"Fault Lines": Dr. Voddie T.
Bauchman's New Bestseller Exposes Critical Race Theory's Danger
Yes,
Things Are Scary Now, But Dr. Bauchman Offers Hope
"Fault
Lines: The Social Justice Movement and Evangelicalism's Looming Catastrophe"
by Dr. Voddie T. Baucham, Jr., is the number one bestseller in its category in
Amazon as of this writing in early August, 2021. The book was released in
April, and yet it already has five thousand customer reviews, 94% of which award
the book five-stars. Given that "Fault Lines" is not receiving the
kind of major-media, saturation coverage that a bestseller might expect, many
of those thousands of reviews are fueled by enthusiastic word-of-mouth.
"Fault
Lines" deserves its phenomenal success. Don't let its
"Evangelical" subtitle fool you. I'm no Evangelical, but I will
happily join my five-star review to the thousands of others. Baucham's
presentation of the history and current profile of critical theory is
accessible to all readers. Even non-Christians can benefit from understanding
how the majority faith of Americans is being corrupted. Finally, as a
Christian, Baucham offers hope for the future. Even non-Christians can apply
some of Baucham's recommendations.
"Fault
Lines" is one of many recent books struggling to take readers by the hand
and guide them through our current cultural moment, of pupils suddenly being asked
to inform their teachers of their "preferred pronouns," of toppling
statues, burning cities, and careers ruined by one suspect utterance. "Fault
Lines" belongs on the same bookshelf as James Lindsay and Helen
Pluckrose's "Cynical
Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything about Race, Gender, and
Identity – And Why This Harms Everybody," as well as Douglas Murray's
"The
Madness of Crowds: Gender, Race, and Identity." "Cynical
Theories" goes into greater detail on the roots of today's hysteria, and
its authors are Christophobic atheists who hold up a vague and unhistorical
notion of "The Enlightenment" as our salvation. Douglas Murray, a
former Christian and current atheist, appears to despair of any hope; rather,
he's given to dire prognostications: "The US is on
the brink of Civil War;" Murray has said; the Western world is
"standing on the
precipice" of cultural annihilation.
Voddie
T. Baucham has one up on Lindsey, Pluckrose, and Murray. Yes, Baucham
recognizes how bad things are. "The United States is on the verge of a
race war, if not a complete cultural meltdown," Baucham predicts. But
Baucham offers hope, and he offers healing. He finds both in Christian faith.
Again, though, you don't have to be a Christian to benefit from reading
"Fault Lines."
"Fault
Lines" is very reader-friendly. Lindsey and Pluckrose offer much more
detailed and academic surveys of how Marxism's twisted evolution lead to the
concept of "microaggressions" and social media videos in
which obese women insist that if you aren't sexually attracted to them you are
a bigot. Like those authors, Baucham also introduces his reader to influential progenitors
of Woke like Antonio Gramsci, Derrick Bell, Kimberle Crenshaw, and Peggy
McIntosh, but more briefly. Clearly, Baucham exhibits the Evangelical's zeal to
reach the maximum audience with the deepest truths, while never allowing
academic jargon to get in the way. This is a book you could understand even if
you were reading it in a noisy and crowded subway car. Its ease of reading in
no way diminishes its profundity.
Helen
Pluckrose, a plump woman, has the courage and integrity to take on the excesses
of extremist feminists and fat activists. Murray is a gay man who critiques
extreme LGBT activists. Baucham is a black man, and a descendant of slaves. He grew
up in the hood and he currently serves as dean of theology at the African
Christian University in Zambia. He tackles Black Lives Matter and critical race
theory.
Yes,
Baucham has a PhD and is a preacher and professor. But our Woke overlords judge
qualifications not on training or intelligence but on identity, and on the
grounds of identity, Baucham is qualified to stand head to head with Ibram X.
Kendi and Robin DiAngelo. Baucham devotes 31 pages of his 251 page book to his
own biography. Baucham has traced his maternal ancestry back to slaves in
Alabama, Virginia, and Texas. He traced his paternal ancestry to a slave in
North Carolina. He was born to a teenaged mother who married his teenaged
father in a "shotgun wedding." The marriage didn't last and Baucham
has no memories of being in an intact family. For decades, that lack of a
father and a family life "haunted" him. His cousin Jamal was shot to
death by a fellow drug dealer while he was selling crack. His absent father
freebased cocaine in Baucham's presence, was shot five times in a crack-related
incident, and eventually succumbed to the damage cocaine did to his heart.
