Alastair's Adversaria - Pentecost and the Gift of a New Politics
Episode Date: February 6, 2025The following was first published on the Theopolis website: https://theopolisinstitute.com/pentecost-and-the-gift-of-a-new-politics/. Follow my Substack, the Anchored Argosy at https://argosy.substac...k.com/. See my latest podcasts at https://adversariapodcast.com/. If you have enjoyed my videos and podcasts, please tell your friends. If you are interested in supporting my videos and podcasts and my research more generally, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or by buying books for my research on Amazon (www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/3…3O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035.
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The following is a recording of an article first published on the Theopolis website, Pentecost and the gift of a new politics.
Many readers of the New Testament will, at some point or other, be troubled by the question of why Jesus' earthly ministry did not address the Roman occupation.
Perhaps as a child in Sunday school, you were taught that the Jews were expecting a military deliverer,
and that the form of Jesus' work was unexpected because he died at the hands of the Roman oppressors,
and brought spiritual rather the military deliverance.
Yet reading through the Old Testament,
focused as so much of it is upon the history of Israel
and the Lord's preservation and deliverance of them,
the seeming absence of national deliverance
might be narratively unsatisfying
and the idea that political concerns should be lightly shrugged off even more so.
Jesus declares the coming of the kingdom of God,
should not such a kingdom have involved, at a bare minimum,
the defeat of the Romans.
In the desire of the nations, Oliver O'Donovan takes up this question, reflecting upon the gospel stories of the census tax,
Matthew chapter 22, versus 15 to 22, is it lawful to pay taxes to Caesar or not,
and the Dydracham tax, Matthew chapter 17, verses 24 to 27.
He observes that Jesus' responses are neither those of a defiant zealot or a quiescent secularist,
Rather, utterly confident in the coming order of the kingdom,
Jesus felt no need to adopt an insubordinate posture to the passing powers of the present age.
Indeed, to do so would have granted them a significance they no longer possessed.
While demonstrating that he was not a rebel,
in the light of the kingdom of God, Jesus' compliance with the authorities was peripheral.
They were stewards of a vanishing order, while he was the son who would inherit all.
Commenting upon the surprising focus of Jesus' works of power,
demonic powers and the strong man who kept Israel in bondage,
O'Donovan writes,
He treated the fact of Roman occupation casually,
with little respect and less urgency.
Israel was enslaved to spiritual enemies,
and of this its colonial status was at most a secondary symptom.
Jesus' preference for addressing the demonic,
rather than the colonial oppressors,
looks from the point of view of our own narrowed conception of politics like a decidedly apolitical
inclination. While he was not a zealot, it would be mistaken to consider Jesus apolitical. We are inclined
to take the existence of power as a given, with politics being concerned with who wields it.
O'Donovan challenges us to reflect upon the threat of depoliticisation, upon situations characterized by a
lack of power or its excessive diffusion. There are places where natural disasters, for instance,
prevent political structures and authorities from being established or overwhelm those that exist,
or places where a multitude of opposing forces, a kingdom divided against itself, prevent order
from emerging. In his ministry, Jesus brought profound power into a situation that was lacking
it. O'Donovan continues, yet that new power was directed against the forces,
which most immediately hindered Israel from living effectively as a community in God's service,
the spiritual and natural weaknesses which drained its energies away.
This was not an apolitical gesture, but a statement of true political priorities.
Jesus' departure from the zealot programme showed his more theological understanding of power,
not his disinterest in it.
The empowerment of Israel was more important than the disempowerment of Rome,
for Rome disempowered would in itself by no way.
means guarantee Israel empowered. The paradigm of the Exodus was, we might say, being read with an
emphasis not on the conquest of the Egyptians, but on the conquest of the sea. The power which God gave
to Israel did not have to be taken from Egypt or from Rome first. The gift of power was not a zero-sum
operation. God could generate new power by doing new things in Israel's midst. Jesus did not need
to rest power from Rome to empower his people.
His gift of power not only exceeded anything Rome either possessed or could grant,
but was quite different in kind from anything Rome could offer.
And had Jesus' power been positioned chiefly in antagonism to Rome's,
its true character would have been misunderstood by his contemporaries,
and perhaps also by the church.
