#civilreligion — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #civilreligion, aggregated by home.social.
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The Worst Kind of Freedom
Dediticii of the State, Paroikoi of the Kingdom:
On Christian Nationalism, False Freedom, and the Pilgrim Church
There is a freedom that sings loudly and yet is already in chains.
#AmericanChristianity #captiveChurch #chains #ChristianNationalism #ChurchAndState #CivilReligion #crossAndFlag #dediticii #empireAndGospel #falseFreedom #Idolatry #kingdomOfGod #nationalismAndFaith #paroikoi #pilgrimChurch #politicalReligion #propheticArt #propheticWitness #religiousSymbolism #spiritualBondage #symbolicPhotography
There is a freedom that waves a flag, quotes a verse, demands a prayer in the public square, and calls itself holy. There is a freedom that speaks the name of Jesus with one breath and the language of domination with the next. There is a freedom that insists it is under threat whenever the neighbor is also allowed to breathe, speak, worship, live, vote, belong, or flourish. And that freedom is no freedom at all. It is fear dressed in patriotic robes. It is anxiety holding a Bible. It is the oldest lie of empire baptized in civil religion.
Christian nationalism is built upon that lie.
It says, “We must take the nation back.”
It says, “We must restore Christian order.”
It says, “We must defend our way of life.”
But underneath all of its grand language is a smaller and sadder confession: we do not trust the way of Jesus to be enough unless Caesar kneels beside him. And once the church begins to think that way, it has already bent the knee to another throne.
That is why the old Roman word dediticii has such prophetic force here. In Roman usage, deditio was surrender, and dediticii were those marked by that surrender, those living under the terms of a conquering power; in later Roman legal usage the term could also refer to people whose liberty was degraded, curtailed, a kind of freedom beneath full belonging. What a terrible phrase that is for the church to deserve: not merely conquered, but living in the illusion of liberty while shaped by the chains of empire.
And that is the tragedy of Christian nationalism. It imagines itself strong, but it is surrendered. It imagines itself sovereign, but it is already owned. It imagines itself defending the faith, but it has accepted the terms of a lesser kingdom. It seeks power in the way Rome seeks power, order in the way empires seek order, peace in the way fearful nations seek peace: through threat, hierarchy, exclusion, privilege, and force. It calls this righteousness. It calls this prudence. It calls this realism. But the gospel calls it what it is: temptation.
For every freedom built on another person’s diminishment is already a form of bondage.
If I can only feel secure when someone else is excluded, then I am not secure.
If I can only feel righteous when someone else is silenced, then I am not righteous.
If I can only feel free when someone else is less free, then I am not free.
I am merely protected by a cage large enough to mistake for a kingdom.
This is the bitterest irony of all: those who would limit the freedom of others in the name of preserving their own eventually discover that they, too, have become servants of limitation. They must constantly patrol the borders. They must always be on the lookout for enemies. They must keep watch over books, bodies, ballots, classrooms, pulpits, prayers, and pronouns. They must nourish grievance. They must cultivate suspicion. They must remain forever agitated because domination cannot rest. The soul that clings to supremacy must live in permanent alarm. And so the one who promised freedom becomes the custodian of fear.
That is why this is not merely a political error. It is a spiritual deformation.
Christian nationalism is not simply bad analysis. It is bad discipleship. It is the church forgetting what kind of people it is. It is the church forgetting that Jesus did not seize Rome; Rome seized Jesus. It is the church forgetting that salvation did not come through occupying the governor’s palace, but through faithfulness unto death. It is the church forgetting that Pentecost did not create a purified nation but a multilingual people. It is the church forgetting that the Lord’s Table is not bordered by tribe, race, party, passport, or patriotic myth. It is the church forgetting that Christ rules from a cross before he is confessed in glory.
And when the church forgets these things, it becomes available for conscription.
It can still sing.
It can still preach.
It can still quote scripture.
It can still say “Lord, Lord.”
But it begins to sound less like the Beatitudes and more like a millstone. Less like the prophets and more like the court. Less like the crucified and more like Pilate washing his hands while the machinery of death carries on.
Against all this, the New Testament gives the church another word, a better word: paroikoi. The term carries the sense of strangers, sojourners, resident aliens, people dwelling near but not fully at home in the order around them. In 1 Peter 2:11, believers are addressed in precisely that way, as “foreigners and exiles,” those whose lives in the world are real but not reducible to the world’s claims. And Paul, in Philippians 3:20, gives the church its political center of gravity: “our citizenship is in heaven.”
There is the contrast.
Dediticii are defined by surrender to imperial terms.
Paroikoi are defined by faithful dwelling without ultimate belonging.
Dediticii live under the dictates of the conqueror.
Paroikoi live under the promise of God.
Dediticii accept diminished freedom as though it were normal.
Paroikoi know that their life comes from another commonwealth.
