The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Christian Intellectual Authority

Elite Christian intellectuals do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking theological, cultural, and civilizational languages that frame their claims as fidelity to orthodox witness, loyalty to the Great Tradition, or responsibility for sustaining Christian seriousness inside an increasingly post-Christian America. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, think tanks, seminaries, journals, podcasts, donor networks, and the invisible circuits of conference invitations and publishing deals. The key language is not only doctrinal. It is also practical and social. Being summoned. Speaking truth to a post-Christian age. Maintaining the Great Tradition. Recovering the Benedict Option. Mapping the Negative World. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of Christian intellectual life the elite can sustain, how demanding that witness should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.
Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The scholar who stays up until 1 a.m. revising an essay on the Negative World is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. He is trying to maintain a form of faithful intellectual life he genuinely values. The core values, orthodoxy, cultural engagement, prophetic critique, institutional loyalty, carry real internal logic and authority for those inside. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions among elite Christian intellectuals. It is not the whole picture.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings construct hero systems to manage existential anxiety. The world of elite Christian intellectuals wrestling with a post-Christian America is such a system. To live as a serious Christian public thinker is to participate in a tradition of bearing witness against secularization, cultural hostility, and spiritual accommodation. Every essay that maps the Negative World, every conference where faithful presence gets strategized, every refusal to chase the latest relevance tactic: these are acts of fidelity to a post-1960s heritage of orthodox witness that has sustained itself through conditions far worse than the current era of elite disdain and institutional marginalization. That is a hero system. It promises that an individual life, lived seriously within this framework, participates in something that neither death nor progressive cultural hegemony can fully dissolve.
What makes this hero system unusually volatile is that it has become a career system simultaneously, and in mature intellectual fields those two things fuse in ways that make the resulting structure nearly impossible to dislodge from outside. The person is not merely defending orthodoxy or witness. He is defending the social world in which he became legible, admirable, employable, and spiritually significant. His sense of faithfulness, his public mission, his livelihood, and his social identity are bundled together into a single integrated self. Disagreement with his diagnosis does not feel like an intellectual challenge. It feels like an assault on reality itself. This explains the intensity of small tonal disputes in this world. They are rarely just tonal. They threaten a whole way of being.
René Girard’s analysis of mimetic rivalry deepens this. The traditionalist and the pragmatist avoid fighting over ideas in isolation. Each group defines itself by what the other lacks, and each secretly desires what the other has. The traditionalist wants the institutional reach and donor access of the pragmatist. The pragmatist wants the moral clarity and prophetic credibility of the traditionalist. They are not arguing from separate foundations. They are watching each other to discover what serious Christian intellectual life should look like, and finding in the other’s position both a model and a threat. This creates a symmetry of resentment that no amount of theological argument can dissolve, because the resentment is structural rather than doctrinal.
Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons explains how the hero system sustains itself. The world of elite Christian intellectuals is not simply a place where thinkers happen to publish near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as faithful witnesses through conferences, donor briefings, podcast appearances, panel discussions, and ordinary retreat-side recognitions. The network’s thickness is the product of repeated summons into orthodox-intellectual being. But Tavory’s summons really lives as much at the dinner table and in the school carpool as in the conference hall. Elite Christian intellectual authority is not produced by abstract institutions alone. It is stabilized through marriages, churches, schools, friendships, relocations, and the practical question of what kind of life this posture actually makes possible. The Benedict Option and the Negative World framework are not just theories. They imply concrete family strategies: schooling choices, friendship networks, geographic clustering, child-raising ideals, consumption norms. People are summoned not only by journals and donors but by the fact that everyone important in their immediate life already treats a certain posture as what fidelity looks like.
Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. Each summons interrupts private drift, which in Becker’s terms means each summons interrupts the moment when the individual is thrown back toward unmanaged anxiety about irrelevance or civilizational defeat. That is why defection carries such disproportionate social weight. The thinker who questions the Negative World framework or who begins softening cultural critique to maintain elite access when his circle holds firm is not merely making a stylistic adjustment. He is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the terror that faithful witness was built to contain.
The field has a status hierarchy that the essay’s framework of hardliners versus pragmatists does not fully capture. There are at least four overlapping layers. The theologian or scholar with institutional pedigree, R.R. Reno at First Things, Carl Trueman at Grove City College, Matthew Levering at Mundelein Seminary, occupies the highest doctrinal ground. The editor or impresario who controls access to journals, conferences, and donor rooms operates the filtering mechanism. The public-facing essayist or podcaster, Rod Dreher in his various incarnations, Aaron Renn through The Masculinist and his Substack, converts ideas into audience and reach. And the patron or donor class, often lacking intellectual distinction but quietly deciding what kind of distinction gets scaled, funds the whole enterprise without appearing in the bylines. These are not the same role, and the most interesting fights happen between them. The scholar thinks he owns doctrinal seriousness. The editor thinks he owns discernment. The podcaster thinks he owns relevance and reach. The donor thinks he owns sustainability. Once you make those layers visible, the jurisdictional war becomes more precise than a simple binary between hardliners and pragmatists.
What donor money purchases in this world is not obedience but tone. It selects against the reckless, the crude, the openly demotic, and the socially radioactive. The resulting field can speak with great intensity about civilizational decline while remaining bounded by elite expectations of seriousness. Bounded radicalism is the product: people can be severe in diagnosing post-Christianity and institutional capture, but usually in a register that still reassures funders they are serious, responsible, and strategically useful. This narrows the acceptable range of expression. It privileges cultural diagnosis over rupture, critique over reckless action, and high-status lament over populist volatility. Money does not merely sustain the network. It selects for a certain style of seriousness, and that selection process is one of the hidden mechanisms by which atmospheric authority gets reproduced.
A lot of what presents as theological or strategic disagreement in this world is actually a genre fight. Is the ideal form of serious Christian thought the long essay, the learned book, the policy memo, the Substack post, the conference keynote, or the podcast monologue? Different media reward different kinds of authority. The older journal-and-seminary world privileges patience, references, pedigree, and tone. The newer podcast-and-Substack world privileges presence, cadence, confidence, and audience intimacy. Aaron Renn’s newsletter and Dreher’s American Conservative columns reach audiences that First Things cannot, using a register that First Things would not print. That is a jurisdictional dispute disguised as a stylistic preference. The digital logic of the summons accelerates the shift toward the prophetic mode. An essay on institutional loyalty has less reach than a map of the Negative World. Platforms reward distinct and aggressive claims of fidelity. Thinkers who prefer nuance find themselves pulled toward harder stances to maintain visibility, not because they have become more radical but because the technology selects for prophetic intensity.
Three master domains organize the formal struggle over institutional authority. The first is moral authority over what counts as serious cultural diagnosis. The second is the organizational structure of journals like First Things and Comment, think tanks like the Witherspoon Institute and the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, seminaries like Westminster and Southern Baptist Theological, donor networks, and conference circuits. The third is the everyday network through which intellectual distinction gets reproduced in essays, podcasts, panel discussions, and the mundane problem of navigating elite academia and media without becoming culturally porous.
The hardline-traditional coalition, represented most clearly by Dreher and Renn, uses the language of prophetic clarity and separation from accommodationist compromise. Rod Dreher’s Benedict Option called for strategic withdrawal into thick communities of practice before the post-Christian order fully consolidates. Aaron Renn’s Negative World framework maps the shift from a cultural environment where Christianity was socially prestigious to one where it is actively penalized, arguing that strategies suited to the Positive or Neutral World are not merely ineffective but actively harmful in the current environment. Both men are drawing on the same Beckerian logic: the hero system must maintain its integrity against accommodations that slowly evacuate it. Every softening of the summons is experienced as a structural threat, not merely a tactical disagreement.
Against this stands a pragmatic-engagement coalition, represented by voices at First Things who resist wholesale cultural withdrawal, by institutionally embedded theologians who argue that faithful presence requires remaining in elite institutions rather than exiting them, and by public intellectuals who maintain that the Benedict Option mistakes a particular cultural moment for a permanent condition. Their claim is not that orthodoxy should be abandoned. It is that Christian intellectual life cannot be governed as though Christendom can be reconstructed through strategic retreat. Once one side defines the role as sustaining maximal prophetic rigor, engagement begins to look like compromise. Once the other side defines the role as making faithful witness sustainable under current conditions, maximal diagnosis begins to look like aggrieved performance masquerading as courage.
It matters that the field draws differently on converts, cradle believers, and institutional refugees, because those groups occupy it with different emotional energies. Converts like Dreher often bring zeal and a taste for sharp boundary language, because they have chosen the tradition self-consciously and need the choice to remain legible as a choice. Cradle believers may have deeper embeddedness and more instinct for survivable compromise, having never experienced the tradition as something that required defense against their previous selves. Institutional refugees, people burned by evangelical institutions, by the collapse of mainline Protestantism, or by the culture of elite academia, often bring a special appetite for diagnosis because diagnosis retrospectively explains their wounds and converts pain into prophetic insight.
It also matters whether Christianity is being defended primarily as truth, as moral order, as cultural inheritance, or as a surviving source of elite seriousness in a decayed public square. Those are not identical projects, and the alliances that form around them often look inconsistent to outsiders precisely because they are. Someone can sound orthodox while really functioning as a civilizational conservative for whom the doctrinal specifics matter less than the social order Christianity once sustained. Someone else can sound culturally strategic while being far more doctrinally anchored than his tactical language suggests. The Girardian point applies here too: figures in this world watch each other to determine what serious Christian thought looks like, and what they find in the other’s position is often a reflection of their own unacknowledged desires.
The contrast with Orthodox Jewish intellectual life is illuminating and runs deeper than a simple comparison of institutional structures. In the Orthodox world, as Tavory’s research shows and as the broader tradition confirms, the intellectual is a constrained internal functionary. His ideas serve halacha and communal continuity. He is accountable to a living community whose practices he cannot reshape through brilliant diagnosis alone. His hero system has rails. Elite Christian intellectuals in America operate without equivalent rails. They must build the track while the train moves. This produces the particular emotional style of the field: aggrieved superiority, brilliant diagnosis accompanied by institutional impotence, the recurrent experience of seeing clearly while changing little. This is not a personality flaw. It is a structural product of operating in adversarial mode, dependent on institutions one critiques, needing recognition from a cultural order one has diagnosed as hostile, and producing commentary rather than governance.
The resentment this generates is real and worth analyzing rather than dismissing. Elite Christian intellectuals are often asked to be simultaneously oppositional and respectable, marginal and influential, prophetic and fundable, orthodox and cosmopolitan. That is an unstable role almost guaranteed to produce a recurrent emotional style of wounded clarity. They must believe they see more accurately than the surrounding order, yet they also want recognition from parts of that order. The contradiction does not resolve. It generates the tone of the field as surely as the theology does.
Stephen Turner‘s critique of essentialism explains why the internal fight never resolves. There is no single stable essence of authentic Christian intellectual life being transmitted intact. There are competing reconstructions. The Dreher coalition reconstructs the role around prophetic diagnosis and strategic withdrawal. The engagement coalition reconstructs it around institutional loyalty and sustainable faithful presence. Both claim continuity with the Great Tradition. Both select from the same dense world of theology, history, and cultural analysis to support present positions. What gets transmitted is not a stable essence but a body of material from which each coalition selects the passages that authorize its current stance.
Across all three master domains, the same pattern holds. Traditionalists claim fidelity to uncompromising diagnosis of the Negative World. Pragmatists claim fidelity to sustainable Christian thought under actual cultural conditions. Organizational leaders claim the coordinating power needed to sustain a thick network of faithful output. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic Christian intellectual responsibility requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts.
The central unanswered question is whether this network can produce governors or only diagnosticians. Can it build and maintain durable institutions that shape schools, families, churches, law, philanthropy, local communities, and eventually political formation? Or is it primarily an ecosystem for diagnosing defeat with increasing sophistication, producing commentary that sharpens the analysis of decline without reversing it? That is where the jurisdictional wars become more than an intramural status game. They become a test of whether the summons can be translated into rule. The field has produced brilliant maps of the territory. What it has not yet produced is sustained control of the territory it maps. Whether that changes, and which coalition’s approach is most likely to change it, is the question the jurisdictional war has been arguing over for decades without resolution. The rest of American Christianity is now beginning to ask it too, with more urgency and less patience than the intellectuals who have been arguing it from conference halls and Substack dashboards.

