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Triumph of the Therapeutic: The President at Willow Creek
By Charles Colson
BreakPoint
Commentary #000816 - 8/16/2000
I thought I had spoken my last words about the
Clinton/Lewinsky scandal. Like most Americans, I'm
sick of it. Then, on the eve of his farewell address
to the Democratic National Convention, President
Clinton discussed the subject before 4,000 pastors
assembled at the Willow Creek Church in Illinois.
Now these comments today are not so much about the
President. He will soon be out of office and we wish
him well. But his appearance last week gives us a
revealing insight in how American culture has
redefined sin and repentance.
Mr. Clinton's remarks were delivered in a Q-and-A
with Bill Hybels, the gifted pastor of Willow Creek
Church. Clinton told the pastors, "...I wake up
every day...with this overwhelming sense of
gratitude, because maybe if I hadn't been knocked
down in the way I was and forced to come to grips
with what I'd done and the consequences of it, in
such an awful way, I might not never have had to
really deal with it 100 percent."
In other words, the Lewinsky affair was, ultimately,
a good thing, because he emerged stronger for having
gone through it.
Mr. Clinton then summed things up: "I feel much more
at peace than I used to. And I think that, as awful
as what I went through was, and humiliating as it
was-more often to others than to me, even, sometimes
when you think you've got something behind you and
then it's not behind you, this sort of purging
process, if it doesn't destroy you it can bring you
to a different place...."
Pastor Hybels, whom I respect greatly for his
ministry -- and his ministry to President Clinton
throughout his presidency, which I know he did
without compromise -- rightly tried to keep the focus
on issues like sin and repentance. He reminded
Clinton of his remarks at a White House prayer
breakfast when the President said he had sinned and
wronged his family, his cabinet, and the country.
But the President didn't pick it up. There was little
mention of God and no mention of sin. The emphasis
was almost entirely on how the scandal and its
aftermath affected Bill Clinton personally -- which,
of course, entirely misses the point, but does
reflect how dramatically our culture's attitude
toward sin and forgiveness has changed.
Over these past thirty years, we have witnessed what
sociologist Phillip Rieff calls the "triumph of the
therapeutic." Psychotherapy, with its emphasis on
individual fulfillment, crowds out concern for
others. All that matters is that, through something
like this, individuals "find themselves." It doesn't
matter what's happened to God or to others.
The President's words were steeped in this
therapeutic language. If you didn't know that he was
speaking to pastors, you could have mistaken the
setting for the "Oprah Winfrey Show." Winfrey has
indeed become the high priestess of the therapeutic
culture.
The President's remarks stand in marked contrast to
the words of another leader caught in sexual sin 3000
years ago. David wasn't thinking of himself when he
wrote "have mercy on me, Oh God, according to your
unfailing love. . . . Against you, you only, have I
sinned." David, you see, understood that true
repentance leads to anguish over how God and others
are affected by one's individual behavior.
We don't know why the President chose to appear
before the pastors at Willow Creek, but we do know
what he accomplished: a graphic demonstration of the
Oprah-izing of American values.
Copyright (c) 2000 Prison Fellowship Ministries
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Updated: 13 July 2002
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