"I
grew up poor, without a father, and surrounded by drugs, gangs, violence, and
disfunction in one of the toughest urban environments imaginable … I didn't
just survive, I thrived! Not because of government programs or white people
'doing the work of anti-racism'" but because of his mother. Baucham
credits his single mother with keeping him on the straight and narrow. She did
this by impressing upon him a sense of agency and accountability. He was always
certain of two things: "My mother loved me, and if I got out of line,
she'd kill me." To conform to peer pressure from his black
"homeboys," Baucham purposely underperformed in school. Baucham's
mother visited his school and got him back on track. Young Voddie once wore a
t-shirt featuring images of Malcolm X and Elijah Mohammad. At the time, "I
was more black than Christian." In fact, his mother was a Buddhist and he
was raised as a Buddhist. He converted to Christianity after contact with a
Campus Crusade for Christ staffer.
Moving
to Africa affected Baucham deeply. "Most Africans would give all they had
to get to America." He realized he didn't have to, because he was American.
He also realized that his ancestors were enslaved by fellow Africans. Those
sold west were relatively lucky. "Thank God they were not sold to the
Arabs! The Arab slave trade lasted more than thirteen centuries and .. few Africans
sold to the Arabs even survived." Life in Africa taught Baucham that
"culture does matter … not all cultures are equal … Christian culture has
produced the highest levels of freedom and prosperity … in the world …
transforming culture is a laudable and worthwhile goal."
These
are remarkable statements that defy Woke at every turn. Baucham rejects
cultural relativism that says that, say, a culture where girls undergo FGM is
no worse than cultures that do not practice such mutilation. He refuses to join
in Woke demonization of the West. And he says that "transforming culture
is a laudable and worthwhile goal." Many on the left condemn calls for
conforming to Western civilization, capitalism, or middle-class values as
"imperialism." Rather, the larger culture must change to accommodate
minority culture. If black kids are not doing well in school, that is because
of racism, and the racist culture must be dismantled. Objective truth and the
scientific method are denounced as white supremacist. Black children are
presumed to possess superiority at music, sports, and storytelling about their
own life experience. These "Afrocentric" skills must become the new
standard, in place of "white" excellence at math, science, or
literature.
"Our
pursuit of justice must be characterized by a pursuit of truth" Baucham
says, citing Leviticus
19:15. With that and other Bible verses in mind, Baucham interrogates the
many lies of Black Lives Matter, a movement founded on lies. Baucham is
fearless; his sentences advance like a warrior marching into battle. His
weaponry consists of facts. Never does he quiver or hesitate or apologize, as
some white critics might do, for fear of appearing "racist." Baucham
recognizes that there is in fact nothing racist about truth. Baucham cites the
research on police shootings published by Roland G. Fryer, Jr, the National
Academy of Sciences, David J. Johnson, and the Washington Post. There is
no epidemic of racist white police officers killing unarmed black men. In fact
"it is white people who are actually shot at disproportionately high rates
when the number of interactions with police is tallied up."
BLM
counters that numbers alone do not tell the full story, because, they say, white
cops murder black people under circumstances that would never result in the
killing of a white suspect. On June 11, 2020, John McWhorter published "Racist
Police Violence Reconsidered" in Quillette. Quillette is
a fine publication, but this important piece should have appeared in
McWhorter's home publication, The Atlantic, which
has a larger circulation. Perhaps it was too controversial – that is, too
truthful – for The Atlantic. McWhorter cites case after case where
whites died in police custody in circumstances that parallel the death of
blacks in police custody, starting with a comparison between the deaths of
George Floyd and Tony Timpa. Baucham makes the same sort of comparisons. Baucham
cites numerous whites, adults and children, who died after brandishing fake
guns, as did the African American child, Tamir Rice. Baucham similarly walks
through misperceptions around the police shootings of Philando Castile, Michael
Brown, and Breonna Taylor.
Baucham
says that antiracism is a new cult, in competition with, and infecting,
Christianity. Like Christianity, antiracism has its own versions of sin, law,
gospel, martyrs, priests, means of atonement, new birth, liturgy, canon,
theologians, and catechism. Baucham offers examples of each of these. Antiracism
is unlike Christianity in that "antiracism offers no salvation;" only
"perpetual penance" and "incurable disease." One thing
antiracism does not have, does not value, and indeed condemns, is objective
fact arrived at through traditional scholarly routes like the scientific
method. "The quest for objectivity is tantamount to a quest for white
supremacy." Baucham mentions one influential Woke classic, Peggy
McIntosh's 1989 essay on "white
privilege." Baucham points out that McIntosh's exercise "is a
classic example of grievance studies in that it was based entirely on
assumptions, anecdotes, and personal observations, and completely devoid of
scholarly research."
