Why Do the Nations Rage?: The Demonic Origin of Nationalism
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About this ebook
David A. Ritchie
David A. Ritchie was born and raised in the West Texas wilderness city of Amarillo, where he serves as the as the Lead Pastor of Redeemer Christian Church. He holds degrees from Amarillo College, West Texas A&M University, and Reformed Theological Seminary. In addition to pastoring Redeemer, David is a part-time Instructor of Religion at West Texas A&M, an op-ed writer for the Amarillo Globe News, and a highly engaged leader in the Amarillo community. He serves on the boards of numerous non-profit organizations and ministries, including the Refugee Language Project and the Redeemer Network, and has also been an advocate for racial conciliation efforts in Amarillo. David is married to Kate, and together they live in Amarillo, Texas with their three sons.
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Why Do the Nations Rage? - David A. Ritchie
Part I
More Things in Heaven and Earth
1
A People Possessed
A nation is a soul, a spiritual principle.
—Ernest Renan, Qu’est-ce qu’une nation? (1882)
See to it that no one takes you captive by philosophy and empty deceit, according to human tradition, according to the elemental spirits of the world, and not according to Christ.
—Colossians 2:8
A Rival Religion
The gallows got my attention. They arose from the chaos, signaling murderous intent, as the mob surged like a tsunami around the Capitol steps. Hang Mike Pence!
voices shouted in unison as realtors and veterans and insurance agents, now insurgents, pressed and burst into the federal building. Lawmakers fled, as men wearing tactical gear swept the legislative chambers with zip-ties in hand, presumably for the purpose of arresting and punishing those leaders deemed treasonous. Some of the rioters came prepared for revolution. Some seem to have been swept up in the spirit of the moment, unaware of the ramifications of what their choices would have on their lives and their nation.
On that day, January 6, 2021, as I saw pictures and footage of the events transpiring in the United States Capitol, I felt angry that the violent political rhetoric in American politics had now increasingly manifested in violent actions. I felt concerned that this extreme event might be a prelude to an even more extreme future. I felt ashamed that such displays had now come to be expected from my nation’s toxic political theater. Most of all, as a pastor, I felt grieved that images of the name of my Savior were displayed alongside this spectacle of nihilistic division and death.
In the days that followed, videos surfaced of worship songs being sung on the Capitol lawn during the invasion and of the man with the iconic horned helmet and star-spangled face-paint offering a prayer in Christ’s holy name
within the invaded Senate Chamber. Consequently, think pieces on the topic of Christian nationalism
began to dominate editorial pages and social media feeds.
How did it come to this? How did Christianity come to be so identified with the ideology known as nationalism? How could some Christians themselves be so enchanted, so deceived, so (dare I say) possessed so as to justify conspiracy theories, mob violence, and insurrection?
Despite the recent focus on what many term as white Christian nationalism
in America, nationalism itself is not inherently bound to any one ethnicity, religion, or nationality.¹ Nor is it by any means a recent phenomenon. In fact, nationalism studies surged as the dust settled from World War 2, as a way to understand, reckon with, and hopefully prevent the devastation of such global conflict. Interestingly, the same time period saw a corresponding increase in interest regarding the Apostle Paul’s doctrine of powers.
² In exploring the powers, theologians rediscovered biblical language and categories to describe the spiritual evil that inspired Nazi Germany to inflict the unimaginable horror of the Holocaust.
But what if nationalism and the powers are more than casually related? What if the biblical category of powers actually helps explain the spiritual aspects and agencies behind nationalism in ways that the social sciences could not? What if the Apostle Paul can help us understand why nationalism is such an enduring and alluring form of idolatry, especially among people of faith today?
I have no intention of demeaning or devaluing sociological or historical perspectives on nationalism. Studying nationalism through the familiar lens of the social sciences can yield helpful and indispensable insights.³ We don’t need less than the social sciences. But we do need something more; something that helps us see beyond the confined horizons of the immanent frame.
