A book of vital importance for the church. God bless Voddie Baucham Jr.
Fault Lines provides clear definitions and focuses on the central issue of the Christian worldview versus the imposter of Critical Theory. He often goes beyond this and calls it Critical Social Justice, but I will use the initials CT below.
Early on, we receive a clear history of CT in its various forms and the contrast with the Gospel begins to become clear. Voddie then tells moving stories with good humour and goes into detail about his early life and the influence of his inspirational mother. This speaks to the importance of family and having a culture that goes beyond the victim mindset and beyond a now common desire to principally force ‘progress’ through the government.
He wrestles with the myths of the Christian faith being the ‘white man’s religion’, reveals why that is mistaken, and refocuses us on our central identity in Christ. True God and true Man for all people. We must all follow this and live it. Even if it is hard and alienates others who would rather slouch back into tribalism. Here, Voddie is serious and not sentimental.
By God’s grace and the good sense of his mother, he escaped a similar fate to his unfortunate cousin killed in LA. He had been held at gunpoint before and saw first hand the struggle just to survive, but his loving mother got him out and they ended up in Texas. Which was a better environment to become a man and, by God's providence, a mature Christian.
Voddie understands the major 'fault lines' that Christians must attend to and communicates the importance of alternatives to government schools. With the best intentions in the world, they destroy young minds. Voddie has sought out alternatives and put skin in the game, home-schooling his own children. He knows that those who work for and prop up the machinery of the leviathan state are often wolves in sheep’s clothing or, at least, are unintentionally misleading young souls.
It should be noted that Voddie resists bitterness against ideological opponents and refuses to take cheap shots throughout. He states that he found SBC to always be fair to him, for example, and declares that they treated him as an equal. Even when, and partly because, they fired him for having different theological views.
Voddie looks at the context of history and message of the Bible constantly and sees that we should not always assume racism and not in all places. That desire to see racism everywhere, like a parody of total depravity but for one ethnic group, comes directly from CT. Life is much messier and more interesting.
Dr Baucham does speak about the challenges of being an ethnic minority in a nuanced way and wrestles with genuine racism.
Later, Voddie writes beautifully about his experiences in Africa and how humble that makes him. He also uses this as a frame to offer a history lesson about the complexities of slavery. Which is not black and white (Pun intended).
Voddie speaks to his experience teaching social issues, as a sociologist, for decades and how vital it is to see them through the prism of the Gospel. This should inspire all of us, regardless of our field. The scriptures lay out the path to real justice and truth by means of love. Convicted by the scriptures, he calls out lies, those who bear false witness, and highlights many clear cultural examples which are antithetical to the Gospel. These lies are exemplified by univariate analyses and the misleading ‘activism’ of the likes of Colin Kaepernick, for example. Real justice, Voddie reaffirms, requires truth and they are selling us all short.
Baucham uses careful statistics to back up his arguments and to deconstruct some of the simplistic myths that dominate our social imaginary, framing thorny issues and misleading most people. Voddie shows that there are layers to this deception which are rooted in the new ideology. Ultimately, the Bible is the only way to true justice in love. In fact, he describes the new religion of CT, or Critical Social Justice as he calls it, how it acts as a parasite on the Gospel, and unveils its central dogmas. These secularist tenants sit underneath any discussions people have about facts and statistics.
