Branson Missouri

Branson Edge

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Holy Hills of the Ozarks

Holy Hills of the Ozarks: Religion and Tourism in Branson,
Missouri.(Shopping for God: How Christianity Went from in Your Heart
to in Your Face)(Book review)
From: The Christian Century | Date: 3/25/2008 | Author: Sutton,
Matthew Avery
The Christian Century

Holy Hills of the Ozarks: Religion and Tourism in Branson, Missouri.

By Aaron K. Ketchetl.

Johns Hopkins University Press, 344 PP., $35.00.

Shopping for God: How Christianity Went from In Your Heart to In Your Face.

By James B. Twitchell.

Simon & Schuster, 336 pp., $26.00.

In 1739, Benjamin Franklin went to hear itinerant evangelist George
Whitefield preach in Philadelphia. Whitefield was quickly becoming the
greatest celebrity in colonial America, drawing crowds in the tens of
thousands, and Franklin wanted to know why. In Whitefield he
discovered a brilliant innovator who blended drama with faith,
blurring the lines between religion and entertainment. "Every accent,
every emphasis, every modulation" of Whitefield's voice, Franklin
observed, was "perfectly well tuned and well placed." The feeling
Whitefield evoked reminded him of the pleasure he experienced when
listening to "an excellent piece of music."

Franklin soon learned, however, that attending a Whitefield
performance was not free. "I silently resolved he should get nothing
from me," he recalled. But as Whitefield "proceeded I began to soften,
and concluded to give the copper. Another stroke of his oratory made
me ashamed of that, and determined me to give the silver; and he
finished so admirably that I emptied my pocket wholly into the
collector's dish, gold and all." In colonial times and in every
century since, American Christianity has taken the form of a consumer
faith, something to be bought and sold. Aaron K. Ketchell's Holy Hills
of the Ozarks and James B. Twitchell's Shopping for God approach this
packaging of Christianity for a modern consumer culture from very
different angles.

According to Ketchell, who teaches at the University of Nevada, Las
Vegas, there are few places that better illustrate the relationship
between faith, entertainment and consumer culture than Branson,
Missouri. In the late 19th century, the Ozarks region became a popular
tourist destination for people seeking a respite from city life. Among
those who visited was Harold Bell Wright, a young minister-in-training
and devotee of the growing Social Gospel movement who struggled with
poor health and sought the curative powers of the Ozarks. Over the
next decade, he repeatedly returned to the region. He also began to
write. His first novel, That Printer of Udell's (1903), ran as a
serial in the CHRISTIAN CENTURY. His next novel, The Shepherd of the
Hills (1907), made him one of the most popular writers of the first
half of the 20th century.

Set in the Branson region, Shepherd of the Hills tells the story of
Daniel Howitt, a minister who comes to the Ozarks in search of peace
after years of relentless toil in Chicago. Keeping his background a
secret, Howitt takes a job as a shepherd. Before long, he becomes a
Christ figure, mentoring, leading and protecting the community. He
also discovers that the landscape itself is sacred, that the Ozarks
are "temples of God's own building." The novel was a hit, selling as
many as 2 million copies, and religious and tourist groups almost
immediately sought to capitalize on Branson's new fame and
"spiritualized aura." The Presbyterians built a retreat center on the
top of a hill, and resorts quickly followed.

Tourists hunted for the characters and places identified in Shepherd
of the Hills, and enterprising residents were more than willing to
play the part, seeking to profit from their "ambitious
fiction-turned-assumed-fact relationship with the book." Some even
learned how to speak and act like "hillbillies." Branson boosters
named fishing boats after Wright's characters, staged plays based on
the book's storyline and offered Shepherd of the Hills tours
throughout the 20th century. As Ketchell brilliantly argues, Branson
entrepreneurs wove Christian sentiment "into a fabric of nostalgia,
premodern longing, and whitewashed rusticity."

Although present-day tourists may not be familiar with Wright's novel,
"notions of sanctified topography, virtuous local residents, and
authentic experience of social and spiritual regeneration still beckon
many to Shepherd of the Hills country." Branson's 7 million annual
visitors can choose from an amazing array of entertainments. Among the
most popular is Silver Dollar City, a Christian-run amusement park
complete with a chapel, regular church services and a saloon that
serves only soft drinks. The city's religiously oriented variety shows
are also a major draw. "People who attend one of the region's
theatrical performances," Ketchell explains, "will not encounter an
explicit missionary presentation," but they will find religiously
tinged music, nostalgic renderings of the past, deference to civil
religion, family-values rhetoric and plenty of patriotism and flag
waving. The Osmonds, Yakov Smirnoff, Tony Orlando and Andy Williams
have all drawn enormous crowds in Branson. Wayne Newton, Merle Haggard
and Willie Nelson all flopped.

