The following was submitted by friend o’ the Journal Austin Roberts in response to last week’s blog post about the juicy itinerary for the Eureka Wal-Mart’s impending opening ceremonies. Roberts has a bachelor’s degree in religious studies from Humboldt State University and a master’s in philosophy of religion from Claremont School of Theology. He is currently an editor for Imaginatio et Ratio: A Journal of Theology and the Arts and resides in Eureka.

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Last week, North Coast Journal writer Ryan Burns wrote about the upcoming Eureka Wal-Mart grand opening ceremonies. Along with the presence of local politicians and dancing corporate mascots, the two ceremonies on June 10th and 13th are set to include an invocation from Hydesville Community Church Associate Pastor Jeff Beltz. Some NCJ commenters interpreted Burns’ post as an offensive attempt to “trash Christianity” itself. While it is true that Burns takes a sarcastic tone in reporting the event, it is far from clear in the post that he seeks to criticize the Christian religion as a whole. Such a response seems reactionary to the extreme.

But my interest here is not so much in defending Burns from unwarranted criticism as it is in using this opportunity to consider the place of conservative religion in the controversial grand opening of a Eureka store by the world’s largest corporation. Consider the situation as it has been presented to the public at this point: a conservative evangelical pastor, Beltz, will offer a prayer for the new Wal-Mart at the Bayshore Mall, probably as a request for and concrete symbol of divine blessing for the company’s success in Humboldt County, perhaps also as a prayer of thanksgiving for the corporate giant’s victory in finally managing to squeeze itself into Eureka against the desires of its many local detractors. Whatever the content of the prayer ends up being, it is what the prayer symbolizes that concerns me here: the close relationship of neoliberal capitalism with (conservative) Christianity. Although this may disappoint a few readers, I have no desire to vilify Beltz in what follows. I believe that he means well in agreeing to offer the invocation (I cannot say the same about Wal-Mart’s intentions), but I do want to make some critical points in response.

First of all, it should be recognized that Wal-Mart has been deeply rooted in conservative Christianity from its founding in 1962 in the American Bible Belt. As the historian of religion and capitalism Bethany Moreton has shown in her important book, To Serve God and Wal-Mart: The Making of Christian Free Enterprise, the company has been a major force in bringing together the free-market dogma with evangelical “family values” and ethics of “Christian service.” In doing so, Wal-Mart has effectively made the self-centered individualism of neoliberal capitalism appear instead as a selfless, virtuous effort to save consumers money by always providing them with the lowest prices. While the company is known, at least by its critics, for various conservative political stances, anti-unionism, low wages, and negative impact on both the environment and local businesses, many of its devoted customers throughout the decades have bought into Wal-Mart’s sanctification of consumer capitalism. As Moreton points out, the company’s founder Sam Walton was a central figure in the spread of the ‘gospel’ of Christian free enterprise and conservative religious-economic individualism – ideologies that became common in Christian university business departments and eventually spread around the world, now firmly tied to an individualistic religious gospel of personal salvation.

All of this goes to say that nobody should be surprised that Wal-Mart would draw on a local conservative evangelical Christian pastor to bless their business operations. At this point, this type of relationship is unfortunately part of the DNA of both Wal-Mart and a large majority of American Christianity. Ultimately, Wal-Mart’s recruitment of Beltz appears to many as a manipulative move to appeal to a particularly profitable customer base and to legitimize their business with a symbol of divine approval.

This brings me to a second important issue the event raises. To put it bluntly, the assumption by conservatives that the Christian tradition is somehow supportive of the neoliberal capitalism that has permitted Wal-Mart to thrive is false. While this belief is shared by many American Christians, it is more influenced by the ‘prosperity gospel’ and Western individualism than the New Testament (or the Hebrew Bible, for that matter). A growing number of influential biblical scholars, including Richard Horsley, Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza, and Roland Boer have argued that the economic dimension of Christianity’s foundational documents – having been written under an oppressive Roman Empire characterized by great economic inequality – include a radical critique of economic injustice and sharp power differentials that is usually distorted by individualistic readings. They certainly offer no support for the Wal-Mart brand of capitalism.

