Dangerous Religion: George W. Bush's
theology of empire.
Sojourners, August 22, 2003
By Jim Wallis
Aug 22, 2003, 09:04
Religion is the most dangerous energy source known to
humankind. The moment a person (or government or religion or
organization) is convinced that God is either ordering or sanctioning a
cause or project, anything goes. The history, worldwide, of
religion-fueled hate, killing, and oppression is staggering. Eugene
Peterson (from the introduction to the book of Amos in the Bible
paraphrase The Message)
"The military victory in Iraq seems to have
confirmed a new world order," Joseph Nye, dean of Harvard's Kennedy
School of Government, wrote recently in The Washington Post. "Not
since Rome has one nation loomed so large above the others. Indeed, the
word 'empire' has come out of the closet."
The use of the word "empire" in relation to
American power in the world was once controversial, often restricted to
left-wing critiques of U.S. hegemony. But now, on op-ed pages and in the
nation's political discourse, the concepts of empire, and even the phrase
"Pax Americana," are increasingly referred to in unapologetic
ways.
William Kristol, editor of the influential Weekly
Standard, admits the aspiration to empire. "If people want to say
we're an imperial power, fine," Kristol wrote. Kristol is chair of
the Project for the New American Century, a group of conservative
political figures that began in 1997 to chart a much more aggressive
American foreign policy (see Project for a New American Empire). The
Project's papers lay out the vision of an "American peace"
based on "unquestioned U.S. military pre-eminence." These
imperial visionaries write, "America's grand strategy should aim to
preserve and extend this advantageous position as far into the future as
possible." It is imperative, in their view, for the United States to
"accept responsibility for America's unique role in preserving and
extending an international order friendly to our security, our
prosperity, and our principles." That, indeed, is empire.
There is nothing secret about all this; on the
contrary, the views and plans of these powerful men have been quite open.
These are Far Right American political leaders and commentators who
ascended to governing power and, after the trauma of Sept. 11, 2001, have
been emboldened to carry out their agenda.
In the run-up to the war with Iraq, Kristol told me
that Europe was now unfit to lead because it was "corrupted by
secularism," as was the developing world, which was "corrupted
by poverty." Only the United States could provide the "moral
framework" to govern a new world order, according to Kristol, who
recently and candidly wrote, "Well, what is wrong with dominance, in
the service of sound principles and high ideals?" Whose ideals? The
American right wing's definition of "American ideals,"
presumably.
Bush Adds God
To this aggressive extension of American power in the
world, President George W. Bush adds Godand that changes the
picture dramatically. It's one thing for a nation to assert its raw
dominance in the world; it's quite another to suggest, as this president
does, that the success of American military and foreign policy is
connected to a religiously inspired "mission," and even that
his presidency may be a divine appointment for a time such as this.
Many of the president's critics make the mistake of
charging that his faith is insincere at best, a hypocrisy at worst, and
mostly a political cover for his right-wing agenda. I don't doubt that
George W. Bush's faith is sincere and deeply held. The real question is
the content and meaning of that faith and how it impacts his
administration's domestic and foreign policies.
George Bush reports a life-changing conversion around
the age of 40 from being a nominal Christian to a born-again
believera personal transformation that ended his drinking problems,
solidified his family life, and gave him a sense of direction. He changed
his denominational affiliation from his parents' Episcopal faith to his
wife's Methodism. Bush's personal faith helped prompt his interest in
promoting his "compassionate conservatism" and the faith-based
initiative as part of his new administration.
The real theological question about George W. Bush was
whether he would make a pilgrimage from being essentially a self-help
Methodist to a social reform Methodist. God had changed his life in real
ways, but would his faith deepen to embrace the social activism of John
Wesley, the founder of Methodism, who said poverty was not only a matter
of personal choices but also of social oppression and injustice? Would
Bush's God of the 12-step program also become the God who required social
justice and challenged the status quo of the wealthy and powerful, the
God of whom the biblical prophets spoke?