Jesus' acts of power attracted some politically restive persons,
persons with designs to make him king by force,
for instance in John chapter 6 verse 15, yet the kind of power they sought was not that of the kingdom of God.
O'Donova noted the way that Jesus' kingdom mission can appear to many to be apolitical,
as it left the seeming primary threat of the colonial oppressors unaddressed.
Behind such an impression, they commonly lurk misguided notions of the nature of true political power,
typically regarding the essence of power to be coercive force.
However, the power of Jesus' kingdom has a character that radically exceeds this,
even if it certainly does not entirely exclude it.
The power of Rome, to which the known world was enthrall, was not powerful enough, not political
enough. Jesus granted his people a power that radically exceeded Rome's in its affordance
of the resources required to ground a community's life.
At Pentecost, there is the gift of true power, flowing from Christ's exaltation,
in the ascension. The spirit gives power that, while not narrowly focused on overcoming Rome
as the supposed obstacle, is by no means apolitical. The power of Pentecost establishes the
fundamental realities upon which effective political community depend. At the heart of a society's
political life are its communications, its meaningful exchanges. The gift of the Holy Spirit is a
transformation and renewal of the speech and the broader communication of God's people,
the spirit is the common possession of the people of God and the ground of its communications,
each member representing to others the shared gift.
To each is given the manifestation of the spirit for the common good,
for to one is given through the spirit the utterance of wisdom,
and to another the utterance of knowledge according to the same spirit,
to another faith by the same spirit, to another gifts to.
of healing by the one spirit, to another the working of miracles, to another prophecy,
to another the ability to distinguish between spirits, to another various kinds of tongues,
to another the interpretation of tongues. All these are empowered by one and the same spirit,
who apportions to each one individually as he wills. First Corinthians chapter 12,
verses 7 to 11. The communications of a political body are paradigmatically encountered in its speech.
At Pentecost's fiery tongues descend upon the disciples, enabling them to speak the consuming word of God.
The spirit gives conviction and boldness for candid speech, demonstrated in the fearless witness of the apostles.
He also grants words persuasive power, inspiring confidence in the effectiveness of truthful proclamation.
He authorizes and empowers us to declare the effective judgments of God, binding and loosing.
The church acts in the name of Jesus, working not with an authority of its own, but as bearers of the name of the one above all principalities and powers.
The spirit establishes communion and a bond of peace, Ephesians 4 verse 3.
He is the love that holds the people of God in union.
He overcomes enmity, making brothers of enemies.
He frees people from the guilt and shame that render them abject and servile.
He is the common spirit that grounds mutual trust, service, and thereby equips us for effective shared action.
He gives hope and saves societies from despair, Romans chapter 15, verse 13.
He releases people from the fear that holds them in bondage and grants them the confidence of faith, Romans chapter 8, verse 15.
In these and other ways, the spirit both overcome.
the fracturing of human society and grants a sure unity and confidence by which it can act.
The spirit is the spirit of wisdom, Ephesians chapter 1 verse 17, the one who enlightens,
illumines and inspires. As such, the spirit enables us to discern things accurately,
judge rightly, and act prudently. Faithful and effective leadership is a gift of the spirit.
Joshua was a suitable leader of Israel, as he was full of the spirit.
spirit of wisdom. Deuteronomy chapter 34 verse 9. In Acts chapter 6 verse 3, the 7 were to be selected
from men of good repute full of the spirit and of wisdom. The spirit gives to the church
chalisms of teaching and leadership, gifts which any society requires if it is to flourish.
And he gave the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, the shepherds and teachers to equip
the saints for the work of ministry for building up the body of Christ,
Ephesians chapter 4 verses 11 to 12.
Despite having wise and good laws, the history of Israel was one of national failure and tragedy.
The mismatch between God-given laws and rebellious hearts meant that the former was insufficient to secure a good society.
Indeed, it ended up functioning chiefly as a means of condemnation.
The promise of the new covenant was the gift of the spirit to the people, writing the law in their hearts and securing a willing,
and understanding obedience. Jeremiah chapter 31 versus 31 to 34,
Behold the days are coming, declares the Lord,
when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah,
not like the covenant that I made with their fathers,
on the day when I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt,
my covenant that they broke, though I was their husband, declares the Lord.