Dediticii are shaped by subjection.
Paroikoi are shaped by pilgrimage.
The church is called to be paroikoi, not dediticii.
The church is called to dwell in the world, bless the world, serve the world, weep with the world, labor for justice in the world, and seek the welfare of the city; but it is never called to worship the city, confuse the city with the kingdom, or surrender its conscience to the rulers of the age. It is called to be near without being possessed. Present without being absorbed. Public without becoming idolatrous. Loving without becoming captive. The church does not need to dominate in order to be faithful. The church needs to remember who it is.
And who is it?
It is a baptized people, not a blood-and-soil people.
It is a Eucharistic people, not a nationalist people.
It is a Pentecost people, not a monocultural people.
It is a cruciform people, not a triumphalist people.
It is a resurrection people, not a fear-governed people.
That is why Christian nationalism is so dangerous. It does not merely propose a flawed strategy. It offers the church a false identity. It tells Christians they are landowners of a sacred nation rather than pilgrims of a holy kingdom. It tells them they are guardians of civilization rather than witnesses to Christ. It tells them their task is to possess the machinery of rule rather than embody the mercy of God. It tells them the neighbor’s difference is a threat rather than an occasion for love. It tells them anxiety is wisdom. It tells them domination is stewardship. It tells them privilege is providence.
And many believe it because it flatters the flesh.
It flatters the longing to be secure without sacrifice.
It flatters the longing to be righteous without repentance.
It flatters the longing to be powerful without being crucified.
It flatters the longing to call coercion conviction and call fear discernment.
But Christ does not flatter the flesh. Christ calls the church to die.
To die to supremacy.
To die to tribal vanity.
To die to the dream of holy violence.
To die to the seduction of being chaplain to empire.
To die to every flag that asks for what belongs only to God.
The church must hear this plainly: when it reaches for power by limiting the lives of others, it does not become more itself. It becomes less. When it seeks freedom through exclusion, it does not enlarge liberty. It redistributes bondage. When it blesses structures that narrow the humanity of the neighbor, it nails its own soul to those same structures. That is the judgment hidden inside the word dediticii: those who think they have secured their place have, in truth, surrendered themselves to a power that can only give them the worst kind of freedom.
But the gospel still offers another way.
Be paroikoi.
Be pilgrims.
Be resident aliens of grace.
Be people whose identity papers are issued in heaven.
Be people who do not need Caesar to certify the lordship of Christ.
Be people free enough to bless without ruling, to serve without controlling, to witness without seizing, to love without fearing.
For our citizenship is in heaven.
And because our citizenship is in heaven, we are finally free on earth: free to tell the truth, free to defend the vulnerable, free to refuse idols, free to reject every gospel of blood and soil, free to stand with those whose liberty is threatened, free to be neither conquerors nor cowards.
The church does not need a Christian nation.
The church needs Christian faithfulness.
The church does not need the illusion of greatness.
The church needs the courage of holiness.
The church does not need to become the soul of the state.
The church must become again the body of Christ.
So let the nations rage. Let the parties boast. Let the demagogues preach their frightened liturgies of invasion, purity, and control. The church must not join their choir. The church must remember its name.
Not dediticii of the state.
But paroikoi of the kingdom.
Not surrendered to empire.
But dwelling in hope.
Not the keepers of a lesser freedom.
But the witnesses of the all-encompassing liberation of Christ. -
Meditation on Triggers for #CivilReligion
Surreal Experience
As an #American “military age male”, there have been 3 times in my adult life during which headline news and civil circumstances have left me to feel uncomfortable inside my own skin:
9/11
Election Night 2016
Jan 6thMy dad read a lot of Tom Clancy when I was growing up, so…I read a lot of Tom Clancy growing up.
http://inaniludibrio.com/2025/06/22/meditation-on-triggers-for-civil-religion/
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the Senate and People of Civitates Foederatae Americae
#SPQCFA #WordsMeanThings #BodyPolitic #CivilReligion #culture #history
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Interesting use of "civil religion" there, too, which was only *just* picking up traction as a phrase, I think.
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Interesting use of "civil religion" there, too, which was only *just* picking up traction as a phrase, I think.
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Interesting use of "civil religion" there, too, which was only *just* picking up traction as a phrase, I think.
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Interesting use of "civil religion" there, too, which was only *just* picking up traction as a phrase, I think.
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Interesting use of "civil religion" there, too, which was only *just* picking up traction as a phrase, I think.
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@Mrfunkedude
The federated republic of instances require #boosts #boostswelcome #boostsappreciated as part of the #CivilReligion to keep the cult of Macedon alive. -
It’s ironic that they reason they want to undermine the #AdministrativeState and blow up the #American #CivilReligion is in order to refactor it in their Christofascist worldview.
