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For the love of money is a root of all sorts of evil, and some by longing for it have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.
I Timothy 6:10

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Friday, May 22, 2026

How Can America Be A Christian Nation?

 A national Christian prayer event occurred in our nation's capital this past weekend. The basic concern of the event was about how to rededicate our nation to Christ. Such an event sounds harmless enough, but was it really?

Rededicating the nation to Christ meant that those in the event want our nation to return to being what it used to be: a Christian nation. And so, the event was really about Christian Nationalism.

How was our nation a Christian nation? It certainly wasn't the aim of The Constitution. We should notice that not only was there an absence of any statements in that document which affirms America being a Christian nation, there are a couple of statements that contradicts such a notion. In addition, the Constitutional debates indicate that basing the nation's federal government on any religion was something to be avoided at all costs.

But what we should note, however, is that in several of the state constitutions, were statements that endorsed some form of Christianity as a state religion. In addition, we should note that in terms of culture and the religious self-image of many of the people, we could call our nation a Christian nation.

There is something else we should note, however. That our nation's Christian self-image was due to demographics. That is that, because of Christendom, the demographics were so affected so that many people identified as Christians. And this is an important point because our nation's religious demographics ain't what they used to be. And so how close can should we return to the past.

There is something else to note. That if we claim that America was a Christian nation at its beginning, then we Christians own some unsavory history from the past. That dubios history revolves around racism. Our nation was at least partially based on racism. It's in our early practices such as race-based slavery and the ethnic cleansing of Native Americans from the land. It was in the federal laws governing citizenship.  They stated that only free white men could become citizens of the U.S. And even after Black men could become citizens, which was after the Civil War, we had Jim Crow and Redlining among other practices. 

And so if America was to return to the good old days, would we also include a return to the racism of the past? Or would we employ new forms of racism? We should note that we don't call the current move toward Christian Nationalism in America, we call it 'White Christian Nationalism.' 

There are two ways by which we could call America a Christian nation today. The first way is if the majority of Americans were actual Christians. The problem with that way is that we cannot manipulate people into becoming Christians. Making a person a Christian is the work of the Holy Spirit and we have no control over the Spirit. And so we have no control over making the majority of Americans Christians.

And so the second way is to change our nation's laws so that they resemble Church laws to a significant degree. And though there are Church laws that are already a part of the laws of our land, not all are.

The above has always been a challenge for the Church. What Church laws should also be laws governing society? And this is where it gets sticky for Christian Nationalists and society because not all agree on the same set of laws. Do we want so many Church laws to also be a part of the laws the govern society? At what point in instituting Church laws, are we showing privilege to Christianity over other religions? And which Church laws would cause people to violate their own religious practices?

When answering those questions, we should note again that religious demographics ain't what they used to be. That we don't have the Christian consensus in America that once existed. And so we have to then consider the amount of control that we Christians should have to exert over unbelievers to pass and enforce the Church laws that we want to become the law of the land. Such is an important consideration because both Jesus and Peter tell us not to 'lord it over' others.

In addition, the Apostles' approach to fulfilling the Great Commission was through teaching and preaching only. Jesus once said that if people do not accept the preaching of the disciples, that His disciples were to move on. There is also a misreading of the Great Commission as seen below (click here for the reference):

16 But the eleven disciples proceeded to Galilee, to the mountain which Jesus had designated to them. 17 And when they saw Him, they worshiped Him; but some were doubtful. 18 And Jesus came up and spoke to them, saying, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Me. 19 Go, therefore, and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, 20 teaching them to follow all that I commanded you; and behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”

The issue here has to do with the Greek word for 'nations.' For some take that to mean to force each nation to be Christian. The Greek word for nations here is 'ἔθνη.' According to the Greek-English lexicon of Bauer, Arendt and Gingrich, the form of the Greek word there means outsiders. That instead of talking about discipling each nation, the disciples were ordered to preach to those outside their group. And, indeed, the use of the form of the word for nation, 'ἔθνη,' often means outsiders both in the Greek Septuagint, which is the Old Testament in Greek, and in the New Testament. And such an understanding would relieve the pressure to feel compelled to make each nation a Christian nation, since such is not in our control in the first place.  

There is another issue to consider here. The modern movement toward Christian Nationalism promoted by some of my fellow believers in Christ, was given its greatest impetus by the Obergfell decision in 2015. Many Christian ministers and leaders opposed the legalization of same-sex marriage. Some said that it should be prohibited because such would interfere with the flourishing of society. After the decision was announced, many Christian leaders advocated that Christians should take a semi-monastic approach to society, which is they sequestered themselves into groups of like-minded believers, until such a time when they could be assured that society no longer had a negative view of the faith. The Benedict Option was such an example. We should note that Aaron Renn described Christianity as going through 3 stages of acceptance by society. According to him, the negative perception of the Church started in 2014 , which was part of the time when the Obergfell decision was being considered.