For this is the covenant that I will make with the House of Israel after those days,
declares the Lord. I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts,
and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. And no longer shall each one teach his neighbor
and each his brother saying, know the Lord, for they shall all know me, from the least of them to the
greatest, declares the Lord, for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no
more. Ezekiel chapter 36, verse 26 to 27, and I will give you a new heart, and
new spirit I will put within you, and I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh, and give
you a heart of flesh, and I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes,
and be careful to obey my rules. Pentecost, commonly understood as a feast commemorating the
gift of the law, provides the fulfillment of Sinai. In the gift of the spirit, the law is placed
within human hearts, producing a free obedience.
In such a manner, the law achieves its intended end and its true effectiveness.
The compliance rested by coercion from the unwilling is weaker and shallower
than the obedience freely rendered by a renovated and loving will.
Yet we too easily consider the securing of the former to be more political than the
securing of the latter. Coercion may be a necessary form of political power in a fallen world.
my claim is not that it is not often needed, nor that it is not a real form of power.
But it is not as essential or focal to authority or power as many believe.
The obedience of faith among all the nations, Romans chapter 1 verse 5,
brought about by the work of the spirit is far more powerful than the slavish service rendered to the lords of the Gentiles.
Nations and kingdoms flourish and fade,
tossed and turned by the unpredictable currents and storms,
of history. Great empires collapse. Crisis and misfortune befall the wisest rulers. No one can shepherd
the winds of history, yet all polities exist at their mercy. If those who fancied themselves
immune to such forces are remembered, it is chiefly for their hubris. At the mercy of the whims of
fortune and the forces of fate, political powers must always reckon with the possibility of radical
reversal and failure. Yet reading the New Testament, we are repeatedly confronted with the assurance
of the church. Faced with powerful opponents and in profoundly uncertain times, the early Christians
were nonetheless utterly confident in the success of their mission. This was not a result of exhausted
planning and careful consideration of all possible contingencies on their part. Rather, their
confidence arose from their knowledge of Christ's authority in the heavens, and the power of the spirit,
them on earth. In Acts, we see several instances of the spirit's matchmaking work, working beyond the
knowledge of the parties involved, in two or more different persons and then bringing them together,
Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch, Saul and Ananias, Peter and Cornelius. The wind of the spirit
blows where it wishes, and although people can see his effects, they cannot tell where he is coming
from and where he is going. Nevertheless, when the Spirit is driving and orchestrating your mission,
although you cannot shepherd it, the wind of the Spirit is on your side. Not only did the
apostles know that in Christ's exaltation they had the mandate of heaven for their cause,
but Providence was determinedly working in their favour. And the Church can be confident that,
though driven powerfully by the winds of the Spirit, even beyond its capacity to set its own course,
it will never finally be shattered upon the rocks of history,
nor will the Spirit ever leave it be calmed.
The Spirit of God's providential wind fills the Church in Christ.
The confidence granted by the Spirit is a confidence of access to God in prayer
and in the effectiveness of prayer.
We can come to the throne of the cosmos as sons and daughters.
We can ask for what we need for the mission,
assured that the Father delights to give the Spirit to those who seek Him.
Where the reality of Pentecost is truly experienced, there is a new power discovered in our midst.
Not a power rested from some opposing human regime, or granted by some human government,
but of God working among, through, and around us. So many of our problems in our day arise,
not from opposing powers, but from broken politics, where words are weak and speech confused,
where love has failed, where trust has gone, where obedience is reached, where obedience is
rejected, and though multiplied, laws are ignored, where guilt and blame enervate people,
where counsels are folly, where all are divided, and where the possibilities seem to be exhausted.
Too often we can assume that true power is ultimately to be found in the halls of our deliberative
bodies. Faced with growing hostility within society, feeling the pressures of anti-Christian
corporate culture, and the impact of bad laws and political opposition, we can feel weak and
anxious. Yet in the spirit we enjoy a power that far exceeds anything in Washington or Westminster.
