I'm not sure what I think of Driscoll. I'm instinctively put off by predestination, but it does make some philosophical sense, and for all my affinity for "smells and bells" it is nice to see a church that can combine populism with strict adherence to some form of doctrine - one cannot accuse the New Calvinists, at least, of hypocrisy.
But what I'm most curious about is not Driscoll himself, but his context. The article discusses a resurgence of Calvinism among American Christians. But it fails to answer the perhaps unanswerable: why? Why now? It seems like a conscious rejection of the human power of the will - that "can-do" attitude that makes up so much of American culture. Is it a discomfort with the Pelagian uber-humanism of American culture contrasted with the recession, where the American dreams of opportunity and self-improvement are dashed against the tragic inevitability of the system-at-large?
Perhaps, in recognizing the limits of human capacity, the New Calvinists are challenging 2008's optimistic mantra "Yes, we can."
No, they reply. "No we can't." At least not without grace.