Commodified Communion: Eucharist, Consumer Culture, and the Practice of Everyday Life
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WINNER, 2021 HTI BOOK PRIZE
Resist! This exhortation animates a remarkable range of theological reflection on consumer culture in the United States. And for many theologians, the source and summit of Christian cultural resistance is the Eucharist. In Commodified Communion, Antonio Eduardo Alonso calls into question this dominant mode of theological reflection on contemporary consumerism. Reducing the work of theology to resistance and centering Christian hope in a Eucharist that might better support it, he argues, undermines our ability to talk about the activity of God within a consumer culture. By reframing the question in terms of God’s activity in and in spite of consumer culture, this book offers a lived theological account of consumer culture that recognizes not only its deceptions but also traces of truth in its broken promises and fallen hopes.
Antonio Eduardo Alonso
Antonio (Tony) Eduardo Alonso is Assistant Professor of Theology and Culture and Director of Catholic Studies at Emory University’s Candler School of Theology. He is also a widely published composer of sacred music.
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Commodified Communion - Antonio Eduardo Alonso
COMMODIFIED COMMUNION
Copyright © 2021 Fordham University Press
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Alonso, Antonio Eduardo, author.
Title: Commodified communion : eucharist, consumer culture, and the practice of everyday life / Antonio Eduardo Alonso.
Description: First edition. | New York : Fordham University Press, 2021. | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2021010239 | ISBN 9780823294121 (hardback) | ISBN 9780823294114 (paperback) | ISBN 9780823294138 (epub)
Subjects: LCSH: Consumption (Economics)—Religious aspects—Christianity. | Consumer behavior—United States. | Christianity and culture. | Lord’s Supper.
Classification: LCC BR115.C67 A46 2021 | DDC 261.8/5—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021010239
First edition
Dedicated to the memory of my abuela
Daisy Concepción de las Nieves Ojeda Capote
Socorro Quiñones Alonso,
an instrument of God’s peace and love
Contents
Introduction
The Praise of Camp at My Abuela’s Altarcito
1 The Resistance
Singing about a (Liturgical) Revolution
2 Listening for the Cry in a Consumer Culture
Salvation in the Shape of an Apple
3 The Limits of Eucharistic Resistance
Communion Commodified
4 Confession, Hope, and Justice in a Commodified World
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
NOTES
INDEX
COMMODIFIED COMMUNION
Introduction
Resist! This exhortation animates and unites a remarkable range of contemporary theological reflection on consumer culture in the United States. Theologians from disparate perspectives, commitments, and disciplines share a common conviction that consumerism runs against the grain of the gospel and is in need of distinctly Christian reform. While they describe the nature and scope of the problem in distinctive ways, their narratives take a similar shape. They first detail how particular dynamics of consumer culture threaten Christian thought or practice. They then retrieve from the Christian tradition a scripture, doctrine, or practice to counter that threat. And often the source and summit of their hope for a Christian practice that might fund such resistance is the Eucharist. The central task of theology, in this vision, is to seek out ways to respond to, resist, or reshape a consumer culture that threatens all that Christians hold dear. Christian hope—implicitly or explicitly—is found in our effective cultivation of practices of everyday resistance to the market.
In the pages that follow, I call into question this exclusive focus on resistance. And there are urgent and compelling reasons to object to my resistance to resistance as the primary mode of thinking theologically about consumer culture at the outset. My own commitments to those reasons are woven deeply into these pages, often through the cautions and convictions of scholars who have already made substantial contributions to the present conversation: the market projects the myth of an autonomous consumer freed from all constraints while it masks its own cultivation, manipulation, and deferral of our desire; marketing strategies pair a product with an entire way of life indirectly related to the product itself, making promises that they can never finally keep; advertisements shape our imaginations in ways that malform our self-perception and distort human identity; the market disciplines our desire in ways that counter the desire for God. Perhaps even more urgent are the ethical critiques: that companies go to great lengths to veil structures of production and to mask the power imbalance between corporations, workers, and consumers; that we are increasingly severed from the harmful conditions under which our products are made; that goods appear to us as if from nowhere and as if made by no one; that the market depends on processes that oppress the poor nearby and far away; that contemporary consumerism comes at the cost of the growing degradation of the planet. These critiques expose a consumer desire that is aimless, manipulated, and misshapen. And they reveal also the profound ethical implications of our own purchasing patterns, implications that are intentionally hidden from our view. These dynamics do indeed run against the grain of the deepest impulses of the gospel. They are worth resisting, transforming, and reforming.
