A book discussion group is
a plus for a neighborhood. In fact, any neighborhood with several such groups
likely has a strong social fabric. However, a discussion group is mistaken to
think it is social action--even if its selections are current affairs. A small
group gathers for breakfast after the 9 A.M. Mass. Its regulars share parish comings-and-goings
and the latest on clergy shenanigans around the country. The breakfast club certainly yields some mutual
support but it is not an example of church improvement. A firm’s young lawyers
gather on Friday for drinks. They talk about cases, judges, legal trends and
office culture. The Friday social group is beneficial to its participants but
they are not influencing the policies of their firm or the justice system in
their town.
Eitan
Hersh, a young professor at Tufts University, is interested in electoral
politics. He keeps up with opinion polls, commentaries and surveys, plus he
conducts some social science experiments and interviews grass-roots activists.
He reaches a provocative conclusion: Citizens who volunteer for electoral
campaigns also spend time watching and reading the news. They converse with
friends about politics. However, “the opposite is not true… Those who spend a
lot of time consuming politics are not participating actively in politics at
all.” Among those “who consume news every day, most report belonging to zero
organizations.” They care about following politics and exhibit “a growing sophistication
in talking about elections” and such. They simply don’t care quite enough to
participate beyond voting. And even when it comes to voting, they are more
motivated by a presidential candidate than they are by policy changes or by
midterm campaigns.
Hersh,
in a fascinating book Politics Is for
Power (Scribner, 2020), criticizes these political junkies or political
hobbyists. Their pseudo-engagement actually “hinders the pursuit of
political power.”
Hersh,
with convincing examples, describes the alternative, which he calls deep canvassing or simply power politics. These are people who are
“not following political drama or debating issues,” but are serious about
“winning people over.” Their method is eliciting stories and sincerely
listening. They do not recite a script heavy on issues. These change agents (who
exist on the right and left) do not focus on one-off events or “on issues and
ideological purity.” They are prepared for “slow and steady progress.” For
them, power is not a topic, “it’s the goal.”
Hersh is
aware that effective public conversations are inherently awkward. They do not
add up to a tidy political parable. This style is an exercise in calculated
vulnerability. It is respectful of differences and thus has the potential to
build trust.
In
several asides Hersh shares research conclusions. Half of non-voters (except
perhaps in a presidential election) are college graduates yet they are the
group more likely to consume political news. Among the non-voters, half later
claim that they voted. Big donors to electoral campaigns are not as interested
in issues as they are in connecting with political insiders and other donors
at, for example, celebrity events. Small donors are attracted by ideology and
“provocative appeals.” Men are more interested in politics than women, but
women are more likely to vote.
In
another aside (one that warrants a full chapter) Hersh applies his thesis to
religion. He explores the popular distinction between spiritual and religious.
It is similar, he says, as the distinction between those well-informed on
politics but shallow in their political behavior and those with grass-roots
political involvement. The spiritual types can include those who know plenty
about their denomination. But their behavior foregoes a commitment to communal
or institutional settings. The longer-haul religious types experience the same
awkwardness as those involved in real politics. “It takes a certain maturity to
find God in the person sitting next to you” during worship, Hersh concludes.
By
several measures U.S. Catholicism is in decline. Its leaders often describe their
desired transition to a renewed Catholicism as one of evangelization or, to use their jargon term, the new evangelization. But what does that mean? In some parishes
the Bible study group is considered new evangelization. In other parishes it means
a refresher course in dogma. These are good activities, but lacking outward action
they are not effective evangelization.
Back to Hersh: Churches could channel people’s
energy into productive “forms of collective action.” But they “do not typically
have a serious vision or resources” to help their faithful members “act
differently.” The congregation, as should be expected, has meaningful worship.
But its other efforts are heavy on socializing and light on truly listening to
those who are spiritual but not religious.
It is
not a simple pivot from talk to evangelizing action because, as in the
political realm, people have scant experience crafting a story of their life
and eliciting the story of another person’s life. A possible exception might be
those worshipers and those citizens who have benefited from a 12-step program.
To be continued…
Droel
edits INITIATIVES (PO Box 291102, Chicago, IL 60629), a free newsletter on
faith and work.
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