That decision recognized a greater equal status for the LGBT community in society. Apparently, many of my fellow religiously conservative Christians then feared that if same-sex marriage was considered equal to heterosexual marriage in society, the property values of marriage would drop. In addition, many of my fellow Christians feared that if society welcomed the LGBT community as equals, that such an acceptance would have a corrupting influence on the Church

But it was also more than the fear of what would happen to heterosexual marriage. With the emergence of the LGBT community from the margins of society came a shock to many of my fellow religiously conservative Christians. Society had changed too much and too quickly for them. Many of my fellow believers no longer recognized the nation in which they were living. And considering how patriotic many of those fellow believers are, they were not just in shock, they were grieving for the loss of what once was. This loss speaks predominantly to white religiously conservative Christians because for many Black fellow believers, what had been also lost over time was Jim Crow culture and laws. It's not that there is no more systemic racism with the current gerrymandering at the expense of representation for Blacks in the House of Representatives serving as just another reminder that systemic racism lives. That is  because the loss of representation for Blacks in the House was not enough of an impediment to stop the current gerrymandering in red  states. It is that even though there was less systemic racism, thing had been changing. In the end, more whites felt negatively about the drastic changes in society.

Christian Nationalism concerns itself with societal laws that affect culture for both unbelievers and believers. What garnered such a high percentage of Evangelical votes for Trump is that he took the side of many religiously conservative Christians, as well as that of Putin (or wannabe Emperor Putintine), in the culture wars. The emergence of the LGBT community from the margins of society created the same reaction in my fellow Christians that the bourgeoisie dictatorship did in Marx. Marx thought that the only way to overthrow the oppression of the proletariat by the bourgeoisie was to replace the bourgeoisie dictatorship with a proletariat one. Such was an example of Marx's black-white thinking on that oppression. He never, that I know of, thought that one way of eliminating the oppression by the bourgeoisie was to get the bourgeoisie and proletariat to collaborate together. And so for many of my fellow believers, the appropriatae response to the emergence of the LGBT community from society was to return that community to the margins of society.

An alternative response would be to replace the culture wars with cultural coexistence as equals and then depend on evangelism and other forms of teaching, as well as discipline in the Church only, as ways of fulfilling the Great Commission. Such a dependence seems to be the way of the Apostles to fulfill the Great Commission.

The tragic thing here for the conservative Church in America, this call to some degree of Christian control over society just might be a front for installing an oligarchy. For that seems to be the battle in Europe. That Democracy with equality is being challenged by authoritarianism with hierarchy that take the form of ethnocracy. And not all examples of ethnocracy are religiously based. But regardless of the form, using ethnocracy as a façade appeals to many conservative voters.

And so some leading the charge for Christian Nationalism are using that label to monopolize conservative votes to support oligarchy. And that would make oligarchy a preferable form of governing to Democracy with equality.



Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Views From The Outside For May 19,2026

 Views From The Outside

The purpose of this page is to list news stories and reports from mostly Western sources outside of the U.S. You can use Google Translate to translate articles that are printed in another language. 

So far, news sources include:

International

From Canada

From England

From France

From Germany

From Russian Source 

From Spain

From Switzerland

From Ukraine


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Friday, May 15, 2026

What Can Peace Through Strength Mean?

The President has been trying to justify his actions and his new $1.5  trillion DOD budget by saying he plans for peace through strength. Of course what that means is implied rather than spelled out. What the President wants Americans to believe that, for him, it means that for him, as the Commander and Chief,  that he is defending our nation from aggression. That our nation must be militarily strong enough so that no nation would dare to attack us. But such an understanding assumes that 'peace through strength' can only have one meaning. My suspicion is that that saying has  more than one meaning. 

To decipher what 'peace through strength' can mean requires that we define what the words 'peace' and 'strength' could mean. And the problem with that is that each of those words can have at least 2 meanings.

For example, how could peace come through strength? We should note that how strength results in peace is that strength acts as a form of intimidation. That if we are strong enough, others would be too afraid to attack us. But such a use of strength is a passive form of intimidation. Passive intimidation means that the mere existence of our state of strength can make others to afraid to attack us. 

Active intimidation is when a group or nation exercises force to show its strength and what could happen if attacked. In other words, a nation or group will exercise that force again unless a given nation or group complies with the stronger one's demands. And so when we look our President's policies, he seems to be employing both forms of intimidation.

As for peace, we can see from America's culture wars, that peace can mean being coerced into complying or to peacefully coexist as equals. Note that with the first form of peace comes hierarchy. That is the peace being sought is when one nation or group is dominating, in varying degrees, over another nation or group. 