Thinking outside such a logic, then, runs the risk of ignoring or relativizing these concerns. It runs against the grain even of my own first gospel-shaped impulse: How can we not resist? Doesn’t anything other than resisting bless the excesses of a culture that so often mutes the cry of those on whom the power of the market depends? Shouldn’t theological reflection pursue any promising path lit by scripture, tradition, or practice to identify, create, and support better tactics of everyday resistance to the market? Shouldn’t practices at the heart of our tradition—like celebrating the Eucharist—ground us in a greater prophetic resistance to the market? How can a theology in such a terrain be true if it does not have as its primary aim the reformation or transformation of consumer culture? I intend neither to evade these concerns nor to offer any easy absolution from them.
Yet there are reasons to question resistance as the exclusive mode of theological reflection on consumer culture. One reason is the ease with which the market co-opts any form of resistance. Dissent itself is a crucial component of consumer culture. When icons of the most piercing critics of capitalism—from Karl Marx to Che Guevara to Pope Francis—can be pressed onto a T-shirt, a poster, or a collectible book to proclaim our resistance to the market; when marketing campaigns for desktop computers invest their advertisements with prophetic figures from Martin Luther King Jr. to Mahatma Gandhi to the Dalai Lama in an attempt to make us think that when we buy their product we will think different
; and when the purchase of everything from pure coconut water to an organic cosmetics product promises a revolution, we need not look far for evidence of the ways that cultures of resistance are themselves manifestations of a market logic. Rebellion against a consumer culture often ends up reinforcing what it denounces.
Religion is hardly exempt. The market is remarkably adept at imitating religious desire and absorbing theological critique in ways that render ineffective any religious objections to it. Papal encyclicals that diagnose the sins of contemporary consumerism and books of daily devotions that promise freedom from the anxieties of the market qualify for Amazon Prime two-day delivery; the proposals of progressive theological activists and neoconservative traditionalists who each provide their own liturgical maps to resist the structures of the world quickly take the shape of brands that promise distinctive ways of marking Christian identity over and against the wider culture and one another; and a wide body of literature that resists consumerism—indeed even a countercultural hymn, sermon, or prayer—is often dependent on and subject to the forces of the same market against which their most penetrating critiques are lodged. Whether theological proposals for resisting the ills of consumer culture center on rereading Matthew 25, rooting oneself in the spiritual exercises of Saint Ignatius Loyola, buying more fair-trade coffee, relearning what Augustine has to say on desire, singing more songs about justice with yet more conviction, or embracing a handsomely packaged contemporary articulation of Benedictine principles for the twenty-first century, the commodification of dissent signals the limits of any proposal—theological or otherwise—that promises a clear recipe for resistance that is completely exempt from a market logic.¹
Yet while the commodification of dissent should temper our enthusiasm for prescription, what drives my resistance to resistance in this project is more fundamentally a theological conviction about the activity of God at work in the world. In the pages that follow, I argue that reducing the work of theology to resistance and centering Christian hope in a Eucharist that might better support that resistance undermines our ability to talk about the activity of God within a consumer culture, binds grace to human activity, and instrumentalizes the Eucharist into ethics. By reframing the question in terms of God’s activity in, through, and in spite of culture—rather than apart from it—I propose a mode of theological reflection on consumer culture and the Eucharist that sees their interrelationship in light of the unique challenges that US consumerism poses to Christian thought and practice.
