". . . My thesis is that secularism necessarily implies dictatorship and totalitarian rule. . . . The result is state control of religion and of all human good, nothing excepted. . . . "
“The
Confession in section i states that it is God who has ordained civil
magistrates. Their authority comes from
him; therefore, they cannot rightfully
act as dictators; their just powers are only those which God has assigned
them.” Dr. Gordon H. Clark
What Is Christian
Nationalism? What Does the Bible Say About the Civil
Magistrate?
Once again I must answer the
objections of the libertarians and the radical two kingdoms proponents. Their contention is that the secular
governments must be obeyed no matter what, based on what the apostle Paul says
in Romans 13:1-10. But is this what the
Bible really says?
I am not sure what the term
Christian nationalism means, since the definition varies depending on whom you
ask. R. Scott Clark of the Heidelblog
defines the term this way:
The West is
declining rapidly and in response some American Christians have begun arguing
for a return to theocracy and even for a theocratic Caesar figure to replace
the secular republican form of government established in the Constitution. (From: Heidelblog: Resources on
Christian Nationalism).
The first assumption which R. S.
Clark makes is that “some American Christians are arguing for a return to
theocracy.” Unfortunately, Clark does
not define the term theocracy as it is applied in modern times. The term, as I have always understood it,
refers to the biblical theocracy which occurred during the time of the judges
and the theocracy under the leadership of Moses, Aaron, and later, Joshua. But, if this is the biblical definition of
theocracy, then I am not aware of any Evangelical Christians of any kind today
who advocate for that sort of theocracy or any theocracy whatsoever; that would
include the theonomists and the reconstructionists.
I suppose that might imply the
issue of civil religion such as what happened when Billy Sunday was an
evangelist in the early part of the twentieth century. Billy Sunday was a supporter of the war
effort during WWI and raised money to support that effort. As a result of Sunday’s support of the
temperance movement and the war effort, it became popular among
“fundamentalist” churches to display both the American flag and the Christian
flag inside the church. However,
whenever I see someone accused of being a fundamentalist during the first half
of the twentieth century, I usually see that as Evangelical. The fundamentalists of yesterday are the
Evangelicals of today. Unfortunately,
the neo-Evangelicals have hijacked the term when in fact they disagree with
both the oldline fundamentalists and the conservative Evangelicals of today.
The radical two kingdoms point of
view is that churches and pastors should never comment on political issues,
while they themselves openly comment on political issues every single time they
complain about Christian nationalists.
This sort of double standard is par for the course for Democrats. Therefore, it makes me suspicious that most
of these radical two kingdoms theologians and church historians are actually
progressive Democrats in their political views.
The time for pretending that churches and pastors have no solid
political commitments is over. That’s because
our democratic republic is quickly devolving into political chaos and open anarchy.
There was a time when the
Christian worldview was predominate over the leftist and Marxist worldview in
the United States and European countries.
Even the Roman Catholic nations were at one time more politically and
morally conservative. However, now even
the Roman Catholic nations are becoming more secular and atheistic in their
political orientations. Even worse, the
pope and the Roman Catholic Church is now openly promoting the ideology of the
LGBTQIA+ agenda by saying that homosexuality and perversion should not be
illegal. Protestants and Evangelicals who
are “woke” are promoting the same sort of nonsense. First of all, there is nothing immoral about
outlawing what God’s moral law outlaws.
To make the point even clearer, the pope and a majority of the Catholic
bishops in America and Europe claim to be against abortion and the pro-choice
ideology but do not wish to make abortion illegal in their nations. Neo-Evangelicals are in complete agreement with
this approach and so are the radical two kingdoms theologians and churches.
The question therefore is who
decides what is right and wrong in the political realm? The radical two kingdoms people have ceded
the argument to the secular humanists, who they say get to determine moral laws
in the political realm, while the church should stay in the closet and say
nothing when genocide and perversion predominates the larger society and
culture. The trouble with that approach
is eventually Christianity itself is made illegal. An example of that is the current issue of
sex change operations performed on minors at almost any age. The public schools are openly propagandizing
and proselytizing young people for the so-called transgender movement and
homosexuality. Some conservative
political pundits refer to this as grooming children for future members of the
LGBTQIA+ movement. This is because the
Marxist left and the progressives have turned the tables on Evangelicals and conservative
Christians. The Christian church has
always catechized the youthful members of the congregation, knowing that the
younger a person reads, studies and believes the Bible, the more likely that
child is to persevere in the Christian faith.
(Proverbs 22:6).
