I’ve read
so many great pieces over the past year written by- and about- thoughtful
Evangelical Christians grappling with the fact that President Trump- an
out-and-proud narcissistic bully- has so much respect and support from their
fellow Evangelicals.
Much of
this writing has sincerely and honestly been trying to re-imagine
Evangelicalism beyond the socio-political ditch into which these writers feel
it has driven itself into, and conceive of an American Evangelicalism that is
more open, inclusive, honest and, well, Christ-like.
I was
raised in the Evangelical Christian subculture and worked within it for a good
chunk of my adult life. While I have not identified as an Evangelical Christian
for about 25 years now- finding my home in the liturgical, the contemplative,
and the silent- I have a great amount of respect and affection for many of my
brothers and sisters in the Evangelical community and applaud their efforts to
think outside the box that previous generations of Evangelicals have
constructed around them.
But outside
of those voices, the vast majority of American Evangelicals (specifically white Evangelicals; Evangelicals of colour have been- not unsurprisingly- unmoved by Trumpism) appear to be
standing rock-solid behind the President, a thrice-married, utterly-irreligious, hedonistic, profane, vain,
corrupt, bullying, bankrupt gambling tycoon.
This seems so incongruous to so many and has fascinated and dismayed many commentators, all of whom seem to be waiting for the moment when Evangelicals wake up in horror, realize what they’ve hitched themselves to, and turn against Trump, hastening his demise.
This seems so incongruous to so many and has fascinated and dismayed many commentators, all of whom seem to be waiting for the moment when Evangelicals wake up in horror, realize what they’ve hitched themselves to, and turn against Trump, hastening his demise.
I don’t
think that’s going to happen, and I think I have an insight into why.
To
understand where I’m coming from, you have to imagine one of the oldest
narratives in human history, found in just about every culture’s myths, epics,
and sagas: the opportunity to get everything you want.
It’s the moment in the tale when a character
engaged in an epic quest is approached by a god or a magical entity who has the
ability to make it possible for the character to achieve and acquire everything
that character wants or needs- wealth, power, love, success, or victory.
The god or
entity can absolutely deliver. All the character has to do is grasp it…
… but (and
it’s always a huge, monumental, epic ‘but’) there is always one thing; one small,
apparently-simple detail that the character must remember to do or not do-
leave the party before midnight; don’t
ever get off the horse; don’t ever look back; don’t open the box; never say a
specific phrase- or they will lose everything.
As the one
small detail seems so simple and apparently irrelevant, the character inevitably
agrees. But just as inevitably, they are tripped up by that one, simple thing
and lose everything.
When we
heard these stories as children, it all seemed so unfair. I mean, who
*wouldn’t* go for the deal? Why did the god or entity include that one, stupid
proviso?
What we
didn’t realize was that the point of these stories was to teach us about human
frailty, hubris, or simply that sometimes bad things happen to good people. We
can never be in control of everything, the stories seemed to say; our lives and
our destinies are never completely our own. Don’t try to shortcut your way to
victory. Keep a reasonable account of yourself. Be realistic. Be humble. Be
wise.
Well, the majority of the Evangelical movement in America have been engaged in a quest for
decades to re-shape and re-mould America (though they would use the language of
restoration). Basically, decades before Trump, they were dreaming of making
America ‘great’ again, but as seen through their religious lens- holy, chaste,
godly, righteous…
In 2016, they got offered the chance to win, win big, win everything.
Their quest
had many elements within it, many of which often paralleled the social and
political aims of other demographic groups. But there was one issue that was
almost exclusively theirs, and on that I’d argue was the central hub around
which all other elements revolved :
abortion on
demand.
Severely
curtailing (if not outright overturning) Roe v. Wade, the 1973 US Supreme Court’s
landmark decision that effectively legalized a woman’s right to terminate her
pregnancy, was and is the Holy Grail of American Evangelicalism.