A Vision beyond Resistance
A vision beyond resistance sees the church as it is rather than merely indulging in fantasies about the church that never seem to touch the ground. It sees a church that has scarcely been free of the market and a market that has scarcely been free of the church.² It makes space for attentiveness to moments when the church has negotiated the market—from the making and marketing of the modern Christmas to the invention and expansion of a religious book trade—without ceasing to be a means of grace in the world.³ It sees histories and practices complex enough to fit multiple narratives, including narratives of declension that see in them the market’s manipulation of Christian thought, desire, and practice. But it sees also the fissures and contradictions at the heart of the church’s relationship with the market, insisting that grace is not confined to those moments or those practices when Christianity seemed to resist its processes adequately but also when it tried and failed to do so. It sees a church enmeshed in a market it helped create and continues to sustain but that exceeds the boundaries that narratives of resistance so often set for it.
Such a vision allows us to see God at work in the myriad ways that people live theology through commodities: veladoras, statues, and holy cards of La Virgen de Guadalupe at the basilica gift shop in Mexico City; family Bibles, daily devotionals, and spiritual journals that rest on coffee tables and night stands; Lourdes water, miraculous medals, and rosaries peddled outside the grotto and online; "#blessed coffee mugs,
My Chains Are Gone bracelets,
(born)² hats,
Jesus Was Black T-shirts,
Mary Is My Homegirl key rings,
WWJD wristbands, and
Holy to the Lord" hoodies; recordings of Gregorian chant, praise and worship choruses, and revived folk hymns; and home altars crafted lovingly over a lifetime composed of a range of religious kitsch from shrines, churches, grocery stores, and more. However imperfectly, these objects and practices make manifest desires, hopes, joys, fears, hurts, anxieties, remembrances, and expressions of gratitude through objects that are neither exempt from market forces nor ancillary to the ways that faithful people experience God in the practice of everyday life. Even in their commodified state, these objects and practices testify to a theology embodied in and practiced through the limitations and possibilities of culture.
A vision beyond resistance also sees the ways that Christianity is poured into the forms of the world. Religious longings, desires, and dreams do not merely disappear into a consumer culture but find their way into a range of cultural forms of art, music, and media.⁴ Ecclesial traditions are reappropriated at the altars of television talk-show hosts and spectacular unveilings of technological devices. Intercessory prayer takes the form of Facebook posts, Instagram memes, and Twitter hashtags. Meditations on grace from Anne Lamott and Mary Oliver are quietly proclaimed in the darkness of hot-yoga rooms. Essential oils are used to cleanse homes, anoint the sick, and heal wounds. This transfer often reveals consumer culture doing one of the things it does best: abstracting sacred objects and faithful practices from the communities in which they were formed and putting them to new use. There is much to lament, to confess, and even to condemn about that transfer for the communities from whom such practices are severed. Yet seeing beyond resistance makes space for the cravings for redemption that surround us even through the misshapen desires and false appearances that are neither reducible to the distorting processes of commodification nor confined to our effective resistance to them. This way of seeing approaches consumer culture not only in terms of its deceptions but also in terms of the truths of its fallen promises. It sees commodities not only as monuments to corrupted desire but also as objects that bear collective dreams only indirectly visible in their failure to fulfill our deepest longings.
And finally, a vision beyond resistance sees the Eucharist as it is. It sees not merely the market’s clear insinuation into contemporary Eucharistic practices in churches where the ethos of consumer culture is most brightly on display and enthusiastically embraced. It also sees the ways that all churches in a consumer culture exist as a commodity on the shelves of the marketplace, whether we like it or not, whether we see it or not. It sees that even our most passionate prescriptions for a countercultural Eucharist—whether in the shape of the Tridentine rite, the twentieth-century liturgical renewal, or any of the many alternatives made in the name of resisting culture—cannot claim to transcend culture completely without denying their own captivity to a market in religious beliefs and practices. It sees a Eucharist that can be and often has been commodified in ways distant from our deepest hopes for it. It is finally an eschatological vision—a vision untethered to human activity—that insists that in and in spite of that commodification the Eucharist remains the bread of life and the cup of salvation.
