wor­shipped in the Wash­in­ton DC area. Carroll’s focus on the unique­ness of her sub­jects as per­sons with innate lead­er­ship poten­tial began to feel more and more like a pro­mo­tion for a Future Lead­ers of Amer­ica ban­quet. As we read on, it became more than obvi­ous that she was writ­ing this book for a par­tic­u­lar audi­ence. What we orig­i­nally took to be sloppy jour­nal­ism appeared more and more to be polit­i­cal talking-points. The first rule of inter­views is to repeat the same points over and over so that the jour­nal­ists will trans­mit the mes­sage you want. Why was a pro­fes­sional jour­nal­ist writ­ing on Gen-X rel­gious move­ments sound­ing so much like a politi­cian?
Halfway through the book we finally decided to google “Colleen Car­roll,” found her “website”:http://www.colleen-carroll.com/ and learned that our sus­pi­cions were con­firmed. After the book came out she was invited to a num­ber of speak­ing engage­ments spon­sored by con­ser­v­a­tive Repu­bi­can Party politi­cians. She was well-received and before long got one of the most cov­eted jobs a twenty-something reporter could hope for: speech­writer to the Pres­i­dent him­self, George W. Bush.
A cer­tain amount of con­grat­u­la­tions are in order: this is quite a feather-in-the-cap for an ambi­tious jour­nal­ist. Unfor­tu­nately though, she weak­ened the book when she decided to make it a Republican-Party call­ing card. More than that, the book itself is a com­pro­mise. Car­roll can­not be trusted because her schol­ar­ship is not real. She not only began with a premise and sought out to prove it; she inten­tion­ally rejected any phe­nom­ena that failed to serve her agenda.
While the book bril­liantly cri­tiques Baby Boomer lib­er­als, it gives Boomer con­ser­v­a­tives a free pass. There’s noth­ing in this book that would upset a polit­i­cally pow­er­ful, middle-aged con­ser­v­a­tive like Attor­ney Gen­eral John Ashcroft. Just the oppo­site: this is a coo­ing love song promis­ing that his spir­i­tual and polit­i­cal off­spring are resurg­ing: good-looking, trend-setting, right­eous con­ser­v­a­tives are tak­ing back the col­lege cam­puses from the peace and jus­tice Catholics at the New­man Cen­ter. Nor does the book take on the “inces­tu­ous amplification”:http://www.nonviolence.org/martink/archives/000100.php and group-think inher­ent in many reli­gious insti­tu­tions. Sadly, Car­roll steers clear of any issue that might divide the old con­ser­v­a­tives from the new ones.
The book could have been more. When Car­roll writes about the prob­lems of Baby Boomer lib­eral oth­o­doxy in con­tem­po­rary reli­gious life, she’s fan­tas­tic. She has good obser­va­tions and writes with wit and humor. As we’re both polit­i­cally lib­eral (or per­haps more accu­rately, post-liberal), we enjoyed this tremen­dously and would love to rec­om­mend this as a book that attempts to cor­rect what we see as the over-reach and thought­less­ness that’s over­come reli­gious lib­er­al­ism in the past few gen­er­a­tions. But this audi­ence would most likely see the uncrit­i­cal con­ser­v­a­tive polit­i­cal agenda and dis­miss Carroll’s entire the­sis. (Julie would actu­ally still rec­om­mend the book, with the caveats she lists at the end of this review.)
It’s instruc­tive to com­pare this book to Robert Webber’s “The Younger Evangelicals”:http://www.nonviolence.org/Quaker/emerging_church.php (“see my book­store review here”:http://www.Quakerbooks.org/info/staffpicks-martin.php) which con­trasts the three twentieth-century gen­er­a­tions, show­ing that the new con­ser­vatism is often a know­ing and sophis­ti­cated reap­pro­pri­a­tion of reli­gious prac­tices or atti­tudes that have been lost or de-emphasized. Webber’s twenty-somethings don’t fit neatly into old left/right, conservative/liberal polit­i­cal stereo­types, but instead bring a new per­spec­tives on faith­ful­ness, issue advo­cacy and self-identity.