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Putting A Number On The DEI Consulting Industry

To rank DEI consulting among American industries, a distinction must be made between pure advisory fees and the total organizational spending used to maintain the network. If using the broad $106 billion figure—which includes internal staff, enterprise software, and mandatory training—the sector functions as a massive administrative layer. If isolating pure external consulting fees, it remains a specialized niche.

When placed against other major U.S. consulting sectors for 2026, a $106 billion DEI industry reveals a significant shift in corporate resource allocation. The broad management consulting market in the U.S. is valued at approximately $412 billion. At $106 billion, DEI-related spending would represent roughly 26% of the entire management consulting industry. This makes it a primary sub-sector, trailing only generalist practices and digital transformation. In comparison to dedicated HR consulting, which sits at $39.4 billion, the DEI network is nearly 2.7 times larger. This highlights how the network has expanded far beyond its traditional home in human resources to become an independent institutional fixture.

Strategic consulting—the elite C-suite work performed by firms like McKinsey and BCG—is estimated between $60 billion and $85 billion in the U.S. market. A $106 billion DEI industry actually exceeds the entire domestic strategy consulting market. This suggests that the “social insurance” provided by DEI infrastructure is currently valued more highly by boards than traditional high-level growth or efficiency strategy.

The only sector that remains significantly larger is IT and Technology consulting, which exceeds $750 billion. While DEI is a heavyweight in administrative services, it represents only 14% to 20% of the revenue generated by the massive technical and digital transformation ecosystem.

The discrepancy between “pure consulting fees” and “total spending” explains where the actual authority resides. Pure advisory fees paid to firms like Deloitte or Korn Ferry are estimated in the low single-digit billions. This places DEI consulting as a minor sub-sector, comparable to niche areas like leadership coaching or specialized culture audits.

The inflation to $106 billion occurs because the network is embedded directly into the institutional skeleton. This figure includes internal DEI departments in the Fortune 500, enterprise-wide compliance software like Workday’s equity modules, and the legal costs of ESG reporting pushed by asset managers like BlackRock.

In this context, DEI does not rank as a mere consulting service. It ranks as a core corporate function, comparable in scale and necessity to legal compliance or risk management. The consultants are not the center of gravity; they are the vendors. The power sits within the HR and legal departments that manage these budgets and the asset managers who mandate the metrics.

The industry feels larger than its revenue because it is not just selling advice. It is selling the data points and certifications required for an institution to remain “investable” and “compliant” in the eyes of the broader professional managerial guild.

In 2026, the power of the DEI network has shifted from public moralizing to a quiet, standardized administrative logic. This logic is enforced by three distinct groups: the asset managers who mandate the metrics, the legal departments that translate those mandates into “risk,” and the HR executives who manage the budgets.

The “Big Three”—BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street—operate as the ultimate gatekeepers. While they have recently softened their public language to focus on “financial materiality” or “human capital management,” their influence remains structural. For example, BlackRock’s 2026 Investment Stewardship Guidelines have replaced the word “diversity” with “various experiences, perspectives, and skillsets.” However, they still explicitly monitor if an S&P 500 board is a “sustained outlier” relative to market demographics. This creates a powerful incentive for a CEO: if their company falls behind in these metrics, they risk “not support” votes for their board members from the very firms that own 20% of their stock. The mandate is no longer about social justice; it is about maintaining “long-term financial value” through demographic reporting.

If asset managers provide the incentive, the General Counsel’s office provides the mechanism. In early 2026, the EEOC, led by Chair Andrea Lucas, sent formal letters to the General Counsel of every Fortune 500 company. These letters warned that “identity-restricted” programs—like women-only retreats or minority-exclusive internships—are now prime targets for federal investigation. Legal departments respond by “de-risking” the DEI network. They do not eliminate the programs; they rebrand them. At companies like Nike and Coca-Cola, lawyers have spent 2025 and 2026 auditing every public-facing commitment. When the EEOC subpoenaed Nike in February 2026, it wasn’t based on a specific victim, but on the company’s own “diversity targets” published on its website. The legal department’s job is now to ensure that the DEI network operates under the guise of “neutral, merit-based” language to provide a “statistical safe harbor” against lawsuits.

The day-to-day survival of the network depends on the HR and “Chief People” officers who control the internal flow of capital. Kelly Rooney (SVP & Chief HR Officer at Waste Management) and Alethia Jackson (SVP & Chief DEI Officer at Walgreens) manage budgets that average $1.5 million for mid-sized Fortune 1000 firms, though large-scale implementations at companies like Deloitte have seen internal spending exceed $1.4 billion on “diverse suppliers” and research.

A vivid anecdote of this power shift is the “DEI Office” vs. “HR Team” budget gap. When a DEI program is managed by a standalone office with its own executive, the average budget is over $1.5 million. When it is folded back into general HR, the budget often drops to $239,000. HR leaders who want to maintain their departmental power have a massive financial incentive to keep the DEI network as a distinct, high-budget office.

In January 2026, a major telecommunications firm was targeted by the DOJ for a “False Claims Act” investigation. The theory was that the firm had certified itself as a “non-discriminatory federal contractor” while its internal HR software, Workday, was specifically configured to flag “diverse slates” for every open role. The legal department had to spend $200,000 on a “bias audit” from a firm like ORCAA just to prove that their digital architecture didn’t technically violate the law. This is the new reality of the DEI network: a multi-million dollar loop where corporations pay consultants to build a system, lawyers to rebrand it, and auditors to certify its survival.

The Department of Justice (DOJ) has moved away from traditional civil rights litigation to a more aggressive financial strategy. In 2026, the primary legal weapon against the DEI network is the False Claims Act (FCA). This shift transforms a policy dispute into a fraud investigation, carrying the threat of “treble damages”—three times the actual financial loss to the government.

According to reports by The Wall Street Journal and subsequent legal analysis by firms like Alston & Bird and Mayer Brown, the DOJ has issued civil investigative demands (subpoenas) to multiple large contractors, including Verizon, seeking documentation on their hiring and promotion practices.

At the Federal Bar Association’s 2026 Qui Tam Conference (February 19, 2026), Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brenna Jenny explicitly identified “diverse slate policies” and the “creation and tracking of demographic goals” as high-priority fact patterns for DOJ investigations. The theory is that these automated internal processes create “illegal preferences” that contradict a firm’s certification as a non-discriminatory contractor.

The following legal theories are dismantling these programs:

1. The “Implied Certification” Theory

Under this theory, when a federal contractor submits an invoice for payment, they are “impliedly certifying” that they are in compliance with all material terms of their contract, including federal anti-discrimination laws. The DOJ argues that if a contractor maintains a “diverse slate” mandate or a race-restricted mentoring program, they are in violation of Title VII. Because they continue to accept federal funds while in this state of “illegal discrimination,” every invoice they submit is technically a fraudulent claim. This allows the government to claw back millions in past payments. In May 2025, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche launched the Civil Rights Fraud Initiative, which specifically uses the FCA to target recipients of federal funds who “knowingly engage in racist preferences.”

2. Materiality of Compliance

For an FCA claim to succeed, the “fraud” must be “material” to the government’s decision to pay. Following Executive Order 14173 in January 2025, federal agencies began inserting specific clauses into contracts stating that “compliance in all respects with federal anti-discrimination laws is material to the government’s payment.” This removes the legal defense that DEI programs are “ancillary” to the actual work (like building a jet or providing software). By contractually defining DEI-related violations as “material,” the DOJ has cleared a path for immediate litigation.

3. Discrimination as “Civil Fraud”

The DOJ is now treating the internal metrics of the professional managerial class as evidence of intent to defraud.

Internal guidance from the DOJ focuses on programs that “pressure supervisors to make hiring decisions based on race or sex.” If a company’s HR software, such as Workday, is found to have “hard-coded” demographic targets that influence bonuses, the DOJ views this as systemic fraud. Because the FCA includes qui tam provisions, internal employees who report these “illegal” programs can receive up to 30% of the total recovery. This creates a powerful financial incentive for “insiders” to leak internal DEI budgets and strategy memos to federal investigators.

4. Expansion to “Supplier Diversity”

The DOJ and groups like the American Alliance for Equal Rights (AAER) are also targeting the “contracts” made with third-party vendors. In March 2026, the AAER filed a federal lawsuit against the National Minority Supplier Development Council, arguing that race-based certification programs violate 42 U.S.C. § 1981, which prohibits racial discrimination in the making and enforcement of contracts. This targets the very certifications that corporations use to prove their “inclusive” status to asset managers.

The shift is forcing a massive “de-risking” exercise across the Fortune 500. Companies like Google and Verizon have reportedly received Civil Investigative Demands (CIDs) from the DOJ, requiring them to produce every document related to their workplace diversity programs since 2018. The cost of complying with these demands is often so high—exceeding $200,000 for the initial audit alone—that many firms are choosing to dismantle their DEI offices rather than risk a multi-year fraud investigation.

While the specific $200,000 figure for an audit is often cited as a benchmark for enterprise-level algorithmic reviews, the DOJ’s new “Civil Rights Fraud” posture essentially mandates these costs. To avoid the “treble damages” of a False Claims Act lawsuit, firms are hiring third-party auditors (like ORCAA or SolasAI) to provide “statistical safe harbor” reports that certify their digital hiring architecture does not technically violate the law.

The legal environment in 2026 has created the “multi-million dollar loop”:

Phase 1: Corporations pay software vendors like Workday for “talent intelligence” modules that include diverse slate flagging.

