George Bush and the Death of American Constantinianism

Or, How God Works Through History to Suppress Bad Theology.
The history of the Church over the past few centuries may be surprising to many who consider the world to be in a perpetual state of moral decline. The 18th and 19th Centuries were particularly dark times for Protestantism and Evangelicalism worldwide. Having fully accepted the anthropocentric philosophy of the 18th century and positivism of the 19th century - first that man is the measure of all things and second that only what is experienced can be certainly known (Schleiermacher, often called the Father of Liberal Theology, was a particular proponent of this last point) - theology became less of the study of God and His relation to man, and more of a purely academic discipline, steeped in the historical-critical tradition. Many would claim to be simply following the Protestant Principle - that is, searching out historic Christianity by removing accretions (such as, many of the time would say, the divinity of Christ or the election of God) - but stripped of any meaningful distinction from generic morality, people began to, as Piper would say, “follow the Protestant Principle right out the door of the church”.
There seemed to be no turning back from Liberal Theology - the idea that simple, general and universal religious truths were the primary aim of the specific stories and letters of the Bible - by the early 20th century. And leaving little to commend Christianity over any other religion, the future of the Church looked quite grim. Fast forward to the 1960s. Evangelicalism was back on the rise with the Baptist denomination (which would quickly become the fastest growing denomination in America and eventually the largest in total number), mainline Liberal denominations were beginning to split off into evangelical segments, and Liberal Theology was virtually dead. What happened in the interim? Quite simply, two world wars happened.
The death of Liberal Theology and the rise of Evangelicalism was directly and immediately thanks to Kaiser Wilhelm and Adolf Hitler. During the 18th, 19th and early 20th centuries, Germany was the center of the Western philosophical renaissance, with eminent philosophers from Kant and Hegel to Schopenhauer and Nietzsche. Incidentally Liberal Theology of that era was built upon defending the Christian faith upon a foundation of the popular philosophy of the day. Thus, Germany was also the theological center of the Western world. There was hardly a theologian of that day, Karl Barth notes in The Humanity of God, that did not also consider himself a professional philosopher.
The problem with Liberal Theology in Germany in the early 20th Century was, however, as Barth also notes in the same book, “He who in 1933 may have still been spellbound by the theology of the 19th century was hopelessly condemned … to bet on the wrong horse with regard to National Socialism”. Liberal theology was built upon the same philosophical tradition as the Nazi Party, and thus was prone to endorse it. Barth even describes the day he became disenchanted with Liberal Theology at large - when in 1914, 93 German intellectuals, including nearly all of the theologians he most revered, endorsed Kaiser Wilhelm’s war policy. Without a firm Christological foundation, Liberal Theology could do no other than be swept away in Europe’s brief mass enchantment with Fascism.
In the aftermath of World War II and following the discovery of the concentration camps, Hitler and the Nazi party came to and continue to carry such a strong stigma that even failing to display proper moral revulsion at their idea was sufficient to pick up the stigma. This was even more pronounced in Christian circles, in which the deeds of Hitler and the Nazis stood in even starker contrast to ideal Biblical morality. How could the greatest theologians of our time have stood by the greatest evil of our time?
Thus the Nazi stigma stuck to Liberal Theology, and it is now widely discredited. Germany never since has returned to the philosophical and theological prominence it once enjoyed. In this instance, we can see the hand of God working in history to stamp out the theology that had castrated the Christian faith for over a century.
So what does this have to do with George Bush and American Constantinianism? Far be it from me to compare Bush directly to Hitler (though it is a popular, if dramatic, comparison among those who oppose his policies) - my point is rather the stigma associated with them. George Bush is by far the most unpopular president in recent memory, and he is even more despised worldwide than at home. And with the national debt as it is, even if we manage to pull out of Iraq soon, his legacy is likely to be even more strongly negative in the future, both in America and abroad.
But even though his stigma is still significantly less than that of Hitler’s, his connection to the group we will focus on is much stronger. Though the Liberal theologians of the early 20th century gave Hitler moral support, there is one group that was singlehandedly instrumental in Bush’s rise to power: The Christian Right.
I have written much before about the danger of Christian Right theology to the Church at large, from engendering materialism to engendering undue disrespect from the World (not that we should actively seek its respect, but we are to appear blameless and shine our lights that the gentiles may “see your good works and glorify your Father in Heaven” (Matthew 5:16)), so I will not argue its harm here. But it seems to me that American Constantinianism - the Christian Right, which seeks to bring the Church into government - may soon face a similar decline to Liberal Theology of the mid 20th century. If Bush’s stigma continues to grow (which is likely) and the Christian Right makes no major move to distance itself from him (which wouldn’t likely matter much, even if it were likely to happen), then mainstream American Evangelicalism could likely move quickly and sharply away from its current state of political activism.
Even now we are beginning to see this happening. I recently ran across a book mirroring many of my own ideas in Books A Million called Jesus For President, that besides the alarming title and artsy layout choices, makes a compelling case for the abandonment of Constantinianism. Though the book does not rail against any particular politicians, it is clearly inspired by a disillusionment with the political fruit of the Christian Right. These ideas, though widely looked upon with scorn by the Evangelical establishment not so long ago, are now gaining steam from the bottom up as more and more Christians recognize the failure of Constantinianism to bring about the good of the Church, or more severely, the glory of God.
Picture from Newsweek’s cover story Bush & God
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