Indeed, fixated as we can be upon coercive force, we can fail to appreciate the weakness of such
force, a weakness exposed by Christ's death and resurrection, and by the faithfulness of the church's
martyrs. One of the things that the Gospels unmask is the fact that the supposed power exercised
in the crucifixion arose chiefly from fear, weakness.
ignorance and anxiety. Fear of the crowds, fear of rival factions, fear of Caesar, fear of the Romans,
fear of a mysterious Galilean prophet, and behind it all, the fear of death. As the spirit delivers
people from fear, this weakness is even further exposed. While the negative power of destruction is
real, it is ultimately weak and manifests the lack of true positive political power, such an economy
of power in slaves rather than liberating, and as the Spirit delivers us from the fear of death,
is largely disarmed. Hebrews chapter 2, verses 14 to 15. Since therefore the children share in flesh
and blood, he himself likewise partook of the same things, that through death he might destroy the one
who has the power of death, that is the devil, and deliver all those who through fear of death,
were subject to lifelong slavery. The gift of the Spirit at Pentecost. The gift of the Spirit at Pentecost,
is the gift of the positive means by which political community can be formed,
and the power by which to act with confidence in history.
Rather than power operating through and grounded in coercion, fear, enmity and death,
the power of the spirit is liberating, energizing, uniting and living.
Jesus did not directly attack Rome.
However, by overcoming death and giving his spirit,
he unsettled the power of Rome at its root and poured out a power that,
was qualitatively different from, and that radically exceeded Rome's.
They may not have taken up arms against Rome,
yet the growing presence of a people animated by Christ's spirit in the midst of the empire
ultimately led to a victory over it.
In our own time, although we face growing opposition and hostility,
we must learn to recognize the profound depoliticizing forces that afflict our societies
and the dispirited character of our nation's political lives.
Like Jesus, we need a theological understanding of power,
not dismissing the importance of power,
but seeking it chiefly where it is most truly to be found.
A Pentecostal political vision is not apolitical,
but recognizes political resources beyond the constricted imagination
of those who think of politics fundamentally
in terms of coercive force and enmity,
which, though real and important, are not and cannot be the ultimate truths of politics.
The call of Abraham occurred against the backdrop of the failure of Babel.
Babel, founded by the self-appointed God King Nimrod,
was an attempt by its builders to secure power against the threat of death,
afraid that society would either dissolve and scatter
or that their names would be forgotten.
God frustrated the building of Babel, confusing the builders' speech.
diverse nations then splintered off from the judgment of Babel.
After Babel, the Lord called Abraham, promising to make his name great and to bless all the nations through him.
What God would achieve through Abraham would somehow provide an answer to Babel.
Galatians chapter 3 verse 14 speaks of the gift of the spirit as the promised blessing of Abraham.
In Christ Jesus, the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles
so that we might receive the promised spirit through faith.
While the languages of the peoples were confused at Babel,
at Pentecost many tongues were united in declaring the mighty works of God.
Babel was a Promethean attempt to gain godlike powers,
recalling the original sin of the garden,
motivated by the desire to become like the gods.
The tower, with its top in the heavens,
offered the prospect of man's exaltation in dominion.
The reversal of Babel at Pentecost has as its basis Christ's exaltation to the Father,
and his enjoyment of all authority and power.
The pouring out of Christ's spirit is the form that the blessing of Abraham takes.
The spirit is how all peoples can be blessed and empowered by heaven.
Rather than stealing fire from the gods,
heavenly power is distributed in fiery tongues.
The Pentecostal spirit can renew the life of our earthly polities.
However, tis not the possession of any such polity,
and tis that which tests the spirits of our earthly polities.
all polities. The spirit has been given to the church, a single gift common to all, yet
represented by each member in their respective spiritual gifts. Each spiritual gift is a refraction
of the single gift and a participation in it, as it is exercised in service of others. The spirit
forms a Catholic body, one that embraces a whole humanity within it, being exclusive to no
single group and establishing the only ultimately common good. As such, the spirit forms a
peoplehood that exceeds and cannot be identified with the nation, while reviving peoples and their
polities. The bond of the spirit must also be that against which we test on mortal polities.
As O'Donovan writes, to each particular identity then is put the question, how can the defense of this
common good, focused around this common identity at this time and in this way, be brought to serve
that common good which belongs to the all-embracing identity individual and collective of God's
kingdom. As such, the spirit tests and tempers all earthly loyalties, subjecting them to the
rule of a much higher loyalty before which they must bow. Loyalty to nation and people have often
proven to be springs of dark idolatries, as such labs, fitting and good in their place,
have been given a priority that belongs to God and his kingdom alone.