Then came Sept. 11, 2001. Bush's compassionate
conservatism and faith-based initiative rapidly gave way to his newfound
vocation as the commander-in-chief of the "war against
terrorism." Close friends say that after 9/11 Bush found "his
mission in life." The self-help Methodist slowly became a messianic
Calvinist promoting America's mission to "rid the world of
evil." The Bush theology was undergoing a critical transformation.
In an October 2000 presidential debate, candidate Bush
warned against an over-active American foreign policy and the negative
reception it would receive around the world. Bush cautioned restraint.
"If we are an arrogant nation, they will resent us," he said.
"If we're a humble nation, but strong, they'll welcome us."
The president has come a long way since then. His
administration has launched a new doctrine of pre-emptive war, has fought
two wars (in Afghanistan and Iraq), and now issues regular demands and
threats against other potential enemies. After Sept. 11, nations around
the world responded to America's paineven the French newspaper Le
Monde carried the headline "We are all Americans now." But the
new pre-emptive andmost criticallyunilateral foreign policy
America now pursues has squandered much of that international support.
The Bush policy has become one of potentially endless
wars abroad and a domestic agenda that mostly consists of tax cuts,
primarily for the rich. "Bush promised us a foreign policy of
humility and a domestic policy of compassion," Joe Klein wrote in
Time magazine. "He has given us a foreign policy of arrogance and a
domestic policy that is cynical, myopic, and cruel." What happened?
A Mission and an Appointment
Former Bush speechwriter David Frum says of the
president, "War had made him…a crusader after all." At
the outset of the war in Iraq, George Bush entreated, "God bless our
troops." In his State of the Union speech, he vowed that America
would lead the war against terrorism "because this call of history
has come to the right country." Bush's autobiography is titled A
Charge to Keep, which is a quote from his favorite hymn.
In Frum's book The Right Man, he recounts a
conversation between the president and his top speechwriter, Mike Gerson,
a graduate of evangelical Wheaton College. After Bush's speech to
Congress following the Sept. 11 attacks, Frum writes that Gerson called
up his boss and said, "Mr. President, when I saw you on television,
I thoughtGod wanted you there." According to Frum, the
president replied, "He wants us all here, Gerson."
Bush has made numerous references to his belief that
he could not be president if he did not believe in a "divine plan
that supersedes all human plans." As he gained political power, Bush
has increasingly seen his presidency as part of that divine plan. Richard
Land, of the Southern Baptist Convention, recalls Bush once saying,
"I believe God wants me to be president." After Sept. 11,
Michael Duffy wrote in Time magazine, the president spoke of "being
chosen by the grace of God to lead at that moment."
Every Christian hopes to find a vocation and calling
that is faithful to Christ. But a president who believes that the nation
is fulfilling a God-given righteous mission and that he serves with a
divine appointment can become quite theologically unsettling. Theologian
Martin Marty voices the concern of many when he says, "The problem
isn't with Bush's sincerity, but with his evident conviction that he's
doing God's will." As Christianity Today put it, "Some worry
that Bush is confusing genuine faith with national ideology." The
president's faith, wrote Klein, "does not give him pause or force
him to reflect. It is a source of comfort and strength but not of
wisdom."
The Bush theology deserves to be examined on biblical
grounds. Is it really Christian, or merely American? Does it take a
global view of God's world or just assert American nationalism in the
latest update of "manifest destiny"? How does the rest of the
worldand, more important, the rest of the church
worldwideview America's imperial ambitions?
Getting the Words Wrong
President Bush uses religious language more than any
president in U.S. history, and some of his key speechwriters come right
out of the evangelical community. Sometimes he draws on biblical
language, other times old gospel hymns that cause deep resonance among
the faithful in his own electoral base. The problem is that the quotes
from the Bible and hymnals are too often either taken out of context or,
worse yet, employed in ways quite different from their original meaning.
For example, in the 2003 State of the Union, the president evoked an
easily recognized and quite famous line from an old gospel hymn. Speaking
of America's deepest problems, Bush said, "The need is great. Yet
there's power, wonder-working power, in the goodness and idealism and
faith of the American people." But that's not what the song is
about. The hymn says there is "power, power, wonder-working power in
the blood of the Lamb" (emphasis added). The hymn is about the power
of Christ in salvation, not the power of "the American people,"
or any people, or any country. Bush's citation was a complete misuse.