Some who profess to follow the
apologetics of the late Dr. Gordon H. Clark affirm a form of political
libertarianism which, for all practical purposes, agrees with the apparent
moral relativism of the radical two kingdoms proponents. However, Jesus said that there can be no neutrality
in matters of morality. I take that to
mean more than just personal piety but also in ecclesiastical politics and the
civil government. In fact, Jesus was arrested
and crucified by both the religious and political authorities of his day. But Jesus did not say do not get
involved. What He said was:
“And he said to
them all, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his
cross daily, and follow me. For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: but
whosoever will lose his life for my sake, the same shall save it. For what is a
man advantaged, if he gain the whole world, and lose himself, or be cast away?
For whosoever shall be ashamed of me and of my words, of him shall the Son of
man be ashamed, when he shall come in his own glory, and in his Father’s, and
of the holy angels.” (Luke 9:23–26, KJV)
Does this sound like Jesus wanted
Christians to hide from the world and say nothing about morality, the moral law
or the Gospel? I think not. Of course, we as Christians must show
prudence in dealing with employers and employees with whom we work in the
secular realm. But does it mean that
Christian churches should take no political positions on moral and ethical issues, that Christian churches should not encourage their members to support
political movements which stand for the Bill of Rights and other Constitutionally
guaranteed freedoms? Again, I think they
should be involved. After all, the
liberal and progressive churches have no such qualms. Their moral relativism has become the law of
the land. Evangelical Christians and
churches have been attributed with false guilt.
They are called homophobic deplorables, transphobic, white nationalists,
white supremacists, racists, and a host of other abusive ad hominems in the
name of silencing theological, moral, and political dissent from a biblical
perspective and the Christian worldview perspective.
The late Dr. Gordon H. Clark
would not have agreed with the political moral relativism of the libertarian
variety. Libertarians have only one
moral law: Do no harm to others. But this is a vague and vacuous imperative
since the proposition does not even appeal to a universal moral standard. Instead it appeals to an unbiblical standard:
“And the
children of Israel departed thence at that time, every man to his tribe and to
his family, and they went out from thence every man to his inheritance. In
those days there was no king in Israel: every man did that which was right in
his own eyes.” (Judges 21:24–25, KJV)
When there is no moral leadership
from Evangelical churches in their local cities, counties, and the state or
commonwealth in which they reside, there is an aggressive attack on
Christianity at large nationally and locally.
Evangelicals need to organize at every level, including nationally. Otherwise, the United States of America is on
the same trajectory as Canada and Europe.
An increasingly tyrannical totalitarianism will continue to push against
Christianity until they control even the local churches. If the fake pandemic is any indication, the
progressives have the power to shut down religious freedoms and Evangelicals
just go along with it like sheep to the slaughter. Christian ministers in Canada can be arrested
for daring to say that homosexuality is a perversion of the natural order or a
sinful rebellion against God.
I am not advocating the confusion
of the law and gospel, nor am I advocating for any so-called Christian
nationalism. What I am advocating for is
that Christian churches and pastors stop ignoring their moral duty to stand
against immorality, crime and the loss of religious liberties in our nation and
our local states and cities. When Jesus
commanded us to evangelize the nations, He was not just advocating the evangelizing of individuals but the evangelizing of entire nations and regions.
The Apostle Paul took this seriously and made at least three missionary
journeys. Was Paul colonizing for the
white race? I do not think so. Christianity is for all nations, tribes, and
peoples. Every kind and class of human
beings is called in the general call of the gospel; rich, poor, kings and
paupers and every gender and race are all to be evangelized without
compromising the moral law or the gospel whatsoever--that would include evangelizing
atheists and homosexuals and transgendered homosexuals. But Christians should not be duped into buying
into the lie that the homosexuals and transgenders are not morally responsible
because they are born with a sexual orientation that is essentially biologically
and genetically predetermined. There is
no biblical support for imposing a materialistic or behavoristic excuse for immorality upon the
Christian churches or Christian individuals.
Dr. Clark repudiated the idea
that humans are biological machines, a theory developed by Thomas Hobbes; he
also rejected naturalism, behaviorism, and secularism. The following comment on the Westminster
Confession’s chapter on free will is exemplary:
What then does
the Confession mean by the natural liberty of the will? The remainder of the section quoted answers this
question as well as two lines can. Man’s
will “is neither forced nor by any absolute necessity of nature determined.” These words were written to repudiate those
philosophies which explain human conduct in terms of physico-chemical law. Although the Westminster divines did not know
twentieth century behaviorism, nor even Spinoza, they very probably knew Thomas
Hobbes, and they certainly knew earlier materialistic theories. That man’s conduct is determined by inanimate
forces is what the Confession denies.
Man is not a machine; his motions
cannot be described by mathematical equations as can the motions of the
planets. His hopes, plans, and activities
are not controlled by physical conditions.
He is not determined by any absolute necessity of nature.
Dr. Gordon H.