Voddie’s goal is to open up space for better and God-honouring conversations. Precisely because he sees through the cultic beliefs of the new secularist faith:
“The antiracist movement has many of the hallmarks of a cult, including staying close enough to the Bible to avoid immediate detection and hiding the fact that it has a new theology and a new glossary of terms that diverge ever-so-slightly from Christian orthodoxy. At least at first. In classic cult fashion, they borrow from the familiar and accepted, then infuse it with new meaning. This allows the cult to appeal to the faithful within the dominant, orthodox religions from which it draws its converts. This new cult has created a new lexicon that has served as scaffolding to support what has become an entire body of divinity. In the same manner, this new body of divinity comes complete with its own cosmology (CT/CRT/I); original sin (racism); law (antiracism); gospel (racial reconciliation); martyrs (Saints Trayvon, Mike, George, Breonna, etc.); priests (oppressed minorities); means of atonement (reparations); new birth (wokeness); liturgy (lament); canon (CSJ social science); theologians (DiAngelo, Kendi, Brown, Crenshaw, MacIntosh, etc.); and catechism (“say their names”). We’ll examine some of those topics in this chapter and a few later on. In case you’re wondering about its soteriology, there isn’t one. Antiracism offers no salvation—only perpetual penance in an effort to battle an incurable disease. And all of it begins with pouring new meaning into well-known words.”
I remember when I was in high school and many of my peers starting losing their damn minds for the new atheism, rushing to devote themselves to Dawkins, Harris, and their cadre of mediocre scientists and poor philosophers.
They wanted to hear how terrible those awful Christians and their God were. Not like us, the 'bright', 'moral' beings who could rise above the muddiness of history by the light of 'reason'.
That was weak.
We see something similar with the new racism. People rush out to buy terrible books by race hustlers such as Ibram X. Kendi or Robin Di Angelo.
They want to hear how terrible 'white' people are and their supposedly terrible use of 'logic', 'good timekeeping' and being 'nice'. (I kid you not).
Not like us, the woke elite who have seen the true light of 'antiracism' and prostrate ourselves before the altar of good 'allyship'.
The spirit of the age is strong. Both are intensely religious movements and highlight our desire to create new gods in our fallen image. We are creatures created to worship God and our hearts will remain restless until we rest in Him.
So, it is a most welcome relief to read this book from a good Christian man, which tears down the new idols and redirects our attention to the true and living God.
One of a list of great and genuine African-American Christian leaders and actual anti-racists. He follows Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, Rosa Parks, and Martin Luther King Jr before him.
That is the importance of Fault Lines by Dr Voddie Baucham Jr.
Elsewhere he notes just how corrosive this ideology has been within the church:
"In a September 2020 article for Commentary, Executive Editor Abe
Greenwald wrote, “The revolutionaries have deemed American customs, culture, habits, and ideas racist. And instead of Mao’s Little Red Book to guide them in the ways of the proletariat, they have Robin DiAngelo’s White Fragility, which shows them all the hidden places where racism is to be found and rooted out.”
In the wake of George Floyd’s death and the riots that followed, there were more than protests going on: there was also a frenzy of research.
“Everyday Americans swapped Black Lives Matter reading lists and strove, however misguidedly, to broaden their conception of racial inequity,..”
Voddie on the new canon of religious texts:
"John O.’s point—shared by many, if not most of the authors on Christianity Today’s reading list, and evinced by the list’s very existence, is that you really don’t get what the Bible is trying to say about social justice until you read social science and history.
I would add that by “read social science and history,” those in the CSJ camp inevitably mean Tisby and not Sowell, DiAngelo and not McWhorter, Kendi and not Lindsey, Alexander and not Steele.
In other words, when he and others say “social science and history,” they mean books written from, informed by, or in service to the perspective of CT, CRT, and Intersectionality.
My point here is not that John O. and I are on different sides of the
social justice discussion; we certainly are. It is that he is outside the bounds of Scripture, theology, and Church history. The social sciences may be useful tools, but they are far from necessary.
“All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work” (2 Timothy 3:16–17).
In no area does God require me to walk in a level of righteousness for which the Scriptures do not equip me—including any and all aspects of justice.
“His divine power has granted to us all things that pertain to life
and godliness, through the knowledge of him who called us to his own glory and excellence, by which he has granted to us his precious and very great promises, so that through them you may become partakers of the divine nature, having escaped from the corruption that is in the world because of sinful desire” (2 Peter 1:3–4).
