Christianism
isn’t
exactly a household word, but it expresses an important, and troubling, aspect of USAmerican religious and political life. Let’s look at what it is and why it’s
objectionable.
What
is Christianism?
The
contemporary use of the word Christianism/Christianist seems to have started with
Andrew Sullivan. He coined those words in a June 2003 post in his political
blog “The Daily Dish,” which he maintained from 2000 to 2015. Sullivan (b.
1963), wrote,
I have a new term for those on the fringes of the religious right who have used the Gospels to perpetuate their own aspirations for power, control and oppression: Christianists. They are as anathema to true Christians as the Islamists are to true Islam.
In
a June 2005
blog posting, Sullivan wrote, “Christianism—politicized Christianity—argues
for the imposition of one religion’s values over the entire society.”
Sullivan
later expanded on his usage of the terms in a May 2006 Time magazine article
titled “My Problem with Christianism.”
Mark Shea, another
blogger, who like Sullivan is a Catholic, is more contentious in his
description of the current meaning of the term(s). He begins his Oct.
2018 Patheos.com article called "I keep getting asked what I mean by ‘Christianism’”
with these sharp words:
A Christianist is an adherent of a political [cult] centered on Donald Trump and informed by a magisterium of FOX, right wing talk radio and right wing social media, which uses Christian imagery and jargon in the service of a diabolical antichrist gospel of racism, war, torture apologetics, gun fanaticism, misogyny, mammon worship, cruelty to the least of these and hatred of both science and orthodox Christian belief.
Christianism
and Christendom
Politicized
Christianity, however, is certainly nothing new. In fact, it can be traced all
the way back to Constantine in the 4th century. When Christianity was co-opted
by the Roman Empire, Christendom was established—and it flourished for fifteen
centuries until weakened by the historical process of secularization.
In
his 2019 book Postcards from Babylon, Brian Zahnd writes negatively
about Christendom: “Tying the gospel to the interests of empire had a deeply
compromising effect upon the gospel, as seen in the sordid history of the
church being mixed up with imperial conquest, colonialism, and military adventurism
around the world” (p. 16).
Contemporary
Christianism is manifested differently, but is similar in many ways to the
ethos of Christendom that goes all the way back to Constantine—and to what we
Anabaptists sometimes refer to as the “fall” of the Church.
Christianism
and Christian Nationalism
The
move toward “Christian nationalism” is one of the main ways Christianism has
been apparent in recent years, although many seem to be unaware of that movement.
The stealth activities of The Family and Project Blitz, both of which I wrote
about last year (see here
and here[LS1] )
is a part of the movement toward Christian nationalism.
Last
year, the Baptist Joint Committee (BJC), an organization I have supported for
decades, started a campaign called Christians Against Christian Nationalism
(CACN). This campaign is clearly in opposition to Christianism, even though
they don’t use that word.
(To
learn more about BJC and CACN, see this important October
2019 article by Frederick Clarkson—or you can read directly about CACN and
even sign the statement opposing Christian nationalism, as I did last year, by
clicking here.)
Even
though much more needs to be said, I close with more from Brian Zahnd, who wrote
that “in the American experiment the United States deliberately broke with
Christendom practice of claiming to be a Christian nation with a state church.
It was America that pioneered the experiment of secular governance.”
And
then he asserted:
America is not a Christian nation; it never was and never can be. The only institution that even has the possibility of being Christian is the church. When we confuse the nation with the church, it may not do any particular damage to the nation, but it will do irreparable harm to the church (p. 46).
Yes,
Christianism is highly objectionable, for, indeed, it does “irreparable harm”
to the work and witness of the faithful followers of Jesus Christ.
*
* * * *
Two
new books about Christian nationalism have just been published, and I am
looking forward to learning more about Taking America Back for God:
Christian Nationalism in the United States (2/20) by Andrew L. Whitehead
and The Power Worshippers: Inside the
Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism (3/20) by Katherine
Stewart.