On the first anniversary of the 2001 terrorist
attacks, President Bush said at Ellis Island, "This ideal of America
is the hope of all mankind…. That hope still lights our way. And
the light shines in the darkness. And the darkness has not overcome
it." Those last two sentences are straight out of John's gospel. But
in the gospel the light shining in the darkness is the Word of God, and
the light is the light of Christ. It's not about America and its values.
Even his favorite hymn, "A Charge to Keep," speaks of that
charge as "a God to glorify"not to "do everything we
can to protect the American homeland," as Bush has named our charge
to keep.
Bush seems to make this mistake over and over
againconfusing nation, church, and God. The resulting theology is
more American civil religion than Christian faith.
The Problem of Evil
Since Sept. 11, President Bush has turned the White
House "bully pulpit" into a pulpit indeed, replete with
"calls" and "missions" and "charges to
keep" regarding America's role in the world. George Bush is
convinced that we are engaged in a moral battle between good and evil,
and that those who are not with us are on the wrong side in that divine
confrontation.
But who is "we," and does no evil reside
with "us"? The problem of evil is a classic one in Christian
theology. Indeed, anyone who cannot see the real face of evil in the
terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, is suffering from a bad case of
postmodern relativism. To fail to speak of evil in the world today is to
engage in bad theology. But to speak of "they" being evil and
"we" being good, to say that evil is all out there and that in
the warfare between good and evil others are either with us or against
usthat is also bad theology. Unfortunately, it has become the Bush
theology.
After the Sept. 11 attacks, the White House carefully
scripted the religious service in which the president declared war on
terrorism from the pulpit of the National Cathedral. The president
declared to the nation, "Our responsibility to history is already
clear: to answer these attacks and rid the world of evil." With most
every member of the Cabinet and the Congress present, along with the
nation's religious leaders, it became a televised national liturgy
affirming the divine character of the nation's new war against terrorism,
ending triumphantly with the "Battle Hymn of the Republic." War
against evil would confer moral legitimacy on the nation's foreign policy
and even on a contested presidency.
What is most missing in the Bush theology is
acknowledgement of the truth of this passage from the gospel of Matthew:
"Why do you see the speck in your neighbor's eye, but do not notice
the log in your own eye? Or how can you say to your neighbor, 'Let me
take the speck out of your eye,' while the log is in your eye? You
hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see
clearly to take the speck out of your neighbor's eye." A simplistic
"we are right and they are wrong" theology rules out
self-reflection and correction. It also covers over the crimes America
has committed, which lead to widespread global resentment against us.
Theologian Reinhold Niebuhr wrote that every nation,
political system, and politician falls short of God's justice, because we
are all sinners. He specifically argued that even Adolf Hitlerto
whom Saddam Hussein was often compared by Bushdid not embody
absolute evil any more than the Allies represented absolute good.
Niebuhr's sense of ambiguity and irony in history does not preclude
action but counsels the recognition of limitations and prescribes both
humility and self-reflection.
And what of Bush's tendency to go it alone, even
against the expressed will of much of the world? A foreign government
leader said to me at the beginning of the Iraq war, "The world is
waiting to see if America will listen to the rest of us, or if we will
all just have to listen to America." American unilateralism is not
just bad political policy, it is bad theology as well. C.S. Lewis wrote
that he supported democracy not because people were good, but rather
because they often were not. Democracy provides a system of checks and
balances against any human beings getting too much power. If that is true
of nations, it must also be true of international relations. The vital
questions of diplomacy, intervention, war, and peace are, in this
theological view, best left to the collective judgment of many nations,
not just oneespecially not the richest and most powerful one.
In Christian theology, it is not nations that rid the
world of evilthey are too often caught up in complicated webs of
political power, economic interests, cultural clashes, and nationalist
dreams. The confrontation with evil is a role reserved for God, and for
the people of God when they faithfully exercise moral conscience. But God
has not given the responsibility for overcoming evil to a nation-state,
much less to a superpower with enormous wealth and particular national
interests. To confuse the role of God with that of the American nation,
as George Bush seems to do, is a serious theological error that some
might say borders on idolatry or blasphemy.
