WASHINGTON (AP) — Empathy is usually regarded as a virtue, a key to human decency and kindness. And yet, with increasing momentum, voices on the Christian right are preaching that it has become a vice.

For them, empathy is a cudgel for the left: It can manipulate caring people into accepting all manner of sins according to a conservative Christian perspective, including abortion access, LGBTQ+ rights, illegal immigration and certain views on social and racial justice.

“Empathy becomes toxic when it encourages you to affirm sin, validate lies or support destructive policies,” said Allie Beth Stuckey, author of “Toxic Empathy: How Progressives Exploit Christian Compassion.”

Stuckey, host of the popular podcast “Relatable,” is one of two evangelicals who published books within the past year making Christian arguments against some forms of empathy.

The other is Joe Rigney, a professor and pastor who wrote “The Sin of Empathy: Compassion and its Counterfeits.” It was published by Canon Press, an affiliate of Rigney’s conservative denomination, which counts Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth among its members.

These anti-empathy arguments gained traction in the early months of President Donald Trump’s second term, with his flurry of executive orders that critics denounced as lacking empathy.

As foreign aid stopped and more deportations began, Trump’s then-adviser Elon Musk told podcaster Joe Rogan: “The fundamental weakness of Western civilization is empathy.”

Even Vice President JD Vance, a Catholic convert, framed the idea in his own religious terms, invoking the concept of ordo amoris, or order of love. Within concentric circles of importance, he argued the immediate family comes first and the wider world last — an interpretation that then-Pope Francis rejected.

While their anti-empathy arguments have differences, Stuckey and Rigney have audiences that are firmly among Trump’s Christian base.

“Could someone use my arguments to justify callous indifference to human suffering? Of course,” Rigney said, countering that he still supports measured Christ-like compassion. “I think I’ve put enough qualifications.”

Historian Susan Lanzoni traced a century of empathy’s uses and definitions in her 2018 book “Empathy: A History.” Though it’s had its critics, she has never seen the aspirational term so derided as it is now.

It’s been particularly jarring to watch Christians take down empathy, said Lanzoni, a graduate of Harvard Divinity School.

“That’s the whole message of Jesus, right?”

    • AceFuzzLord@lemmy.zip
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      4 days ago

      I remember someone I watch online talking about how he was reading people talking about this. Apparently those people came to the conclusion that the Southern Baptists, I think it was, would end up killing him if he ever came back.

      • Jiggle_Physics@sh.itjust.works
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        4 days ago

        Well, if Jesus actually comes back, he isn’t here to do discipleship 2.0. He is here for judgement day, and those Christians might be shocked to find out which side of the holy law they are on.

        Lucky for them, this isn’t happening.

  • AceFuzzLord@lemmy.zip
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    4 days ago

    If empathy is a sin, call me a sinner for being more like actual Biblical Jesus than any of those “Christians”, even with my brain running on AutismOS.

    It’s sad when a non-Christian has a better chance of getting into Heaven than an actual Christian, but those types of Christians just keep proving that the bar to get into Heaven is at the lowest layer of Hell if they’re somehow able to get in.

  • pimento64@sopuli.xyz
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    5 days ago

    Daily reminder that the origin of the idiom “wolves in sheep’s clothing” is literally this.