The Politics of Jesus

Mark Tooley on August 11, 2023

There is an interesting observation from Michael Warren Davis in American Conservative:

For whatever it is worth, I strongly suspect that Russia will succumb to the Franco effect. By cynically allying itself with Putin, the Russian Church will (once again) discredit herself in the eyes of many Russians. “Why Kirill, it profit a man nothing to give his soul for the whole world. But for the Kremlin?”

No patriarch in the last hundred years has been able to refuse that bargain. Alas. So, I would not be surprised to find that adherence to Orthodoxy drops off a bit over the next few years.

Davis links back to an earlier article citing Franco:

By trying to force Catholicism on the Spanish people, Francisco Franco created resentment against the Church and hastened its decline in Spain. As a rule, when the government becomes more religious, public religiosity declines. (The phenomenon is now playing out in Islamic theocracies like Turkey and Iran.)

The same thing happens even if people think they want a theocracy. If their hearts remain unconverted, they’ll get sick of public religion pretty quickly. That’s what happened in Renaissance Florence under Savonarola.

Now, don’t get me wrong. This isn’t a paean to “freedom of religion” or any of that nonsense. God is no respecter of persons, and neither am I. No: this is about psychology. Laws are good at reinforcing a moral consensus. That’s why the theocratic monarchies of the Middle Ages survived for a thousand years. But when you try to use state power to build a religious consensus, it tends to backfire. In the modern world, such regimes have a zero percent success rate.

There is always the temptation by religionists to believe that power in their hands can enact a holy regime. The results are always at best very mixed, and usually the experiment does not last long. Religious views that are perceived to be imposed become unpopular, and the coercion enforcing them becomes ultimately unsustainable.

The old political order in Latin America for centuries was aligned with Roman Catholicism, which commanded until recent years over 90 percent of Latins. Some military dictatorships of the 1960s-80s were perceived to be aligned with the Catholic Church. Now Catholicism in Latin America in on track to sink below 50 percent of the population. Pentecostalism is displacing Catholicism, accompanied by growing numbers of unaffiliated. Of course, parts of Latin Pentecostalism are making their own political alignments with consequences not yet fully foreseen.

Even without coercion, religions perceived to be strongly aligned with particular political forces can lose their savor, while nonaligned religions prosper.

Recently in Comment, Mark Noll credited the wildly successful evangelistic success of early American Methodism, in contrast to established churches, to its detachment from partisan politics:

As a spiritual movement, Methodists achieved remarkable success in large part because they kept their message nonpartisan in a nation riven by political-religious conflict. But when the this-worldly convictions tied to early Methodist spirituality confronted the realities of American political controversy, especially concerning slavery, the Methodist religious revolution faltered.

And:

Methodist concentration on “scriptural holiness” produced remarkable results, particularly in joyful personal liberation, disciplined personal piety, and supportive community fellowship. Yet the singleness of purpose that kept Methodists from instrumentalizing their religion for political purposes was shaping a society where others did not hesitate.

Observers in the early twenty-first century where the politicization of religion has become so contentious might consider an ability to remain above the fray idyllic. Simply by not harnessing their religious energies to political bandwagons, early Methodists did maintain their religious integrity. Yet with a political tabula rasa, the Methodist movement could not offer much resistance to other influences once Asbury’s iron discipline passed from the scene. Because Methodists had not developed mechanisms for connecting individual piety to systemic public responsibilities, they drifted like political chameleons after Asbury’s determined apoliticism wore off.

The collapse of Methodist social influence in America began with its greatest political victory: Prohibition. After Prohibition’s repeal, Methodism first began to lose in its share of American population, and then later in absolute numbers, all the while becoming politically less and less relevant. Presidents Roosevelt, Taft and Wilson all spoke to Methodist governing bodies during the lead-up to Prohibition, after which another president never again addressed a Methodist juridical convention. In the 1950s, Bishop Bromley Oxnam was exasperated when the Methodist bishops met with President Eisenhower, who offered only a photo op, and no interest in hearing their views. Oxnam was not discouraged from pursuing other channels of political influence for his denomination.