In a brilliant little book, On Sacrifice, Moshe Halbertal, questions the common notion that selfishness
and excessive self-love are the fundamental ethical problem. Rather, he argues that
misdirected self-transcendence is far more serious, not least because it masquerade.
as something noble and can be used to justify the most horrific acts as sacrifice.
Another way of describing this is idolatry.
Halbertal writes,
idolatry is the utmost surrender to a cause that is not worthy of the corresponding sacrifice.
In giving the profoundest form of self-transcendence to us,
the spirit keeps us from idols that would demand dreadful sacrifices of us in their service.
Among other themes, the Book of Daniel explores the idolatrous aspirations of empire
against the thematic backdrop of Babel.
The reference to the land of Shinar in the opening verses already tips us off to the connection.
It is a book of proud towers, of attempts to gather all peoples under a single rule of the confusion of language,
failures of interpretation, and frustration of speech, and of God's humbling of proud empires.
In Nebuchadnezzar's first dream, he saw a towering image of a man, its head of gold, its chest and arms of silver, its middle and thighs of bronze, its legs of iron and its feet, iron admixt with clay.
This image represents a succession of empires, but also implies an idolatrous elevation of humanity through such imperial might.
This image is broken to pieces by a stone cut without hands, which then expands to fill the whole earth.
enduring kingdom of God, which inaugurates a new political order and puts a definitive end to such
imperial idolatry. Likely in response to his dream, Nebuchadnezzar then constructed an image of gold upon
the plain, gathering people from the breadth of his vast kingdom and from all levels of government to pay
homage to it. Nebuchadnezzar was attempting a sort of reversal of Babel, joining people of all peoples,
nations and languages, in a unified act of worship, directed towards his towering image.
In the following chapter, a further towering structure is seen in the immense tree of Nebuchadnezzar's second dream,
representing Nebuchadnezzar himself. In an action reminiscent of Babel, an angelic watcher comes down from
heaven and fills the tree, humbling the king for his hubris. In chapters that follow,
we see confusion caused through strange language
with the writing on the wall of Belchaz's feast.
There is also a further prostration
of an idolatrous elevation of a king
to the status of universal mediator
between man and the gods.
Chapter 7, recalling chapter 2,
presents us with the figure of the Son of Man,
to whom is given an everlasting and universal dominion.
The dominion of the Son of Man
will spell the end of the age of the beasts.
and the inauguration of a new order of authority.
There will continue to be great political powers,
yet the idolatrous projects to consummate humanity and secure its destiny
in vast empires under kings that claim divine or messianic prerogatives for themselves,
reach their end as the Son of Man ascends to the divine throne.
Empires, nations, peoples, and all other such human solidities
must now bow to the Son of Man and seek the destiny exultation,
unity and consummation of humanity in him.
Daniel exposes the way that some arrogant and vinglorious political visions
can have an adulterous core to them.
They offer people an ultimate meaning, fulfillment and completeness,
the sort of self-transcendence that Halbertold describes
that is not in their power to give.
As with the original Babel project,
they may offer a way to make our name great,
or some security against death, ensuring,
that our names will not be forgotten
and that we will have an enduring
legacy. And with such
proud promises, they will make
dreadful demands and require
terrible sacrifices of people.
Fueled by such false promises
of self-transcendence, people
will do terrible and evil deeds
in the names of their gods.
The establishment of the Kingdom of God
and the granting of all authority
and power in heaven and on earth
to the ascended Christ is a
radical humbling and de-mistive
of the pretensions of such political powers. Their authority, though real, is that of servants.
It is in Christ alone, who is over all powers and authorities, that we can find completeness,
not in the success of the revolution, nor in fighting for our people, nor in a perfected earthly
nation, nor in the advent of a powerful political leader. Although many of these might be worthwhile,
they are poor objects upon which to set our trust and hope.
can often have a more spiritual character,
seeking to summon, arouse, capture, or channel various spirits.
