Rachel Maddow's Drone Dysphoria, and Rolling Stone Reviews 'Sympathy for the Shooter'
The Left's Somali Exception to Collective Blame
Ann's 1-Step Guide To Saving North Carolina
Dylan Douglas's Parents Need to Listen to Meghan McCain
Newsom Keeps His Eye on the Ball: The 2028 Presidential Election
Anti-Semitism Exposed: NYC Public School Prevents Holocaust Survivor From Speaking
A Two-Pronged Democratic Strategy for 2028
Repeat Drug Offender Found Guilty in Scheme to Flood Columbus With Illegal Narcotics
Three Officers Shot at Omaha Convenience Store; Suspect Dead
DOJ: Men Execute ‘Relentless’ Multi-Million-Dollar Fraud Scheme in Minnesota
El Chapo’s Son Joaquin Guzman Lopez Pleads Guilty to Federal Drug Charges
Former Minneapolis Chamber CEO Admits Stealing Reward Money for Unsolved Child Murders
A Winning Formula: Keeping NFL Games Free and Accessible
Dem Bill Tries to Block Mandatory Detention for Illegal Immigrants
Georgia Man Gets 46 Months for $7.2M Medicare Kickback Scheme
OPINION

Revival Time

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

Pretty much every American lacking a cemetery address understands the purpose of the rhetoric of the House Judiciary Committee's report this week on impeachment: "betrayed the nation," "threat to the Constitution," "engaged in a pattern of misconduct." And so on.

Advertisement

It is how prosecutors talk, knowing the need to throw the kitchen sink at the accused, hoping to hit him with, at the very least, the soap dispenser. Likewise, every American above ground will have noticed that the president himself lays on a mean rhetorical bullwhip, his intemperance being a major reason for the whole impeachment foofaraw.

Many, without parsing the language of the Judiciary Committee report, agree in general that President Donald Trump should be tossed from the top of the Washington Monument, sans parachute. Which, in my estimation, he won't be -- unless he confesses proudly, in so many words, "I slipped Zelenskiy a C-note to lie about Biden." Which, of course, he won't. I think. And then we'll be past this stuff -- the biggest waste of public time since the Janet Jackson wardrobe malfunction.

I am guessing it will be years before we understand fully the dimensions of the immense, immersive moment in our affairs when a TV reality star volunteered to lead the country in a different direction -- and we took him up on it. The world is presently burying us in analyses of this hinge moment. The world, not just the United States.

The Mother Country -- Britain -- is part of it. Witness Boris Johnson and the triumph of the Conservative Party, suddenly rendered not very conservative at all, with its plan of exit from the European Union.

Analyses of the British elections resemble analyses of the U.S. election of 2016. We're tired, supposedly, of the global elite running everything, identifying causes and solutions the majority find sterile or irrelevant. The defection, in Britain, of Labour Party strongholds to the Conservative Party looks like testimony of the same sort that bears on Trump's stewardship.

Advertisement

In other words, we don't like the people running things, and they don't like us -- the real people. We don't mind the money the rich have accumulated so much as we mind the way they try to run things.

I call this a hinge moment because we are seemingly moving away -- slowly, unevenly -- from where we've been for a while to ... well, we don't know quite yet. There's no master plan, but the dynamics of the thing indicate a classic power struggle: Johnson and the Brexiteers versus the globally minded. Trump and MAGA versus the business elites and the universities. Comparative modesty against hauteur and high-and-mightiness.

Just here the thing starts to come together. Kind of. Humans do this sort of thing every so often. Something new happens in life, altering existing relationships. In this novel environment, everybody knows exactly what should be done, and why gainsayers and opponents are wrong -- morally wrong! -- and should be impeached, if not guillotined.

Do you know what this is a great moment for? Lots of things, but one in particular: the recovery, in the Christian churches, of the enduring elements of religious faith: confession, redemption, salvation and so on, according to ancient understandings that trample fashionable anxieties. A spiritual center is what the present age aches for and should work to recover.

The churches have not latterly been doing well, having come up, in the last century, with the notion of social reform as the incontestable religious ideal -- the church as community service agency rather than testator to the authority of its Lord.

Advertisement

We read constantly these days about the "nones" -- adherents to no religion save in some vapid "spiritual" sense. With the decline of religious conviction goes certainty, any sense of authentic place in community and community adherence.

What comes with it? Well, an increase in pointless squabbles for one thing; bad-tempered attacks on the differently minded or motivated; furious efforts at disassociation from the unconvinced; and repudiation, often enough, of community and family.

Anything else come with it? Impeachment? Political warfare as a way of life? I wouldn't be startled to hear just that. Nor, I fancy, should anyone else.

William Murchison is writing a book on moral reconstruction in the 21st century. His latest book is "The Cost of Liberty: The Life of John Dickinson." 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement