Christian Nationalism and
Dominionism:
Christ Nationalism has been evident throughout
the history of Christianity, beginning when the Roman Emperor Constantine made
Christianity the state religion of the Roman Empire. As Richard Niebuhr wrote
in his book Christ and Culture (1951), Christians can challenge the
culture in which they live, accommodate to the culture, or practice their faith
separate from the culture. Niebuhr makes no ethical distinction between these
positions but surmises a kind of dualism that can result. Dualism can be good
or bad, depending upon the human frailties of those involved. Throughout
two-thousand years of Christian history there have been extremes and variations
of these positions of how a Christian functions in the country and cultural
times in which each Christian lives.
Christian
nationalism arises from the relationship of a government of a nation with a
body of Christ or, in other words, of group of Christians calling themselves a
church. Countries that have such a relationship often have a history of violent
conflicts. One only needs to examine what has happened in English history
between British Kings and Queens and the Church of England and in Ireland. Struggles
for control or power of one over the other have had disastrous results. The
same can be said for the Roman Empire and the Russian Empire over centuries of
the history of Christianity. Today that struggle for power and control exists
in both Russia and the United States.
In Russia
power and control rests in the current ruler, Putin, who, like the rulers
before him, accommodated with the Russian Orthodox Church or visa-versa. Under the
former Soviet Union, the Communist Chairmen first tried to control the Russian
Orthodox Church and then sought to eliminate the Church’s influence by
arresting priests and exiling them to Siberian camps. When that failed and after
the Russian Orthodox Church celebrated its millennial celebration under
Gorbachev, Christians emerged from hibernation, rejoined worshipers at Russian
Orthodox churches or formed non-denominational bodies of Christ. Although the Orthodox believers were once
again allowed to worship, when Vladimir Putin took over as president, believers
simply accommodated to Putin’s increasingly authoritarian rule.
In America, Christian
Nationalism took a dangerous new twist beginning in the 1960s with the formation
of the New Apostolic Reformation, with help from some Southern Baptist Church leaders, some
charismatic churches, and a group called the Family. These Christian bodies
believe that in the beginning America was founded as a Christian nation and the
US Constitution was inspired by God and therefore should be again and those elected
to office should only be Christians. When the take-over over of both government and government
institutions will be completed, America will then become fully the Kingdom of
God. Dr. David W. Scott, a Methodist
historical researcher and Director of Mission Theology at the General Board of
Global Ministries, defines our American brand of Christian Nationalism as moral
cover for any action taken in pursuit of national or political goals, identifying
our nation with God’s will and action in the world. In its extreme form, this
American Christian Nationalism has been called Dominion Theology, Dominionism, Christianism, or
Christian Reconstructionism.
The term dominion
derives from Genesis 1:28 when God gave the right to mankind to rule over the
animal kingdom. Nowhere in any Bible translation
does the term dominion mean the right to rule over other humans. In the Old
Testament, God reluctantly allowed the Israelites to have a king, whom He would
anoint, instead of a Judge, which God preferred. Americans do not have a king
but an elected president who doesn’t have absolute power, like Putin has. Today,
the influence of Dominionism is widespread in the United States; there is even
a Dominion Christian School. This term is not to be confused with the Roman
Catholic Dominican orders. These orders are based on scholastic and democratic
principles and are named after a Spanish Saint, Dominic, who, in 1200 AD, was
an evangelistic preacher.
Any
Christian should cringe in horror at what is happening in the current attempt
by Putin to reclaim Ukraine and realize the danger of today’s Russian brand of
Christian Nationalism. At least, in the UK, the English head of the Anglican
Church anoints the king or queen, who seems, under their democratic form of
governing, to have only limited powers at this time in English history.
However, the current brand of American Christian Nationalism allows American
Christians to remake our nation’s government the way these followers believe
God wants it to be in preparation for Jesus’ second coming.
Jesus never
tried to remake the Roman form of government, but he did challenge the Pharisees
to live the way they preached and taught. He teaches in the Sermon on the Mount
how all believers should treat everyone with the kind of love God has for each
of us, to love a nation’s enemies, to be humble servants, to care for the poor
and sick, to welcoming refugees and immigrants, and to be active as peacemakers.
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