Christians, don’t be fooled: Trump
has no deep religious convictions
By Stanley Hauerwas January 27
Many Americans appear ready to give
President Trump a pass when it comes to his lack of religious
knowledge, sensibilities or behavior, but I think that’s a mistake.
Trump is quite pious and his religious
convictions run dangerously deep. But his piety is not a reflection
of a Christian faith. His piety is formed by his understanding of
what makes America a country like no other.
Trump proclaimed Jan. 20, the day of
his inauguration, a “National Day of Patriotic Devotion.”
Patriotic devotion? Christians are devoted to God, not to any nation.
Trump defended his call for a day of patriotic devotion by drawing
attention to his other claim — taken on faith — that there are no
greater people than American citizens. Faith in Trump’s view,
though, requires belief in those things for which we have
insufficient evidence.
There is nothing, in Trump’s view,
the American people cannot accomplish as long as we believe in
ourselves and our country. But Christians do not believe in ourselves
or our country. We believe in God, but we do more than believe in
God. We worship God. Nothing else is to be worshiped.
Christians have a word to describe the
worship of that which is not God: idolatry. Idolatry, of course, can
be a quite impressive form of devotion. The only difficulty is
idolaters usually end up killing someone for calling into question
their “god.”
Trump’s inauguration address counts
as a stunning example of idolatry. His statement — “At the
bedrock of our politics will be a total allegiance to the United
States of America and through our loyalty to our country we will
recover loyalty to each other” — is clearly a theological claim
that offers a kind of salvation.
Christians believe that only God
demands “total allegiance.” Otherwise we run the risk, as Trump
exemplifies, of making an idol out of some human enterprise.
The evangelistic character of Trump’s
faith should not be missed. He suggests that we will rediscover our
loyalty to one another through our total allegiance to the United
States. Quoting the Bible, he even suggests we will learn to live
together in unity.
But history tells us people experience
repressive politics for challenging such “oneness.” It is
difficult to imagine those who have faced slavery and genocide can be
in solidarity with those who believe we can let bygones be bygones.
Consider Trump’s use of the phrase
“the people” in his inaugural address. “The people” have
borne the cost. “The people” now own, rule and control the
government. “The people” have not shared in the wealth of the
country but now they will. “The people” will have their jobs
restored.
To which one can only wonder: Who are
these people? The answer must be that they are Trump’s people who
now wait for his call to action, that is, to make America great
again. Trump, in his mind, is not just the president of the United
States. He is the savior.
Trump identifies as a Presbyterian.
However, he has said he does not need a prayer for confession of sins
because he has done nothing that requires forgiveness, one signal
that he does not believe in a basic Christian tenet. He has
identified with Norman Vincent Peale, who wrote the book “The Power
of Positive Thinking,” which does not represent Christian
orthodoxy. Christianity in Peale’s hands was closer to a set of
beliefs a follower could make up to suit their desires. Trump has
adopted this strategy and applied it to the country.
Christians must call his profound and
mistaken faith what it is: idolatry. Christianity in America is
declining if not dying, which makes it difficult to call Trump to
task. Trump has taken advantage of Christian Americans who have long
lived as if God and country are joined at the hip. I do not doubt
Trump thinks of himself as a Christian, but America is his church.
Christians have a church made up of
people from around the globe. That global interconnectedness might
just produce a people with the resources to tell Trump “no.” At
the very least, Christians in the United States have little to lose
by beginning to reject our long love affair with American pretension.
Stanley Hauerwas’s most recent book
is “The Work of Theology” (Eerdmans). He is retired from the
Divinity School of Duke University. Most recently he was chair in
ethics at the University of Aberdeen (Scotland).
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