⁴ Indeed, there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in our secular philosophy, and a biblically-derived spiritual realism brings forth a necessary perspective for Christians to understand and navigate the transcendent dynamics behind nations and nationalism.
Since nationalism involves the exaltation of a nation (or a particular conception⁵ of a nation) to the highest place of allegiance, concern, and devotion, it is essentially idolatrous, as several Christian critics of nationalism have observed. However, in the coming pages, I will argue that nationalism is inherently demonic as well.
Through an interdisciplinary analysis of scholarship on nationalism and Paul’s doctrine of powers, we will learn how the impulse behind nationalism is as ancient as the tower of Babel and as demonic as the worship of Baal. Indeed, when examined through the lens of biblical demonology, you will discover that there is little distinction between the ancient pagan’s worship of a national patron deity and the contemporary nationalist’s tendency to exalt a particular nation to a place of functional divinity.
I will be upfront with my goal. By the time you come the final page of this book, I want you to see that Christianity and nationalism are rival religions.
I write about nationalism, not as an armchair theologian with a political axe to grind. I write about nationalism because my experience as a pastor in the West Texas wilderness has led me to believe that nationalism—not atheism, not new age spiritualism, nor any other traditional world faith—is the greatest religious rival to the Christian gospel that vies for the worship of the people whom I love and serve in my congregation, my broader community, and, increasingly, my nation.
As a rival religion, nationalism may seek to conquer Christianity, or it may seek to co-opt Christianity for its own purposes. To borrow some imagery from the book of Revelation, as a Beast,
nationalism may seek to destroy Christianity through the power of the sword (cf. Rev 13). But as a Babylon,
it may seek to compromise Christianity through the power of seduction (cf. Rev 18).⁶ Likewise, the wicked Queen Jezebel sought to ruthlessly destroy all prophets of Yahweh, whereas the false prophet Balaam sought to lead the people of Israel astray through syncretism and idolatry. Yet both Jezebel and Balaam were worshippers of Baal. In exalting the nation to a place of spiritual ultimacy, nationalism effectively turns the nation into an idol of a false god. Christians must flee such idolatry, for to serve or make sacrifices to such idols is to share fellowship with demonic powers who are actively opposed to God and his people (cf. 1 Cor 10:20–21).
A Roadmap Going Forward
In the remaining chapters of Part I, I will introduce the concepts of powers,
nations,
and nationalism.
After establishing a common framework and vocabulary, we will move toward a biblical-theological critique of nationalism by using Paul’s doctrine of powers as the primary lens of analysis. In Part II, we will explore the rich intellectual history that lies behind the powers, primarily deriving from the Hebrew Scriptures as well as a few other ancient sources. This will reveal not only the origin of the powers, but also the deeply ancient connection between the powers and the pagan nations. Part III will unfold how the Apostle Paul understands the powers, the nations, and nationalistic allegiance in light of the redemptive accomplishment of Jesus Christ. Arguably the most significant section of the book, Part IV will show the various ways that nationalism, in all of its myriad forms, consistently conveys its own set of spiritually-charged, religious doctrines that simultaneously mirror and distort the Christian gospel. Finally, Part V will offer a practical sketch for contending with the powers of nationalism in a ministerial context, along with a final pastoral charge.
1
. Admittedly, the most noxious—and unified—form of nationalism in the contemporary United States is white Christian nationalism,
and there is an avalanche of disheartening sociological data that supports this claim. See: Whitehead and Perry, Taking America Back for God. However, I want to stress that white Christian nationalism is only one manifestation of a much broader and deeply historical form of spiritual idolatry.
2
. The term powers
comes from the KJV translation of "exousias" in Ephesians
6
:
12
, which refer to spiritual forces of darkness, which the NKJV and NASB still follow. Although other modern English translations prefer to translate "exousias, as
authorities," the spiritual forces described in Ephesians
6
:
12
are still most often termed powers
by New Testament biblical scholars and theologians.
