A book
review by Viola Larson
The
Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory: American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism
Author: Tim Alberta
Harper Collins: 2023
Writing in
2024 I intend, to focus on Jesus as Lord and the good news of redemption.
Still, I see painful times ahead and believe there is a warning that needs to
be given to Christians. It is about idolatry. Tim Alberta’s new book The
Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory is to the Church a gift, a warning and a
carrier of hope.
Alberta who
is a political columnist for Atlantic, as well as a Christian, began his journey
of writing his book after experiencing harassment at his father’s funeral. (His
father had been an evangelical pastor.) After Alberta’s book American
Carnage was published many of his fellow church members were unhappy with
his views of Trump. He was given an insulting letter by a church elder. Alberta
writes:
“I was part of an evil plot, the man wrote, to undermine
God’s ordained leader of the United States. My criticisms of President Trump
were tantamount to treason—against both God and country—and I should be ashamed
of myself.
However, he assured me, there was hope. Jesus forgives and so
does he. If I could use my journalism skills to investigate the “deep state” he
wrote, uncovering the shadowy cabal that was sabotaging Trump’s presidency then
I would be restored. He said he was praying for me.” [1]
This and
other harassments sent Alberta on a journey, exploring the causes of such
idolatry in the Church.
Some
chapters in his book explore the roots as well as the present ideology of
believers caught up in extreme loyalty to Trump. Those explorations cover a
past that was itself a move away from the words and work of Jesus, including
the formation of Liberty University. And a present which includes mega churches
who with ultra-patriotic sermons and flag waving captured the loyalty of
members of other churches that were attempting to protect their members from
COVID by staying closed during the worst of the pandemic.
It should be
pointed out that Alberta believes that those evangelicals who are a part of
Maga not only idolize Trump, they, going beyond normal patriotism, idolize
America—see America as a covenant nation meant, like Old Testament Israel, to
obey scriptural laws. They do not see America as a pluralistic democracy and
they tend to confuse that with their real biblical position as citizens of the
Kingdom of Heaven.
Alberta has one
chapter on Clay C lark and Michael Flynn’s Reawaken America Tour, a movement I
sometimes follow and write about. His description of his experience in one
meeting in Branson Missouri covers the nightmare well:
“Sitting in the second-floor gallery of the Mansion Theatre looking
out across a standing-room—only crowd of people clad in garish cross necklaces and
Qanon sweatshirts and red Maga hats, I could practically hear the voice of the
Old Testament prophet Jeremiah, who declared sometime around 600 BC that the
people of Israel possessed ‘no shame at all. ‘They had, Jeremiah said in one
translation, ‘forgotten how to blush.’ In fifteen years of political journalism,
I had witnessed political chicanery and skullduggery of every sort. Nothing
could surprise me anymore; I was immune to outrage, bereft of the ability to
recoil from iniquity. And then I discovered the Reawaken America Tour. [2]
Positioned
here and there within various chapters are Christians who represent hope. One
person is the pastor following Alberta’s father. Timid at first, fearful of
those in his church who constantly pushed far right political issues including
conspiracy theories, losing members during the COVID pandemic, Cris Winans grew
mature, brave, and wiser. Alberta writes of how Winans begin to deal with the
members of his church:
“Winans wanted to bring his congregation along to compel them
to second-guess their extrabiblical desires. But make them think it was their
own conviction. He would preach on godly character then play dumb when someone
approached him afterward to admit they were rethinking their allegiance to certain
politicians or pop-culture personalities; he would preach on the spiritual
principle of discernment then offer a bemused shrug when someone confessed to
him that they were beginning to doubt conspiracy theories or question
information they’d been imbibing on social media.”[3]
A couple of the
pages of hope are contained in one chapter with so much hope it is impossible
to cover all in a short review. A conference at Wheaton College. Several
outstanding speakers return the audience to the need for Christians to return
to love and compassion for those outside the church. And there is a reminder
that, yes the church was once persecuted greatly and in other parts of the
world still is, but here in the West, in America, contrary to many evangelicals’
views. there is not that kind of persecution.
And
additionally, there can be great ministry because of push back to the gospel.
As one speaker, Laurel Bunker, reminds the audience of the world’s real need:
“The Black kids of the city of Chicago; the gay kids who
struggle with suicidal ideation; the single mothers’ the prostitutes; the
broken of society. The only way they will know is if we go.” … “they are not
going to come to us. They don’t care about our steeples. They want to know, is
my life redeemable? Does my life have purpose?”[4]
And then there
is the chapter that covers an event in France where an Orthodox Ukrainian monk,
Hovorun and Miroslav Volf, a well known theologian and poet, from what was once
Yugoslavia, now at Yale, spoke covering the political religion that Vladimir
Putin embraces as an excuse to keep power and enlarge it. While there is so
much information in this chapter that is so thoughtful and helpful the discussion
on civil religion versus political religion is particularly enlightening in
regards to Trump, Maga and evangelicals who are pushing toward nationalism.
Alberta states
that Hovorun notes that political religion is enforced by the state and gives
examples of “Hitlerism, Nazism, and Communism.”[5]
According to Alberta, Hovorum also stated, “In Trumpism, we are still dealing
with civil religion—a form of civil religion. Its not yet political
religion.” (Italics Alberta’s)
To take this further Hovorun points to what he believes is hopeful, political evangelicalism is “Christ-centric.” But Volf disagrees, his words “I’ve come to believe … that the Christ of the gospel is a moral stranger to us.”[6]
There is more,, The book is full—as I said at first it is a warning and gift to
the Church.
5 comments:
If it's the same Laurel Bunker I know, she is a wonderful person. Absolutely love her.
Craig, I don't know her but she does sound like a wonderful person.
Happy New Year, Viola,
I think you may have convinced me to buy this book; at the risk of being the choir to which he is preaching...
"to undermine God’s ordained leader of the United States"
There are shades of Germany in the mid 30's all over this movement. It does worry me a lot. Added to the mix is the resurgence of militant Islam. But solving these problems on the battle field will likely only lead to catastrophe. Evangelism, not evangelicalism, is, as you suspect and I agree, the only viable path forward.
I believe the words in Isaiah 55:11
"So will My word be which goes forth from My mouth; It will not return to Me empty, Without accomplishing what I desire, And without succeeding in the matter for which I sent it."
Jodie Gallo
Los Angeles, Ca
Viola,
She was the campus pastor when my youngest was in college, and we got to know her through that role. She's a wonderful person.
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