The latter is what we see how. some Christians approach their role in society. That these Christians want to have a certain measure of control over a society that consists of non-Christians and Christians. An alternative to fighting culture wars is for us Christians to decide to coexist as equals with unbelievers in society. That is, we will disagree with the cultural values of many unbelievers, but we will defend their equality in society by defending their right to live out those values. That we will not try to coerce unbelievers to at least behave in ways that follow our own cultural values.

If we look at Trump's attempts to rewrite trade deals, we find that Trump used both forms of intimidation to coerce complieance with his demands. Trump used the economic dependence that other nations have with the U.S. as leverage, which would be passive intimidation. He then employed active intimidation by issuing new tariffs to further his advantage over America's trading partners. It isn't that his tactics always worked; it is that that was his approach.

Trump has used his military capture of Maduro from Venezuela and his attacks on Iran as active intimidation over other nations so that they could see what could happen if they either don't comply with his demands or thought about attacking us. His new $1.5 trillion DOD budget is to provide a passive form of intimidation.

What is most dangerous here is the form of peace that Trump is pursuing. Though he is always marketing his actions and those of his opponents in ways to make it appear that  he is seeking the kind of peace that most people want in the world, in reality, as the National Security Strategy of 2025 (click here for the document) reveals, Trump's peace through strength means coercing other nations, especially in the Western Hemispher, into some level of compliance. Such a peace is, more often than not, a peace without justice. And that kind of peace often begets future conflicts.

Peace through coercion is what we see in Trump's attempts to get a deal with Iran to end the war. Trump is not in a hurry to end the war, because, IMO, both the Stock Market and major businesses are benefiting from the war and ceasefire. Those businesses include those that belong to the oil industry and the Military Industrial Complex. That means that he doesn't appear to care about the economic hardships that most American citizens,as well as those around the world, are suffering from. Nor does he appear to care about the war victims. And so what kind of peace can we expect if Trump has his way with Iran?

The kind of peace we pursue says much about what 'peace through strength' actually means.




Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Views From The Outside For May 12, 2026

 Views From The Outside

The purpose of this page is to list news stories and reports from mostly Western sources outside of the U.S. You can use Google Translate to translate articles that are printed in another language. 

So far, news sources include:

International

From Canada

From England

From France

From Germany

From Russian Source 

From Spain

From Switzerland

From Ukraine


<< Previous Views                                                        Next Views >>


Friday, May 8, 2026

The 2nd Amendment And The Middle East

American conservatives are fond of, and even zealous for, proclaiming peopleˋs right to bear arms. But much of their enthusiasm loses its luster when applying that right to those outside of our borders.

Take Israel and the Occupied Territories for example. Many conservative Americans will mindlessly repeat the claim that Israel has a right to defend itself. But how many of those same conservative Americans will also say that Palestinians have a right to defend themselves. And guess which group is most threatened by the other.

If we look at Israelˋs neighbors, very few are allowed to acquire enough arms to have a deterence against aggression from a neighbor. Palestinians have been forbidden from such acquisitions. But so to has Lebanon, Iraq, and Syria. One has to wonder when Saudi Arabia and Egypt will have reached their quota for weapons. And yet, Israelˋs regional policies strongly suggest that its immediate neighbors should insist on acquiring as many weapons as possible in case of future military actions practiced by Israel.

Itˋs not true that there are no Palestinians who are allowed to be armed. And certainly, Lebanon has an army. But despite the constant attacks by Israel on Lebanon prior to  the recent war against Iran, Lebanon is not allowed to acquire any force that could deter Israel from its military actions. And so this is where we need to admit to the privilege Americans have to bear arms rather than claiming that it is a right. That is because regardless of whether one is talking about freedom, liberty, or rights, when equality is absent, what we are really. talking about is privilege.

Why don't Israel's neighbors have the same right to bear arms like some Americans believe that they themselves are entitled to? That has to do with America's Security Strategy. In that work, the U.S. government's goal is to prohibit any non American-friendly Middle Eastern nation from gaining a strategic advantage over the area. That boils down to only granting Israel the "right" to acquire as many arms as its heart's desire.

And so the short of it is that America limits the acquisition of weapons to those nations that it deems to be an actual or possible threat to its interests. Therefore, we need to ask if our government can limit the weapons that a foreign nation can have depending whether our government feels threatened by them, why can't our government limit the weapons that its citizens can have when others feel threatened,  or even worse, by those weapons?


Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Views From The Outside For May 5, 2026

 Views From The Outside

The purpose of this page is to list news stories and reports from mostly Western sources outside of the U.S. You can use Google Translate to translate articles that are printed in another language. 

So far, news sources include:

International

From Canada

From England

From France

From Germany

From Russian Source 

From Spain

From Switzerland

From Ukraine

<< Previous Views                                                        Next Views >>