Okay folks, you all have been very kind over the last few days. I promise this account hasn't been highjacked. There's a lot going on & evangelical proximity to it is maddening.

But I promised you a thread about cancel culture, socioeconomics, & vocation.
First, let me say that I believe peer pressure & shunning happens in every social group. I believe the group can rally against the individual to force them comply w/ established norms & established powers. It is feature of human community.
So I don't disbelieve that something akin to "cancel culture" exists. But living in & ministering in working class spaces, I've never understood the emotion attached to popular iteration.
Sure, we talk about political correctness & the pressure to not say things, but the cancel culture narrative always felt imported somehow. Like, it wasn't organic to the way we moved thru the world.
So it's always puzzled me. The emotion that is. The fear. The panic of the woke mob coming for your job. Why is it framed this way? None of this made sense to me until I started mixing more w/ mid-upper class conservatives, particularly Xians.
Exhibit A: Lunch w/ a woman w/ college-aged children in private university who tells me how worried she is that they'll be black-balled at school & lose opportunities & career path.
Exhibit B: Anonymous commentors on Twitter who when I challenge their anonynimity tell me that they don't use their real names & pics b/c they're afraid they'll be fired for opinions that they share online.
Exhibit C: SENATOR Josh Hawley claiming a canceled book contract equates to loss of individual liberty & infringement of rights.
And all I can think is "Have you all never lost a job in your life? Have you never experienced work insecurity? What makes you believe that your position will be there tomorrow?"
Again, my point is not about the legitmacy of leveraging work against people. My point is that only a certain type of worker expects that their job will always be there (barring cancel culture of course). Only a certain level of worker thinks a career path is a right.
B/c where I live, work instability is more norm than not. And our own family has cycled thru 2-3 periods of unemployment brought about, ironically enough, by philosophy differences w/ CHURCHES that my husband pastored. (Ain't no cancel culture like church cancel culture amirite?)
So I'm no stranger to feeling the pressure to conform, to knowing that your beliefs might put you at odds w/ your employer, to facing the loss of work & income for speaking truthfully.
But my empathy for the dilemma doesn't mean that I share the assumption that we're owed work or that our children are owed a certain career path. (I say this carefully b/c I know the devastation that our own family has experienced when career dreams are shattered.)
And this I think is a significant blindspot of the faith & work conversation: What happens when you're locked out of the C-Suite? What happens when you can't expect a certain career or that work will be there tomorrow?
A robust theology of vocation teaches us that we'll be okay. It teaches us that we work "as unto the Lord" & that "my God shall supply my every need." A robust theolgy of vocation rests not on a certain career path but on a certain God.
In this respect, I simply cannot share the panic I see among conservative Christians regarding cancel cutlure. Does it exist? Sure. Every community, every culture has ways of policing its boundaries. The Q is whether I should fear it.
I do not. B/c I know that ultimately my calling & vocation is sure w/ the Almighty. If *he* calls me to speak things that set me at odds w/ my employer or publisher, I best obey him & not them.
And this I think is another part of the dilemma: Too many of us want impunity to say & do whatever WE want, not whatever we're called to. We have become our own masters & none shall master us. But this is not the way of Christ, either.
What we do & what we say is direct by the One we're called to serve. And if HE calls you to speak truths that go against your cultural norms--whether in the church or outside--you can better believe that he'll preserve you as you obey him. BUT...
As the Apostle Peter wrote, make sure "none of you suffer as a murderer, or as a thief, or as an evildoer, or as a busybody in other men's matters" (I Peter 4:15)

2021 version: Don't get canceled b/c you did something that deserves cancelling.
IN SUMMARY:

Work is good, but no one owes you a career path. Live peacefully w/ all men, & be willing to go against the flow when necessary. Protect your integrity & know that your God will supply your needs.

But don't be a jerk b/c if you are, that's on you.

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More from @sometimesalight

8 Jan
"When the rich wage war, it's the poor who die." --Sartre
I believe that individuals must be held accountable for their actions. In particular, those with social & political power must be held accountable for how they use it.
We must prosecute those who committed acts of violence. But if we prosecute them & give a pass to those who fomented & encouraged it--on whose behalf they acted--we will be the worst kind of hypocrites.
Read 5 tweets
7 Jan
IME, a whole lot of Christian leaders preach grace, but only a few believe it. The ones who truly believe it are the ones who can admit a mistake & acknowledge when they were wrong.
Too many folks have built their platforms on doctrines of grace but live as if they don't need it. Grace is available in theory but unnecessary in practice.
Some of you are hoping that Christian leaders will disavow the unholy alliance btwn church & politics that helped spur on the events at the Capitol. If they do, welcome it. But also, don't hold your breath.
Read 5 tweets
6 Jan
Soon you will hear claims that today's events are the work of antifa. And I suppose that's plausible... If the sitting president whose name is on their banners hadn't just called them patriots.
If his supporters hadn't been threatening these very actions for months...
If chat rooms & threads & vast networks of conspiracies hadn't been discussing the likelihood...
Read 7 tweets
6 Jan
The flag in the middle of this picture is why I spend time talking about US politics as part of my calling to serve the church thru writing & speaking.
For me, the motivation to speak about politics stems from a sincere desire to see Christians live as Christ, to see the Church give full allegiance to Christ.
Insofar as pursuit of political power disorders our affections, I will speak about politics. Insofar as our earthly citizenship blinds us to our heavenly citizenship, I will ask Qs that some will deem devisive.
Read 4 tweets
6 Jan
Also, to all my followers outside US, thanks for your patience w/ thoughts being shaped by what's happening here right now. It's hard to explain, but American Xianity (& American evangelicalism in particular) cannot be understood apart from larger political forces.
There are #reasons, of course, just as there are plenty of American evangelicals who see the danger of this entanglement to the health of the church & discipleship of her people.
More than ever, American evangelicals need the voices of global evangelicals. We need to see different models. We need to know what faithful witness looks like as a cultural minority. So thanks for bearing with me & us.
Read 4 tweets
6 Jan
Is this the point in the story where the 20-something assistant pastor splits the church b/c he senses God calling him to plant a new party... uh... I mean, church?
Look, I know you come here for measured thoughtfulness but you all are going to have to BEAR WITH ME for a bit.
I know a lot of you work in low church evangelicalism & the patterns & machinations in US politics over last few years have been brutal. You know these dynamics. You've seen them up close & personal.
Read 15 tweets

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