The Shape of the Book
The work of the pages that follow strives toward this new way of seeing. I begin by surfacing a pattern that undergirds current literature on consumer culture and religion (Chapter 1). Through attentiveness to the writings of Geoffrey Wainwright, William T. Cavanaugh, and Vincent Miller, I show that despite their different diagnoses of and solutions to the dynamics of contemporary consumerism, they all presuppose a logic that limits the ways we might think theologically through the ambiguities of consumer culture. The logic I call into question centers on convictions that both shape and reflect a much wider range of literature on the topic at its deepest levels: that the primary task of theology vis-à-vis consumer culture is resistance, that a meaningful contrast can and must be drawn between consumer culture and Christianity, that the privileged site of our cultural resistance is a Eucharistic one, and that the Eucharist should be celebrated in particular ways to shape such resistance. I argue instead that remaining on the level of resistance limits our ability to see the activity of God in a consumer culture, the church, and the Eucharist. What is needed is not solely theologically backed resistance but a distinctly theological account of consumer culture.
The work of Michel de Certeau and Walter Benjamin informs such an account (Chapter 2). The emphasis on resistance in current theological literature on consumer culture has driven a narrow application of Certeau’s distinction between tactics (the inventive and unpredictable practices of people in their daily lives) and strategies (the grids of power that structure them). This paradigmatic appropriation of Certeau’s work uses his notion of tactics to describe a mode of Christian resistance that can persist even without overthrowing the strategic grid of consumer culture. By situating tactics within the wider body of his work, I argue that for Certeau tactics were not primarily signs of resistance but signs of absence: living realities that pulse within and against systems of strategies that can never quite contain them. Reading tactics through a hermeneutic of absence opens a space for a theological account of consumer culture that takes seriously the irreducibility of our experiences, even those in the contemporary marketplace.
Yet while Certeau’s work implicitly invites attentiveness to the practices of everyday life that slip beyond the grid of market logic, and while he is frequently invoked in literature on consumer culture and theology, Certeau himself was silent on the topic. And so to extend Certeau’s insights into consumer culture, I explore the commodity fetish as Karl Marx first articulated it and as Walter Benjamin distinctively expanded it to ground a theological account of consumer culture that recognizes not only its deceptions but also the traces of truth in its broken promises and fallen hopes. Benjamin’s way of seeing theological
wishes, dreams, and desires invested in fallen commodities provides a way to take seriously the pervasive and even dangerous forces of commodification while still leaving a space for traces of the activity of God irreducible to the efficaciousness of human resistance.
I show also how consumer culture lays bare both the empirical and the theological limits of claims about how the Eucharist effects, shapes, inspires, or demands resistance to the market (Chapter 3). A dominant strand in twentieth-century liturgical theology anticipated the kinds of convictions about the formative nature of the Eucharist that so often dominate contemporary reflection on consumer culture. Absent empirical evidence to support their arguments, some liturgical theologians have turned to the social sciences to verify their claims. But a circular logic constrains much of the social scientific reflection on the liturgy, merely confirming assumptions about the formative potential of the Eucharist with which the scholars began; empirical claims are left unverified by empirical evidence. But when the Eucharist is pressed toward concrete ethical ends, it is already caught up in a logic that instrumentalizes it. If confining theological reflection on consumer culture to resistance limits our sense of the activity of God at work in the world, I argue that pressing Eucharistic practice into the service of that resistance unwittingly limits our conception of the activity of God at work in the Eucharist. This logic reveals a new inversion of an old theme about the activity of grace in the sacraments: ex opere operato reappears under the sign of ethics. Whether implicitly or explicitly, the Eucharist comes to be measured against its ability to fund our effective cultural resistance. This puts grace at the mercy of human activity in a Eucharist that cannot claim to stand completely outside a market logic—even as we place our deepest hope in a grace that does.
Given the theological and empirical limits of framing reflection on consumer culture in terms of resistance, I conclude with a reflection on what it means to celebrate the Eucharist in a commodified world (Chapter 4). Using Enrique Dussel’s prophetic narration of the Eucharistic conversion of Bartolomé de Las Casas as a prism through which to consider Eucharistic practice shaped by the logic of late capitalism, I offer an account of my own sense of the shape of confession, hope, and justice demanded in a consumer culture. I argue for the need to take seriously the profound materiality of Eucharistic practice in a way that avoids a temptation toward the denial of our contingent complicities, on the one hand, and our temptation toward despair at the seemingly totalizing forces of the market, on the other. To accept the materiality of the Eucharist as the means of God’s presence means that, in a fallen world, the materiality of the Eucharist—from bread and wine to hymnals and ritual books to the people who use them—will always be enmeshed in the material of that world, including its immanent complicities and captivities to the forces of the market. But the promise of the Eucharist is paradoxically a hope that the ordinary and even the sinful materials of everyday life are made holy by a God who transcends our most faithful efforts and our most profound failures to mend the brokenness of the world. Eucharistic hope, then, is not only located in our effective resistance of consumer culture but is finally an eschatological hope that flourishes in and in spite of our ability to resist the market.
