Quotes & Sayings


We, and creation itself, actualize the possibilities of the God who sustains the world, towards becoming in the world in a fuller, more deeper way. - R.E. Slater

There is urgency in coming to see the world as a web of interrelated processes of which we are integral parts, so that all of our choices and actions have [consequential effects upon] the world around us. - Process Metaphysician Alfred North Whitehead

Kurt Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem says (i) all closed systems are unprovable within themselves and, that (ii) all open systems are rightly understood as incomplete. - R.E. Slater

The most true thing about you is what God has said to you in Christ, "You are My Beloved." - Tripp Fuller

The God among us is the God who refuses to be God without us, so great is God's Love. - Tripp Fuller

According to some Christian outlooks we were made for another world. Perhaps, rather, we were made for this world to recreate, reclaim, redeem, and renew unto God's future aspiration by the power of His Spirit. - R.E. Slater

Our eschatological ethos is to love. To stand with those who are oppressed. To stand against those who are oppressing. It is that simple. Love is our only calling and Christian Hope. - R.E. Slater

Secularization theory has been massively falsified. We don't live in an age of secularity. We live in an age of explosive, pervasive religiosity... an age of religious pluralism. - Peter L. Berger

Exploring the edge of life and faith in a post-everything world. - Todd Littleton

I don't need another reason to believe, your love is all around for me to see. – Anon

Thou art our need; and in giving us more of thyself thou givest us all. - Khalil Gibran, Prayer XXIII

Be careful what you pretend to be. You become what you pretend to be. - Kurt Vonnegut

Religious beliefs, far from being primary, are often shaped and adjusted by our social goals. - Jim Forest

We become who we are by what we believe and can justify. - R.E. Slater

People, even more than things, need to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed, and redeemed; never throw out anyone. – Anon

Certainly, God's love has made fools of us all. - R.E. Slater

An apocalyptic Christian faith doesn't wait for Jesus to come, but for Jesus to become in our midst. - R.E. Slater

Christian belief in God begins with the cross and resurrection of Jesus, not with rational apologetics. - Eberhard Jüngel, Jürgen Moltmann

Our knowledge of God is through the 'I-Thou' encounter, not in finding God at the end of a syllogism or argument. There is a grave danger in any Christian treatment of God as an object. The God of Jesus Christ and Scripture is irreducibly subject and never made as an object, a force, a power, or a principle that can be manipulated. - Emil Brunner

“Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh” means "I will be that who I have yet to become." - God (Ex 3.14) or, conversely, “I AM who I AM Becoming.”

Our job is to love others without stopping to inquire whether or not they are worthy. - Thomas Merton

The church is God's world-changing social experiment of bringing unlikes and differents to the Eucharist/Communion table to share life with one another as a new kind of family. When this happens, we show to the world what love, justice, peace, reconciliation, and life together is designed by God to be. The church is God's show-and-tell for the world to see how God wants us to live as a blended, global, polypluralistic family united with one will, by one Lord, and baptized by one Spirit. – Anon

The cross that is planted at the heart of the history of the world cannot be uprooted. - Jacques Ellul

The Unity in whose loving presence the universe unfolds is inside each person as a call to welcome the stranger, protect animals and the earth, respect the dignity of each person, think new thoughts, and help bring about ecological civilizations. - John Cobb & Farhan A. Shah

If you board the wrong train it is of no use running along the corridors of the train in the other direction. - Dietrich Bonhoeffer

God's justice is restorative rather than punitive; His discipline is merciful rather than punishing; His power is made perfect in weakness; and His grace is sufficient for all. – Anon

Our little [biblical] systems have their day; they have their day and cease to be. They are but broken lights of Thee, and Thou, O God art more than they. - Alfred Lord Tennyson

We can’t control God; God is uncontrollable. God can’t control us; God’s love is uncontrolling! - Thomas Jay Oord

Life in perspective but always in process... as we are relational beings in process to one another, so life events are in process in relation to each event... as God is to Self, is to world, is to us... like Father, like sons and daughters, like events... life in process yet always in perspective. - R.E. Slater

To promote societal transition to sustainable ways of living and a global society founded on a shared ethical framework which includes respect and care for the community of life, ecological integrity, universal human rights, respect for diversity, economic justice, democracy, and a culture of peace. - The Earth Charter Mission Statement

Christian humanism is the belief that human freedom, individual conscience, and unencumbered rational inquiry are compatible with the practice of Christianity or even intrinsic in its doctrine. It represents a philosophical union of Christian faith and classical humanist principles. - Scott Postma

