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Another week, another conspiracy

Digital generated image of macro view of the coronavirus from 2020
Digital generated image of macro view of the coronavirus from 2020 | Getty Images

Another week, another lengthy YouTube video alleging a coronavirus-related conspiracy reaching to the highest levels of government. This time the villain is National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease director Dr. Anthony Fauci who, as the title of the video in question suggests, is supposed to have planned this pandemic.

If my experience is any guide, conservative evangelicals are among the quickest to share this sort of shoddy documentary (and have been for some time — the Religious Right is a hothouse of anti-vax activism and health fads). Those spreading such paranoia deserve criticism, and if anyone among my co-religionists has written the definitive rebuke of the conspiratorial reflex, it’s Alastair Roberts.

But there’s also something to be said on behalf of conservative evangelicals, of whom I am a card-carrying example — rural upbringing, home education, raw milk and all. Our increasing distrust of “official stories” and established knowledge is in some ways an understandable response to a cultural and political elite who have turned their backs on us. And that makes discerning the truth right now uniquely challenging.

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I realized this last week when a number of Facebook followers took issue with my decidedly mainstream commentary on COVID-19. A fair paraphrase of their complaints would be: “What happened to you, man? You’ve spent the last several years slamming the established positions on abortion, homosexuality, climate change, evolution, and so on. Why are you all of a sudden parroting the three-letter institutions on this virus and the lockdown?”

It’s a compelling question, based on more than a grain of truth. My fellow religious conservatives and I really have dissented fiercely from many of those three-letter institutions on all of these issues. Abortion is not “basic women’s healthcare,” as the World Health Organization, the Centers for Disease Control, and no doubt a U.N. summit full of other leading organizations assert. There is no “human right” to do that which God calls an abomination and treat it in law like a marriage. And no matter how many credential-suffixed names assure me women can have penises and the universe brought itself into existence, it will not make either claim less laughable.

In other words, those who want to know why I’ve suddenly abandoned the barricades of heroic dissent and am strutting around like Bill Nye the Science Guy have a pretty accurate understanding of our situation: established opinion in the West really has turned against traditional Christians.

My Facebook friends aren’t imagining it: The Church really is in the epistemological doghouse. And another religion — call it “secular humanism” if you like — really has enthroned itself at the heart of our institutions and is putting on its best I’m-not-a-religion-act. If I didn’t believe that, then I would need to explain why Planned Parenthood still gets my tax money and pro-life activists are struggling just to keep their mobile apps from being deleted.

But buried in this instinct to extend our distrust of experts to viral pandemics is a giant, hairy, zoonotic-disease-ridden non-sequitur — that because the experts have been wrong on hot-button cultural issues, they must also be wrong about the coronavirus, no matter what reason, evidence, or experience say to the contrary.

This piece was originally published at BreakPoint

From BreakPoint. Reprinted with the permission of the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without the express written permission the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. "BreakPoint®" and "The Colson Center for Christian Worldview®" are registered trademarks of The Colson Center for Christian Worldview.

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