Politics is always a realm of powerful spirits,
yet some political movements more intentionally seek to arouse,
summon, or channel the spirit of a people, class or nation,
to receive the power of destiny that might impel them to greatness
as the zeitgeist settles upon them,
or to act with the exalted authority of history,
whether hypothesized as judge,
revealer of truth, destiny, or irresistible force.
Here our minds might naturally and appropriately go to something like the Volksgeist
of the German Volkish movement,
with the overtly mystical tendencies of romantic nationalism.
Such politics might also seek to capture the mood of the masses,
pursue certain vibes, or excite a free-flowing vitalist energy.
That it is a unified humanity,
Christ that receives the Pentecostal Spirit means that no particular nation or people can lay claim to his
prererer of human destiny, nor anointed for messianic mission. No people is complete in itself
outside of the church. No ruler but Christ can unite all humanity. No leader but Christ can truly
sum up the people in himself. None but Christ enjoys all authority and power or absolute sovereignty.
Pentecost is not only the reversal of Babel, but the continued divine frustration of all Bavillic projects.
The Let Us Go Down of Genesis chapter 11 verse 7 is realized most fully in the descent of the spirit.
Evil political spirits have been the source of some of history's greatest evils and horrors.
When a people are possessed and driven by false spirits, a sort of collective insanity can result.
In 1937, Professor D. Caius Fabricius wrote the following in a book entitled Positive Christianity in the Third Reich.
The Fuhrer himself belongs to those who fulfil the will of God and realise the life of Christ in this life to an extraordinary degree.
The Fuhrer is uniting the nation and helping it to rise from the laxity and neglect into which it had fallen to a sense of moral discipline,
fulfills the law of Christ respecting love in a way few mortals could ever hope to emulate.
By defending with the strong hand the spiritual heritage of the German nation against the powers of darkness,
he also protects our most sacred possession, the gospel, guaranteeing moreover the further spread of its power.
And when he himself in the strength of his trust in God places the destiny of the whole nation in the hands of the Father,
he manifests the spirit which through the coming of Christ has become a living power in the world.
On several occasions in his book, Fabricius distinguishes between the service and honour owed to God
and those due to the nation and its leader. Bracketing for a moment, the referent of his statements,
Fabricius' claims, especially when we consider some of the qualifications and distinctions he makes at various points,
might sound like the sort of thing that a Protestant political theologian influenced by
German Romanticism would say. As an implicit theology of the Christian nation and its Christian
Prince, it would not even sound strange in some circles today. Indeed, Probius's book is currently
being republished by a right-wing reformed Christian publisher, that Fabricius is making all these
pious sounding statements about none other than Adolf Hitler is alarming to us. However, it should
be a sobering reminder that, without rigorous testing of the spirits, such a theology can
easily end up underwriting and making us complicit in great evil. Without the discernment,
the spirit grants us to recognize his fruit and those spirits that come from God, such a political
theology might be considerably worse than worthless. The terrifying ambivalence of such a theology
should also drive us to consider how such dangers might be avoided. Even within Fabricius's
qualifications and distinctions, it is important to observe the manner of,
in which the Fuhrer and the German nation start to take on a prominence that trespasses
even upon that enjoyed by Christ and the Church. The Fuhrer assumes something of a messianic
role and the German nation, animated by the Volksgeist and claiming a grand destiny for itself,
begins to sound like a rival to the church. Fabricius manifestly both failed to recognize the spirit
of Nazism for what it was, or the fact that he had himself fallen so deeply
under its influence. Fabricius is an especially chilling reminder of how imperative it is to test
political spirits and how even people who claim to serve Christ can be deceived. Nothing can protect us
from imbiving such devilish spirits more than drinking deeply of the spirit of God. The best way to
recognize false and counterfeit spirits is to devote ourselves wholly to the enjoyment of the true
spirit. With the benefit of historical hindsight, we can see more of the theological shape of Hitler's
aspirations and the way in which the Fuhrer, the Nazi party and Nazi Germany parody to Christian
realities. In the messianic role and prerogatives, the figure of the Fuhrer was granted in forging
the identity and destiny of the people, his place came to rival that of Christ. The radicalisation
and elevation of national identity in Nazi Germany, unsurgency, unsurgency, unsurgency,
surprisingly established the nation and the party as a rival to the church,
claiming ultimate loyalties for the state and people to which they had no rightful title.