It is never wise to have a self-appointed religious institution determine a nation's moral code. The opportunities for moral compromise and failure are high; the moral codes and creeds assuredly racist, discriminatory, or subjectively and religiously defined; and the pronouncement of inhumanitarian political objectives quite predictable. - R.E. Slater

God's love must both center and define the Christian faith and all religious or human faiths seeking human and ecological balance in worlds of subtraction, harm, tragedy, and evil. - R.E. Slater

In Whitehead’s process ontology, we can think of the experiential ground of reality as an eternal pulse whereby what is objectively public in one moment becomes subjectively prehended in the next, and whereby the subject that emerges from its feelings then perishes into public expression as an object (or “superject”) aiming for novelty. There is a rhythm of Being between object and subject, not an ontological division. This rhythm powers the creative growth of the universe from one occasion of experience to the next. This is the Whiteheadian mantra: “The many become one and are increased by one.” - Matthew Segall

Without Love there is no Truth. And True Truth is always Loving. There is no dichotomy between these terms but only seamless integration. This is the premier centering focus of a Processual Theology of Love. - R.E. Slater

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Note: Generally I do not respond to commentary. I may read the comments but wish to reserve my time to write (or write from the comments I read). Instead, I'd like to see our community help one another and in the helping encourage and exhort each of us towards Christian love in Christ Jesus our Lord and Savior. - re slater

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Four Christians. Four Conversations. One Faith.


Illustration by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT

Four Christians. Four Conversations.
One Faith.

A Five Act Play

by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT


Christ against empire.
Love against fear.

The gospel is not ideology.
Faith does not live by power.

Where power asks devotion,
idolatry has begun.



The Characters (Dramatis Personae)

Jonathan Creed
A Christian nationalist theologian and public advocate. Intelligent, articulate, confident. Believes Christianity and civilizational order are inseparable.

N. T. Wright
Biblical scholar and theologian. Defender of kingdom, cruciform power, and the church as an alternative polis (a self-governing, independent body politic).

Elias Vale
A philosophical and prophetic witness. Concerned with truth, power, and theological deformation.

Silas Reed
A pastoral and ethical witness. Concerned with human dignity, consequence, and the fruits of belief.


The Setting

A smallish, round wooden table in a warmly lit library. Many books on various topics rested on shelves along the walls: Scripture, History, Philosophy, Theology, Political thought....

Four chairs were arranged for conversation. A single lamp burned on the lone table. Outside, distant thunder rolled and flashed its coming. The year is unspecified. The crisis is not.


The Movements

Act I - Why Christianity?
Act II - Christ and Empire
Act III - Borders and Human Dignity
Act IV - Faith and Power
Act V - Recovering Witness.


Prologue

A voice, neither seen nor named, speaks out in the lamplit den. It is the reason the group had agreed to gather and see if they might work out their understandings of "Christ in the public square." On their invitation was written:

"There are times in the church's history when theology is argued in books. And there are times when theology must answer in the presence of existential crisis. This is such a time."

The invitation leaned against the lamp on the small table that held the center of the room as it was read aloud by one of the four. Each of the respondents had automatically gathered around near to one another. By agreement - and by testimony - one would defend church-state power; one would question this arrangement; and, two would represent a "left-of-middle" witness to what would follow.

Their dispute concerned no small matter. It concerned whether the Christian faith, having entangled itself into the tentacles of state power, could still remember their Lord and Savior, Jesus the Christ, during the years when it was methodically oppressed and without popular voice.

The lamp continued to burn quietly as a pause settled around the carpeted room. Then one of the voices, a Jonathan Creed, begins. He has eagerly awaited this gathering for several months now to express his views. Near to him, an N. T. (Tom) Wright smiles weakly. To his right, an Elias Vale silently watches from the sidelines while his colleague, Silas Reed, leans back in his chair from the other side of the group, listening intently.

No one rises. Jonathan Creed is the first to the match....


Act I - Why Christianity?

(Curtain rises.)

Prominent TV host and podcaster, Jonathan Creed, speaks out. His youth has played out. He finds himself in his middle years with a wife and family, slightly graying, but healthy. He wants to rouse a nation to its feet believing it to be a Christian nation and worthy of defending. He begins by firmly stating,

"Christianity exists because all societies require moral order. Without God's transcendent authority, cultures decay. Without shared virtue, their liberty collapses. Without religious foundations, moral nations lose their coherence."

"... The Christian faith is not merely about personal salvation. It is about civilizational necessity - which I will not apologize for. I hold to this confession in the strongest of terms. A faith that cannot preserve its people can scarcely guide a nation."