James B. Twitchell, who teaches English and advertising at the
University of Florida, is also interested in Christian entertainment.
His sometimes funny, sometimes frustrating Shopping for God is a
haphazard look at how Christians buy and sell religious experience.

Twitchell believes that consumers of both faith and material goods
"yearn for a certain kind of experience, expect a certain kind of
brand story, and desire a certain kind of community." The historic,
mainline denominations have forgotten this. They "forgot how to sell.
Or just don't care." Part of the problem is that the meaning of church
membership has changed. In previous generations, to be a church member
meant something about who you were. This guaranteed that older,
wealthier mainline denominations did not need their members; their
members needed them. Today, however, material goods, not membership,
are what signify status.

In one of the smartest sections of the book, Twitchell analyzes
mainline denominations' efforts to use mass media to regain cultural
currency. He concludes that their advertising has been a failure
because instead of marketing their brand (denomination) they market
their product (Christianity). As a result, consumers who see their ads
may be attracted to the faith, but they don't necessarily learn
anything about why they should choose one denomination over another.

After his captivating dissection of church advertising, Twitchell
turns to what he identifies as the biggest problem in the mainline
churches--impotent, effeminate, emasculated clergy. He seems to
believe that the 1990s best-seller Men Are from Mars, Women Are from
Venus is the gospel truth. Invoking absurd stereotypes, he writes that
most men "do not like to be told what to do. ... And men especially do
not like to be told they are not in control of their fate." Nor,
Twitchell argues, do they like to sing or pray aloud in public. Once
churches stopped singing "Onward Christian Soldiers" and began
emphasizing the need for a relationship with Jesus Christ, men
disappeared. (He does not explain why personal-relationship rhetoric
is so prevalent among men in successful evangelical churches.)

The alternative Twitchell presents to this emasculating faith is the
evangelical megachurch, which is "selling, selling, selling, 24-7."
And what does Twitchell think that the megachurch is selling?
Hypermasculinity. "The care of men is megachurch job number one, and I
have not seen a single mega that doesn't focus on getting him in its
crosshairs." How do they do this? Once again invoking ridiculous
gender stereotypes, Twitchell writes that megachurches use "all the
technologies men appreciate," they have "comfy seats," they preach
"nonthreatening" messages, they include "slick music videos to make
emotions easier to sense," and they offer golf tournaments and
motorcycle clubs.

Twitchell's gendered reading of the megachurch is at odds with most of
the literature on these churches. In reality, the megachurches'
attention to families, not men, is the most fundamental cause of their
growth. Furthermore, the very "pastorpreneurs" that Twitchell
invokes--Bill Hybels, Rick Warren and Joel Osteen--are by no means
alpha males.

A more likely cause of the megachurches' success that Twitchell does
explore is their ability to put on a good show. They use
state-of-the-art sound systems (with the volume set so high that,
according to Twitchell, men don't have to worry about their singing
being heard), and their performances are seamless. "They are
entertaining. Fun!" They minister "not only to spiritual issues but to
the feel-good entitlement of brand-shifting shoppers," whom they study
and understand.

The styles of Holy Hills and Shopping for God could not be more
different. Ketchell based Holy Hills on his doctoral dissertation, and
it reads that way. Twitchell, on the other hand, sounds like the
teacher who tries to be hip by adopting the vocabulary of his
students. He tells us that the Methodists used to be "smokin'!" and
that Whitefield "rocked."

So what does the future hold for the Christian marketplace? Things are
certainly changing in the Ozarks. The year 2006 saw the opening of
Branson Landing, a $420 million venture featuring shops such as Ann
Taylor and Victoria's Secret, two Hilton hotels, a handful of bars,
and luxury condominiums. This development may signal a move away from
the region's traditional commitment to inexpensive family
entertainment or, more likely, it may reflect the increased economic
power of evangelicals and conservative Christians' accommodation to
consumer culture. One thing is certain. As consumer trends shift,
religious entertainers and innovative pastorpreneurs will continue to
change with them.

Reviewed by Matthew Avery Sutton, author of Aimee Semple McPherson and
the Resurrection of Christian America (Harvard University Press).


--

http://www.bransonedge.com
http://www.bransonmissouri.blogspot.com

Comments on "Holy Hills of the Ozarks"

 

post a comment