What could possibly be beyond the scope of “all things that pertain to life and godliness”? Moreover, what could a social science text give me that would be better or more sufficient than partaking in “the divine nature” or “having escaped the corruption that is in the world because of sinful desire”?
Although he does not phrase it this way, Dr Baucham Jr shows that Critical Theory, Critical Race Theory, and all this racist, sexist, secularist ideology is no more compatible with the Gospel of Jesus Christ than the eightfold path of Buddhism or Islamic Metaphysics and the claim that Muhammad's Quran is the final and fullest revelation to mankind. We need to understand this.
"...The million-dollar question is whether CRT is a worldview or merely an analytical tool. In other words, are there worldview assumptions that must be accepted in order to apply the tool? If there are, then the authors of the final resolution are either naïve or downright subversive.
According to the founders of CRT, the “movement is a collection of activists and scholars engaged in studying and transforming the relationship among race, racism, and power.” Based on those assumptions, CRT “questions the very foundations of the liberal order, including equality theory, legal reasoning, Enlightenment rationalism, and neutral principles of constitutional law.”
Moreover, the movement itself asserts that, “Unlike some academic disciplines, critical race theory contains an activist dimension. It tries not only to understand our social situation but to change it, setting out not only to ascertain how society organizes itself along racial lines and hierarchies but to transform it for the better.”
How, then, can CRT be viewed or used as “a set of analytical tools that explain how race has and continues to function in society”? Tools don’t explain; worldviews do. And CRT is a worldview based on clear, unambiguous assumptions."
The CSJ view is considered, Voddie demonstrates, is both 'unfalsifiable' and 'unassailable'. He offers several real world examples, statistics and this imaginary discussion based on his experiences:
"Take an imaginary discussion about a young man in trouble with
the law who was eventually expelled from school:
Could his history of drug use be a contributing factor?
Not his fault … Racist policies flooded the inner city with drugs.
How about his record of poor academic performance and absence
from school?
Inequities created inferior schools that minorities are unmotivated to attend.
Could the lack of a father in his home have anything to do with it?
That is a by-product of slavery and an excuse used to blame the victim.
In the end, the answer to everything is racism. Not only is this kind
of reasoning logically flawed, but it also flies in the face of a substantial
body of sociological research and the historic preaching and understanding of the black church."
"...Both Loury and Sowell chart a course that is not only sensible, but
is also aligned with the historic view of the black church in America.
Neither argue that America is free of racism, but both argue that there
are other issues that must be addressed regardless of racism...
There are certainly black churches that are rife with Marxist liberation theology, CRT, Intersectionality, and the social gospel. With all
the churches that exist in a country the size of the United States, this
should come as no surprise. However, if you assume that this means
the pulpits in black churches don’t address personal responsibility, you
are wrong. White liberals like Robin DiAngelo, Jim Wallis, and Daniel
Hill may chafe at the idea of black responsibility, but black pastors do
not. The internet is filled with clips of black pastors getting standing
ovations as they passionately admonish their young members to “pull
up your pants, get an education, stop dropping babies all over the place,
learn to speak proper English, get all that gold out of your mouth....”
They and their members know that, regardless of what is going on
outside the black community, culture matters. The black family matters. Education matters. Decisions and choices matter. And above all,
God’s Word matters."
God's Word informs Dr Baucham's whole perspective and he wrestles with many of the most important issues of our time, including those that many others are afraid to touch: fatherlessness, education, crime, and abortion. This is
“speaking the truth in love” (Ephesians 4:13).
It is important that Voddie is redirecting us to logic, the art of history, and reclaiming the 'black church', all together. He is continuing in a great and multifaceted tradition of African-American Christians who are fighting for true justice in Christ. Following: Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks, Dr Martin Luther King Jr and other luminaries.
Moreover, Voddie finishes the book with a call to return to love and forgiveness in Christ. He has already brought justice to the world and shown us the way. We must participate in the life of the church by recentering on forgiveness. This frees us, as individuals and as communities, for a life of gratitude, joy, and true diverse Pentecostal communion.