Catholic Exchange

Lefty and Righty Secular Messianism

Scott Hahn once remarked to me that the biblical pattern seems to be that what pride is to an individual person, nationalism is to a people. Sooner or later, every people seems to hit the point where they want to feel as though they occupy a special and privileged place in the Divine Plan.

Now, of all ethnic groups, only the Jews have ever really had a claim to be Chosen. But the paradox of biblical election is that the Chosen are always chosen for the sake of the Unchosen. And that imposes a terrible burden on any who would aspire to such a terrible blessing. For if you are chosen for the sake of the unchosen, the day must inevitably come where it is required that you give up your life that another may live, since all (including the Jews) are “chosen in the Beloved” — that is, chosen in Christ and for His plans and purposes, not theirs.

So to be chosen is to be called to walk in the way of Christ, which is the way of death and resurrection. Sooner or later you must lay down your life — or not. When that choice is required, you can instead choose the mystery of evil and say, with Caiaphas, “It is better that one man die than that a whole nation should perish.” Like John and James, nations can and often have sought to have a place at the right and left hand of Christ. To them, our Lord has always replied, “You do not know what you are asking.”

That there is something in the nationalist impulse that hankers after the same claim of blessing God conferred on the people of Israel seems self-evident to me. Again and again we see nations, in their prime, desiring to be a royal priesthood, a chosen nation, a people set apart for the Lord with a mission to the world.

And so, for instance, the great nation-states of Europe all seem to have gone through their phase of claiming divine anointing and a Special Place in the Divine Plan. We see it reflected in the myth of the Grail in England and the notion that Jesus took time out of His busy schedule to pay some boyhood visits to Albion:

And did those feet in ancient time,
Walk upon England’s mountains green:
And was the holy Lamb of God,
On England’s pleasant pastures seen!

Likewise, when France was in peak form, she claimed the title of Eldest Daughter of the Church (that’s before she went to Paris, took an atheist lover, and started reading Voltaire and Sartre). Russia, too, had its spasm of Christo-nationalism in the 19th century when it claimed the title of “Christ of the Nations.” I once heard a talk by a Byzantine Rite priest who seriously claimed that Byzantium was the physical instantiation of the City of God on earth and that Constantine, not Jesus, was the “Founder of the Church.” The Boers of South Africa were once filled with a somewhat demented notion that they were the elect of God, chosen to bring light to the victims of their apartheid policies. Seventy years ago, Germany likewise embraced an (extremely debased) notion of being a Chosen People with catastrophic results, proving once again that nothing is more dangerous than a single biblical idea cut off from the rest of revelation.

And, of course, for nearly 500 years, America has had a long and rich history of discerning the Hand of the Almighty at work in her founding and history. From the Pilgrim’s City on a Hill, to the Founders’ Novus Ordo Seclorum to Lincoln’s Second Inaugural to the theory of Manifest Destiny to Bill Clinton’s “New Covenant” and George W. Bush’s faith in the “power — wonder-working power — in the goodness and idealism and faith of the American people” to the current anointing of Sen. Barack Obama as a sort of Messianic God-King by his disciples, American politics is suffused with the constant tendency to confuse the Kingdom of Heaven and the American Way. Not for nothing did Chesterton remark that we are a nation with the “soul of a Church.”

So it should come as no surprise that, in the late 1970s, just as conservative Evangelicals were feeling their oats, the theory that there was Something Divinely Special about America regained currency among Righty types and The Light and the Glory was published. Along with it came a great deal of quasi-biblical stuff about America’s Providential History and so forth.

Now, in one sense, we can of course speak, as Catholics, of “America’s Providential History.” God’s Providence, after all, governs Everything That Happens down to the fall of a sparrow and the numbering of the hairs of your head. Is America part of God’s plan? Of course! So is Switzerland, Lichtenstein, and the reign of Emperor Norton I.

mapcross.jpgAfter that, though, things get rather tricky and Evangelicals have to perform prodigies of exegesis that Catholics tend to shy away from in order to work out the specifics of “what the Bible says” about America’s “role” in God’s plan. The reason for this is simple: the Bible doesn’t say anything about America’s role in God’s plan. The only ethnos that figures, as an ethnos, in God’s plan as a nation is the Jewish people. But other nations, including our own, keep trying to see their reflection in the looking glass of the Old Testament. The only thing we know for sure, however, is that the story of Israel is intended to tell us, not about America, Britain, France, Russia, or Switzerland, but about the Church, which is, as Paul tells us, the Israel of God.

The result of this thoroughly unbiblical notion about some more-special-than-everybody-else place for America in Providence has been, of course, a source of tremendous confusion on the Right for the past 30 years. Drawing from deep American cultural roots, the notion of America as a Chosen Nation is something that brings out the best and the worst in us. It inspired us to do great and noble things out of real self-sacrificial heroism — and it fills us with incredibly obnoxious hubris. It prompted us to storm the beaches of Normandy, save Berlin from the Commies, and found things like the Peace Corps.