The
religion of antiracism directly contradicts Christianity in multiple ways, and
yet Evangelicals are abandoning Christianity and embracing Woke. Except for
passing mentions, "Fault Lines" does not mention Catholicism, but
Catholics, too, are abandoning central Christian teachings in favor of critical
race theory. America, the Jesuit magazine, is leading the way, for
example here.
Sojourners is a prominent Christian magazine. It was founded by Jim
Wallis, a self-described Evangelical Christian. Unless they confess to
"the sin of white privilege," Wallis wrote, "white Christians
will never be free." Baucham contrasts Wallis' fiat with Christian
scripture, which declares that Jesus Christ frees those who believe in him and
repent of their sins.
Baucham
points out that antiracism concocts a Kafka trap, that is a rhetorical prison
where no matter what any white person says or does, his speech and action will
be interpreted to "prove" that he is a white supremacist. Concepts
like "white fragility" and "white equilibrium" are tools in
this trap. Anyone who disagrees with any aspect of antiracism is met with
"That's your white fragility speaking" if they are white, or
"That is your internalized racism," if they are not white.
Black
people's "lived experience," recounted in anecdotes, is sacrosanct
and must be honored, and never examined. Baucham calls this "Ethnic
Gnosticism," that is, the belief that being a member of a certain ethnic
group endows that group member with knowledge that no one outside the group can
ever lay claim to. Ethnic Gnosticism insists that there is a "black
perspective" that all black people share. If a black person disagrees with
Woke, he is "broken." Baucham, because he criticizes antiracism, is
"broken." He is not an authentic black person. The people declaring
that he is not an authentic black person are themselves often white. The Woke
similarly condemn, Baucham reports, black conservatives like John McWhorter and
Thomas Sowell.
Be
the Bridge is a self-described "non-profit organization." Non-profit
or not, its founder Latasha
Morrison has done quite well. She is represented by the same talent agency
that represents Olympian Simone Biles, singer Alanis Morissette, and award-winning
journalist Bob Woodward. Be the Bridge hosts an online store where one can
purchase a $299, eight-course "Whiteness Intensive" indoctrination
"taught by a diverse group of Be the Bridge educators;" a $40
"anti-racist hoodie;" and a free webinar entitled "A Discussion
on [sic] Self-Care, Lament, & Trauma for People of Color." On its
Facebook page, Be the Bridge offers a self-description. "We inspire and
equip ambassadors of racial reconciliation to build a community of people who
share a common goal of creating healthy dialogue about race."
According
to one
Amazon review of her bestselling book, Morrison, in a directly un-Biblical
manner (see Ezekiel
18:1-4), holds all whites guilty for sins committed by other, long dead
white people. Conversely, she does not hold blacks guilty even for contemporary
crimes against non-black people, or against their own kin. "She holds
Whites' skin color against them and calls them privileged … plenty of white
people have not been born into privileged homes and have been labeled
derogatory terms such as 'white trash.' Where is her call for Blacks to grieve
black gang violence, violent crimes done against non-black people, or the cost
of the abandonment of black children by their fathers that leads to societal
evil affecting all people? Did I miss where she called for the Blacks whose
ancestors were slave owners to lament over their part in slavery? Or for all
the African-Americans whose ancestors played a part in selling/trading their
countrymen?"
Baucham
says that Be the Bridge it is a "go-to resource" for Evangelicals. Baucham,
like the above-quoted Amazon reviewer, faults Be the Bridge for an unbiblical
view of guilt. "Morrison's work … is replete with references to
generational guilt." Baucham quotes the "rules" for white Be the
Bridge members. Whites must never speak to non-whites as if they, the white
people, are equal. They must always speak and act as inferior, submissive, guilty,
and tainted. They must not share their understanding, they must assume
themselves guilty no matter what their intentions are, they must never refer to
objective facts, and they must remain silent and passive when being publicly
cursed, insulted and accused of racism. Truth in advertising demands that
Latasha Morrison retitle her work, "Be the Punching Bag." Indeed, Be
the Bridge commandments for how white people are allowed to behave are
reminiscent of requirements for the accused at Maoist struggle sessions.
Baucham
mentions Southern Baptist Theological Seminary professor and author Jarvis J.
Williams. In a shocking YouTube video, Williams claims or insinuates that white
people have never been lynched, that white people invented slavery, that white
people were never enslaved, and that the Confederate flag can mean only one
thing to those who brandish it: white terror against black and brown people.
