The
Secular Agenda to Silence the Church
by Gary
DeMar
The
controversy over the role that religion plays in politics is an old one.
Jesus was accused of subverting the political order by “misleading
[the] nation and forbidding [people] to pay taxes to Caesar, and saying
that He Himself is Christ, a King” (Luke 23:2). Christians were
accused of promoting the idea that there was “another king, Jesus” (Acts
17:7). The designation of Jesus as “Lord” had significant
political implications in the Roman empire since the Emperor held the
title of Dominus et Deus, “Lord and God.” Rome permitted
and promoted religious diversity, just like today’s liberals, but
it did not allow religious competition with the State, just like today’s
liberals. For more than 50 years, from the Scopes Trial in 1925 to the
presidential candidacy of Jimmy “Born Again” Carter in 1976,
conservative Christians did not develop a discernable political philosophy.1 The
secularists took advantage of the indifference and moved the country
in a decidedly anti-Christian direction. The major institutions were
captured—courts, schools, seminaries—and turned into secular
advocacy groups churning out disciples for the humanist agenda.
With the help of
the media and legal groups like the ACLU and Americans United for Church
and State, the secularists began to flex their muscles and kick sand
in the face of sleepy Christians. The sleeping giant has finally awakened
to find that the moral landscape has been ravaged. The secularists
who are attacking Christian activism are frightened that they might
lose influence, so they are pulling out all the stops. Their tactics
have a déjà vu quality about them.
Twentieth-century
tyrants and those who support them have followed a playbook similar
to the one practiced by Rome: They never met a competing religion they
liked. Nazism has been described as a “political
religion” that demands “of its adherents total submission
of their consciences and surrender of their souls. . . . It was unconditional
in its claims, inspired fanaticism and practiced extreme intolerance
of those who thought otherwise.”2 According
to the late William L. Shirer, under the leadership of Alfred Rosenberg,
Martin Bormann, and Heinrich Himmler, “who were backed by Hitler,
the Nazi regime intended eventually to destroy Christianity in Germany
. . . and substitute the old paganism of the early tribal Germanic gods
and the new paganism of the Nazi extremists.”3 Bormann, “one
of the men closest to Hitler, said publicly in 1941, ‘National
Socialism and Christianity are irreconcilable.’”4 For
Bormann, the Nazi worldview was absolute and final truth. All of life
was to be refracted through the prism of the Nazi worldview. “For
this reason,” Bormann wrote, “we can do without Christianity.”
A similar attitude
pervades the academic establishment. “There
is no dogma more prevalent within American high culture than that smart
people outgrow God,” says Douglas Henry, an assistant professor
of philosophy and director of Baylor’s Institute for Faith and
Learning. “The more educated, the more erudite, the more discerning
and wise one is, the less one is inclined to be a deeply pious Christian,
the thinking goes. In higher education, this dogma gets expressed in
the axiom that academic excellence and Christian faithfulness are incompatible.”5 Like
today’s Christian antagonists, Nazi propagandists understood that
one way to discredit Christianity was to ridicule it. Martin Bormann
was a master. His rhetoric matches much of what comes from the pages
of magazines like Mother Jones. Just substitute “evolution” for “National
Socialism”:
The Christian Churches
build upon the ignorance of men and strive to keep large portions of
the people in ignorance because only in this way can the Christian
Churches maintain their power. On the other hand, National Socialism
is based on scientific foundations. Christianity’s immutable
principles, which were laid down almost two thousand years ago, have
increasingly stiffened into life-alien dogmas. National Socialism, however,
if it wants to fulfill its task further, must always guide itself according
to the newest data of scientific searches.6
William Shirer would
later write: “We know now what Hitler envisioned
for the German Christians: the utter suppression of their religion.”7 With
Christianity out of the way, anything was possible and everything became
permissible.
1. Tom
Strode, “Abortion issue & Schaeffer
influence pushed evangelicals to engagement, [Richard] Land says,” BP
News (December 6, 2005): www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?ID=22215
2. Michael Burleigh, The Third
Reich: A New History (New York: Hill and Wang, 2000), 252.
3. William L. Shirer, The Rise
and Fall of the Third Reich (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1960),
240.
4. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of
the Third Reich, 240.
5. Quoted
in Karen Houppert, “Professing
Faith,” Mother Jones (December 2005), 41.
6. Martin
Bormann, “National
Socialist and Christian Concepts Incompatible” in George L. Moss, Nazi
Culture (New York Grosset & Dunlap, 1968), 244.
7. William L. Shirer, The
Nightmare Years: 1930–1940 (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1984),
156.
Gary DeMar is president of American Vision and the author of more than 20 books. His latest is Myths, Lies, and Half Truths.
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