Why criticizing "positive thinking" in Trump is not simply "negativity."

I answer this question a zillion times a week so here goes.
"Positive thinking" is a shorthand for a movement that took shape in late 1940s as a response to WWII and the economic optimism that shaped the new American middle class.

Its popularizer was a man named Norman Vincent Peale in his 1952 classic "The Power of Positive Thinking"
Positive thinking is a metaphysical tradition, meaning that it rests on deep RELIGIOUS beliefs that the mind is more powerful than the body.

It doesn't just mean "having happy thoughts" or "expressing confidence."
Donald Trump and what little faith tradition he has has been DIRECTLY shaped by Norman Vincent Peale.

When Trump was married for the first time, it was Rev. Norman Peale who performed the wedding ceremony in the church that was the hallowed birthplace of positive thinking.
Positive Thinking has lots of spiritual cousins, so to speak. The closest cousin is the American prosperity gospel.

So when you see that Trump's religious board of advisors is stacked with prosperity preachers, you will understand why.
Gloria and Kenneth Copeland. Paula White. These are pentecostal versions of a similar belief.

The core belief is that the mind can harness spiritual powers that change REALITY. Can alter illness. Can create miracles.
Positive words spoken out loud with the right beliefs become the spiritual vehicle that allows God to act.

That's the core belief. This is why it is metaphysical, and not simply a therapeutic technique for emotional management.
There is a long tradition of this priority on the power of the mind that really takes off in the late 19th century.

But it is one of the most common cultural stories that Americans tell: that positive words change reality.
And if anyone has any questions, I'll be happy to answer them.

But dear sweet mother of the Lord, just please don't make me respond to the rhetorical sinkhole: "Isn't that just being negative?"

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More from @KatecBowler

8 Oct
A blessing for when they knew and didn’t tell us.
o God, they knew months before
how lethal this virus could be, but didn’t tell us.
their lies made us scramble for our safety and survival.

o God, give us courage and strength
and leadership that will steer us through this calamity.
God have mercy.
Christ have mercy.
Spirit have mercy.

blessed are we who say God,
it’s hard to pray for miracles
when we shouldn’t have needed this many.

blessed are we who lament loudly
that the truth was hidden from us,
downplayed, stalled, and politicized
Read 8 tweets
7 Oct
4 anniversary of Trump's Access Hollywood audio and we Christians still have a lot to do to challenge the narrative that all pain - even pain we CAUSE - is a test

Take Billy Bush, for instance, describing how God may be involved in his part in Trump bragging about sexual assault
“I was kind of bopping along, and I don’t know if it was God or what that said, ‘OK, you’ve developed. You’re a pretty good guy. Let’s see how you handle this.’ And ka-boom! It all comes apart.”

- Billy Bush
On Twitter this was one of the great moments of reckoning for evangelical women leaders. Do they run the risk of "being political" and alienating their readership or do they take a public stand.

We know that many who chose to speak up lost a great deal of support and followers.
Read 5 tweets
5 Oct
What happens when sickness is mistaken for failure? And honesty for negativity?

This is the great exhaustion of having cancer or COVID or ANY kind of a fragility in a bootstrapping, science-fearing, positive thinking world. To the delusional go the spoils.
Megachurch pastors and televangelists have been (rightly) criticized since the late 1980s for their uncritical promotion of the power of "positive faith" for as a bid for power.

But I would love an honest reckoning for the MANY who have allowed this narrative to go unchallenged
The number of times when I have been asked to make my cancer into a "miracle" or a "failure" (where I have lost my "battle") shows the lack of textured language in this bizarre WINNER TAKE ALL approach to the human condition.

We don't need winners. We need truth.
Read 5 tweets
2 Oct
We need each other. Even now. Especially now.

We are scared + under threat.
We are fractured + destabilized by forces of hate and disturbingly smart tech which keeps us from building trust and compassion

We are at the lowest levels of trust in institutions in 60 years (Pew)
So what can we do?

The pandemic offers us a window into our shared humanity. We are tied to one another. Our health and our futures depend on our ability to love our neighbor as ourselves.

But to create any sort of unity, we need to begin with seeking out sources of trust.
Trust is the most precious commodity we have in the information age. Who has earned our trust? Will I hold them to account if they risk of losing it?

It will feel absolutely dumb to care enough to be disappointed. But now is the season to recommit to deep, selective trust.
Read 6 tweets
1 Oct
A blessing for when the day hasn’t turned around.
o God, this day has unfolded with everyday human frustrations.
but i’m just so ‘off’ today, that they have me in a downward spiral.

God, come meet me here.
help me understand what’s happening,
and how to reverse it.

God have mercy.
Christ have mercy.
Spirit have mercy.
for I have the desire to do what is right,
but not the ability to carry it out.
Romans 7:18

blessed, o how blessed are we when we notice
that the day is trending in the wrong direction.
Read 8 tweets
28 Sep
A pandemic is an exercise in communal thinking. Individualism fails because, suddenly, there is an unavoidable "we."

WE are in danger
WE need protection
WE need healthcare and a safety net when WE fall apart

Americans are famous for their opposition to a communal narrative.
One fun example of why Americans privilege a wildly confident and individualistic story about themselves comes from the difference between the American and Canadian constitution.

🇺🇸 American: life, liberty, pursuit of happiness
🇨🇦 Canadian: peace, order and good governance
There's a lovely example in a lecture by Robert Fulford by about how Americans assume everything must be CONQUERED and not, say, coped with. He writes about a Canadian book by Judylaine Fine called "Your Guide to Coping with Back Pain."
Read 7 tweets

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