Papers of a Perverse Patriot (2)
Perverse Patriotism is the unique and
exclusive loyalty (what we call “faith”) to apocalyptic Jesus that serves him
in a Subversive Counter-Revolutionary Movement (SCRM,
a.k.a. in polite society as “church”)
Perverse patriots can only be that if they know who they
are. That’s not as easy as it sounds. In North America the church knowing who
it is and understanding the difference between that identity and a living in
America is problematic because the confusion between the two is profound and
pervasive.
It is my contention that across the board in whatever
form we find God’s people, that is a people fleeing Egypt, wandering nomads, a
united and divided monarchy, a people in exile in Babylon, and a people exiled
in their own land under foreign rule, they are to be a Subversive
Counter-Revolutionary Movement (SCRM). Jesus of Nazareth entered the story of
his people under the last-mentioned condition. They are to be God’s SCRM
because this world is not as it was meant to be.
Instead of a world lathered and luxuriating in God’s
presence and the abundance of life on this planet in its full flourishing,
humanity turned its back on God in the cruelest of ingratitude. Breaking
relationship with God unraveled the good order of his creation. We could no
longer live with ourselves, each other, or the creation.
God, however, never acquiesced in this fallen state of
his creatures or creation. Immediately, he began a reclamation and restoration
project. God called Abraham and Sarah from out of the pagan rebellious world to
be the parents of a new people. They received a threefold promise in their
calling:
-God
would make from them a great nation,
-God
would bless and protect this people, and
-God
would use this people to spread his blessings throughout the world.
As the instrument of divine blessing to the world,
this people, Israel, was to declare and demonstrate God’s will and way for his
errant and erring creation. This entailed a subversive and
counter-revolutionary existence for Israel.
-Subversive
because they had to contest the distortions in thought, attitude, and action
now inscribed into life and world by human rebellion. And they were to do this
from below, as it were. Not by seizing control of the world and imposing
solutions top-down but from a patient and persevering practice of the life God
intended for all humanity.
-Counter-Revolutionary
because the church acts in the interest of God’s purposes. These purposes will
not be fully established until the End. Therefore, the church counters the
revolution of humanity into sin and death not by a return to a previously
established state of affairs (the Garden of Eden) because that state was only
the beginning of the journey toward the End, which is a city encompassing a
garden. The Church heralds a count-revolution then that is forward looking,
ever-provisional, and perpetually self-critical.
In his birth, life, death, resurrection, and ascension
Jesus subverted and countered human sin and its effects in a climactic and
decisive way. He
-brought
Israel’s exile to an end,
-reconstituted
it as God’s Abrahamic people, and
-equipped
them to go into the world discipling all nations.
Jesus embodied and enacted the ethos and ethics
of this “subversive counter-revolutionary movement” and enjoined them on the
new people of God centered on him.
After Pentecost the church no longer takes or need the
form of a nation-state. Now it’s spread into every nook and cranny of the globe
as a transnational community with no boundaries, many tongues and ethnicities,
male and female, children and adults, rich and poor, the lowly and the
well-placed, and so on across every division that separates us from each other.
Though the church is a community of the Spirit, it is
not a “spiritual” community in the sense we so often take it in North America,
as an invisible, inward relation to God and Jesus through the Spirit that has
nothing to do with the material, physical, political, economic, or social
aspects of our lives. The church is, in the Spirit, a political body. It is a
public community, committed to a way of life that directs us to live in certain
ways rather than others that can be observed by other people and groups in the
world.
As noted earlier, because we live in a world hostile
to and running from God, to live in God’s way will mean we run into opposition.
Opposition that wants to either shut us down or convert us to its way of living
and relating. And we learn in the New Testament that this opposition and
hostility is ultimately rooted in cosmic powers created by God but which
unfathomably and inexplicably rebelled against God and sought to seize control
of the world for themselves. And human empires are a chief way they exercise
their illicit rule.
Jesus defeated this rebellious cosmic cohort at the
cross and by his resurrection rules over them and the whole world. He is
rehabilitating those powers that can be rehabilitated and defanged those that
cannot. The latter continue to foment trouble for God’s people with their lies
and illusions. They cannot make us do their bidding; they can only lie and
deceive. It’s only our capitulation to these falsehoods that gives them any
ongoing power over us.
But Jesus has equipped us to resist and deflect this
demonic assault. In fact, God intends to use his New Testament people to
manifest his varied wisdom to these still hostile-though-defeated-powers
announcing that Jesus is Victor, their power is gone and reign of terror over,
and destruction awaits them.
The dynamic of God’s SCRM is maintained by two sets of
practices. First, perpetual reminders of to whom they belong, who they are, and
what they are to be about in God’s world. Worship, the Sacraments, and Word are
central here. This involves both extolling the triune God and critiquing and
rejecting the imperial ideology, the chief mark of human rebellion against God,
that continually seeks to seduce us. Second, practices of “healing and
restoring that which the empire has crushed and destroyed, acts of both
resistance to the imperial powers and of solidarity with those the empire has
turned into victims” (Robert J. Arner, “Resisting the Empire,” https://preachingpeace.org/resisting-the-empire-fidelity-to-the-gospel-of-life/).
I know this does not sound much like church to many in
this country. That it doesn’t is a measure of our distance from the gospel. We
need a thorough rethink of the nature and purpose of the church from the ground
up. We have entered a new epoch in the history and culture of the West, “the
world come of age” as Bonhoeffer called it. And as Bonhoeffer saw, a new form
of church is required for this new age. But this new form of church, whatever
and however various it may turn out to be, must always bear the character of
God’s Subversive Counter-Revolutionary Movement. Arner provides a splendid
summary statement:
“The ekklesia (church) organized
itself as an alternative form of political identity based not upon the power of
the sword, but on the kenotic law of love. By offering a vision and
organization for an alternative form of social interaction, the movement
challenged the perception that Rome was the desirable, rightful, invincible
ruling power. It rejected the empire's totalizing claims and version of social
reality that brought benefits to a few and hardships to many. By
contextualizing the empire in God's greater purposes, the Christians
demystified it, relativized its power, exposed its shortcomings, burst its
illusions, revealed its lies, and numbered its days....They exposed the
empire's vulnerability by displaying the limits of its claims to human
allegiance.”
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