Phase 2: The DOJ launches an investigation based on the “implied certification” that these programs are discriminatory.

Phase 3: The corporation’s Legal Department hires a firm like ORCAA to perform a costly “bias audit” to prove the algorithm is fair.

Phase 4: The firm uses that audit to settle or dismiss the fraud claim, often keeping the underlying system in place but under a different administrative label.

The “multi-million dollar loop” of 2026 is a sophisticated cycle of administrative self-preservation. It is no longer about the morality of DEI; it is about the actuarial management of institutional risk. This loop ensures that while the rhetoric changes, the professional managerial class—and the vendors that support them—remain essential to the organization’s survival.

Phase 1: The Automated Mandate

Corporations integrate “talent intelligence” modules from vendors like Workday or Eightfold AI. These systems are designed to automate compliance with the “diverse slate” requirements often mandated by the Big Three asset managers (BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street).The Number: A typical enterprise license for these modules costs between $7 and $10 per employee per month. For a firm like Verizon, this represents an annual “subscription to symmetry” in the millions of dollars.The Anecdote: In early 2026, many firms found themselves in a “technological trap.” They had spent years hard-coding demographic targets into their hiring algorithms to satisfy ESG investors, only to have those same digital footprints become the primary evidence for federal fraud investigators.

Phase 2: The “Implied Certification” Trap

The Department of Justice (DOJ), under its Civil Rights Fraud Initiative (launched May 2025), uses the False Claims Act to target these firms. The legal theory is that by certifying themselves as “non-discriminatory federal contractors” while using software that flags candidates based on race or sex, the firms have committed civil fraud against the government.

In January 2026, the DOJ issued Civil Investigative Demands (CIDs) to Verizon and Alphabet (Google). The investigation focuses on whether their automated “diverse slate” policies constitute a knowing violation of federal anti-discrimination laws. Under the False Claims Act, the DOJ can seek treble damages—three times the value of the government contracts—which can reach into the billions.

Phase 3: The Defensive Audit

To survive the investigation, the corporation’s Legal Department hires a “third-party algorithmic auditor” like ORCAA or SolasAI. This is the most expensive part of the loop. A comprehensive “bias audit” for a Fortune 500 company in 2026 typically starts at $200,000 but can exceed $500,000 if it requires “formal verification”—a mathematical proof that the algorithm’s invariants cannot be broken. These auditors perform what is essentially a “digital exorcism.” They scan the millions of lines of code in the firm’s HR software to find “proxies” for protected traits (like zip codes or graduation years) and “re-weight” them to ensure the output satisfies both the DOJ’s “merit” requirements and the asset manager’s “diversity” expectations.

Phase 4: The Administrative Pivot

The firm uses the audit as leverage to settle the DOJ’s claims. The settlement rarely requires the firm to dismantle the system. Instead, the firm “rebrands” the entire DEI infrastructure. In 2026, “Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion” is being replaced by “Human Capital Optimization” or “Skills-Based Belonging.”

The software (Phase 1) remains in place, but with a new “compliance-certified” label from the auditor (Phase 3). The HR executives and lawyers who managed the crisis are rewarded for their “risk mitigation” skills, and the cycle begins anew as the next set of ESG or federal metrics is released. This loop represents the final stage of institutionalization: a system that creates its own crises and then charges itself to solve them.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Christian Media Authority