But striving toward a new way of seeing demands more than merely telling: It also demands showing. And so interspersed between each of the chapters, and grounded in the vision I develop in the second, I offer close readings of the material, historical, and theological significance of four fragments of my own everyday life: my grandmother’s altarcito, the hymnals of my childhood, a series of discarded Apple products, and commodified communion hosts. I have chosen these objects in light of my own proximity to them. Undialectical moralizing is a temptation in every kind of theological reflection. But it seems particularly heightened when the topic is consumer culture. Consumerism is too often defined as something in which everyone but the scholar reflecting on it is engaged. Religious leaders from Pope Benedict XVI to Shane Claiborne long for versions of themselves that are somehow exempt from the machinations of the market. I share those longings, deeply. But it is easier to swing clubs at other people’s loves while clinging to one’s own. By reflecting on objects of personal significance to me, I attempt to take seriously my own embeddedness in the market in a way that neither ignores the distortions of the processes that shape these objects nor absolves the misshapen desires and perplexing contradictions of the one who engages them. In each of these, I attempt to interrupt familiar ways of thinking theologically about consumer culture by showing what and whose objects, practices, and theologies are lost in confining theological reflection on consumer culture to resistance and by awakening attentiveness to the ways that the work of God is active even in the places we may be attempted to label as all but godforsaken. Despite the different tone of these reflections—both in content and in voice—they are not meant as mere illustrations of an otherwise academic argument. They are instead at the constructive heart of the argument for the ways that they reveal what is at stake in failing to account for such practices and also for the ways that they perform the very kind of lived theology this project calls forth.
Justice in a Commodified World
Advocating for theological reflection in a commodified world beyond resistance is at constant risk of relativizing the ethical demands of the gospel. But in the pages that follow, I argue that such reflection neither rules out a space for practices of everyday resistance nor nihilistically celebrates the futility of that resistance in a way that absolves us from working for justice in a fallen world. Instead, it attempts to open a space for myriad faithful responses to the graciousness of a God who works through us, including through our acts of everyday resistance to contemporary consumerism. But this reflection is rooted in a conviction that God’s activity is never identical to that work. And because the activity of God is not finally confined by the work of our hands and feet, it frees us to invest in daily acts of resistance with an eschatological humility that confesses both their limitations and their possibilities. Amid the mess of a commodified world rather than apart from it, seeing beyond resistance finds traces of a Eucharistic hope that flourishes in its gaps.
The Praise of Camp at My Abuela’s Altarcito
With regard to the past,
Daniel Berrigan wrote in an essay on modern sacred art in 1962, it would serve no real purpose here to detail the centuries of vapid, dissociate art which have preceded our own, and which we are in the process of disavowing.
¹ Berrigan’s relief over the shattering of a material devotional Catholic aesthetic in the decade following the Second Vatican Council was not exceptional.² For Catholic moderns like Berrigan, many of the most significant religious artifacts of daily devotion were outward signs of all the council tried to overcome. A gradual accretion of perceived devotional excesses did not fit neatly with the work of bringing the church up to date
in the modern world. Aggiornamento demanded the abandonment of embarrassing superstitious practices like kissing the bone of a dead saint for healing or kneeling in supplication before a weeping statue of Mary. Relics of a medieval credulity,
³ such practices were vestiges of a bygone Catholicism in need of modern purification, correction, and reform.⁴ Affirmations of divine presence migrated from holy cards, rosaries, and statues to the full, conscious, and active participation of the faithful in the church’s liturgy, a real presence verified in ethical living in the world. Enthusiastic for the authenticity
of modernity and suspicious of the inauthenticity
of many of the