Perhaps this cycle of churches eschewing and embracing politics is unavoidable. Rising religions focus on gaining new members and creating new communities of devotion. Once large in numbers, they command social influence and are courted by political forces, to which they succumb. These political engagements are not always negative seductions. Religious groups, especially when large, have accompanying societal responsibilities. Their adherents naturally want guidance about their duties as citizens. The difficult balance for religious groups is to encourage good citizenship without themselves becoming partisan actors and losing their more important spiritual credibility. Effective religious communities prioritize God’s eternal kingdom. Effectively advocating for constructive faith-inspired political engagement without conflating faith with a particular political brand is always challenging.

This poll earlier this year asked respondents to place Jesus on the political ideological spectrum. Naturally, respondents aligned Him with their own politics. Hopefully these respondents, whatever their politics, were at least shaped by the virtues and practices that Jesus taught.

Of course, Jesus as God Incarnate and Second Person of the Trinity cannot be placed on any ideological spectrum. As Creator and Savior, He cannot be reduced to our categories. We stand in His Judgement. Our politics are at best an approximation of what we think He desires in our fallen world. But we must be very slow to speak politically for Him. And we must be mindful that even a righteous political cause pursued intemperately while claiming His name will discredit our cause and even His.

  1. Comment by David on August 11, 2023 at 7:57 am

    A number of future, incumbent, and past Presidents spoke at the Methodist Ocean Grove [NJ] camp meeting over the years. These events, of course, were not official functions of the Methodist Church. The Presidents included Grant multiple times, Garfield (1876), Taft (1911), McKinley (1889), Theodore Roosevelt (1899 and 1905), and Wilson (1911). As noted by the author, such visits declined and Nixon was the last in 1970.

    Claiming God is on your side goes way back. Prussian/German soldiers wore belt buckles emblazoned with “Gott mit Uns” (“God with us” or “God is on our side”), sometimes with a swastika. The 1971 film, “Fools’ Parade,” had a profound line, “God uses the good ones. The bad ones use God.”

  2. Comment by John Sampson on August 12, 2023 at 1:38 pm

    I wonder what will happen to the imposed religions of cultural Marxism and other -isms like transgenderism etc.

  3. Comment by Dan on August 15, 2023 at 2:13 pm

    Mark,
    Interesting article. Given your article, what is your opinion about “Letter to the American Church” by Eric Metaxas? When do you think biblical morality should be a force in society, and can or should it be attached to any particular political party or movement?

  4. Comment by Ken MacAlister on August 16, 2023 at 7:25 pm

    Jesus Christ is apolitical. It’s insulting to label the Creator of the universe with the political labels of human beings. As Isaiah wrote in his prophecy quoting God, “my ways are not your ways, my thoughts are not your thoughts.” The problem is most churches today as well as seminaries steer clear of God’s holiness & practice political interpretations of God’s Word. Or they just ignore The Bible totally. An understanding of God’s holiness would help people realize God does not concern Himself with human politics & doesn’t subscribe to any human political philosophy. I spent most of my life in a mainline denomination (UMC) & knew very little about the holiness of God during those years. It was rarely, if ever mentioned in sermons. It took leaving the UMC & going to a church which teaches directly from The Bible without a political agenda to learn things about God I never knew about while growing up. Any church which tries to politicize God, The Bible or the church itself should be avoided. I didn’t rush into a new church. I researched them until I found one that rejected politics & taught Sacred Scripture without any worldly influence. These churches are hard to find because there aren’t too many of them. They are worth finding though. It’s time the church as a whole stopped turning to politics, political parties, & politicians for the answers to the problems in the world & turn to The One who has the answers & doesn’t check people’s politics before giving those answers. God brings people together. Jesus saves. Politics & ideology divides.

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