Christians Must Challenge American
Messianic Nationalism:
A Call to the Churches
Rosemary Radford Ruether
Rosemary
Radford Ruether is the Carpenter Professor of Feminist Theology at Pacific
School of Religion, and the author of many important books in feminist
theology and social analysis, including
Sexism and
God-Talk;
WomenChurch;
Women
and Redemption: A Theological History; and
Gaia and God:
Ecofeminist Theology and Earth Healing.
In this shorter essay she presents a theological critique
of the new American religion of "messianic nationalism," following in the
great tradition of
the Barmen Declaration drafted by German Christians to critique the
Nazi regime. [To read the Barmen Declaration, which is part of
the Presbyterian Book of Confessions, you'll need Adobe Acrobat
Reader; go to the link above and scroll down the left column till you come
to The Theological Declaration of Barmen (near the end of the list).
Click on the title, and with a little luck you'll have it right before
your eyes.]
We are posting
this paper here with the very kind permission of Dr. Ruether. You
may also want to look at a talk she presented on
receiving an award from the Catholic Peace Ministry in Des Moines,
Iowa.
For some other articles on the subject of American
empire, click here.
[3-23-04]
We'd appreciate your comments!
Please send a
note and we'll share it here.
Click here to read the first comments.
Religious language is always double edged. It is properly
used as prophetic critique that calls for repentance. But it can be twisted
into a self-sacralizing rhetoric that associates God with human projects of
power. The United States has often fallen into this temptation to use
religious language as idolatrous messianic nationalism. When this happens it
is the duty of the churches to challenge such language and reveal its
opposition to the authentic good news of the gospel. In 1934 the German
theologians of the Confessing Church disassociated themselves from a German
Christianity that identified Christianity with Aryan nationalism. I believe
the Americans churches must make a similar critique of American messianic
nationalism today.
What is American messianic nationalism? This is an
ideology rooted in the belief that the United States of America is uniquely
an elect nation chosen by God to impose its way of life on the rest of the
world by coercive economic means, and even by military force, if it deems
necessary. Nations who pursue other ways of economic development than "free
market capitalism" can be regarded as enemies, not only of the United
States, but of God. This is particularly the case if they seek to mobilize a
counter-bloc of nations against the global hegemony of the United States.
The ideology that the United States is an elect nation
divinely chosen to be a model and mentor to other countries has long been
entertained by dominant American culture. During the Cold War the struggle
against communism was typically couched as a "war against evil." The
conflict between two strategies of economic development, capitalism and
communism, was defined as if it were a war against demonic powers in which
capitalist countries were the agents of divine goodness.
This language has returned with new force under the
administration of George W. Bush in its "war against terrorism." The
language of holy war, "crusade" and the apocalyptic conflict between good
and evil, God and Satan, are freely used in its war rhetoric, directed first
against the Taliban in Afghanistan and then against Saddam Hussein in Iraq.
These wars were depicted as if they were episodes in an apocalyptic drama of
good against evil, angels of light against the forces of darkness, God's
chosen people against God's enemies. This language of apocalyptic warfare
assumes an U.S. mission to the rest of the nations of the world. America in
general, and President Bush in particular, are depicted as messianic agents
chosen by God to combat evil and to establish good; namely American
hegemonic power and its economic, cultural and political "way of life" over
the rest of the world.
This messianic nationalism was expressed in its most
blatant form by General William Boykin, an American military leader charged
with the hunt against Osama bin Laden. In a speech to his fellow believers
Boykin declared that the United States is an object of hatred by other
nations because we are uniquely a "Christian nation." He went on to claim
that "our spiritual enemy can only be conquered when we confront them in the
name of God" (i.e. their spiritual identity is that of Satan). He said that
Muslims worship an idol and not the true God. Moreover God has put George W.
Bush in office at this time to carry out a world redemptive mission: "We are
an army of God raised up for such a time as this."
In other words, George W. Bush is God's elect messiah put
in the White House at this time of final crisis in the conflict between God
and Satan to lead God's forces of good against the forces of evil. To defeat
U.S. America's enemies and put in place the American "free market" system
equals defeating evil and establishing the Reign of God over the earth.
Although the Pentagon distanced itself from Boykin's language, they did
nothing to counteract it. This language creeps continually into official
White House declarations of their identity and role. Neo-conservatives, such
as Richard Perle, adopt such language, as in his recent book on "How to win
the war against terrorism" which he entitled The
End of Evil.
In her recently released "New Pentagon Papers," former
military intelligence officer Karen Kwiatkowski, revealed the fanatical
atmosphere that had taken over Pentagon policy intelligence in the months
before the Iraq war, suppressing any objective information on the Middle
East. She writes, "I saw a dead philosophy - Cold War anti-communism and
neo-imperialism - walking the corridors of the Pentagon. It wore the
clothing of counterterrorism and spoke the language of a holy war between
good and evil. The evil was recognized by the leadership to be resident
mainly in the Middle East and articulated by Islamic clerics and radicals.
But there were other enemies within, anyone who dared voice any skepticism
about their grand plans."
This language of apocalyptic warfare and messianic
nationalism is enormously dangerous at a time when the peoples of the earth
are becoming increasingly divided by aggressive American power. Many see
this as impoverishing the earth, disabling authentic democracy, undermining
cultural diversity, destabilizing social integrity and aggravating the gap
between rich and poor. The Christian churches should be involved in many
kinds of alternative development to this dominant system, together with
other groups, religious and secular. But the first responsibility of the
Church is to rebuke the blatant misuse of its own religious language.
