I grew up in churches that eventually went full MAGA. A LOT of them want a literal theocracy where ‘gods law’ is the law of the land. They also believe political leaders are put in place by either god or the devil. The conflation of divine will is biblical as far as they are concerned.
They also have a cultural agenda of raising people to participate and influence politics.
The real failure is the inability to prevent the church from re-taking over the state.
This is the catholic church all over again… just with teen pageant models instead of choir boys.
The real failure is the inability to prevent the church from re-taking over the state.
The mistake is in assuming churches weren’t running the state to begin with. This goes back to the 1950s Cold War Era, where “Being Religious” was part of the litmus test for being anti-Communist. What we’ve seen over the post-Cold War Era was an attrition of Christian religious fervor (and a general New Atheist backlash to non-Christian religions) that’s forced once prolific congregations to consolidate control in order to secure their little theocratic fiefdoms across rural America.
But they never really lost power to begin with. They only lost popularity.
America was colonized on the principles of not being taxed by a kinggenocide of native peoples and not being told how many wives you can have by a popeinstitutionalized slavery .
I grew up in churches that eventually went full MAGA. A LOT of them want a literal theocracy where ‘gods law’ is the law of the land. They also believe political leaders are put in place by either god or the devil. The conflation of divine will is biblical as far as they are concerned.
They also have a cultural agenda of raising people to participate and influence politics.
The real failure is the inability to prevent the church from re-taking over the state.
This is the catholic church all over again… just with teen pageant models instead of choir boys.
The mistake is in assuming churches weren’t running the state to begin with. This goes back to the 1950s Cold War Era, where “Being Religious” was part of the litmus test for being anti-Communist. What we’ve seen over the post-Cold War Era was an attrition of Christian religious fervor (and a general New Atheist backlash to non-Christian religions) that’s forced once prolific congregations to consolidate control in order to secure their little theocratic fiefdoms across rural America.
But they never really lost power to begin with. They only lost popularity.
America was colonized on the principles of not being taxed by a king and not being told how many wives you can have by a pope.
The separation of church and state was a lofty ideal, but never a realistic one given who moved to America.
But otherwise, sure. I agree.