The National Valtzgeist was usurping the place that belonged to the Heiligergeist.
The result was nothing less than a dark and idolatrous political system.
Communism provides other examples, some of which have also had their theological useful idiots.
While political rulers are ministers of Christ and kings may be crowned in Christ's name,
one of the most important tasks of the church is to desacralize the politics of this present age.
That God is king means that there can be no divine emperor or God king,
and frustrates the aspirations of the state to apotheosis.
That Christ is king of kings and lord of lords means that all rulers of this age are humbled in their claims
to ultimate sovereignty. The king is not a God or even the Messiah, but a minister of Messiah Jesus,
subject to Christ's law. Pentecost is a fundamental political truth, and the reality of the
church is a primary defence against political idolatry. The church is the recipient of the gift
and anointing of the spirit in a way that no earthly nation has been. And so the spirits of all
nations and political movements must all be subject to and tested by him.
The Christian gospel is political at its heart, albeit political in a form alien to the rulers of this age.
Likewise, the church does not have to go outside of itself to become political.
In our cry, come Holy Spirit, we are seeking the generative power that grounds all true political community.
The Spirit's power is not a formless and fungible means to our various autonomous political ends,
but understood properly is an end in itself.
The Spirit is the Spirit of Christ, communicating and fashioning the form of Christ wherever he is bestowed.
The power of the Spirit can neither be divided from his person nor the form of his fruit.
Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.
Galatians chapter 5, verses 22 and 23.
The river of the water of life, flowing from the heavenly city, is flanked by the tree of
life, its leaves for the healing of the nations. Revelation chapter 22 verse 1 and 2. The power of the
spirit can renew our earthly polities, the fractured and chaotic babbles we inhabit, even when Christians are
in the minority. This should not be understood as a retreatist, quietest or separatist vision. We can be
actively and passionately involved in the life and discourse of our polities. Nevertheless, this does not
involve the sacralization of secular politics, nor the politicization of the sacred that so commonly
occurs when we fail to appreciate the relativization of the politics of this present age in the light
of the Pentecostal politics of the Kingdom of God. While Christian ministers should speak with moral
clarity concerning sin and righteousness in public life, they should beware of meddlesome involvement
in questions of political policy or prudence in this present age, and should
firmly resist any tendency to throw in the church's lot with any political cause or to use Christ's
sovereignty to underwrite any candidate party or nation. This is not because the church lacks authority,
but in no small measure on account of the danger of confusing that much greater enduring authority
of the kingdom of God with, or reducing it to, the authority proper to the temporary stewards of this age.
As Jesus relativised and decented the power of Rome in his teaching and practice,
the Church's proclamation and practice of a higher and greater politics
must challenge a common preoccupation with an excessive investment in the politics of this age.
It must also expose the threat of idolatry that lurks
when loyalty to alignment with service of and advocacy for
some political cause candidate, party, policy or entity
becomes a principal test of faithfulness,
mark of membership, basis of unity,
or foundation of identity,
and when no questioning, challenging,
or counteracting of it, is tolerated.
The church exceeds any party alignment,
national project, class solidarity,
earthly power or political movement,
relativising all,
calling them to bow before a higher throne,
and placing all under that throne's judgment.
Where earthly politics bows before this higher throne,
it may experience something of the healing streams that flow forth from it.
It may also see in its midst a new political community being formed,
one which, by its very existence, reveals the penultimacy of all others.
Even while being politically involved,
we need not play a zero-sum game of politics,
becoming fixated upon resting power from our opponents.
There is power the rulers and children of this age
neither know nor understand.
We see the shrinking and the exhaustion of power in our politics
and increasing dependence upon the weak and enslaving forces of fear and coercion
and the strife and confusion of tongues.
Despite all this, we can find confidence in the gift of the spirit,
grounding and investing ourselves in a new kingdom of which the church,
anointed at Pentecost is a promissory initiation. As the life of this new kingdom flows out,
we can seek his reviving and empowering of the common life and the rule of our societies.
Thank you very much for listening. If you would like to support my work, you can do so using
my Patreon or PayPal accounts. If you'd like to follow my writings, follow the anchored argosy
substack. Argosy.substack.com. God bless.
Thank you.