They object to the technical debt incurred as a result of developing civil infrastructure for the #BodyPolitic.
You can’t shame the shameless.
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If Obama had committed to live-streamed town halls in 2009-12, then people would have seen the creepy weirdos from their neighborhoods earlier on and rejected them quicker.
#ParticipatoryLeadership is critical to the #American #CivilReligion.
https://mastodon.social/@digiphile/113023671549766211 -
If Obama had committed to live-streamed town halls in 2009-12, then people would have seen the creepy weirdos from their neighborhoods earlier on and rejected them quicker.
#ParticipatoryLeadership is critical to the #American #CivilReligion.
https://mastodon.social/@digiphile/113023671549766211 -
If Obama had committed to live-streamed town halls in 2009-12, then people would have seen the creepy weirdos from their neighborhoods earlier on and rejected them quicker.
#ParticipatoryLeadership is critical to the #American #CivilReligion.
https://mastodon.social/@digiphile/113023671549766211 -
If Obama had committed to live-streamed town halls in 2009-12, then people would have seen the creepy weirdos from their neighborhoods earlier on and rejected them quicker.
#ParticipatoryLeadership is critical to the #American #CivilReligion.
https://mastodon.social/@digiphile/113023671549766211 -
If Obama had committed to live-streamed town halls in 2009-12, then people would have seen the creepy weirdos from their neighborhoods earlier on and rejected them quicker.
#ParticipatoryLeadership is critical to the #American #CivilReligion.
https://mastodon.social/@digiphile/113023671549766211 -
The #American #Catiline lives and wants to hold a triumph.
Catiline was wicked.
#CivilReligion #history
https://beige.party/@RickiTarr/113017383564160585 -
This is <10 min CNN interview clip takes quite the journey around #American #CivilReligion.
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The Revolution will be Ritualized.
The Culture War™ is the network society platform where merchants of tribes extract, transform, and load shibboleths into our memories on the cloud technostructure.
Many people have an aversion to data & history.
Fear and “loss aversion”, can lead to delaying valuable interventions, critical actions, or development of first-principles.
#tradition #CivilReligion #culture #SystemsThinking #data #intuition #CultureWar #BreatheAndPush #PointAndLaugh #history
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@JasonPerseus @mwyman
I think whomever floated the thought experiment of repealing the 22nd Amendment already has a slight case of constitutional derangement syndrome.It has afflicted a faction of the #American body politic, influencing #CivilReligion since the Sedition Acts / Marbury, then 13th and calcified with the 27th.
Now those suffering the most desire to stop applauding any of it because it could result in a pluralistic society, and they’d rather burn the whole thing down, instead.
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Nobody is suggesting that the #AntiNormie #reactionaries also abide by this #ceasefire in the #CivicsWars for #CivilReligion.
The #ProNormie faction of #CivicEducation doesn’t have a right to defend itself?!?
Why do you hate #history, the #humanities, and #CriticalThinking?
https://www.the74million.org/article/its-time-for-a-ceasefire-in-the-civics-wars/
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This just one small, inconspicuous piece of evidence of how the cult of #American #CivilReligion manifests in public spaces.
https://channels.im/@usluck/112130937667410331 -
The #culture and #rituals of #CivilReligion and #governance are *supposed* to be boring.
Living in “interesting times” means things are not great, Bob!
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CW: uspol, dissing blue teamers
I think #American #CivilReligion has always been like this, since the days of #pamphleteering: https://inaniludibrio.com/2024/02/17/rewilding-of-civil-religion/
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@hosford42
I’m still trying to unpack this #ShowerThought.The Discourse™ around politics, governance, and policy is some people trying to be helpful and making suggestions for the story.
And then there is a back-and-forth as others who are in the middle of the chronically-ill #CivilReligion are like, “Yeah, I know the Electoral College sucks, but I live with it!”
All of this is supported by a #media #ecosystem optimized for noisemakers, the chronically ill just need stillness of thought...
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Something @hosford42 posted made me think that a non-trivial percentage of The Discourse™ is a symptom of our #CivilReligion being chronically ill: http://inaniludibrio.com/2024/02/17/rewilding-of-civil-religion/
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The decentralization of media sources, the decline of Must Watch TV, and ubiquity of microniches is leading to balkanization of civic religion. There are many cohesive storytellers, platforms, and political factions.
http://inaniludibrio.com/2024/02/17/rewilding-of-civil-religion/
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CW: A Jewish response to Christianity
@whimsy
@politics
@sociologyofreligion
@theology
@socialjustice
@historicaljesus
@faith#USA
#USpolitics
#RepublicanJesus
#CivilReligion
#ReligionAndPublicPolicy
#ChristianityClassic Jesus was concerned about and inclusive of marginalized people.
Republican Jesus is an excuse for cruelty, bigotry, and the concentration of power in the hands of a few white supremacists and fascists.