Efforts began
slowly in the mid-70’s; President Carter, though an Evangelical, stood by the
decision and got no serious, sustained flak for it. It was not until the
Reagan-era 80’s and the rise of Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority, Pat Robertson’s
Christian Coalition, and Randall Terry’s Operation Rescue that the American
‘pro-life’ movement slammed into high gear.
This was the beginning of a long campaign to put real political power into the hands of Evangelical Christians by getting their issues into the Republican Party platform, and overturning Roe v. Wade was a policy linchpin.
Roe v. Wade
at this point began to be given the descriptive characteristics of a holocaust,
innocent, unborn children, butchered by the millions. Anyone who defended
abortion was depraved, the doctor who performed one was a murderer, and any
woman who had one was a monster, sacrificing an innocent life for freedom and
pleasure.
Make no
mistake; that was the only explanation I ever heard for why this went on, and
the very cruelty of it compounded the horror. The life of the baby overrode any
other explanation or circumstance. The mother was alive and the baby was dead.
The horror, to the pro-lifer, was self-evident.
Abortion
was Satanism at its most naked and most cruel.
Mainstream
Republicans noticed what was brewing and cautiously began a courtship with this
new insurgency, seeking to harness this growing and hugely dedicated new
demographic- the ‘Religious Right’. However, the mainstream Republican machine
didn’t embrace the Evangelicals’ moral crusade, at least not in the same way.
They saw the Evangelicals as an asset, one constituency group of among many,
there to be tapped as part of greater strategies.
Republicans made many of the
right noises, and did things that Evangelicals liked. But because most of the
Washington Republican machine didn’t think about abortion in the same way as
their Evangelical base did, it was never going to be as high on the ‘to do’
list as Evangelicals would want it to be.
The
weakness of the Evangelicals’ position, unfortunately, was similar to any
dependable constituency in a two-party system: they had nowhere else to go-
particularly in the Clinton-dominated 90’s- and they began to suspect the
Republican machine was taking them for granted… which was probably true.
Each election cycle, Evangelicals rallied to the Republican candidates with the best Evangelical bona fides- Michelle Bachmann, Ben Carson, the seemingly-perennial Alan Keyes, even Pat Robertson himself back in the day- but dutifully and sometimes grudgingly voted for the Washington-connected center-right moderate Republican that got the nomination.
Each election cycle, Evangelicals rallied to the Republican candidates with the best Evangelical bona fides- Michelle Bachmann, Ben Carson, the seemingly-perennial Alan Keyes, even Pat Robertson himself back in the day- but dutifully and sometimes grudgingly voted for the Washington-connected center-right moderate Republican that got the nomination.
Abortion on
demand- seen by the majority of Evangelicals as America’s greatest moral
failing- remained on the books and (it appeared) unassailable.
But
Evangelicals were playing a very, very long game- longer than any of their
detractors understand… That's because the
issues that they most care about- and abortion crystallizes that like no other
issue- are timeless and non-negotiable. Abortion is murder. Roe v. Wade is
demonic. What they want is no mere political victory, but a spiritual one,
directed by God who, though he works in mysterious ways, absolutely assures
them the victory.
Which pretty
much brings us to the present moment, and in Evangelical terms, what a present
moment it is…
President
Trump (who, to be fair, wasn’t their first choice; they'd have much preferred Carson or Cruz) has given Evangelicals more of what
they’ve actually wanted in a year and a half than every Republican administration
in the past forty:
He’s been aggressively vocal about Christianity’s supremacy over other faiths;
He’s been outspoken about culture war battles such as the ‘War on Christmas;
he’s moved the US Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, aligning himself with the most intransigent, militaristic, and theocratic elements within Israel and the US;
he’s packed the federal courts with ideological conservatives;
He’s been aggressively vocal about Christianity’s supremacy over other faiths;
He’s been outspoken about culture war battles such as the ‘War on Christmas;
he’s moved the US Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, aligning himself with the most intransigent, militaristic, and theocratic elements within Israel and the US;
he’s packed the federal courts with ideological conservatives;
And crucially,
he has brought Evangelicals within striking distance of the ultimate prize: a
solidly ideologically-conservative US Supreme Court, capable of finally- at
long last- ending abortion on demand.
Trump himself is not an Evangelical, nor has he shown any religious tendencies whatsoever, nor indeed (it could be effectively argued from his own sordid history) does he care or even have any particular opinion one way or another about any of these issues beyond seeing them as chances to aggrandize himself personally... but his administration includes die-hard conservative Evangelicals in Jeff Sessions and Betsy Devos, and he's had an open-door policy for Jerry Falwell Jr., Franklin Graham, and other powerful right-wing Evangelical leaders who have been able to steer his erratic ship toward their own fortunes, much to the delight of the average Evangelical voter.
Trump himself is not an Evangelical, nor has he shown any religious tendencies whatsoever, nor indeed (it could be effectively argued from his own sordid history) does he care or even have any particular opinion one way or another about any of these issues beyond seeing them as chances to aggrandize himself personally... but his administration includes die-hard conservative Evangelicals in Jeff Sessions and Betsy Devos, and he's had an open-door policy for Jerry Falwell Jr., Franklin Graham, and other powerful right-wing Evangelical leaders who have been able to steer his erratic ship toward their own fortunes, much to the delight of the average Evangelical voter.
Simply put, for a significant majority of white Evangelicals, Trump is delivering, and in ways that no one has ever politically and
culturally delivered to them before.
Trump offers victory... evidence, to many, that for all his faults and foibles, he must be the instrument of God.
Trump offers victory... evidence, to many, that for all his faults and foibles, he must be the instrument of God.
With that
in mind, do you really think Evangelicals will suddenly turn on Trump because
he says mean and stupid things?Do you
think they’re going to simply surrender a forty-year war because Trump was rude
to Christine Blasey Ford?
Don’t be ridiculous. This is the win of all wins…
But (and
here comes that huge, monumental, epic ‘but’…)
like the
hero in the myths, there is a price to pay for all this, a ruthless and very
disturbing bargain made:
It is
nothing less than surrendering any moral authority to speak of the Gospel of
Jesus as it is understood from the biblical text... all for the chance to 'restore' America to the image that the Trump-supporting Evangelicals envision.
Trump
insults and bullies the poorer, the weaker, the less-attractive;
He praises
the strong, the supremacists, the prejudiced;
He defends
the oppressor, the suppressor, the aggressive;
He lies,
and lies, and lies;
He is the
antithesis of every characteristic that Jesus in the biblical text lays out for
those who follow him;
He is the antithesis- at times almost comically so- of every attribute that St. Paul considered evidence of the working of the spirit of God in a person's life- love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, self-control...
He is the antithesis- at times almost comically so- of every attribute that St. Paul considered evidence of the working of the spirit of God in a person's life- love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, self-control...
Needless to
say (and I'm sure no one will be shocked to hear it), I just don’t see Jesus in this.
Needless to
say, I don’t see the Gospel of the biblical text- food for the poor,
sight for the blind, release for the prisoners, freedom for the captives, life
for the lifeless, a voice for the voiceless- in this.
This is not interpreting the Gospel; it's not spinning, finessing, or managing it… This is abandoning it.
Jesus’s
words in the Gospel of Mark recently came to my mind:
‘Whoever
wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow
me.
‘For whoever
wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life
for me and for the gospel I preach will save it.
‘What good is
it for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul?
‘Or what can
anyone give in exchange for their soul?
‘If anyone is
ashamed of me and my words in this adulterous and sinful generation, the Son of
Man will be ashamed of them when he comes in his Father’s glory
with the holy angels.’
If
Evangelicals are being forced to choose between the Christ of the Gospel and
the adulterous and the sinful- as I believe they are- they risk gaining their 'whole world'- their 'restored America'- at the price of their soul.
That price
is too high…
… and
blessings on those Evangelicals trying to point that out.
But as to the
rest turning on Trump? No time soon, I fear…
Five Stars
ReplyDeleteThanks, mate:-)
ReplyDeleteWell said, Jon!
ReplyDelete