Christian TV and media preachers do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking spiritual, prosperity, and revival languages that frame their claims as fidelity to biblical abundance, loyalty to soul-winning, or responsibility for sustaining anointed media ministry inside a hyper-competitive, post-pandemic digital environment. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, television networks, streaming platforms, book deals, conference circuits, donation funnels, and the invisible networks of seed-faith appeals and partner lists. The key language is not only theological. It is also practical and social. Being summoned. Preaching the uncompromised Word. Releasing faith for breakthrough. Walking in divine favor. Touching the nations. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of media ministry the industry can sustain, how demanding the anointing should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.
Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The preacher who stays up until 3 a.m. editing the next broadcast is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. She is trying to maintain a form of anointed media life she genuinely values. The core values, faith, prosperity, healing, soul-winning, carry real internal logic and authority for those inside. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions in Christian TV and media preaching. It is not the whole picture.
Bryan Wilson’s analysis in Religion in Secular Society supplies the structural foundation that explains why this industry exists at the scale it does. Wilson argued that Americans secularized not by leaving their churches but by reducing the specifically religious content within them, that in America religion remained institutionally central but ideationally increasingly bankrupt, and that church allegiance in a society largely uninformed by distinctive religious values became a matter of social respectability rather than theological conviction. The Christian TV and media preaching industry is, among other things, a response to exactly this hollowing out. Where mainline denominations accommodated the secular order and lost their doctrinal density, the televangelism tradition doubled down on miracle claims, prosperity theology, and the full supernatural package. It offered the specifically religious content that Wilson’s secularizing mainstream was surrendering. The partner who sends a seed-faith offering is not looking for social respectability. She is looking for what Wilson called the distinctively religious, and she has found an industry organized to supply it at scale.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings construct hero systems to manage existential anxiety. Christian TV and media preaching is a hero system of unusual density operating within a broader cultural context that Wilson diagnosed as spiritually thin. To live as a serious media preacher is to participate in a tradition of reaching the masses with the gospel against secular media, cultural decline, and spiritual dryness. Every broadcast where miracles are declared, every partner conference where breakthrough is released, every refusal to chase the latest viral social-media gimmick: these are acts of fidelity to a post-1950s heritage of televangelism that has sustained itself through conditions far worse than the current era of cord-cutting and algorithmic competition. That is a hero system. It promises that an individual life, lived seriously within this framework, participates in something that neither death nor declining viewership can fully dissolve.
What Wilson also noticed, writing about the clergy in 1966, was that as science and secular expertise colonized domain after domain, the clergy were left as distinctly more amateur practitioners whose special expertise became increasingly less relevant to a pragmatic society. The televangelism response to this demotion was to double down on the one domain secular expertise cannot colonize: the miraculous. Joel Osteen’s Lakewood Church reaches millions weekly not because he offers better psychology than a licensed therapist or better financial advice than a certified planner. He offers what neither can claim to provide, divine favor, supernatural breakthrough, and participation in a covenant relationship with God. Kenneth Copeland and Creflo Dollar make the same jurisdictional claim in a more explicit register. Benny Hinn’s miracle crusades stake out the territory where secular medicine explicitly stops. The prosperity gospel is not a theological error grafted onto Christianity from outside. It is a strategic response to Wilson’s structural problem: how does a religious institution maintain jurisdictional authority in a society that has outsourced most of what clergy once did to secular professionals?
Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons explains how the hero system sustains itself across millions of viewers who never meet the preacher in person. The Christian TV and media preaching business is not simply a place where preachers happen to broadcast near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as covenant partners, faith-filled believers, and kingdom influencers through broadcasts, partner calls, prayer lines, live crusades, and the continuous stream of content that interrupts private drift before it can settle into doubt or disengagement. Every on-air appeal, every urgent letter about a financial breakthrough window, every invitation to become a monthly partner: these are micro-summons that maintain the viewer’s identification with the hero system. The industry has industrialized the summons mechanism more completely than any other domain examined in this series, reaching not hundreds or thousands but tens of millions simultaneously.
Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely commercial. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work at industrial scale. That is why defection carries such disproportionate social weight inside the community. The preacher who questions a colleague’s seed-faith appeal or who begins softening prosperity language to appease critics when his circle holds firm is not merely making a theological adjustment. He is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the terror that true gospel impact was built to contain.
As of 2026, the summons mechanism is being scaled through artificial intelligence in ways that change the analysis considerably. AI systems now analyze donor and viewer data to create personalized prayer guides and customized discipleship pathways, making the individual feel seen by the ministry without requiring the ministry to see her. AI categorizes prayer requests and generates initial pastoral responses, maintaining high-frequency contact across millions of relationships that no human staff could sustain. This is the summons automated. Tavory described repeated hailing by a human community. The Christian media industry is discovering that the hailing can be delegated to a system that never sleeps, never forgets a donor anniversary, and never loses track of which emotional register worked best on which viewer last quarter. The hero system does not change. The infrastructure maintaining it becomes algorithmic.
Three master domains organize the struggle over institutional authority. The first is moral authority over what counts as serious anointed broadcasting. The second is the organizational structure of television networks, streaming platforms, partner programs, conference circuits, and donation systems. The third is the everyday network through which media-preacher distinction gets reproduced in on-air appeals, partner calls, book launches, and the mundane problem of navigating ratings and donor retention without becoming financially or spiritually porous. Where once the second domain was controlled by access to TBN, CBN, and the major Christian satellite networks, algorithmic authority has largely replaced institutional authority as the primary gatekeeper. A preacher can maintain a massive audience and a functioning donation pipeline with no network relationship at all, provided the algorithm rewards her content. This shifts power from network executives to content performance metrics, which in turn rewards emotional intensity, shared identity, and the kind of controversy that drives engagement regardless of theological consistency.
The hardline-traditional coalition, represented most clearly by Kenneth Copeland, Benny Hinn, and Creflo Dollar, uses the language of full anointing, miracle density, and separation from seeker-sensitive dilution or social gospel compromise. Its claim is that the industry’s value lies precisely in its capacity to sustain demanding supernatural claims against the pressures of declining traditional TV and cultural accommodation. Every softening of the prosperity message is experienced as a threat to the structure through which the community manages its existential stakes.
Against this stands a pragmatic-engagement coalition, strongest among those navigating the post-2010s digital reality. Steven Furtick’s Elevation Church represents the clearest case: digital-first, high production value, enormous online reach, theologically adjacent to the traditional prosperity world but presented in a register that allows college-educated millennials to participate without the cognitive dissonance that Copeland’s explicit seed-faith apparatus produces. Joel Osteen occupies a similar position at greater scale. His message retains the prosperity framework’s emotional architecture, divine favor, breakthrough, abundance, while filing off the theological edges that attract regulatory scrutiny and cultural mockery. David Jeremiah and Joseph Prince represent different pragmatic positions, the former offering a more conventionally evangelical product with sophisticated media delivery, the latter building a global grace-theology brand that competes with prosperity orthodoxy on doctrinal grounds while matching it in production quality and streaming reach.
Each coalition has predictable failure modes. Traditionalism can calcify into what critics inside the evangelical world call name-it-and-claim-it theology that becomes increasingly difficult to defend when promised breakthroughs do not materialize, producing donor attrition and the kind of scandal that has periodically damaged the industry’s credibility since the Bakker and Swaggart collapses of the late 1980s. Pragmatism can slide into what Wilson predicted for American religion generally: institutional survival purchased at the cost of distinctive religious content, until the ministry becomes indistinguishable from a wellness brand with worship music.
The industry now faces an external competitive pressure that Wilson could not have anticipated but whose structure his framework helps explain. The WitchTok movement, with the hashtag surpassing 65 billion views by 2026 and an estimated 1.5 million practicing witches in the United States, represents a competing hero system using identical digital infrastructure. Wilson argued that denominational diversity promotes secularization by providing uncommitted people with a diversity of religious choice, in creating institutionalized expression of social differences, and in the very circumstance which, in extending choice, allows some to make no choice at all. The digital spiritual marketplace extends this logic to its limit. WitchTok offers what Christian media offers, a summons, a community, moral vocabulary, practices that interrupt private drift, and participation in something larger than oneself, but directed at populations that experience Christian institutional frameworks as exclusionary rather than welcoming. LGBTQ individuals, those drawn to feminist or nature-based spiritualities, and the growing demographic of what researchers call the spiritual but not religious find in the pagan digital movement a hero system calibrated to their particular anxieties and identities.
The Christian media response has been largely defensive and coalition-building. Apologetics platforms frame WitchTok as a spiritual risk to retain Gen Z within the Christian hero system. Reaction content engages the competition directly, which the algorithm rewards with visibility while locking both systems into a mutual amplification loop where each uses the other as a foil to strengthen its own coalition’s identity. This is Alliance Theory operating in real time across competing hero systems, each claiming to protect its audience from the existential danger the other represents.
Stephen Turner’s critique of essentialism explains why the internal fight never resolves. There is no single stable essence of authentic Christian media preaching being transmitted intact. There are competing reconstructions. The Copeland coalition reconstructs the business around classic televangelism and miracle density. The Furtick coalition reconstructs it around sustainable digital engagement and workable spiritual intensity under modern viewer conditions. Both claim continuity with the Great Commission. Both select from the same dense world of revival history, prosperity theology, and broadcast practice to support present positions.
Across all three master domains, the same pattern holds. Traditionalists claim fidelity to uncompromising supernatural standards. Pragmatists claim fidelity to sustainable anointed excellence under actual viewer conditions. Organizational leaders claim the coordinating power needed to sustain a thick network of high-impact output. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic gospel broadcasting requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts.
The broader religious organizations market is estimated at roughly $409 billion in 2026. The Christian streaming segment alone sits at approximately $575 million with projections toward $1.5 billion by 2033. Within this economy, the media preachers function as Wilson’s secularization thesis in commercial form: institutions competing for the religious attention of a population that has more spiritual options than at any point in history, each claiming to offer the real thing while adapting to market conditions that continuously reshape what the real thing needs to look like in order to survive. The jurisdictional war is a struggle over who gets to define what being summoned really requires. Beneath that, it is the same struggle Wilson identified in 1966: which religious institutions can maintain genuine distinctiveness under conditions that systematically reward accommodation, and which will purchase survival at the cost of the very thing that made them worth surviving.
Fifty nine years on, Bryan Wilson’s book Religion in Secular Society holds up poorly as a predictive framework and only partially as a descriptive one.
For example, Seventh-day Adventists have grown from roughly two million members in 1966 to over twenty million today, with the bulk of that growth in the global south but also in the United States. Sydney Anglicans under successive Moore College-shaped leaderships have become more theologically conservative, not less, and have exported that conservatism through organizations like GAFCON to reshape global Anglican identity. Orthodox Judaism, whether in Pico-Robertson, Bondi, Melbourne, or Brooklyn, has not shrunk. It has expanded, institutionalized, and in many communities grown wealthier and more self-confident. Chabad alone operates in over one hundred countries.
Wilson might argue that these are rearguard actions, that growth in numbers does not equal social significance, and that modern states have stripped religious institutions of their former power over law, medicine, education, and civic identity. That part of his argument has more traction. Courts in Australia, America, and England no longer defer to religious authority on questions of family law, bioethics, or civil rights. The Sydney Anglicans can control their own pulpits but not the Marriage Act.
Still, the limitation of Wilson’s framework for my power series topics is that he treated secularization as structural and more or less inevitable. He had little room for the possibility that religious communities might constitute themselves as deliberate countercultures with durable institutions, tight boundaries, high fertility, and sophisticated internal economies. Satmar in Brooklyn or Kiryas Joel is not a relic. It is a design. Sydney Anglicanism under Philip Jensen was also a design, a conscious effort to strip away liberal accommodations and build a distinctive community that could reproduce itself.
What Wilson also missed, or underweighted, was the role religious identity plays in status competition and boundary maintenance among educated elites. Orthodox Judaism is not just theology. It is also a community that provides schooling, matchmaking, professional networks, and a clear answer to the question of who you are. That is enormously attractive in a fragmented society, and it has nothing to do with the secularization curve Wilson drew.
For thinking about Adventists, Wilson offers a useful starting point for understanding why Adventism’s early apocalyptic edge softened as the church institutionalized, a process he analyzed well. But it does not help much with why Adventism kept growing after that softening, or why it differs so sharply across Jamaica, Kenya, and California.
The scholar who updates Wilson most usefully is probably Christian Smith, whose work on American evangelicalism argued that religious groups thrive through tension with their surrounding culture rather than accommodation to it. Rodney Stark’s work on religious economies, though it has critics, also does more for understanding Adventist or Orthodox growth than Wilson’s framework. Grace Davie’s concept of vicarious religion helps explain the British and Australian patterns where formal membership declines but diffuse religious identity persists.
Wilson remains worth reading as intellectual history. He captured something real about the mid-century moment when the mainline Protestant establishment was losing its grip on Anglo-American public life. But for a power series examining communities that have built genuine institutional density in 2026, his secularization thesis functions more as a foil than a guide.
Why Religion Went Obsolete: The Demise of Traditional Faith in America by Christian Smith (Oxford University Press, 2025). Smith argues that traditional institutional religion in America has not merely declined but become obsolete, particularly among Americans under fifty. Obsolete does not mean destroyed. He uses the typewriter analogy: still functional, but superseded by something people find more useful. The sacred impulse has not died; it has migrated.
That distinction matters enormously for my power series, and it cuts in two directions at once.
On one hand, Smith’s central empirical challenge to secularization theory is that traditional religion’s losses have not produced sheer secularism. The sacred, spiritual, magical, enchanted, and supernatural remain alive. They have simply relocated to new forms and new institutions. He calls this re-enchantment culture, and he has a follow-up book coming this fall on what he calls “occulture,” the new face of American spirituality. That is directly useful for anyone thinking about New Age content in my series, about the spiritual-but-not-religious category, or about why something like the Esalen Institute keeps generating cultural influence decades after it should have faded.
On the other hand, the book has a significant limitation for my specific communities. Smith’s obsolescence thesis applies most forcefully to Americans under fifty, which he treats as nearly all of America in the not-distant future. But the communities I track most closely, Sydney Anglicans, Chabad, Satmar, Orthodox Jews in Pico-Robertson or Bondi, Seventh-day Adventists, do not behave like his data. They are exactly the groups his framework struggles to accommodate.
Smith’s account of contributing factors includes the deinstitutionalization of marriage and family, the relegation of religion to the role of moral custodian, popular postmodernism, neoliberal economic demands, multiculturalism, and the internet. These forces are real, and they have hit mainline Protestantism and liberal Catholicism hard. But Orthodox Judaism and confessional Anglicanism have largely resisted them, partly because they never accepted the reduction of religion to morality that Smith identifies as fatal. A Satmar rebbe or a Moore College Anglican does not pitch religion as a way to be a nicer person. They pitch it as revelation, covenant, and obligation. Smith’s own earlier work on why religious groups thrive through tension with their surrounding culture predicted this, which makes it slightly odd that the new book does not do more with it.
Smith points to 1991 as an epoch-altering year, the end of the Cold War, the acceleration of globalization, the emergence of Nirvana and Seinfeld, and the beginning of a lasting shift in the share of Americans identifying as non-religious. That periodization is interesting for my series because 1991 is also roughly when Chabad began its most aggressive international expansion after the Rebbe’s final years, and when Sydney Anglicanism under Philip Jensen was consolidating its theological identity. The same cultural moment that broke the back of liberal Protestantism seems to have sharpened the resolve of high-boundary communities.
Smith also argues that religious institutions largely abandoned ritual resources for grappling with suffering, instead reinforcing social morals and emphasizing being nice or uplifting, and that this failed younger generations living in a world that feels chaotic and hard. That observation helps explain Adventism’s persistent appeal to working-class communities in the global south and among immigrant populations in America. Adventism, whatever its institutional accommodations, still carries a strong eschatological edge. The world is broken and Jesus is coming. That is not a message about being nice.
Where the book adds most to my power series is probably in the Professional Managerial Class threads and the Elite Distinction topics. Smith explores how the “spiritual but not religious” identity has become a significant category, with somewhere between one in four and one in three American adults claiming it, and he examines a publishing genre he calls Good Without God. That genre is a PMC phenomenon. It is the cultural product of educated Americans who want the status signals of moral seriousness without the submission that traditional religion requires. My DEI corporate threads, my elite humanitarian prestige content, and my analysis of organizations like the ADL or the SPLC all connect to this. Those institutions function as secular replacements for the moral authority religious bodies once held, and Smith’s framework gives you a sharper vocabulary for naming that.
The book will not tell you much about the communities I cover most closely, but it will sharpen your sense of what those communities are defined against.

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Religion in Secular Society

Bryan Wilson’s Religion in Secular Society, originally published in 1966 and reissued with Steve Bruce’s commentary in 2016, notes that when science developed as a specialized profession and gained social prestige through demonstrable practical results, the clergyman was left as what Wilson calls a distinctly more amateur practitioner. His special expertise, knowledge of theology and liturgy and the license to perform sacramental acts, became increasingly less relevant to a pragmatic society. The prestige of scientific procedures was such that it affected theology itself, pulling it toward the canons of objectivity, neutrality, and empiricism. Clergy who had once been the educated class, the people who knew things, found themselves outflanked in every domain of knowledge they had previously owned. Psychology, sociology, pastoral counseling, social work: each carved off a piece of what the clergy once did and professionalized it under secular auspices. Even in their pastoral functions, Wilson writes, the clergy may be said to have become amiable amateurs.
This is the structural condition that produces rabbi whisperer Michele Lowe. When the clergyman loses specialist authority across domain after domain, what remains is the performance of the role itself. The sermon is one of the last things the clergy still own exclusively. No sociologist can give it. No therapist can give it. It belongs to the pulpit. But Wilson’s analysis predicts exactly what then happens: the one remaining jurisdiction gets subjected to the same professionalization pressure that colonized every other domain. The sermon coach is the secular expert arriving to professionalize the last redoubt.
Wilson’s argument, which Bruce summarizes as Americans secularizing by reducing the specifically religious in their churches rather than by leaving them, is the precise condition that makes sermon coaching a growth industry in America rather than a marginal curiosity. In England, secularization produced empty churches. In America, it produced full churches with increasingly thin religious content, institutions that maintained attendance by becoming more socially useful, emotionally resonant, and culturally fluent. Wilson writes that in America religion remains institutionally central but ideationally much more bankrupt, and that church allegiance in a relatively non-religious society functions as social respectability. If your congregation comes for social respectability and communal belonging rather than theological formation, your sermon must compete on different terms. It must hold attention. It must be emotionally resonant. It must send people away talking. That is the demand that makes Lowe’s $400-an-hour sessions rational for the rabbis hiring her.
Wilson also has a passage that connects directly to the defense mechanisms the clergy-inspiration industry represents. He writes that clergy who cannot fill the churches seek to keep their institutions alive through other means, including the burgeoning of theological and quasi-theological academic disciplines, pastoral work, ritual elaboration, and what he calls the new responses and defense mechanisms mounted for professional survival. The clergy-inspiration industry is exactly such a defense mechanism, institutionalized and commercialized. It converts the anxiety of professional irrelevance into a coaching product.
The professionalization of the sermon is not a recent response to social media and algorithm-driven attention. It is the latest iteration of a century-long pattern in which the clergy, stripped of domain after domain, improvise new forms of expertise to justify their professional standing. Lowe is not introducing something foreign to the rabbinate. She is accelerating something that Wilson described the structural conditions for in 1966.

