This trend may quicken as the balance of power moves from west to east. The banking failures of the last decade happened in the west, and many countries, sensing a shift in power, are becoming more enchanted with the so-called Beijing consensus of free markets but censored public forums than the so-called Washington consensus of free markets and personal freedoms. Journalists like Will Hutton make a good case for saying that long term economic development can only be sustained by what he terms the ‘enlightenment architecture’ of, among other values, the freedom of the press, public assembly and the rule of law, but the immediate future looks very different from some parts of the world. And this shift has happened within a decade.
The intended outcome of the trading of freedom for money is that truth is never told to power. While ordinary people are free to make money, the political elites which afford them this power grow ever more corrupt as they exploit the connections of office. In such contexts, the Church is faced with dilemmas. In some places they have virtually no freedom at all. In other places there is freedom to worship and win converts to the faith, but there are subtle limitations on what can be achieved. People are free to gather to worship but they are not free to criticise their governments. The temptation here is one of self-limitation. In order to sustain their freedom to worship, churches may be reluctant to engage in the public arena prophetically for fear they will lose their most basic freedom of safe assembly.
An informed reading of scripture shows a preference among prophets like Amos and John the Baptist for uncompromising witness. It also exposes the craven failure of some to hold power accountable. What it does not do, by and large, is to tell us the individual stories of those who sacrificed their public calling in order to sustain their private faith. By definition, such people do not make a stir publicly and do not get noticed by historians. Yet it is going to be a challenge for the churches to avoid such an outcome in some parts of the world in our lifetime.
At the same time, I have some sympathy for those who are tired of hearing western voices preach the virtues of their system when it comes not just with a seemingly endless cycle of boom and bust but with extraordinary personal and relational costs. We seem to treat rates of family breakdown, abuse, crime, addiction, mental illness and inequality as a small incidental cost on an inside page of our national financial accounts, rather than the headline figure it truly represents. More humility and self-awareness is called for. A long time ago, those of us who live in the west made our own compact with the system: as long as we get wealthier, we will voice only hushed opinion on the damage that the preference for a material over a relational society does to its citizens in the long run.
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