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mine
Eyes Have Seen The Glory
"We are lived by forces we scarcely understand," wrote W.H.
Auden. What forces live us now as America again torques toward war?
George W. Bush is certainly the plaything of such forces as the
geopolitics of oil but it seems that he is susceptible to other even
darker archetypal concerns. Let me be blunt. The man is delusional and
the shape of his delusion is specifically apocalyptic in belief and
intent. That Bush would attack so many vital systems on so many fronts
from foreign policy to the environment may seem confusing from the point
of view of realpolitik but becomes transparent in terms of the
apocalyptic worldview to which he subscribes. All systems are supposed
to go down so the Messiah can come and Bush, seemingly, has taken on the
role of the one who brings this to pass.
The Reverend Billy Graham taught Bush to live in anticipation of the
Second Coming but it was his friendship with Dr. Tony Evans that shaped
Bush's political understanding of how to deport himself in an
apocalyptic era. Dr. Evans, the pastor of a large Dallas church and a
founder of the Promise Keepers movement taught Bush about "how the
world should be seen from a divine viewpoint," according to Dr.
Martin Hawkins, Evans assistant pastor.
S.R. Shearer of Antipas Ministries writes, "Most of the leaders of
the Promise Keepers embrace a doctrine of 'end time' (eschatology),
known as 'dominionim.' Dominionism pictures the seizure of earthly
(temporal) power by the 'people of God' as the only means through which
the world can be rescued.... It is the eschatology that Bush has
imbibed; an eschatology through which he has gradually (and easily) come
to see himself as an agent of God who has been called by him to 'restore
the earth to God's control', a 'chosen vessel', so to speak, to bring in
the Restoration of All Thingss." Shearer calls this delusion,
"Messianic leadership"-- that is to say usurping the role
usually ascribed to the Messiah.
In Bush at War Bob Woodward writes, "Most presidents have high
hopes. Some have grandiose visions of what they will achieve, and he was
firmly in that camp."
"To answer these attacks and rid the world of evil," says
Bush. Grandiose visions. Woodward comments, "The president was
casting his mission and that of the country in the grand vision of Gods
Master Plan."
In dominionism we can see the theological source of Bush's monomania.
Not to be distracted by the fact that he lost the popular election by a
half a million votes, that the Joint Chief of Staff at the Pentagon were
so concerned about his plans to invade Iraq that they leaked their
unanimous objection, that he has systematically alienated much of the
world, that roughly seventy percent of Americans remain unconvinced of
the imminent threat of Saddam Hussein and the same percentage object to
war if there will be significant American casualties--none of this is in
the least relevant. He believes his mandate toward action is from God.
As humans we live within stories. Some stories, like apocalypse are
thousands of years old. The scriptured text that informs Bush
understanding of and enactment of the End of Days (Revelations 19)
depicts Christ returning as the Heavenly Avenger. Revelations is the
only New Testament book that justifies violence of any kind, and this it
takes to the limit: Christ himself the agent of mass murder.
"I saw heaven open and there before me was a white horse who is
called Faithful and True. With justice he judges and makes war...He is
dressed in a robe dipped in blood and his name is the word of God...Out
of his mouth comes a sharp sword with which to strike down the Nations.
And I saw an angel standing in the sun who cried in a low voice to all
the birds flying in midair--come gather together for the great supper of
God, so you may eat the flesh of kings, generals and mighty men, of
horses and their riders, and the flesh of all people, free and slave,
small and great."
Such is "the glory of the coming of the Lord." Truth, carnage,
and the ecstasy of vultures. In a ruined world the Messiah slays the
antichrist and creates "a new heaven and a new earth." The
dead are judged, the Christians saved and the rest damned to eternal
torment. The New Jerusalem is established and the Lord rules it
"with an iron scepter."
It is not inconceivable that Bush is literally and determinedly drawn,
consciously and unconsciously, toward the enactment of such a scenario,
as he believes, for God's sake. Indeed the stark relentlessness of his
policy in the Middle East suggests as much.
It dishonors the profundity of the Christian tradition if one doesn't
note that Revelations has always been a rogue text. Because of its
association with the Montanist heresy (which like contemporary
fundamentalists took it to be literal rather than allegorical) it was
with great reluctance that it was made scripture three centuries after
the death of Christ. Traditionally attributed to St. John, most Biblical
scholars now recognize its literary style and its theology has little in
common with John's gospel or his epistles and was likely written after
his death. Martin Luther found the vindictive God of Revelations
incompatible with the gospels and relegated it to the appendix of his
German translation of the New Testament instead of the body of
scripture. All the Protestant reformers except Calvin regarded
apocalyptic millenialism to be heresy.
But Revelations is also a rogue text because it is unmoored from its
origins, which are far from Christian. It is a late variant on a story
that was pervasive in the ancient world: the defeat of the wild and the
uncivilized by a superior order upon which a New World would be
established. Two thousand years before Revelations depicted Christ
slaying the antichrist and laying out the New Jerusalem, Marduk slayed
Tiamat and founded Babylon.
This pagan myth recycled as a suspiciously unchristian Biblical test
found new credence in the 19th century when John Darby virtually revived
the Montanist heresy of investing it with a passionate literalism. Given
to visions (he saw the British as one of the ten tribes of Israel) Darby
left the priesthood of the Church of Ireland and preached Revelations as
both prophecy and imminent history. In this he inaugurated a lineage in
which Bush's mentors, the Reverend Billy Graham and Dr. Tony Evans are
recent heirs. Revelations is much beloved by Muslim fundamentalists and
like their Christian compatriots they also thrill to redemption through
apocalypse. Jewish fundamentalists of course do not believe in
Revelations but have nonetheless made common cause with the Christian
Right. "It's a very tragic situation in which Christian
fundamentalists, certain groups of them that focus on Armageddon and the
Rapture and the role of a war between Muslims and Jews in bringing about
the Second Coming, are involved in a folie a deux with extremist
Jews," said Ian Lustick, the author of For the Land and the Lord:
Jewish Fundamentalism in Israel. The Judeo-Christian-Islamic tradition
(and yes it is a single tradition) is being led by its fringe into the
abyss and the rest of us with it.
The world has been readied for the fire but the critical element is the
Bush Administration. Never in the history of Christendom has there been
a moment when this rogue element has carried anything like the
credibility and political power that it carries now.
The
Nganga Project
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