But, because our Puritan missionary spirit goes marching on even when our culture degrades into complete apostasy, we continue our sense of mission even when the mission becomes to “export abortion and our pornocratic culture as far as humanly possible.” This frequently hurls Evangelicals into chaos because America acts like the whore of Babylon just as often as she mimics the Virgin Daughter of Zion. It gets tough to cling to the Light and the Glory when your chief cultural export is Madonna, Sex and the City, and condoms.

For Catholics, the situation is rife with confusion too, but Catholic social teaching has always had a pretty good bead on primary and secondary goods. Love God and your neighbor are the two big commandments, in that order. Love of country is simply a corollary of the second greatest commandment. As long as the greatest commandment is Numero Uno, the second greatest can be followed with complete freedom. But the moment somebody tries to put the second commandment first is the moment a line has been crossed and idolatry has occurred.

So the sacred and secular are clearly distinguished in the Catholic tradition. If somebody tries to tell us to put the interests of Caesar before the command of God, they are speaking with the voice of the devil. Ultimately, our goals as a nation are not the same as those of Holy Mother Church, who is the only fully fitting recipient of all that prophetic witness in Scripture about being a “chosen nation,” etc. So Evangelicals are often at sixes and sevens about America, because she goes on stubbornly being a purely temporal creature concocted by Enlightenment minds and subject to all the mutability this world has to offer. They keep hoping she’ll fill the bill for the Church. But she’s not the Church. She’s only a nation with the soul of a Church — and she’s been exhaling that soul for some time now and breathing in lots of other spirits. She won’t last forever. No merely human nation will. On the Last Day, the only two peoples we are guaranteed to still see standing will be the House of Israel and the Catholic Church, finally reconciled in their common Messiah.

That’s not a reason not to fight for America. My mother won’t last forever either, but that’s scarcely a reason to give up on her. America is one of the greatest human inventions the world has ever seen: an almost sacred thing. But only almost. Great as she is, she remains a human invention, not the inspired creation of God. Not a Light of revelation to the Gentiles nor the Glory of His people Israel. That role has been filled for all time by Jesus Christ. So all the normal apostolic warnings about exalting human traditions to the level of the Tradition of God apply.

If you don’t make that distinction between human and apostolic tradition, you wind up getting unjustly angry at America (or whatever other human thing you idolize) for being only human and not meeting our divine hopes. That’s the blunder of Lefties like Jeremiah Wright and others. Like those on the Right who accord America hyperdulia or latria, they wind up honoring merely human things more highly than they ought.

Touchstone sums it up well:

There is a liberation theology of the Left, and there is also a liberation theology of the Right, and both are at heart mammon worship. The liberation theology of the Left often wants a Barrabas, to fight off the oppressors as though our ultimate problem were the reign of Rome and not the reign of death. The liberation theology of the Right wants a golden calf, to represent religion and to remind us of all the economic security we had in Egypt. Both want a Caesar or a Pharaoh, not a Messiah.

But a Messiah is what we have, thanks be to God.

Comments

11 responses to “Lefty and Righty Secular Messianism”

  1. Arkanabar Ilarsadin Avatar

    Though America is surely worth fighting for, she isn’t worth despairing over. Good as she may be, never forget that God has better for us.

  2. Warren Jewell Avatar
    Warren Jewell

    Nationalism tends to ‘group’ us when the very Two Great Commandments are calls to personal humility before God, and for love of God, self and neighbor. I find the surest way to that love is simply to remember that God loved and loves me still first (1John 4:19), before I can lift my head, heart and hand to Him.

    God does really only save us ‘one at a time’, and as each of us is uniquely His child. Our nation (state, locale, abode) is really more ‘where we are’ than ‘who we are’. ‘Who I am’ like my salvation is a very personal thing between God, Who is I AM, and His Church and me. Hey, if God can refine the prophecy and salvation of John the Baptist in the wilds of and beyond Israel, God can give us His love, mercy, gifts and graces to me and to you anywhere.

  3. gk Avatar
    gk

    Warren – Pristienius,

    It is good to see your words. You are one great guy.

    Please kiss both the Cubs and White Sox for me. The last time they were both in the play offs was … 190-something right? And kiss the air around Chicago because, although she is not Rome or Egypt, she is to me home of a good people.

    I look forward to seeing more comments by a Mr. Warren Jewell! My six kids are doing well and so am I. Thanks be to God I have been married 16 years. It is a gorgeous blessing of which I am not worthy. I have no rigth, no right to anything God gives me. But, I heartily imbibe all that he does.

    Love and respect,

    GK
    – George

  4. elkabrikir Avatar
    elkabrikir

    Mark,
    thanks for the article and reminder. My blood pressure went down several points!

    James Madison wondered “whether the American experiment was to be a blessing to the world or to blast forever the hopes which the republican cause had inspired.”

