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Foreword

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Our deepest loyalties live next to each other in the depths of our soul. They are few in number, only two or three, yet they form the center of our being. Our deepest loyalties constitute the “hills we would die on.” For many American Christians these loyalties are God, country, and family. Perhaps there was a time when they could be listed by priority: 1. God, 2. Country, 3. Family, with the claim that in that order, none would suffer. Times have changed and the three deepest loyalties seem to have been rearranged, resting now side by side on the same plane, any one of the three available to come to the fore of thought and action as “loyalty number one,” according to circumstance. The shift is profound in its implications. Exodus 20:1–8 shouts at the shift, but to no avail. The cries of the commandment are overpowered by the din of 9/11 scandalization, political division, and calls to reestablish a Constantinian Christian America. American flags are posted in the worship sanctuaries of “Church Families” across the United States, with the congregations’ common national enemies and issues providing at least as much inspiration as is their common loving Lord. Rob Hewell has observed these things and with this book speaks in a calm, clear, rational voice that will surely pierce the continuous noise of partisan rhetoric by its sheer contrast to blinded eyes, hoarse voices, and frightened minds.

It must be acknowledged that responsible patriotism is the duty of all citizens, even Christian citizens. At its root, the word patriotism simply refers to one’s love for or loyalty to their homeland. We are called to love God supremely, but we are not called to love God exclusively. So there is room for patriotism in the heart and life of a Christian. Borrowing from a discussion of taxes, we are admonished to give to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s and to God the things that are God’s. However, we are called to worship God exclusively (again, Exodus 20). Christian worship cannot and will not abide anything that even remotely resembles the worship of another god. Here is the danger of the three loyalties being stored on the “same shelf” in the Christian’s deepest heart. They can become entangled at the call to worship.

Responsible patriotism is a communal force focused on the welfare and betterment of each other and of humankind in general. It can easily be at home in the Christian heart, resonating with the call to ministry in the name of Jesus, but it cannot and would not be the focus of Christian worship. Nationalism, as opposed to patriotism, is the most ugly and destructive force on our planet and in human history. Somewhere in the migration from patriotism to nationalism, exclusivity and triumphalism enter the picture and the heart. For Christians there can be no participation in nationalism; this is especially true in the context of worship. Endorsing nationalism, especially the sort that blindly stumbles into the sanctuary and considers itself to be the equivalent of worship, can only be categorized as idolatry. Nationalistic worship and civil religion are signs of disillusionment with the gospel, disappointment with the Creator, respectful disgust with the teachings of Jesus, and disconnect from the Holy Spirit. Nationalism is patriotism that has grown impatient with, even frightened of, the Kingdom of God’s orientation of heart and mind.

For many Christians, patriotism is seen as the one acceptable pride that a Christ-follower may politely possess and exhibit. At best, these believers bring their patriotism into worship so that it might undergo purification and divine validation, so that it might be returned to proper perspective. In that regard, one might say that patriotism could rightly bow before the Master who heals and blesses, who receives confession and forgives. But patriotism that stands tall in the place and context of Christian worship, refusing to bow its knee and retire its colors, has already morphed into nationalism. Nothing should cause the worshiper or the liturgy to declare in word, deed, or symbol an exclusivity or triumphalism that the Christ being worshiped will not own. Jesus will not bless our pride, nor will pride bow its heart.

Disturbingly, a poem comes to mind: W.B. Yeats’ The Second Coming. Only three lines deep into his insight Yeats declares that “Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold.” Nationalistic worship is a sign that a nation’s patriotism is suffering division and is falling apart, clinging to Christian worship to stop, or at least slow, the deterioration. Nationalism moves beyond the prayer of 2 Chronicles 7:14 and calls on the nation to save Christianity. Nationalistic worship is a sign that within that nation’s culture and identity, the declared center, Christianity, cannot hold in its Christ-following form. In other words, Jesus refuses to be an American and Uncle Sam cannot be Messiah. Things fall apart. Therefore, if Christianity is to be reestablished as the center of the culturally and religiously diverse nation the United States has inevitably become, it must be redefined, divorced and diluted from “Christ-following” of the gospel order. Nationalistic worship’s Christianity, in our world, must be redefined as “not Muslim.”

We have never said that one must first become a Christian to become a U.S. citizen. Let us not, then, declare that one must first become an American (and of a particular political sort) to become a worshiper of Christ.

Pulses race and fears run rampant at such thoughts and words and debate. Under the influence of fear, we call upon the three deep loyalties to rise up as one, sacrificing family and Christianity in defense and protection of our nation. On-going discussions of a good and strong nation’s responsibility in an evil and cruel world enter the sanctuary no longer as prayers for guidance, but now as prayers for victory. The blood stains of the cross and the red stripes of the flag blur. We determine that in times like ours Jesus’ peace must wait until Christmas, Jesus’ victory must wait until Easter, and Jesus’ dying for enemies must wait until the second advent.

Perhaps freedom of worship, even Christian worship, in the United States has finally met the oppressor who would imprison it. It wasn’t communism after all. It is well intentioned loyalty combined with un-checked fear, morphing into incipient idolatry. No dictator has sent armed troops into our sanctuaries and the drifting can be reversed by means of repentance. But where are the voices of the prophets? Where is Rabbi Friedman’s “nonanxious presence”? Where are the pastors who will lead us with courage through the maze of our dual citizenship in the kingdoms of Heaven and earth?

Enough sidestepping and polite walking away, enough of silence in the name of differences of opinion and taste, enough simultaneous shouting; Rob Hewell has shown up with the Bible (all of it) in his hand and “Jesus is Lord” (all the time) in his heart and mind. There is clear thinking here; unusual, hopeful, clear thinking. Further, there is hope to be found in the hearts of Christian patriots in America who really do want to worship aright the one true God, even though they have been caught up in the current rage and fury, and even though to worship God without a flag seems strangely vulnerable and un-American. The hope lies in clear-minded study of scripture, earnest and humble prayer, and worship that bows low enough before God to rise above 24/7 televised shouting matches, grief for a lost “Christian America” past (real and imagined), and fear of a reordered future. One last thought: The absence of the flag in worship is not enough. It must be explained by the presence of the cross.

Terry W. York

George W. Truett Theological Seminary

Baylor University

Waco, Texas

Fall, 2011

Worship Beyond Nationalism

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