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NYT: The Rabbi Whisperer: A Playwright Helps Sermon Writers Find Their Voice

Sarah Maslin Nir writes in the New York Times on Sep. 14, 2023:

Michele Lowe, a former advertising executive, coaches religious leaders on how to write sermons with a little “zetz.” This is her peak season.

Football players have the Super Bowl. Actors have the Oscars. For rabbis, it’s Rosh Hashana.

The Jewish New Year is a time of reflection and celebration. But for clergy, who preach to pews swelled with once-a-year attendees, it is a high-pressure moment: All eyes are on them to come up with the pitch-perfect sermon that will keep congregants inspired, engaged — and awake.

That is why rabbis from New York, Texas and beyond have been known to place a call for an unlikely source of backup: a former advertising executive from the Bronx.

Call her the Rabbi Whisperer. Over the past eight years, Michele Lowe has emerged as a resource for dozens of rabbis, becoming — to her surprise — something like a college-essay coach for the rabbinate. Via word of mouth, her contact information has been passed shul to shul each year by clergymen and women struggling with fine-tuning a phrase, delivering a punchline or solving a bad case of rabbis’ block.

“I call myself the ‘Jew in the pew,’” Ms. Lowe said in a recent interview during a break between clients. “I come and say, ‘I am here, and what do you want me to be thinking about for the next 12 months?’”

This year is one of her busiest: She is editing 33 sermons intended for Rosh Hashana, which begins Friday at sundown, and Yom Kippur, she said. “My job is to help these rabbis find their voice.”

In this New York Times profile, Michele Lowe emerges as an improbable but increasingly indispensable figure in contemporary Jewish clergy life. A former advertising executive who once sold Miracle Whip and cat litter with memorable flair before leaving Madison Avenue for Broadway, Lowe now coaches rabbis on crafting High Holiday sermons, the marquee performances of the Jewish calendar. What looks on the surface like a quirky side hustle in sermon polishing is, on closer examination, a textbook case of quiet professional evolution. Without fanfare or formal decree, rabbinic authority is being upgraded. Traditional expectations of textual mastery and halakhic fidelity are being layered with competencies borrowed from advertising and theater: narrative drama, emotional pacing, audience capture, and stage presence. The language that makes this shift palatable, finding their voice, a little zetz, making it personal, does the legitimating work so softly that the transformation itself remains unnamed.
Lowe’s trajectory supplies the perfect metaphor for what she is doing to the profession. The same critical eye trained on consumer attention and theatrical timing now turns to the pulpit. Rabbis contact her via word of mouth, shul to shul, because the High Holidays demand something the seminary curriculum rarely supplies: sermons that can hold a thousand once-a-year attendees who will dissect the message over brisket for the next twelve months. Rosh Hashanah is the rabbinate’s Super Bowl. Failure is not theological but reputational. Attendance outside the holidays can dwindle. Peers notice. Congregants talk.
The coaching itself is imported wholesale from commercial craft. Lowe instructs clients to write three different openings in three different tones, then choose the strongest. She pushes them to insert personal anecdote where scripture once stood alone. She tells a nervous young rabbi to wear a ponytail and plant her feet. She advises another to tape his yarmulke with fashion tape so he stops fidgeting during the service. For Rabbi Mara Nathan of Temple Beth-El in San Antonio, Lowe helped fuse the 2023 blockbuster Barbie with the teachings of Hillel the Elder into a sermon on embracing imperfection. The result is a hybrid product: part ancient theology, part pop-culture artifact designed for a culturally literate audience whose attention is competed for by every screen and algorithm they carry in their pockets.
None of this is framed as a challenge to tradition. That is precisely why it works. The moral vocabulary is gentle, almost therapeutic. Rabbis are not being retooled. They are finding their voice. They are not learning marketing. They are adding sparkle. They are not optimizing for retention. They are delivering a little zetz. These phrases do not threaten the core identity of the rabbi as transmitter of Torah. They reframe expanded skill sets as deeper authenticity. Authority is no longer indexed solely by fidelity to text or halacha. It now includes performance competence and emotional resonance. The rabbi remains the rabbi, but the job description has quietly lengthened, and the new requirements arrived without anyone voting on them.
Institutional enforcement requires no central mandate. Diffusion is informal and relentless. High-stakes moments create urgency. Audience feedback loops, sermons hotly discussed at holiday tables all year, turn every service into a referendum on the rabbi’s effectiveness. Status anxiety does the rest. Rabbis fear being labeled boring, out of touch, or failing to connect. Some of Lowe’s clients ask her to remain confidential, worried that needing a coach signals weakness. Yet once a few respected figures adopt the practice, it becomes an expected competence. Rabbi Dara Frimmer of Temple Isaiah in Los Angeles initially hesitated to credit Lowe publicly. She eventually wrote at the bottom of her sermon: Thank you to Michele Lowe. The act of acknowledgment itself was, she realized, profoundly Jewish, turning to community in a time of need. The rationalization completed the legitimation.
What is being imported is not theology but technique. Narrative framing, emotional pacing, brand voice, audience capture: these are the tacit knowledges of the advertising and theater worlds migrating into a religious domain that previously drew its authority from an entirely different source. Lowe is not a theologian. She is a communications professional. No rabbinical assembly votes on sermon coaches. The practice spreads because it solves an immediate problem, holding attention in a media-saturated age, and then hardens into new expectation. The penalties for noncompliance are soft but brutal. Disengaged congregants. Stagnant attendance outside holidays. Peer judgment. The quiet label of uninspiring. No one is excommunicated. Influence simply erodes.
This migration of technique is not unique to the rabbinate. It reflects a broader shift underway in every profession where authority once rested on credentialed expertise rather than performed competence. Medical schools have integrated narrative medicine into required clinical curricula, asking students to write parallel charts reflecting on a patient’s hopes and fears alongside the clinical notes. Columbia and Geisinger Commonwealth have made this formal. The logic is that narrative competence, the ability to recognize and be moved by the stories of illness, improves both clinical judgment and patient compliance. Teachers’ colleges now embed social-emotional learning frameworks into preparation programs, training aspiring teachers not just in subject matter but in the management of classroom emotional climate, replacing the category of the good teacher with the learning facilitator who must demonstrate measurable empathy behaviors in simulation labs. Major rabbinical schools including the Ziegler School and Hebrew Union College have formalized homiletics and twenty-first-century media communication as core competencies alongside text study, requiring students to demonstrate the ability to translate Jewish sources in meaningful ways for contemporary life rather than simply to master them.
The pattern across all three fields is identical. What was once treated as an innate gift or a secondary craft has been codified into professional standards. Learning has moved from the classroom to the simulation lab. Skills once thought intuitive are now broken into measurable behaviors that can be taught, assessed, and graded. The gap between learned expertise and lay reception has become a professional problem requiring professional management.
Viewed through an alliance-theory lens, Lowe’s work upgrades the rabbinic coalition in a specific way. The old coalition rested on Torah authority, textual mastery, halakhic reasoning. The new layer adds emotional authenticity and cultural fluency. A rabbi who can weave Barbie and Hillel signals competence to both traditionalists and to culturally literate congregants navigating a secular world. The sermon becomes a hybrid product that expands the tent without appearing to tear it. At Washington Hebrew Congregation in Washington, where congressional staffers from both parties pray, Rabbi Eliana Fischel and Lowe steer deliberately away from partisan weeds, finding messages that resonate across the political divide. In San Antonio, Rabbi Nathan leans into politics through a Jewish lens, reproductive rights, Black Lives Matter, migrant welcome, using Lowe’s tools to sharpen delivery without losing the room. The coalition adapts. The role widens. The jurisdictional claim quietly expands.
The signal broadcast to the pews is authenticity. I am speaking from the heart. The cue to the careful observer is professionalization: a communications expert trained in consumer persuasion is optimizing message delivery for maximum impact. Theology has not disappeared. It has simply been joined by attention economics, and the joining was accomplished without any announcement, through small practical decisions that solved immediate problems and then became new norms.
In the end, Michele Lowe is not merely editing sermons. She is helping to edit the definition of rabbinic success for the twenty-first century. The Jew in the pew has become the unseen co-author of the rabbi’s public voice. And in that collaboration, authority is not diminished but quietly, durably updated for an age in which the greatest threat to any pulpit is not heresy but boredom. The zetz has been professionalized. The voice has been found. The profession, almost without noticing, has moved on.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Inspiration Authority