It's easy to demonize the enemy and claim that we are
on the side of God and good. But repentance is better. As the Christian
Science Monitor put it, paraphrasing Alexander Solzhenitzyn. "The
gospel, some evangelicals are quick to point out, teaches that the line
separating good and evil runs not between nations, but inside every human
heart."
A Better Way
The much-touted Religious Right is now a declining
political factor in American life. The New York Times' Bill Keller
recently observed, "Bombastic evangelical power brokers like Jerry
Falwell and Pat Robertson have aged into irrelevance, and now exist
mainly as ludicrous foils." The real theological problem in America
today is no longer the Religious Right but the nationalist religion of
the Bush administrationone that confuses the identity of the nation
with the church, and God's purposes with the mission of American empire.
America's foreign policy is more than pre-emptive, it
is theologically presumptuous; not only unilateral, but dangerously
messianic; not just arrogant, but bordering on the idolatrous and
blasphemous. George Bush's personal faith has prompted a profound
self-confidence in his "mission" to fight the "axis of
evil," his "call" to be commander-in-chief in the war
against terrorism, and his definition of America's
"responsibility" to "defend the…hopes of all
mankind." This is a dangerous mix of bad foreign policy and bad
theology.
But the answer to bad theology is not secularism; it
is, rather, good theology. It is not always wrong to invoke the name of
God and the claims of religion in the public life of a nation, as some
secularists say. Where would we be without the prophetic moral leadership
of Martin Luther King Jr., Desmond Tutu, and Oscar Romero?
In our own American history, religion has been lifted
up for public life in two very different ways. One invokes the name of
God and faith in order to hold us accountable to God's intentionsto
call us to justice, compassion, humility, repentance, and reconciliation.
Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, and Martin King perhaps best exemplify
that way. Lincoln regularly used the language of scripture, but in a way
that called both sides in the Civil War to contrition and repentance.
Jefferson said famously, "I tremble for my country when I reflect
that God is just."
The other way invokes God's blessing on our
activities, agendas, and purposes. Many presidents and political leaders
have used the language of religion like this, and George W. Bush is
falling prey to that same temptation.
Christians should always live uneasily with empire,
which constantly threatens to become idolatrous and substitute secular
purposes for God's. As we reflect on our response to the American empire
and what it stands for, a reflection on the early church and empire is
instructive.
The book of Revelation, while written in apocalyptic
language and imagery, is seen by most biblical expositors as a commentary
on the Roman Empire, its domination of the world, and its persecution of
the church. In Revelation 13, a "beast" and its power is
described. Eugene Peterson's The Message puts it in vivid language:
"The whole earth was agog, gaping at the Beast. They worshiped the
Dragon who gave the Beast authority, and they worshiped the Beast,
exclaiming: 'There's never been anything like the Beast! No one would
dare to go to war with the Beast!' It held absolute sway over all tribes
and peoples, tongues, and races." But the vision of John of Patmos
also foresaw the defeat of the Beast. In Revelation 19, a white horse,
with a rider whose "name is called The Word of God" and
"King of kings and Lord of lords," captures the beast and its
false prophet.
As with the early church, our response to an empire
holding "absolute sway," against which "no one would dare
to go to war," is the ancient confession of "Jesus is
Lord." And to live in the promise that empires do not last, that the
Word of God will ultimately survive the Pax Americana as it did the Pax
Romana.
In the meantime, American Christians will have to make
some difficult choices. Will we stand in solidarity with the worldwide
church, the international body of Christor with our own American
government? It's not a surprise to note that the global church does not
generally support the foreign policy goals of the Bush
administrationwhether in Iraq, the Middle East, or the wider
"war on terrorism." Only from inside some of our U.S. churches
does one find religious voices consonant with the visions of American
empire.
Once there was Rome; now there is a new Rome. Once
there were barbarians; now there are many barbarians who are the Saddams
of this world. And then there were the Christians who were loyal not to
Rome, but to the kingdom of God. To whom will the Christians be loyal
today?
Jim Wallis is editor-in-chief of Sojourners