3
. To the potential consternation of some readers, this book is not primarily an analysis of contemporary Christian nationalism. Rather, this book is intended to function as a biblical-theological critique of the broad phenomenon of nationalism and the spiritual foundations that lie at its core. For sociological critiques of Christian nationalism in the United States, see: Whitehead and Perry, Taking America Back for God and Gorski and Perry, The Flag and the Cross.
4
. By the phrase immanent frame,
I refer to the condition of secularism wherein any notion of transcendent reality is presuppositionally contested. "
. . .
this frame constitutes a ‘natural’ order, to be contrasted with a supernatural one, an ‘immanent’ world over against a possible ‘transcendent’ one." Taylor, A Secular Age, 542
.
5
. By conception,
I'm alluding to the fact that there are differing visions as to what a given nation should be and thus different (or variegated) versions of nationalism. Some iterations of nationalism are more ethnically oriented (i.e., black nationalism, white nationalism), some are more ideologically oriented (i.e., Bolshevism, revolutionary France, extremism in modern political parties), and some are a combination of the two (i.e., white Christian nationalism, Nazism). See chapter
3
for more on the variegated nature of nationalism.
6
. Leithart offers the distinction of beasts
and babels
to categorize the way that empires have opposed Christianity. I believe this distinction also applies to the way nationalism opposes Christianity. Thus, what is often referred to as Christian nationalism
is a babel-like variety of nationalism. Leithart, Between Babel and Beast, xi.
2
The Powers That Be
Introducing the Powers
While significant space will be devoted in later chapters to Paul’s understanding of powers, a brief introduction to the concept is in order. Simply stated, Paul presents the powers as spiritual beings that are personal in nature and exert corporate influence over groups of people.⁷ Although the powers are clearly related to the concept of demons, Paul does not typically employ the term demons
(daimonion) when describing forces of spiritual evil.⁸ Instead, he uses the terms rulers
(archē), authorities
(exousias), powers
(dynamis), dominions
(kyriotēs), thrones
(thronos), or cosmic powers
(kosmokratōr) as cognate terms when describing such entities.⁹ In utilizing this language, Paul implies that the powers bear negative influence not only over individuals but also people groups and geographical territories.
Paul’s use of powers is also apocalyptic
in nature.¹⁰ Here, apocalyptic
carries the notion of that which was once concealed being suddenly, dramatically, and irreversibly revealed or unveiled. When referring to the rulers,
authorities,
and cosmic powers over this present darkness,
Paul is lifting a curtain. He is unveiling the true nature of spiritual reality that lies behind the flesh and blood
of human experience and human history (Eph 6:12). To preclude these powers from how we understand reality is to miss the whole picture and wonder of biblical cosmology. In an unenchanted wasteland of a secular age, we are prone to interpret ourselves, our world, and even Scripture itself within the constraints of mere matter in motion. But within this truncated, cropped-frame view of reality, the Apostle Paul’s apocalyptic framework invites use into a widescreen edition
of the cosmos we inhabit and the unseen spiritual drama that surrounds us.¹¹
As biblical scholar J. Louis Martyn observed, Paul’s apocalyptic perspective views the drama of salvation not as a two-actor drama, consisting only of God and humanity. Rather, Christian salvation is a three-actor drama consisting of God, humanity, and the cosmic powers.¹² In Christ, God has dramatically—and apocalyptically—acted upon the world, which has been under the tyranny of the anti-God powers. The arrival of Christ has inaugurated the age of New Creation that is contrasted with the present evil age
(Gal 1:4), wherein the peoples of the earth have been under cosmic enslavement.¹³
Nevertheless, in this present age, the powers seek to separate people from the love of God (Rom 8:38). They apparently possessed and controlled the imperial means that crucified Christ (1 Cor 2:8). They blind the minds of unbelievers to the light of the gospel (2 Cor 4:4). They are the beings with whom spiritual war is waged (Eph 6:12). Yet, they have now been defeated and delegitimized by the far greater power of the resurrected and ascended Lord Jesus Christ (Eph