Political Conventions, Religion and Serving the Lord

FOURTEENTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST

Joshua 24:1-2a, 14-18

Psalm 34:15-22

Ephesians 6:10-20

John 6:56-69

Prayer of the Day: Holy God, your word feeds your people with life that is eternal. Direct our choices and preserve us in your truth, that, renouncing what is false and evil, we may live in you, through your Son, Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord.

“Now therefore revere the Lord, and serve him in sincerity and in faithfulness; put away the gods that your ancestors served beyond the River and in Egypt, and serve the Lord. Now if you are unwilling to serve the Lord, choose this day whom you will serve, whether the gods your ancestors served in the region beyond the River or the gods of the Amorites in whose land you are living; but as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.” Joshua 24:14-15.

This declaration of Joshua comes at the close of the book by his name. Israel is entering upon a new stage in its history. The future holds both promise and danger. In its own land, Israel has the unprecedented opportunity to become a people formed by Torah. Unlike the Egyptian Empire and the petty kingdoms of Canaan and its rulers who claimed godhood and exercised exploitive power over their subjects, Israel was to be a people ruled by the God who liberates slaves, champions the poor, the widow and the orphan. Israel is to model the way of being human that God intended from the beginning. It was being given the opportunity to become an agent of blessing to the world as was promised to Abraham.[1]

It should be noted that Joshua’s was not the first conquest of Palestine. For centuries before, the fertile crescent had been fought over by competing tribes, petty kings and empires. Though Joshua’s struggle was with the Canaanite city states residing in the land, Palestine was at that time nominally under the jurisdiction of the Egyptian empire. According to the Books of Judges and I Samuel, Israel’s hold on the promised land was at best partial and always precarious. The Israelite tribes were frequently under the control of competing tribes and rulers. Occupation of the land clearly was not the same as exercising sovereignty over it. Indeed, neither God nor God’s prophet Samuel favored Israel’s exercise of sovereignty and only reluctantly gave in to Israel’s demand for a king to rule over it that it might be “like the other nations.” Israel was not intended to be “like other nations.” Over all, Israel’s experience with monarchy did not produce the just and compassionate society envisioned in Torah, but led rather to its conquest, loss of the land and exile. Living faithfully as God’s people in the land of promise does not require the exercise of sovereignty over that land.

Disciples of Jesus interpret Joshua’s final words through the lens of the great commandments, namely, that we are to love God with all the heart, soul, mind and strength and the neighbor as ourselves. Saint Paul reminds us that, unlike Joshua’s struggle, “our struggle is not against enemies of blood and flesh, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers of this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places.” Ephesians 6:12. This is critically important for a world that is erupting into wars driven by the deities of nation, race, blood and soil. The devil would have us believe that our enemies are of blood and flesh. The devil would have us believe that our freedom and security depend on our willingness and ability to kill all who would take it away from us. The devil would have us believe that war is inevitable and necessary for the sake of the greater good. Understand that the devil is completely nonpartisan, taking no interest in the justice or injustice of any party’s cause in any military conflict. The devil takes no sides in war. He doesn’t have to. No matter who prevails on the battle field, the devil always wins.

According to the latest surveys, Christianity is still nominally the dominant religion in America. But I believe the surveys are wrong. I believe that the dominant religion in America is America. Think about this. If I were to boast that my children were volunteering to take up arms against people deemed hostile or resistant to my religion, one would think me backwards, primitive and uncivilized. But if I were to say that my children had enlisted in the armed forces, I would likely get a slap on the back and kudos for my family’s patriotism. I am, of course, not suggesting for one minute that killing for the sake of religion (or anything else for that matter) is justifiable. My point is that what people are willing to kill, die and send their children to die for says a great deal about what they hold most dear. For Americans, that is America.

It is important to understand that the Canaanites who sacrificed their children on altars and condemned women to a life of temple prostitution were not inherently cruel and perverse. They believed that the gods they worshiped demanded these things from them and that the wellbeing of the whole community depended upon satisfying those demands. Human sacrifices had to be made for the greater good. That is the mark of a false god. It always demands a blood sacrifice. America is no different. The blood of our soldiers must be given and that of our enemies shed to defend its interests. Child laborers in developing countries working on starvation wages must be sacrificed to ensure the flow of cheap goods we need to maintain “our American way of life.” Human sacrifice is not a relic of the dark and barbaric past. It is very much a part of American life, though we prefer to give it more palatable names.