I suggest that this "Americanist" messianic nationalist
Christianity needs to be critically analyzed and rejected theologically.
This denunciation needs to be communicated to American churches of all
denominations as a call to conscience. There are four basic heresies
involved in this "Americanist" Christianity. They have to do with the nature
of God, the nature of the relation of God to human nations, the nature of
evil and how evil is overcome or at least lessened in human affairs. I refer
to these as "false theological ideas." By "false" I mean that these
theological ideas are both idolatrous, pretending that the American nation
is uniquely a representative of God, and also conducive to destructive
violence, and hence blasphemous when attributed to the will of God.
1. False Theological Idea One: God chooses one
nation above all other nations. In Christian tradition God is a God
of all nations. "In Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek": (Gal 3:21).
Christianity confirmed a development within universalist Judaism that God is
the creator of the whole world, loves all peoples and nations equally and
chooses no one nation above or to the exclusion of others.
2. False Theological Idea
Two: The United States is God's uniquely chosen nation.
Since God is a God of all peoples and loves all peoples equally, God cannot
be seen as choosing the United States for some unique mission over other
peoples of the world. Although the concept of "election" can be seen as a
way in which every person, and every cultural and national community,
grapples with their responsibilities before God, this idea cannot be
translated into an objective positioning of one nation over others.
3. False Theological Idea Three: Evil is socially
located in the enemies of the United States. In Christian teachings
all humans are created in the image of God and all have a potential for good
and yet all have sinned and fall short of the will of God. Evil exists
particularly in the way in which humans violate their relation to one
another. To usurp power and monopolize wealth in one person's or group's
hands, depriving other people of the bare means of existence, is the basis
of evil on earth. To defend injustice as divinely given is blasphemy,
attributing evil to the will of God.
Every person and nation must struggle with how they have
helped to construct systems of evil that are impoverishing the earth and the
majority of humans and how they have blasphemously sought to defend such
evil systems as good and divinely ordained. Although there is undoubtedly
responsibility for evils in other peoples and nations, the United States and
its citizens must grapple with evil by first asking how they are
contributing to it and helping to perpetuate it.
4. False Theological Idea Four: Evil can be
conquered by external coercion, ultimately by military force.
Local, national and international societies have limited rights to use
coercive force in order to constrain abuse of people and the environment
within their jurisdictions. The coercive role of government must include
those who use power to abuse others, such as paying below living wages and
allowing toxic environments that injure health. The proper role of
governments is not limited to police functions of restraining outlaws, but
includes the use of the sanctions of the law to encourage justice and fair
treatment for all.
But it must be clear that such coercive means, whether
within or between nations, cannot be construed theologically as "overcoming
evil." Evil can only be overcome by conversion, which takes place in the
hearts of persons in community. Those who monopolize wealth and power to
lord it over, impoverish and abuse others must be changed inwardly to
recognize their evil doing. This change is a mystery of divine grace that
calls us, empowers us to change and opens us to this call and
transformation. Conversion means giving up unjust power and privilege,
reconstructing one's relation to others, so that the means of life are
justly shared. In Jesus' words to the rich ruler, "sell all that you have
and distribute to the poor and you will have treasure in heaven" (Luke
18:22).
Conversion always happens in a social context, not as
isolated individuals in no relation to society. Personal conversion is
extended in a struggle to change communities. Persuaded by converted
mentors, communities recognize that they are using their wealth and power to
abuse others and to spiritually impoverish themselves. They decide to change
their ways in order to create more just and life giving social relations for
all.
Thus, for example, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict can
never be ended by the endless cycle of Israeli assassination of Palestinian
leaders and Palestinian suicide bombers taking revenge by randomly killing
Israelis. Although the international community can play a role in defining
and encouraging a more just sharing of the land between Israelis and
Palestinians, a real break-through to a just sharing of the land can only
happen as Israelis and Palestinians become converted from enmity toward each
other to seeing each other as fellow human beings with whom they wish to
live together as neighbors.
Apartheid in South Africa was overcome, not by external
coercion, although sanctions may have played a positive role, but ultimately
when whites and blacks were converted to one another and determined that
they must live together as equal fellow citizens of one national community.
Although all "evil" has hardly been overcome in South Africa, the end of
apartheid has lessened one aspect of the evil of racist monopolizing of
political power by whites. This has laid the basis for new efforts to create
a more just sharing of resources between white and blacks.
Conversion is the only way evil is "overcome." Military
violence generally worsens evil, imposing one unjust system in place of
another. Non-violent coercion and social reforms may constrain social evils.
But coercion never actually "overcomes" evil. This only happens when people
are converted from enmity and abuse of others to love of one's neighbor as
oneself
American Christians need to come together through local,
regional and national networks and church bodies to repudiate Americanist
Christianity and to call on all American Christians to distance themselves
from its false theological claims. Only in this way can we hope, with other
Americans, to forge a new national and international policy that will lessen
the evil the United States is doing in the world and the enmity that this is
causing. Only in this way can Americans hope to reestablish their country as
a nation among other nations that, together with other peoples of the world,
might actually lessen the evils of social injustice and environmental
degradation and create a beginning of a sustainable future for humanity.
We'd appreciate your comments!
Please send a
note and we'll share it here.
Click here to read the
first comments.