How we longed to see Car­roll turn her obser­vant gaze on exam­ples that flew in the face of picture-perfect, white, upper-middle class, Chris­t­ian tra­di­tion­al­ists. The voice of a sin­cere, devout gay Catholic who was tra­di­tion­al­ist in every­thing but his sex­ual ori­en­ta­tion, for exam­ple. Or some D.C.-area activist who took his cue from Pope John Paul II and was out­spo­kenly anti-war and crit­i­cal of Pres­i­den­tial appeals to Chris­tians to sup­port the Iraq War. Or some­one who worked on the street to build ties of under­stand­ings between Chris­tians and Mus­lims as a way to defuse the “War on Ter­ror” rhetoric. We could list dozens of exam­ples like these, of indi­vid­u­als who are the­o­log­i­cally con­ser­v­a­tive, but not nec­es­sar­ily polit­i­cally con­ser­v­a­tive. It is appar­ent to us, as wit­nesses to this on a daily basis, that all too often the­o­log­i­cal lib­er­als feel that they must also be polit­i­cally lib­eral, and vice versa. This is not always the case. This is a major issue for many young Chris­tians, and a divi­sive issue gen­er­a­tionally. But Car­roll wouldn’t touch this with a ten-foot pole–it’s sim­ply too con­tro­ver­sial. And besides, it would be too messy, it would spoil her neat and tidy the­sis.
We’re still only two-thirds of the way through the book. We’ve read reviews that it picks up again later. She’s on EWTN tonight (March 11) & we’re really look­ing for­ward to see­ing it. Despite our reser­va­tions, we really like a lot of what she’s say­ing. It’s just that we wish she had said so much more. She tries so hard not to alien­ate politicaly-conservative Boomers that she backs off a lot of impor­tant issues just as she’s about to say some­thing inter­est­ing. It’s fine if she’s a Repub­li­can, but why does she con­sis­tently insist that the con­ser­v­a­tive reli­gious ortho­doxy has to line up so per­fectly with the con­ser­v­a­tive polit­i­cal pow­ers that be?
h4. More to come as we con­tinue read­ing the book.…


bq. Note: Julie would rec­om­mend the book, but with seri­ous reser­va­tions. Her rea­son: There are NO other books that she con­sid­ers worth­while out there that are attempt­ing to describe this phe­nom­ena. Her reser­va­tions: 1. Carroll’s schol­ar­ship is awful. No, it’s actu­ally painful it’s so bad. She doesn’t even quote stud­ies them­selves. She was obvi­ously too lazy to read the actual stud­ies so instead read, for exam­ple, Time Magazine’s syn­op­sis of a study and so instead quoted that. She also quotes highly ques­tion­able sources. Also, her sam­ple is not at all ade­quate. This leads to point #2: Car­roll seems to have race and class issues and they stick out like a sore thumb in the book. It would’ve been cool to hear from a few African-American Catholics and the strug­gles they face in the Church, for exam­ple. And hey, what about some homely peo­ple too?! Not all of us Catholic tra­di­tion­al­ists look like fash­ion mod­els. And 3. Car­roll, in my hum­ble opin­ion, com­pro­mised the very endeavor she under­took because, while _The New Faithful_ is really an extended opin­ion piece, she tried to make it look as if it was aca­d­e­m­i­cally respon­si­ble (or at least quasi-scholarly), and it is not. The point: take _The New Faithful_ with a grain of salt. Real­ize that yes, likely the phe­nom­e­non of Chris­t­ian ortho­doxy among the young is prob­a­bly legit­i­mate, but that her pic­ture of it is not. She makes good points, it is an inter­est­ing read, and it may be foun­da­tional for future writ­ers on this topic. For that, Julie would like to thank Colleen Car­roll for being so per­cep­tive and for tak­ing the time to write the book.