Clergy coaches, preaching trainers, homiletics consultants, and leadership developers in the industry that teaches clergy how to be more inspiring do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking spiritual, rhetorical, and congregational languages that frame their claims as fidelity to biblical excellence, loyalty to transformative preaching, or responsibility for sustaining vibrant church leadership inside a hyper-competitive, post-pandemic secularizing environment. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, seminaries, D.Min. programs, certification tracks, mastermind groups for pastors, denominational training events, online courses, and the invisible networks of pulpit referrals and church-growth consulting. The key language is not only theological. It is also practical and social. Being summoned. Preaching with power. Leading from the heart. Igniting revival. Holding sacred space for the Spirit. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of clergy formation the industry can sustain, how demanding that inspiration should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.
Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The former pastor who stays up until 3 a.m. refining a sermon-coaching curriculum is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. He is trying to maintain a form of ministerial formation life he genuinely values. The core values, biblical fidelity, Spirit-led delivery, congregational transformation, authentic presence, carry real internal logic and authority for those inside. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions in the clergy-inspiration industry. It is not the whole picture.
What makes this industry a distinctive case within the series is a structural irony that no other domain examined here shares. Every other hero system in this analysis, philosophy, Goldman Sachs, the PMC, the spirituality business, the self-help industry, is a secular substitute for religion. Each offers symbolic immortality, communal summons, and existential grounding to people who have largely left formal religious frameworks behind. The clergy-inspiration industry is religion coaching religion. It applies the same mechanisms of alliance formation, jurisdictional competition, and moral vocabulary deployment to the institutions that originally generated the hero system template. Ernest Becker’s framework was built to describe what religion does for human beings. Here it describes an industry built to teach religious professionals how to do it more effectively. The recursive quality is analytically striking and theologically uncomfortable, which is one reason the industry rarely examines its own structure too closely.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings construct hero systems to manage existential anxiety. Every religious tradition is such a system, and the clergy-inspiration industry is a meta-level hero system built on top of them. To live as a serious clergy coach is to participate in a tradition of revitalizing the pulpit against cultural irrelevance, congregational decline, and spiritual dryness. Every sermon workshop where timid delivery gets confronted, every mastermind where uncomfortable truths about leadership are spoken, every refusal to chase the latest seeker-sensitive gimmick: these are acts of fidelity to a post-1970s heritage of pastoral excellence that has sustained itself through conditions far worse than the current era of empty pews and digital distraction. That is a hero system within a hero system. It promises that an individual life, lived seriously within this framework, participates in something that neither death nor the surrounding culture of secular metrics can fully dissolve.
Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons explains how the system reproduces itself. The clergy-inspiration industry is not simply a place where trainers happen to work near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as pulpit transformers through denominational events, online masterminds, certification programs, retreat feedback sessions, and ordinary conference-side recognitions. The industry’s thickness is the product of repeated summons into anointed-leadership being. To belong here is to be hailed, continuously and from multiple directions, as a particular kind of clergy inspirer.
Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. Each summons interrupts private drift, which in Becker’s terms means each summons interrupts the moment when the pastor-coach is thrown back toward unmanaged anxiety about irrelevance or pastoral failure in a secularizing culture that provides fewer and fewer external confirmations of the calling’s worth. That is why defection carries such disproportionate social weight. The trainer who questions a colleague’s fifty-thousand-dollar clergy mastermind or who begins softening rigorous homiletics to keep enrollment high when her circle holds firm is not merely making a business adjustment. She is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the terror that true pulpit revival was built to contain.
Three master domains organize the struggle over institutional authority. The first is moral authority over what counts as serious inspirational clergy formation. The second is the organizational structure of certification programs, D.Min. tracks, denominational training events, masterminds, and consulting contracts. The third is the everyday network through which clergy distinction gets reproduced in sermon critiques, retreat feedback sessions, conference stages, and the mundane problem of navigating denominational politics without becoming spiritually or professionally porous.
The hardline-traditional coalition, concentrated in circles that still prize exegetical rigor, Spirit-led authenticity, and uncompromising confrontation with sin and complacency, often led by veteran pastors or seminary professors, uses the language of biblical standards and separation from performative motivational speaking or seeker-sensitive dilution. H.B. Charles Jr. occupies this position in the evangelical world, building authority through demonstrated expository rigor rather than platform scale. Rick Warren’s Purpose-Driven legacy sits at the edge of the traditional coalition, having pioneered audience-sensitive preaching in ways that traditionalists still debate decades later. The hardline claim is that the industry’s value lies precisely in its capacity to sustain demanding pulpit excellence against the pressures of declining attendance and cultural accommodation. Every softening of the summons is experienced as a threat to the structure through which the community manages its existential stakes.
Against this stands a pragmatic-engagement coalition, strongest among those navigating the post-2010s reality of shrinking congregations and algorithm-driven attention. Andy Stanley is the dominant figure here. His Preaching with Andy Stanley course and Communicator training events draw pastors across denominations who pay premium rates for a clear, audience-focused preaching model that traditionalists regard with suspicion precisely because it works so well by metrics the traditionalists distrust. Craig Groeschel’s Leadership Podcast and clergy coaching programs train thousands of pastors annually on inspirational preaching and scalable church leadership. Carey Nieuwhof’s Art of Leadership Academy occupies a similar position, explicitly framing its mission around helping pastors avoid burnout, which is the pragmatic coalition’s version of sustainable excellence. Their claim is not that depth should be abandoned. It is that clergy formation cannot be governed as though it were still a 1950s seminary or a pure expository laboratory. Once one side defines the industry’s purpose as sustaining maximal homiletical rigor, flexibility begins to look like drift. Once the other defines it as making inspirational leadership sustainable under current congregational conditions, maximal rigor begins to look like status competition masquerading as faithfulness.
The presence of Nancy Duarte in the top tier is analytically interesting and worth dwelling on. Duarte is a communication and storytelling expert, TED-famous, who works extensively with megachurch pastors on crafting inspiring sermons. She is not a theologian. She is not ordained. She carries no denominational credential. Her authority is entirely rhetorical and commercial, and yet she commands premium fees from clergy who accept her jurisdiction over the craft of sermon delivery. This is the self-help and CEO coaching world importing its credentialing logic into the sacred space of the pulpit. It represents the most visible point where the signal layer, biblical fidelity and Spirit-led transformation, comes under pressure from the cue layer, audience engagement metrics and communication effectiveness scores.
John Maxwell’s presence in the top tier makes the same point differently. Maxwell began as a pastor and has largely shed that identity to become a general leadership guru whose materials now appear in pastoral training programs as a matter of course. His certification tracks for clergy are not primarily theological. They are organizational leadership with religious application. This represents the self-help industry’s successful colonization of clergy formation territory, the mirror image of the self-help industry’s absorption into corporate HR that the previous essay described.
The Jewish clergy-inspiration world maps onto the same structure with instructive differences. Atra under Rabbi Shira Koch Epstein functions as the field’s most hands-on practitioner operation, having trained over a thousand rabbis through sermon-coaching labs and one-on-one coaching. The Shalom Hartman Institute under Yehuda Kurtzer occupies the intellectual high ground with its Rabbinic Leadership Initiative, which functions as the hardline-traditional coalition’s most prestigious institutional expression in the pluralistic Jewish world. Michele Lowe, a playwright turned sermon coach whose work was featured in the New York Times, occupies a position structurally identical to Nancy Duarte in the Christian world: an outside creative professional whose authority over the craft of rabbinic communication is accepted by clergy who would not extend that acceptance to her on theological grounds. The fact that rabbinics draws more heavily on non-clergy expertise than evangelical Christianity does reflects a broader cultural difference between the two traditions in how they conceptualize clerical authority, but the underlying jurisdictional competition is identical.
Stephen Turner’s critique of essentialism explains why the fight between these coalitions never resolves. There is no single stable essence of authentic clergy inspiration being transmitted intact. There are competing reconstructions. The traditionalist faction reconstructs the industry around theological seriousness and rhetorical density. The pragmatic faction reconstructs it around sustainable engagement and workable inspiration under modern audience conditions. Both claim continuity with the revival tradition. Both select from the same dense world of homiletics literature, pastoral history, and transformation practice to support present positions. The conflict is not over preservation of an essence but over which reconstruction will dominate the jurisdiction.
The secularization pressure gives this industry a specific urgency that distinguishes it from every other domain in the series. The other industries examined here are competing for market share in growing or stable sectors. The clergy-inspiration industry is competing within a shrinking one. American church attendance has declined steadily for decades. The evangelical world that produces most of the industry’s top figures has held more stable than mainline Protestantism, but even there the trend lines are sobering. Synagogue membership has followed similar patterns. This means the industry’s internal jurisdictional war is taking place against a backdrop of genuine institutional crisis, which intensifies the hero system dynamics considerably. When the hero system itself is under external threat, the internal demand for purity and the fear of accommodation become more acute, which is precisely why both the traditionalist and pragmatic coalitions operate with such urgency. Each genuinely believes that the other’s approach will accelerate the decline it claims to be preventing.
Across all three master domains, the same pattern holds. Traditionalists claim fidelity to uncompromising homiletical standards. Pragmatists claim fidelity to sustainable inspirational excellence under actual congregational conditions. Denominational leaders claim the coordinating power needed to sustain a thick network of vital congregational life. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic clergy formation requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts. Moral language is the medium through which coalitions compete because it is the only language that converts a bid for institutional control into a legitimate claim on collective identity.
The jurisdictional war in the clergy-inspiration industry is a struggle over who gets to define what being summoned really requires. Beneath that, it is a struggle over which version of the hero system is strong enough to keep the terror contained, both the existential terror of the individual clergy member and the civilizational terror of a religious tradition watching its institutional forms hollow out under secular pressure. The expansion of clergy coaching into digital masterminds, online D.Min. tracks, and global pastor networks does not dissolve that internal tension. It amplifies it, because every new certification program that enters the serious coalition becomes a new arena where the same question must be answered. How demanding must the summons be to remain credible? Where is the line between a practice that sustains true pulpit revival and an accommodation that hollows it out? The industry has been arguing over that line for decades. The secularizing culture pressing in from outside has simply raised the stakes for getting the answer right.

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The Clergy Inspiration Business

Grok says: This space blends homiletics training, sermon coaching, pastoral leadership development, and high-ticket masterminds/certification programs for clergy. Rankings reflect commercial scale (coaching retainers, online courses, certification programs, conferences), influence on actual pastors, and reach through books, podcasts, and denominational networks.
Andy Stanley
The dominant figure. Runs the highly regarded “Preaching with Andy Stanley” course and Communicator training events. Pastors across denominations pay premium rates for his clear, audience-focused preaching model.
Craig Groeschel
Founder of Life.Church; his Leadership Podcast and clergy coaching programs are ubiquitous. Trains thousands of pastors annually on inspirational preaching and scalable church leadership.
Carey Nieuwhof
Runs The Art of Leadership Academy — one of the largest and most respected church-leadership training platforms. Focuses on helping pastors communicate with clarity and avoid burnout.
Nelson Searcy
Church Leader Insights and Renegade Pastors Network. Specializes in high-ticket coaching for senior pastors on preaching effectiveness, church growth, and leadership presence.
Nancy Duarte
Communication/storytelling expert (TED-famous) who works extensively with clergy and megachurch pastors on crafting inspiring, transformative sermons.
Rick Warren
Saddleback Church legacy; his Purpose-Driven preaching and leadership training materials are still widely used in seminaries and clergy cohorts worldwide.
John Maxwell
Leadership guru whose materials are staples in pastoral training programs. Runs certification tracks specifically tailored for clergy and church staff.
H.B. Charles Jr.
Highly respected preacher and homiletics trainer; regularly leads preaching workshops and coaches pastors on expository, Spirit-empowered delivery.
Preaching Coach (platform led by figures like Ken Davis and associates)
Dedicated sermon-coaching service that pairs pastors with professional coaches for personalized inspiration and delivery training.
Gravity Commons / Fuller Youth Institute coaches
Cohort-based leadership and preaching coaching for pastors; strong reputation for deep, transformative work with clergy in mainline and evangelical settings.