I do not mean to say that America is inherently evil by identifying it as an idol. Idols, after all, are usually good things in themselves. They are good gifts of God that, due to our human propensity for disordered desires, have been elevated above the Giver. Government is a gift of God for maintaining order, ensuring justice and providing protection for the most vulnerable among us. Politics is a gift of God though which we are able corporately to love and care for our neighbors. But when the nation is elevated to godhood and politics become religion, the shedding of blood is sure to follow.

This week I have been watching the Democratic National Convention on and off. A political convention is about as religions as religion ever gets. It has liturgy, hymns, prayers and avid worshipers who chant responses on cue. It has speeches with all the hallmarks of revivalist sermons. These conventions were designed to stir up love of, admiration for and devotion to America. There is no disputing that they are good at what they do. I am watching this convention with mixed feelings. Clearly, I do not want to see another four years of Donald Trump. As thoroughly sickened as I am by our nation’s support of war in the middle east and eastern Europe, I am appreciative of the many positive contributions of the Biden administration and believe that Joe Biden is a good man who has given much that is good to this nation. So when I listened to his speech on Monday night, I was almost carried away by it. I was with him until closing remarks when he recited the words from the American Anthem, “Let me know in my heart when my days are through. America, America, I gave my best to you.”

With all due respect, Mr. President, no. I love my country. I love the American people. I will always try to do my part to make this land a kinder, more equitable and beautiful place. But my best belongs and always will belong to Another. America can never be first if I am to love it rightly and well. So as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.

Here is a poem/song by Phil Ochs that illustrates well the blood sacrifice required of that religion called America.

White Boots Marchin’ in a Yellow Land

The pilots playing poker in the cockpit of the plane
The casualties arriving like the dropping of the rain
And a mountain of machinery will fall before a man
When you’re white boots marching in a yellow land

It’s written in the ashes of the village towns we burn
It’s written in the empty bed of the fathers unreturned
And the chocolate in the childrens eyes will never understand
When you’re white boots marching in a yellow land

Red blow the bugles of the dawn
The morning has arrived you must be gone
And the lost patrol chase their chartered souls
Like old whores following tired armies

Train them well, the men who will be fighting by your side
And never turn your back if the battle turns the tide
For the colours of a civil war are louder than commands
When you’re white boots marching in a yellow land

Blow them from the forest and burn them from your sight
Tie their hands behind their back and question through the night
But when the firing squad is ready they’ll be spitting where they stand
At the white boots marching in a yellow land

Red blow the bugles of the dawn
The morning has arrived you must be gone
And the lost patrol chase their chartered souls
Like cold whores following tired armies

The comic and the beauty queen are dancing on the stage
Raw recruits are lining up like coffins in a cage
We’re fighting in a war we lost before the war began
We’re the white boots marching in a yellow land

And the lost patrol chase their chartered souls
Like cold whores following tired armies.

Source: The War Is Over: The Best of Phil Ochs (1988) (c. Barricade Music Inc.) Phil Ochs (1940-1976) was born in El Paso, Texas. He was a folk singer/songwriter and contemporary of Bob Dylan, Pete Seeger and Arlo Guthrie. He wrote hundreds of songs in the 1960s and 1970s and released eight albums. He performed at numerous anti-Vietnam War, civil rights and organized labor rallies. Ochs’s mental health deteriorated in the 1970s owing to what is now known as bipolar disorder and alcoholism. Tragically, he took his own life in 1976. You can find out more about Phil Ochs and his music at this website. If you would like to listen to the above song as performed by Phil Ochs, click here.


[1] The book of Joshua is a problematic one for people of faith. The wars conducted by the people of Israel against the inhabitants of Canaan under Joshua’s leadership could fairly be characterized as genocidal. That this account of Israel’s conquest of Canaan does not likely reflect the actual historical realities on the ground is beside the point. I do not feel the need to defend or rationalize these wars (as though God needed or wanted our defense). Neither will I call in the historical critical cavalry to put the blame for Joshua’s rough edges on some anonymous redactor. I will only say that we who identify as Christian are disciples of Jesus, not Joshua, Moses, St. Paul or any other biblical figure. The way of Jesus is to love one’s enemies and pray for one’s persecutors. It is through the lens of this “great commandment” that we read, interpret and re-interpret the Bible. The theological assertion made in our passage from Joshua is that God has delivered on the covenant promise made to Abraham and Sarah. The land is now in the possession of their descendants.  

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