    God’s will be done.

    Blessed be the name of the Lord.

  5. patti Avatar
    patti

    What an insightful article. How many of us feel let down by our country’s insane loss of moral logic? How many keep hoping people will come to their senses? In the end, it’s the way of the world. Our task is to follow Christ. Of course we are let down when others beat a path in the other direction. But just like other countries in the past, our pride leads us astray. Perhaps that is why the humble, poor countries sometimes have a leg up on us spiritually. Then, like Ireland, when prosperity arrives, people first define it as God’s blessing and then eventually forget God altogether as they pursue their own worldly agenda.

  6. gadjmljj Avatar
    gadjmljj

    That’s what so great about this 40 days for life. It organizes and empowers people to do something about the immoral culture we live in now. Not just wait for the “right” candidate to get into office ( although chosing the right person is very important). This country will not change until enough hearts have changed. And the call is not to those who don’t know or understand but to us that (say) we do know and understand. The scripture for the 40 days for life is this:
    “If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land. (2 Chronicles 7:14)
    We need to pray harder, sacrifice more for one another, and hope always in God.

  7. crazylikeknoxes Avatar
    crazylikeknoxes

    I enjoyed the essay. And would like to add a few (more) bons mots from Chesterton which I think are appropriately addressed to secular messianists of the right and the left as well as of the European variety: “Many clever men like you have trusted to civilization. Many clever Babylonians, many clever Egyptians, many clever men at the end of Rome. Can you tell me, in a world that is flagrant with the failures of civilization, what there is particularly immortal about yours?” From The Napoleon of Notting Hill.

    “Spera in Domino, et fac bonitatem; et inhabita terram, et pasceris in divitiis eius.” Psalm 36(37):3.

  8. Warren Jewell Avatar
    Warren Jewell

    gk – thanks, but ‘great’ covers me only like ‘saint’ could – AT LEAST premature.

    Yes, we can hope for a L-train world series – both teams have the players, coaching and moxie. It was 1906, when last both got to the Series. a century plus two too long. Pray for the luck to witness such Chi-town glory, if only in baseball.

    Apropos of GKC, who possessed a bold single way of trying to educate and illuminate, and in witness both to the Forty Days for Life and our current political campaigning, he noted that it is wastefully silly to look for some hero when one can just go ahead and be a hero. Next time around, let’s all run for office. We just have to avoid being so ‘clever’ and/or ‘messianic’ as to be part of the mortal decadence of our own experiment in governance.

  9. noprem Avatar
    noprem

    “what pride is to an individual person, nationalism is to a people.”
    In fact, your fellow Catholic Arnold Toynbee felt the same. He argued against nationalism as destructive to humans and their peaceful endeavors. He felt the mainstream religions furnished the best alternative, bringing peoples together in spite of national feelings.
    It’s a long way from preaching to practice, however. In both World Wars he served his country (UK) as a dollar-a-year man, helping English Catholics kill German Catholics. Not unusual; both of those wars involved mainly nations claiming to be Christian. The Christian leader, though, didn’t have wars in mind for his people: “A new commandment I give unto you: That you love one another, as I have loved you, that you also love one another. By this shall all men know that you are my disciples, if you have love one for another.” (John 13:34,35; Douay) “As I have loved you”- then he gave up his life for them, he did not kill for them.

    As to the superiority of one country over another- “Christian” or not- perhaps God’s prophetic dream to Nabuchodonosor can shed light: As interpreted by Daniel: “But in the days of those kingdoms, the God of heaven will set up a kingdom that shall never be destroyed, and his kingdom shall not be delivered up to another people: and it shall break in pieces, and shall consume all these kingdoms: and itself shall stand for ever.” (Dan 2:44; ibid.)
    The Douay at newadvent.com has this note: “A kingdom… Viz., the kingdom of Christ in the Catholic Church which cannot be destroyed.” Be that as it may, the “break in pieces and consume” is not well-known to many, as I have found. Has the Church told Bush Minor, Mr. Sarkozy, and the others that this is to be the fate of their “empires”? More important, are individual Catholics made aware that they should not be found in the to-be-consumed organizations at the time of the prophecy’s fulfillment?
    I find that most Catholic commentators, like Mr. Shea, instead take the view that participation in national affairs is somehow a religious duty. Daniel’s God disagrees.

  10. […] MARK SHEA– Lefty and Righty Secular Messianism …. […]

  11. Beverly M. Avatar
    Beverly M.

    Thank you Mark. You have shared the “hard saying”. Of course I love my country, but that is the country won for us 237 years ago by men and women of courage and faith. We have wasted that God given gift, and evolved into something completely unrecognizable. May God forgive us! Our Lady warned us at Fatima, but her loving counsel has gone unheeded by the world, and America in particular. May we, as Catholic Christians, have the courage to live as Jesus taught us, and never deny our love for Him – no matter what the cost.

Leave a Reply