Honorable mentions / strong runners-up
Derwin Gray (Transformation Church – leadership and preaching training)
Brandon A. Cox (Preaching for Change)
Tony Merida (homiletics professor and trainer)
Exponential Network leaders (church-planting/preaching focus)

This industry is smaller and more relational than pure self-help or CEO coaching, but the top names command premium fees ($10k–$100k+ for masterminds or retainers) and exert outsized influence on what thousands of pastors preach every Sunday. The commercial side (online courses, certifications, and high-ticket cohorts) is growing rapidly as churches face attendance pressure and seek fresh inspiration tools.

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The Ten Biggest Names In The Rabbi Inspiration Industry

Grok says: This is the specialized world of Jews teaching rabbis how to inspire — focusing on homiletics (sermon coaching), rabbinic leadership development, pulpit presence, spiritual communication, and congregational inspiration. Rankings combine program scale (fellowships, master classes, certifications), reach among working rabbis (especially in North America), commercial footprint (coaching retainers, online courses), and influence on rabbinic practice.
Rabbi Shira Koch Epstein
Executive Director of Atra: Center for Rabbinic Innovation. Runs sermon-coaching labs, rabbinic fellowships, and one-on-one coaching that have trained over 1,000 rabbis. The most hands-on “rabbi whisperer” operation in the field.
Yehuda Kurtzer
President of the Shalom Hartman Institute. Leads the flagship Rabbinic Leadership Initiative (RLI) and Rabbinic Torah Seminar — the premier pluralistic, high-level training for North American rabbis on inspirational thought leadership and public communication.
Rabbi Daniel Smokler
CEO of Assembly and senior faculty at Atra. Specializes in catalytic rabbinic coaching and visioning; widely sought for helping rabbis craft inspiring, community-transforming messages.
Dr. Erica Brown
Leading Jewish educator and author who runs high-impact rabbinic leadership programs and sermon workshops. Frequently invited to coach rabbis across denominations on powerful, resonant preaching.
Rabbi Sid Schwarz
Veteran innovator (founder of PANIM and long-time leader in rabbinic training). Continues to shape clergy-inspiration programs focused on visionary, engaging Jewish leadership.
David Trietsch
Founder of Hevruta Coaching. Provides individualized, confidential coaching to rabbis on communication, boundaries, and inspirational presence; one of the most respected private coaches in the Jewish clergy space.
Rabbi Marc Margolius
Senior Programs Director at the Institute for Jewish Spirituality. Directs the Clergy Leadership Program and mindfulness-based training that helps rabbis preach and lead with greater authenticity and impact.
Michele Lowe
The “Rabbi Whisperer” — a playwright-turned-sermon coach featured in The New York Times. Works one-on-one with dozens of rabbis on crafting compelling, voice-driven sermons.
Rabbi Irwin Kula
Long-time leader at CLAL (National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership). Runs Rabbis Without Borders and innovative programs that train rabbis to communicate Jewish wisdom in inspiring, accessible ways.
Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
Dean of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies. Trains and coaches rabbis in dynamic, heart-centered preaching and modern Jewish leadership through the American Jewish University network.

Honorable mentions / strong runners-up Rabbi Ron Wolfson (synagogue leadership and relational inspiration training)
Rabbi Laura Geller (pioneering work in rabbinic voice and community engagement)
Rabbi Tirzah Firestone (spiritual leadership and renewal-focused coaching)
The Rabbinic Training Institute (JTS) faculty collective (Conservative-focused continuing education)

This niche is smaller and more relational than the broader self-help or Christian clergy-coaching worlds, but it is highly influential: the rabbis trained by these figures shape what tens of thousands of congregants hear from the pulpit every Shabbat. Demand has grown sharply since 2022 as synagogues face attendance challenges and seek fresh tools for inspiration.

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The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Self-Help Authority

Gurus, coaches, authors, and influencers in the self-help industry do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking transformational and empowerment languages that frame their claims as fidelity to personal growth, loyalty to mindset mastery, or responsibility for unlocking human potential inside a hyper-competitive, post-pandemic wellness-and-productivity market. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions, online courses, mastermind groups, certification programs, book launches, speaking circuits, apps, podcasts, and the invisible networks of affiliate commissions and corporate training contracts. The key language is not only psychological. It is also practical and social. Doing the inner work. Rewiring your mindset. Stepping into your highest self. Building atomic habits. Choosing to be brave. These phrases do not merely describe practice. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of self-help the industry can sustain, how demanding that transformation should be, and which forms of balancing still count as faithful.
Before the analysis proceeds, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The coach who stays up until 1 a.m. preparing a client session is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. She is trying to maintain a form of empowerment life she genuinely values. The core values, growth mindset, resilience, authenticity, abundance consciousness, carry real internal logic and authority for those inside. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions in the self-help industry. It is not the whole picture.
The self-help industry is best understood as a distinct case within this series because it occupies an unusual position between the spirituality business and the professional knowledge economy. Unlike the spirituality business, which makes openly non-empirical claims about vibration, transmission, and source alignment, the self-help industry wraps itself in the authority of science. James Clear cites habit research. Brené Brown cites her own qualitative studies. Adam Grant draws on organizational psychology. Joe Dispenza invokes neuroscience. Simon Sinek grounds Start With Why in evolutionary biology. These citations are real enough to pass casual inspection and thin enough to serve primarily as coalition markers rather than genuine epistemic constraints. The self-help industry is not anti-science. It is science-adjacent, borrowing the authority of the research enterprise while operating largely outside its accountability structures. No peer review committee vets a mastermind curriculum. No replication crisis threatens a certification program. The scientific wrapper does the work that science itself would do if it were actually present.
This creates a distinctive epistemological closure. The spirituality business pathologizes scrutiny as resistance to higher consciousness or operation from a scarcity frequency. The self-help industry pathologizes it as fixed mindset, resistance to growth, or self-limiting belief. The mechanism is identical. The costume differs. In both cases, the framework pre-emptively converts the tools of scrutiny into symptoms of the problem the framework claims to solve.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings construct hero systems to manage existential anxiety. The self-help industry is such a system, but it targets a specific demographic at a specific moment of vulnerability. Its primary market is not the catastrophically broken, as the spirituality business often is, but the functionally adequate who sense that something is missing. The suburban professional who reads Atomic Habits at 6 a.m. is not in crisis. She is managing a low-grade anxiety about whether her life is adding up to something. The self-help hero system tells her that it can, if she optimizes the right variables. Every habit tracked, every morning routine completed, every limiting belief identified and reframed: these are acts of fidelity to a post-1960s heritage of personal development that promises individual lives can be continuously improved toward a version of themselves worth living. That is a hero system. It promises participation in something larger than daily routine, the project of becoming, which neither death nor stagnation can fully dissolve.
Iddo Tavory’s concept of summons explains how the system sustains itself. The self-help industry is not simply a place where coaches happen to work near one another. It is a network in which people are repeatedly called into being as growth-oriented leaders through podcasts, group calls, live events, certification programs, and the continuous stream of content that interrupts private drift before it can settle into the question of whether the framework is actually working. Every email from James Clear, every Brené Brown TED talk clip, every Mel Robbins five-second challenge: these are micro-interruptions of the moment when the individual might otherwise notice that the hero system is a construction. The battle for authority in this industry is a battle for the right to be the one who does the interrupting.
Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. That is why defection carries such disproportionate social weight. The coach who questions a colleague’s ten-thousand-dollar mastermind or who begins softening rigorous accountability to keep client retention up when her circle holds firm is not merely making a business adjustment. She is, in the community’s felt logic, weakening the collective structure through which everyone present manages the anxiety that true self-actualization was built to contain.
What most distinguishes the self-help industry from the spirituality business in this series is corporate capture. The spirituality business remains largely outside formal institutional structures. Sadhguru does not appear in mandatory HR training. Eckhart Tolle is not embedded in performance review language. The self-help industry has been absorbed into corporate life at scale. Growth mindset, a concept drawn from Carol Dweck’s research, now appears in Microsoft’s management philosophy and Google’s leadership training. Psychological safety, drawn from Amy Edmondson’s work, structures team meetings at companies whose actual culture bears little relationship to the concept. Radical candor, from Kim Scott’s book, has become a standard framework for feedback conversations that are often neither radical nor candid. The self-help vocabulary has colonized corporate HR, leadership development, and organizational culture programs, which means the summons mechanism now operates through institutional channels with genuine coercive power. Participation in the framework is no longer merely voluntary. In many workplaces it is a condition of professional standing.
This corporate capture creates the industry’s most distinctive enforcement mechanism. The spirituality business enforces through social exclusion and the withdrawal of the summons. The self-help industry enforces through those channels and through the formal structures of professional life. A manager who refuses to engage with the growth mindset framework in a performance review is not merely coded as spiritually blocked. She is coded as not a culture fit, which has material consequences for promotion, assignment quality, and career trajectory.
The three-tier structure of the industry maps onto this corporate dimension in a specific way. At the retail layer you have content creators, podcasters, and social media coaches selling low-ticket courses, books, and online challenges. James Clear’s Atomic Habits, Mel Robbins’s five-second rule, and Glennon Doyle’s memoir-driven empowerment model all operate primarily at this layer, reaching mass audiences through publishing and platform distribution. At the mid-tier you have established coaches and thought leaders running high-ticket masterminds, certification programs, and corporate keynote circuits. Brené Brown’s Dare to Lead corporate training program, Simon Sinek’s leadership consulting, and Adam Grant’s organizational psychology speaking engagements operate here, where the corporate channel adds institutional credibility that pure consumer self-help cannot claim. At the wholesale layer you have the figures whose pedigree is so established that they no longer need moral clearance from anyone. Tony Robbins operates at this level, having long since transcended the need to justify his authority through research citations or institutional affiliation. Oprah Winfrey’s Book Club and Super Soul Sunday function as the industry’s wholesale layer in its purest form: a platform so authoritative that appearing on it confers legitimacy regardless of the content being endorsed.
The hardline-traditional coalition, concentrated in circles that prize clinical depth, evidence-based psychology, and uncompromising accountability, uses the language of rigorous standards and separation from performative positivity or quick-fix hacks. Figures like Adam Grant, who critiques much popular self-help from an organizational psychology standpoint, and the various therapist-turned-coaches who emphasize the difference between genuine psychological work and mindset manipulation, occupy this coalition. Its claim is that the industry’s value lies precisely in its capacity to sustain demanding transformation against the pressures of social media and algorithmic attention. Every softening of the summons is experienced as a threat to the structure through which the community manages its existential stakes.
Against this stands a pragmatic-engagement coalition, strongest among newer influencers and more flexible platforms trying to build sustainable scale in a saturated, algorithm-driven global market. Their language is workability, livable empowerment, and sustainable growth. Their claim is not that depth should be abandoned. It is that self-help cannot be governed as though it were still a 1970s encounter group or a pure clinical practice. Mel Robbins’s approach, which strips psychological complexity down to a single countable intervention, represents the pragmatic coalition’s most commercially successful expression. The five-second rule is not clinically rigorous. It is extraordinarily deployable, and deployability is the pragmatic coalition’s primary value.
Each coalition has predictable failure modes. Traditionalism can harden into a credentialed priesthood that mistakes academic pedigree for practical effectiveness and uses research citations as jurisdictional weapons rather than genuine epistemic constraints. Pragmatism can slide into what the industry’s critics call toxic positivity, where the demand for continuous growth pathologizes normal human limitation and converts genuine difficulty into a personal failure of mindset. The system oscillates between these poles without resolving the tension because both are rooted in real constraints.
Stephen Turner’s critique of essentialism explains why the fight never resolves. There is no single stable essence of authentic self-help being transmitted intact. There are competing reconstructions. The traditionalist faction reconstructs the industry around psychological density and evidence-based practice. The pragmatic faction reconstructs it around accessible intervention and scalable impact. Both claim continuity with the original humanistic psychology tradition of Maslow, Rogers, and the human potential movement. Both select from the same dense world of research, clinical history, and transformation practice to support present positions. What gets transmitted is not a stable essence but a body of material from which each coalition selects the passages that authorize its current stance.
Authority in this context is atmospheric. It lives in who gets the TED main stage, who secures the corporate keynote contracts, which coaches are quietly recommended for Fortune 500 leadership programs, and which ones are spoken of with hesitation in professional circles. The science wrapper does specific atmospheric work here that the spirituality business cannot replicate. A self-help figure with a PhD or a Harvard Business Review byline occupies a different jurisdictional position than one with only a personal transformation story, because the academic credential signals prior submission to a vetting process that the corporate buyer recognizes as legitimate. The credential does not guarantee quality. It provides cover for the purchasing decision.
Across all three tiers and both coalitions, the same pattern holds. Traditionalists claim fidelity to evidence and genuine psychological depth. Pragmatists claim fidelity to accessible transformation under actual market conditions. Corporate HR departments claim fidelity to organizational health and employee development. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic personal growth requires. That convergence of form with divergence of content is precisely what Pinsof’s framework predicts. Moral language is the medium through which coalitions compete because it is the only language that converts a bid for institutional control into a legitimate claim on collective identity.
The jurisdictional war in the self-help industry is a struggle over who gets to define what being summoned really requires. Beneath that, it is a struggle over which version of the hero system is strong enough to keep the anxiety contained. The industry’s corporate capture means that this struggle now plays out not only in the marketplace of consumer attention but inside the formal institutions of professional life, where the vocabulary of growth, mindset, and potential has become the official language of how organizations talk about human beings. The question that the industry has been unable to answer, and that its critics keep raising from outside, is whether a hero system built around continuous self-improvement can ever declare the project complete, or whether its deepest commercial interest lies in ensuring that it never does.