Williams said he was so afraid when he saw a Confederate flag in Tennessee that
he had to leave the area. In fact if Williams were open to actual facts, I
could show him archival photographs of lynched whites, I could show him numbers
proving that these lynchings
of white Italian and other immigrants, including German immigrant Robert Prager were no
one-offs, that white people have in fact been enslaved, in their millions, by
Muslims, that there were white slaves in the US, see, for example, here, that the indenture
system of whites was slightly better than, but in
many respects comparable to, slavery, and that there are abundant images
of African Americans wearing, flying, or otherwise embracing the Confederate
flag, which suggests that not all black people interpret it as he does. One
response to Williams' comments on YouTube reads, "I’m Hispanic and brown when I see a confederate flag I
think Dixie, a war that was won for freedom, the dukes of hazard and gone with
the wind! Im not offended never have never will ! I recognize history and learn
from it! I don’t dwell in it !" Finally, it is very disturbing to hear a
Christian preacher insist that no whites were ever lynched, given the notorious
history of the lynching of the Jewish man Leo Frank.
Baucham
details behind-the-scenes politicking around critical theory and the 2019 Southern
Baptist Convention. Concerned Baptists put forward a resolution on critical
race theory and intersectionality. The original document boldly asserted that
"critical race theory and intersectionality are founded upon unbiblical
presuppositions descended from Marxist theories and categories, and therefore are
inherently opposed to the Scriptures as the true center of Christian union."
The rest of the document was equally forceful and clear. Politicking watered
the document down and that watered down document was all the public saw. Baucham
fearlessly names the names of those who promoted Woke at the expense of the
Bible, and engaged in what he calls a "deliberate act of duplicity." It
is never more clear than in this account why Baucham titled his book
"Fault Lines." Clearly, his own life will be quite challenging
because of this book's forthrightness. As in the wider society, congregants at
Christian churches are being separated by an ideological divide as difficult to
mend as the fault line ripped into the earth after a large quake.
Baucham
speaks to black people as his own mother spoke to him. Baucham's mother
emphasized personal responsibility. Baucham, too, emphasizes personal
responsibility. Like so many other conservatives, he cites the importance of
fathers. He also emphasizes the importance of education and he is not afraid to
talk about the statistics that indicate that African Americans commit a disproportionate
number of violent crimes, and that most of those crimes are committed against
fellow African Americans. Baucham points out the folly of many voices, like
that of Lebron James, who insist that African Americans are afraid to leave
their homes because white people might hunt and kill them. Rather, African
Americans are much more likely to commit a violent crime against a white or
Asian person than vice versa. "Black people are overwhelmingly more likely
to victimize white people than the other way around … a police officer is 18.5
times more likely to be killed by a black assailant than an unarmed black man
is to be killed by a cop." Black people themselves support the presence of
police in their communities, and black voters and black politicians
participated in tough-on-crime measures during the crack epidemic that
devastated black communities.
Baucham
believes that the deadliest destroyer of black lives in the US is abortion. "Though
black women make up less than 13 percent of the population, they account for 35
percent of all abortions. In major cities like New York, Philadelphia, and Los
Angeles, more black babies are aborted than born … nearly 80 percent of Planned
Parenthood's abortion clinics are in minority neighborhoods."
Again,
Baucham does offer hope. His hope is distinctively Christian, and it entails
features that used to be part of everyday life in the West: repentance,
forgiveness, starting anew, a belief in progress, a belief that all of us were
created by one loving, creator God, and that we are all connected by that
shared creation. Tom Holland, author of "Dominion,"
and Douglas Murray are both atheists, and they are both astute observers who
recognize that society needs routes out of resentment, recrimination, and the
lust for revenge, and Christianity provided those routes. Baucham, a Calvinist,
does not expect his every reader to become Christian. We must, therefore, find
some way to respect these Christians traditions in a post-Christian society.
Otherwise, the Pagan tribalism that Baucham labels "ethnic
Gnosticism" and the no-exit, permanent struggle session mandated by
critical race theory will destroy the bonds that hold Americans together.
"There
can be no reconciliation without justice," Black Lives Matter claims.
Baucham replies, and the all caps are in his original reply, "YES! AND THE
DEATH OF CHRIST IS THAT JUSTICE! … Antiracism offers endless penance, judgment,
and fear … I am not an African. I am not an African American. I am an American,
and I wouldn't want to be anything else. America doesn't owe me anything.
America has blessed me beyond measure. If anything I owe America. More
importantly, I owe my Savior, and, by extension, I owe my brothers and sisters
in Christ." What can one say except "Amen"?
Danusha Goska is the author of God through Binoculars: A Hitchhiker at a Monastery
Thanks for doing the heavy lifting here, Ms. Goska, by reading and reviewing these books for us. I'm still reeling from the election, barely able to stream legacy television much less get back to watching conservative news and read conservative web sites.
ReplyDeletethank you for reading and commenting!
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