Like other imperial projects, the Roman Empire under Augustus portrayed itself as promoting prosperity and what we might call “family values” (e.g., in its strong support of marriage). Nevertheless, it created enormous inequalities of power and wealth and even its rhetoric of prosperity and morality ultimately served the interests of those on top. As religion scholar Harvey Cox explains, Christianity “began as the persecuted victim of the Roman Empire and provided an alternative to it, [but] then became a obsequious mimic of that empire and finally its compliant acolyte” (Future of Faith, 72). That sounds familiar, doesn’t it? As leading political theorists Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri argue, the contemporary globalized Empire should be understood as “network power” (Multitude, xii), constituted not only by the most powerful nation-states but also supranational institutions and corporations like Wal-Mart. It is difficult to see how an adherent of a religion that developed in sharp opposition to Empire can pray for divine blessing of one of its most dominant manifestations in the world today. Thanks to popular depoliticized readings of the New Testament, Christianity and its founders continue to be co-opted by Empires.

Conservatives will protest that the economic-political dimensions of the New Testament – when they even recognize them as such – are just for the individual and possibly the local church, and are not meant as critiques of society as a whole. But this is to anachronistically impose a framework on the New Testament that is (like it or not) a modern invention: the separation of religion from economics, politics, and culture (as those working in the field of cultural studies tend to point out). In such a view, the substance of a religion can speak about individual souls and personal morality without reference to systemic, economic concerns and injustices. But this is precisely what modern scholars of early Christianity argue is a serious misunderstanding about ancient societies, where religion was never separated from economic and political issues. As such, there can be no such thing as an apolitical Jesus. Horsley comments, “Assuming that Jesus is appropriately categorized as a religious figure, we more or less ignore the political-economic aspects and implications of Jesus’ preaching and practice.” (Jesus and Empire, 6).

What Paul called the ‘powers that be’ actively work against such readings of history and sacred texts that undermine the ability of religion to offer its support to the neoliberal capitalist project (e.g., witness the mainstream hostility towards liberationists like James Cone and Marc Ellis). Despite the growing scholarly consensus on these matters over the last few decades, those in power continue to justify themselves through conservative religion, especially in their ongoing Santa Clausification of Jesus into a capitalist free-marketeer – just as they have done with the radical Martin Luther King, Jr. It seems to me that Cox was exactly right that the Religion of the Market dominates in America, not so much Christianity. I do not imagine that the invocation for Wal-Mart’s grand-opening is really directed at the God who Jesus prayed to – it is instead the omnipresent, omniscient, and omnipotent Market-as-Deity that is really being called upon for the corporate giant’s success in Humboldt County.

— Austin Roberts

Previous Local Wal-Martitude:
Wal-Mart Opening Ceremonies / Wal-Mart Resistance

 

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37 Comments

  1. 1. The customers tend to fall on the low end of the socioeconomic spectrum, meaning low income and poorly educated.

    2. Religious sentiment is strongest among people who are low income and poorly educated.

    3. Having an invocation from a conservative religious leader is simply good marketing. Ingratiate yourself to your core audience.

  2. Although I make more than the average Humboldt County citizen, I will still shop at Wal-Mart and WinCo…Safeway and Murphy’s are just too expensive. I find it interesting that some of the “local” stores purchase there products from Costco and winco and mark them up between 20-30%.

  3. I’d like ‘Crazy’ to cite the stores he believes are buying at Costco and marking up the products. I mean non-food items because of course restaurants will buy food and resell it. Not everything you conjure up out of your imagination is real.

  4. My Lord! Who thought that turning a WalMart opening into a church service was a good idea. There are numerous sections of the Bible (that aren’t even hard to find) that would be pretty clear about how this is out of line. Just scratching my head on this one.

  5. Oh good. Now you have your friends writing articles defending your lameness. Journalism at its finest.

  6. By Joe @ 7:36 am; You sir are a bigot.

    ummm @ 8:36 am; The Handee Market on F st. (very nice people)

    To all the other cry babies; It’s called FREEDOM!! Don’t like it, don’t fucking go.