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The Fictions We Live By

“Social life depends on these kinds of shared fictions. When an agreed-upon story appears, people often accept it even when they have doubts.” (Rob K. Henderson)

American social life runs on stories that are treated as real enough to organize behavior even when privately doubted. Yuval Noah Harari called these imagined orders in Sapiens, arguing that large-scale human cooperation depends not on shared biology or face-to-face trust but on collective fictions that strangers agree to treat as binding. The American Dream, blind justice, the college credential, the neutrality of expertise: none of these descriptions fully matches reality, and most participants sense the gap. They comply anyway, because the cost of refusing the story is exclusion from the coalition that controls jobs, status, and belonging. The mechanism is not stupidity. It is coordination.
David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory sharpens Harari’s insight considerably. Shared fictions are not merely coordination devices. They are jurisdictional claims. The moral vocabulary attached to a fiction determines who gets to speak, who gets access, and whose arguments count before any argument is made. You clear the moral bar first. Then you reason. This is why the fictions feel so resistant to factual correction. They are not primarily descriptive. They are organizational. Correcting the description without displacing the coalition changes nothing, because the coalition was never really defending the description.
The dollar is the purest case. Currency has no intrinsic value. It consists of paper or digital ledger entries. Americans accept it as payment for labor and goods because they believe others will do the same, and that belief is self-fulfilling as long as it holds. The Federal Reserve reports that as of early 2026, the M2 money supply sits close to twenty-one trillion dollars, most of it existing only as accounting entries. Private skeptics buy gold or cryptocurrency. They still use dollars for coffee and rent, because the alternative is barter or collapse. The fiction requires no enforcement beyond the shared understanding that everyone else is also acting as if it is true. This is pluralistic ignorance in its most economically consequential form.
The meritocracy story works through the same mechanism but requires more active maintenance. Elite institutions repeat it constantly. Admissions offices speak of holistic excellence. Corporations speak of top talent pipelines. Everyone inside the system knows, at some level, that legacy admissions, donor pressure, networking, and credential filtering do heavy lifting alongside genuine ability. The fiction persists because it serves multiple functions simultaneously. It tells winners they deserve their position. It tells losers the system is legitimate rather than rigged. It reduces open conflict by converting a distributional struggle into a narrative about individual character. Inside the game, people reason very well. They optimize credentials and signaling with real sophistication. The reasoning is genuine. The frame within which it operates is carefully managed.
Blind justice follows the same pattern with starker data. The statues wear blindfolds. The courtroom rituals, rising when the judge enters, the formal address, the procedural language, all perform the fiction of equal treatment under law. Most participants in the legal system are aware, at some level, that outcomes track resources, forum, and leverage as much as law. The fiction of neutrality persists anyway, because it stabilizes the system. If the story collapsed entirely, the authority of every verdict would be contestable. The shared fiction is doing load-bearing structural work.
The college credential operates as what the earlier essays in this series called moral laundering. Once an individual passes through the right institution, their views inherit its legitimacy. The credential signals prior submission to the right protocols under sufficient pressure. Employers use degrees to filter applicants not primarily because the degree certifies relevant skill but because it certifies socialization into a particular kind of person. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York found that 33 percent of college graduates work in jobs that do not require a degree. The credential fiction persists because it serves the institutions that issue credentials, the employers who use them as a sorting device, and the graduates who need the signal to enter the coalition that controls professional life. All three parties have a stake in maintaining the story even when they privately recognize its limits.
The same pattern holds across every licensed profession. In law, the moral vocabulary of rule of law, due process, and professional independence frames every move as principled rather than strategic. In medicine, patient safety and evidence-based practice stabilize decision-making and liability while practitioners navigate guidelines that lag behind evidence and vary widely by local culture and financial incentive. In journalism, objectivity and public interest present coverage as neutral discovery rather than coalition-aligned selection, while story assignment, framing, and source access shape outcomes as powerfully as facts. In each domain, the vocabulary does the same work. It grants legitimacy before any technical claim is made. It is enforced mostly through informal channels, the drying up of referrals, the loss of access, the quiet coding of someone as not serious or not safe. And it operates differently at different altitudes. At the middle levels, people perform the vocabulary carefully because their status is fragile. At the top, decisions track power, risk, and timing, while the public language is maintained because it keeps the machine running.
Stephen Turner’s observation about expert consensus adds the missing piece. What looks like independent judgment often reflects training pipelines and funding dependencies. People learn, through graduate education, professional socialization, and early career experience, what can be said without losing grants, jobs, or access. Over time, that constraint becomes tacit knowledge. It feels like professional judgment. It is also a map of where the landmines are. The two-party political system illustrates this at the electoral level. Many voters feel neither party reflects their views. A Pew Research Center study in late 2024 found that 63 percent of Americans feel dissatisfied with candidates. People pick a side anyway, because the system is partly structural, a product of first-past-the-post voting that makes third parties difficult to sustain, and partly a maintained fiction that these two coalitions represent the full range of legitimate political thought. Conformity is enforced not by belief but by the calculation that the alternative costs more than compliance.
The fictions Harari described assumed a relatively unified narrative space. One large shared story, amplified by mass media, national holidays, and educational systems, could coordinate a diverse population of strangers. That assumption is now structurally compromised in ways that change the analysis considerably.
Algorithmic fragmentation has replaced the unified narrative space with a proliferation of competing micro-fictions, each internally coherent, each equipped with its own moral vocabulary, its own summons mechanism, and its own enforcement of who counts. People no longer leave one large shared story and enter skepticism. They leave one large story and enter a smaller one with more intense internal discipline. The shift is from mass coordination through a single fiction to coalition coordination through many competing fictions. Each coalition has a fully operational hero system in Ernest Becker’s sense. Each offers participants symbolic participation in something larger than themselves. None of them share enough common ground to negotiate with the others, because the moral vocabularies are not just different. They are mutually delegitimizing. To accept the other coalition’s vocabulary is to accept its jurisdictional claims, and those claims are zero-sum.
Generative AI accelerates this process in a specific way that deserves its own analysis. The problem is not primarily that people cannot distinguish real content from synthetic content, though that is real. The deeper problem is that synthetic content industrializes the production of moral vocabulary at a scale that was previously impossible. Coalition technologies that once required human effort to produce and distribute can now be generated and targeted automatically. The summons mechanism, the continuous interruption of private drift that keeps individuals identified with their hero system, gets faster, more precise, and cheaper. What Iddo Tavory described as the repeated hailing of the individual into a particular kind of man can now happen continuously, algorithmically, and at industrial scale. The jurisdictional wars accelerate because the tools of coalition maintenance become available to anyone with access to the platforms.
The result is not the end of shared fiction but its multiplication into competing fictions that increasingly cannot coordinate with each other. This is the coordination crisis of American public life in 2026. It is not a deficit of values. Every coalition has values, rigorously maintained and internally enforced. It is not a deficit of commitment. The summons mechanisms are working better than ever at the coalition level. The crisis is that the shared fiction large enough to coordinate strangers across coalition lines has fragmented, and the tools being built to replace it are optimized for within-coalition cohesion rather than cross-coalition cooperation.
Harari argued that shared fictions make large-scale cooperation possible. That insight remains correct. The American coordination problem is that the fictions are now operating at a scale too small for the cooperation required. Every coalition believes it is defending civilization. No coalition can recognize the others as legitimate participants in a shared project. The moral vocabularies that once coordinated a continental nation are now doing the work of tribal maintenance, and the institutions that once enforced a common enough story have either fragmented along coalition lines or lost the authority needed to hold the center.
The forward-looking implication follows directly. As alternative platforms and funding paths multiply, each domain faces pressure from outsiders who reject parts of the established vocabulary. The incumbents respond by tightening definitions of standard, safety, and independence, or by absorbing the challengers and relabeling their practices. The shared fiction does not disappear. It gets updated to keep control of the pipeline and the brand of legitimacy. But the update cycle is now faster than the enforcement mechanisms can handle, and the competing fictions are better resourced than they have ever been. The jurisdictional wars continue. The names change. The function does not. What has changed is that the battlefield is now the whole of American public life, and the question of which fiction is large enough and credible enough to coordinate it remains, for the first time in generations, open.

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