Clark. What Do Presbyterians Believe? The Westminster Confession Yesterday and
Today. 1965. Second Edition. (Unicoi:
Trinity Foundation, 2001). P. 106.
The secularists contend that
there are human rights which are independent of any divine moral law or divine
imperative. Instead, they propose a
materialistic and a humanistic approach which is supposed to reduce human
suffering to the lowest common denominator.
Of course, to accomplish their goals they take a utilitarian approach to
attaining their political and moral superiority. The end justifies the means according to
them; and they openly state this when they comment on abortion, euthanasia, homosexuality,
sex change mandates, and their contention that they will not allow President
Trump to be re-elected—even if the majority of the states’ populations votes for
him. They openly admit that they will
use pandemics, their relativizing of the rule of law, and whatever other means,
including disinformation and propaganda, to keep our democratic republic from
electing a popular president. According to the secular humanists, evil is merely an existential experience of human
suffering, not a violation of divine moral law.
This is why they appeal to climate change, pandemics, lockdowns, open
borders, and sexual deviancy to justify their totalitarian tactics. They also use racial divisions and male and
female issues to gain power.
But once again, Dr. Gordon H. Clark’s
comments are amazingly applicable even in our contemporary political and moral
situation. Although his remarks are directed particularly at the issue of plenary verbal inspiration and the inerrancy of
the Bible, his comments also apply to the political realm:
A second
objection to verbal and plenary inspiration can be reproduced by repeating a verse
previously quoted. The verse was, “The Scripture which the Holy Ghost by the
mouth of David spake.” And the rejection is the great outcry against the theory
of mechanical dictation. The liberals regularly accuse orthodox Christians to
reducing the prophets to the status of typewriters, or at most, stenographers.
This makes them machines and violates their personality. Since it is
unthinkable that God would violate anyone’s personality, the doctrine of verbal
inspiration must be rejected no matter what the Bible says.
In answer to
this objection, I would like to make a minor point and a major point. Actually,
it is hard to tell which of these points is major and which is minor. But one
is more remote and fundamental, the other is immediate and direct. The
more remote and fundamental reply is the denial of the liberal concept of God
on which their concept is based. For the liberal, man has certain
rights that God cannot violate. Man is in some way independent of God and God
is in some way subject to rules of justice that he did not set up. The Bible
however presents a sovereign God who out of the same lump of clay create [sic]
one man to honor and another to dishonor. No man has the right to complain to
God and ask, “why has thou made me thus?”
Obviously, God
has created rocks and trees, birds and elephants. And no bird has the right to
complain that it is not an elephant. Similarly, God is sovereign in creating
men. And if he has created some men to be used as typewriters at times, no one
has a right to complain. Hence the first reply to the liberals is to reject
their notion of the relation between God and man. God is not man’s valet nor
even his cosmic pal and copilot. God is the sovereign creator against
whom no one has any claim whatever.
Dr. Gordon H.
Clark. “The
Inerrancy of the Bible.” The Gordon H. Clark Foundation. P. 6.
Whether the libertarians or the
radical two kingdoms proponents wish to acknowledge it or not, nations and even
the entire global human race, both individually and corporately, are morally
accountable to God. It follows, therefore,
that churches and pastors and denominations are morally accountable to God for
what they think, say, and do, and for what they omit to do in regards to the
moral law. This is a non-negotiable
demand of the moral law, and not even Christians under the covenant of grace are
exempt from keeping the moral law, albeit not as a covenant of works. (See: Westminster
Confession of Faith, Chapter 19:5-7).
“V. The moral law doth forever bind all, as well justified persons
as others, to the obedience thereof; and that not only in regard
of the matter contained in it, but also in respect of the authority of God the
Creator who gave it.” (Ibid.). The Bible clearly says that we must obey God
rather men. (Acts 5:29). This means that when secular governments
become tyrannical and threaten Christians and Christian pastors with jail time or
loss of their employment for exercising their God given right to the freedom of
religion, freedom of assembly, and the freedom of speech, they should instead
obey what God plainly says the Holy Scriptures.
Jesus did not merely suggest such opposition but in fact commands it. (John 15:18-25).
Gordon Clark succinctly opposes both
libertarian relativism and secular humanism in these remarks:
. . . My thesis
is that secularism necessarily implies dictatorship and totalitarian rule. . . . The result is state control of religion
and of all human good, nothing excepted.
. . .
The
Confession in section i states that it is God who has ordained civil magistrates. Their authority comes from him; therefore,
they cannot rightfully act as dictators; their just powers are
only those which God has assigned to them. What those powers are and what they are not
is indicated here and there throughout the Bible; . . .
Clark, What Do Presbyterians Believe?, pp. 207-208.
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