  7. Well UMM, having been closely involved with the local retail grocery business for many years I can attest to the fact that many small retail establishments purchase a portion of their inventory at Costco. Step into most any small grocer in Humboldt and your more than likely to see some type of “Kirkland Signature” product for sale therein. Maybe it’s batteries, maybe its water etc. It’s a part of many small retailers business plan to resell Costco Merchandise. Costco actively promotes itself to these businesses and makes it very easy for them to do this. There was a time, and it may still be going on, that a retailer could call in an order to the big C and it would be delivered soon thereafter. There is nothing wrong with the practice of using a warehouse store as a source of product for resale. I imagine that there are more than a few such small retailers that use the Grocery Outlet and maybe even Winco for the same purpose. Certainly, there is nothing wrong with this practice. It’s a normal part of doing business. I expect that Wal-Mart product will turn up for sale in other retail establishments as well.

  8. As a Christian, I find it offensive that the world’s largest corporation would use religion in an attempt to build good will in the community. I’d love to see religious people in America move towards more honest, intellectual discussion of their faith. Unfortunately, that does not appear to be the direction trends are moving.

  9. Wow, kinda wordy, but something I’ve been struggling to put into context for a while now. Evangelism and capitalizm; go together like a horse and carriage. Blessed are the meek, for they shall shop at WalMart. And, isn’t it more comforting now that the moneychangers rule our world.

    At its core, I see modern religion as teaching someone to believe something in the absence of proof, or even contrary to proof. Thats what faith is. Ok, cool. But it turns out that believing is a transferrable skill, i.e., you can get believers to believe in all kinds of stuff in the absence of proof, because proof is not a requirement for them.

    Take the mantra of modern capitalizm, tax cuts for the rich creates jobs, which can be proven false just by looking at the real world through your own eyes. Or, international free trade benefits everybody. Or, regulation just kills jobs. Or, that televangelists don’t make any money for what they do, its all going to support their efforts to spread the word. But, with appropriate training in taking things on faith rather than fact, you can still believe these fables. And of course, the big one, the whopper of taking it on faith, that this system results in the most optimal possible social outcomes by rewarding the worthy and showing disfavor to the unworthy, all the while providing everyone with a similar opportunity to succeed. Blame yo-self.

    I greatly appreciate the way you put into perspective the capitalist seduction of Christianity. At least thats what I read into it. Thanks for writing this piece.

    As for WalMart, I plan to go there to buy my ‘Jesus prefers job creators’ ballcap, and my ‘If God didn’t want us to drill 5 miles under the ocean, why would he put so much oil there?’ T-shirt. Hope they have my size.

  10. yawn, “conservative pastor”?

    belief – tenets held true in the lack of evidence. never believe a theologian.

  11. Interesting post, thank you Mr. Roberts and Mr. Goff.

    The teachings of Jesus, like the teachings of essentially all religion, can be summed up fairly well as “be less selfish.” Unfortunately, modern capitalism runs on a different three words: “greed is good.”

    Another great Jewish teacher who lived around the time of Jesus, Rabbi Hillel, was famously asked to explain the Torah while standing on one foot. As the story comes to us, he replied “do not unto your neighbor what you would not have him do unto you; this is the whole Law; the rest is commentary.”

    In the New Testament, there’s Matthew 19:23-24: “Then Jesus said to his disciples, “Truly I tell you, it is hard for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of heaven. Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.”

    There’s Matthew 6:19-24. It couldn’t be clearer.

    From the Tao Te Ching (Jane English translation):

    When the court is arrayed in splendor,
    The fields are full of weeds,
    And the granaries are bare.
    Some wear gorgeous clothes,
    Carry sharp swords,
    And indulge themselves with food and drink;
    They have more possessions than they can use.
    They are robber barons.
    This is certainly not the way of Tao.

    It has always been an easy trick to co-opt a religion to support the powers that be, and it’s been done throughout history. After all, religions generally encourage sacrifice, and who better to sacrifice for than the powers that be.

    The true message of religion remains, for those few who are actually interested in religion as a source of wisdom, as opposed to those who turn to religion to provide a team and a team mascot.

