Review: The Deconstruction of Christianity

The Deconstruction of Christianity, Alisa Childers and Tim Barnett. Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale Elevate, (Forthcoming, January 30,) 2024.

Summary: A study of what the authors term the “deconstruction movement.” why this needs to be taken seriously, and how to respond to loved ones who are “deconstructing.”

As I read some of the copy associated with this book, I was initially inclined to be somewhat skeptical of the contention that there is a “deconstruction movement.” I’ve worked in collegiate ministry for over forty years and have witnessed alarmist scares over a series of “movements”: scientism, postmodernism, New Age Aquarian conspiracies, the new atheism, Critical Race Theory, and more. We get people in the pews very concerned with “be afraid, be very afraid” rhetoric. And it sells–at least until the next scare arises. In a few years to a decade, the prominence of these ideologies tends to recede into the melange of ideas that shape our cultural mindset. None of these has been a “slate wiper” for the Christian community but rather an intellectual challenge to be met and engaged in the lives of real people who hold these ideas and embrace these beliefs.

The authors of this book made a case for me that faith deconstruction is more than merely a personal experience a number of Christians are undergoing, one that may actually lead to a deeper walk with Christ. For one thing, it encourages a mindset that goes beyond asking questions, expressing doubts, or processing negative, even abusive experiences with the hope of reformation, coming to a deeper grasp of what one believes, discerning what was a false expression of biblical faith, and more deeply loving God. Rather, it pursues a route of not only denouncing abuses but dismissing the Bible, rightly understood, as the authoritative source for our lives, first questioning and then deny what God has said, making the only authority in our lives the autonomous self. There are not toxic aspects of Christianity. Christianity as an undifferentiated whole is dismissed as toxic. And young people who once identified as Christian are walking away in droves.

The other aspect is the network of communication channels, podcasts, and figures who self-syle themselves as deconstruction coaches. They document the number of figures in the Christian celebrity culture who have “deconstructed” and proclaim their deconstruction as vigorously (and sometime profitably) as they proclaimed their faith. One of the authors, Alisa, was part of the girl group, ZOEgirl and describes the corrosive aspects of that culture that could be disillusioning and more.

The authors’ suggest that we not use a distinction between “good” and “bad” deconstruction. They propose instead, the idea of reformation for a process of winnowing out cultural falsehoods, wrongful abuses from the truth of the gospel. They freely admit to a number of the problems that many exiting churches note: biblical literalism, patriarchy, homophobia, political conservatism, and nationalism. They note how many were discouraged from asking questions by leaders but also the thin veneer of instruction and formation in the faith many received. Reformation brings all this to God, examines all of this in the light of scripture, brings lamentations of trauma and hurt to Christ. Deconstruction is different, not only leaving behind toxic elements, but branding it all toxic, including God.

The authors look at the rhetoric used on social media. They observe how scripture is distorted, often in convenient meme statements. The identify the methodology behind deconstruction of identifying a societal problem, showing ways the church was complicit, and concluding that the cause is warped evangelical theology. They explore what we mean by “true” and “faith.”

The book concludes on a note of hope. The authors explore the importance of questions but also of helping questioners be honest about whether they are seeking answers or exits. They offer wise counsel for loved ones of those amid deconstruction, including prayer, being a safe presence, doing triage (are they truly deconstructing or simply asking questions, are they moving away from or toward God, and they set and respect boundaries. They tell stories of those who have returned to a deeper, vibrant faith.

I think the one place where the book weakens its argument is in its attempt to defend complementarianism against charges of patriarchy in the church and its brief attempt to refute Beth Allison Barr’s critique in The Making of Biblical Womanhood. Complementarianism as it has been lived out in many churches, including the ways it was reflected in purity culture, has contributed to the disillusionment of many with the church. I can envision some putting down the book at this point, which is unfortunate because it is ancillary to the basic argument of the book.

That argument, what people are doing when they deconstruct, the complex of ideas that undergird deconstruction, and the network of speakers, media channels, and coaches advocating and supporting deconstruction, needs to be reckoned with as we try to understand what is happening with youth who are walking away from not only from churches but the Christian faith. The alternative, reformation, is one we would hope many would take. But it is not only disillusioned youth in need of reformation. The deconstruction the authors describe can point to toxic practice and theology, albeit distorted and exaggerated by deconstructors in their rhetoric, for which the church is also desperately in need of reformation. Even as we hope to point those questioning back to scripture and to King Jesus, so we need to join them to hear what the Lord would say to us all.

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary review copy of this book from the publisher.

2 thoughts on “Review: The Deconstruction of Christianity

  1. Pingback: The Month in Reviews: November 2023 | Bob on Books

  2. Many of my friends have said they are “deconstructing.” But they’re not really. Like me, they’re reforming. We’re pursuing a Christo-centric Christianity committed to pursuing God above all. Just because our second tier preferences and beliefs do not reflect the way we are raised does not mean that we have deconstructed. Thanks for the review!

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