  12. great post Austin. thanks for cennecting so many dots and doing so without demonizing those you were critiquing.

  13. It came as a great shock to me to see that Thorstein Veblen had come back to life after so many years. A miracle? Who knows…
    While I thoroughly appreciate the article by Austin Roberts I wish it had been less academic and more readable since its message is important and I would like to see it widely read.
    Mr. Roberts, there is a big difference between writing a blog for the general public and writing for an academic journal. I doubt many readers will know or care who Harvey Cox is (or is it ‘was’ since if he is still alive he has to be pretty darn old) or any of your other references.
    Brian Connors: Unfortunately “freedom” also means that uninformed idiots like you get to post. sigh…

  14. Or maybe … just maybe … they’re having the store blessed as a matter of tradition. Many business owners have their business blessed upon opening for, lack of a better term, good luck.

    But while we’re questioning Walmart’s motives for wanting to has a member of the clergy bless their store, why don’t we start complaining about the invocation at school graduations (OMG TEH SEPARATION OF TEH CHURCH AND STATE!!!). Then maybe we can hike on over to Trinidad and complain about the blessing of the fleet (See how many friends you can make with the fishermen with that one.)

    Whether you like it or not, it is Walmart’s store and they can do whatever they want for their grand opening.

    Some of you people need to stop drinking the conspiracy theory kool-aid. Every action by a company or person that you don’t like does not need to come with an ulterior motive.

  15. The Holy Roman Empire was nor Holy, Roman nor an Empire. The Conservative Fundamentalist Christians aren’t truly conservative, fundamentalist or christian.

  16. At a meeting of the NCJ, Ryan Burns wasn’t allowed to write another anti-Walmart rant after he fucked the dog on the last couple of ones, so they had someone else ask a friend to sign a name to someone else’s rant.

    Oh, for the resellers, Greenview Market in Arcata used to do it.

  17. Derpy Doo smells a lot like Anon-r-Mouse. Check his shoes if you’re going to let him in.

  18. It seems like most people are missing the point. Yes, Scott, they can do what they want. But Jesus spoke out against the injustices that allow Walmart to profit. Pastor Jeff Beltz and his congregation, if they believe in the Bible, should know that.

  19. What a ridiculous waste of words and thought. Find something more important worthy of bloviating. WALMART has fairly priced birdseed.

  20. We’re all going to get sucked into the BigBox Stores, as the market keeps falling, the people have to get what they want as cheap as they get it. Armegedin has begun.

  21. Oh my God, Christian Capitalists. My worst nightmare. We’re all gonna die!

    Would it have been okay with Mr. Austin, if a Wiccan Warlock had offered prayers and blessings toward the the success of the business? Maybe a psychic, or a feng shui expert, should have been on board to bless the proceedings. Surely that would be politically acceptable to Mr. Austin.

    The Constitution demands the separation of Church and State. It does not separate religion from business. The Constitution guarantees the right to free association. I don’t care if a business bases its code of conduct on the teachings of Jesus Christ, or on the teachings of Randi the Magician, just give me a good product at a fair price.

    If you don’t like a particular business, don’t shop there, but don’t impose your concept of what is “just” or “fair” on me, or infringe on my right to spend my dollar where I choose.

  22. Next door to WalMart is Ray’s Grocery with more employees than customers for over 10 years..and counting!

    Too big to fail big boxes, like the banks, have their hands deep into the public’s pockets. What happens when their welfare runs out?

    Calculate the costs of 1,000 foreign U.S. military installations protecting Walmart’s access to cheap resources and labor, calculate the social service costs that poverty-wage big box employees qualify for, and discover just how unsustainable and cost-prohibitive big box products are.

    Walmart, like B of A, Morgan Stanley, et al…will remain open and expand here no matter how unpopular they might actually be.

    If Stalin or Mussolini could have figured out how to dress tyranny in a flag of freedom, they too could have squeezed another 100 years out of an ancient, failed, imperial economic ideology.

  23. At least, Walmart is well-positioned to serve the homeless, which I hope it does with full Christian heart…

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