(Pause.)

"Further, if Christianity has historically aligned itself with past kingdoms, laws, and nations, perhaps this relation is not corruption, but responsibility, wisdom, and blessed by divine guidance. Certainly, not all power is temptation... but preservation of the faith by Almighty God."

Each of the listening figures adjust themselves in their seats. One, an older figure, leans forward in cautious reply. He is wearing a vest over a wool shirt, and plaid socks closed within laced shoes. His name, N.T. Wright, an reputed Oxford don, known and loved by Christians around the world.

"Now I wonder Jonathan on whether one begins with Caesar or with Jesus? Because if one begins with Jesus, one finds rather quickly the Christian faith did not arise to stabilize empires. Rather, it arose announcing another kingdom. A kingdom not of this world. It was a rather awkward pronouncement for any empire to hear, let alone entertain."

To the side, there was a small, cheshire-like smile spreading across Silas' face, who lightly averred -

"It seems, my friends, that the first Christians did not imagine themselves custodians of Roman order. They imagined themselves as witnesses to a crucified and risen Lord put to death by that same Roman order. That is a rather different vocation of Christianity than as you had just advocated."

He continued, "The church was not born asking, 'How do we preserve civilization?' It began by asking, 'What has God done in Christ, and how shall we live because of it?' Those are not identical questions."

The hook had been set. The bait taken. Jonathan quickly replied, self-sure and building steam, "But surely you would not deny that societies need moral order? Or that Christianity can help provide that order as decreed by God above?"

"Of course not," agreed Wright too quickly. "But the question is whether moral structure comes from the fruit of a loving gospel... or is the driving purpose behind the rule of empire. And those are very different things."

A small pause again held the room for a moment when finally Elias Vale, speaks out, "At issue, - as I see it - whether Christianity exists to underwrite moral social order... or to call all state orders into the witness of divine judgment. This too is no small distinction.

His longtime friend and counselor, Silas Reed, then ventured a another response... a much different response based upon his many years in community ministry, "Perhaps a Christian faith should serve the vulnerable first, rather than a society's moral order? I have often felt the two are not together in their views of morality."

And with that, a long silence settled in as each heard the slow roll of cavernous thunder rumble across the fields towards the cottage home. Each look down in their lap or at the mug of coffee in their hand. Jonathan Creed, having started the conversation, looked up and began anew, preparing for another ideological campaign....

"Very well. Then let us ask directly. If Christianity is not for the preservation of a civilization... what good is it's charters for?"

A quiet smile crossed Wright’s face. Not dismissively. More as one recognizing the right question had finally been asked. One that he might redirect....

"Dear Jonathan, 'What good is Christianity for?' That is precisely the question. It is for announcing that in Jesus, God’s own heavenly kingdom has drawn near. It is for forming a people whose life together bears witness to another way of being human within the sacred-divine. It is for teaching forgiveness where vengeance rules; reconciliation where division hardens; and hope where fear governs."

"And most certainly, a Christian faith is for making Caesar less absolute."

A faint stir passes through the room. Too quickly, too self-assured, Jonathan Creed replies to the sturdy figure whose very presence spoke creedal authority, "But that sounds all-together inward. Spiritual. Beautiful, perhaps. But very, very thin on the outside of things."

"Let me ask forthrightly, 'What of nations? What of borders? What of social collapse? What of enemies? Can such a faith  weak in power be able to survive itself let alone history?'"

Carefully, Wright folded his aged hands. "My dear Jonathan, the early Christians asked exactly that - except with hungry lions viciously growling nearby."

Silas laughed softly into his coffee. "Well played, Tom, well played."

Wright continued, "The question is not whether Christianity survives history. The question is what Christianity becomes when religious survival is made its highest aim. And therein, I think, lies our greatest difficulty."

Elias leaned forward for the first time in reply, "Perhaps what Mr. Wright suggests is that Christianity ceases to be itself when preservation becomes its first principle. For what begins in fear may end in domination."

Jonathan answered sharply, though not angrily, "And what begins in Christian idealism may also end in ruin!"

Silas Reed quickly looked up as if feeling the pain of Creed's implication - "Or perhaps what begins in love may yet end in justice!"

Another silence. The rumbling thunder moving further off.

Jonathan Creed slowly nodded, as if granting the argument had reached a place he had not intended, when he spoke again, "If what you say is true, Tom..."

and here Wright smiled at the familiar use of his name,

"... then we have not yet spoken of empire at all."

Wright answered, "No. We have only just this moment arrived at it."

The lamp flickered with the last flash of lightening holding each figure in their thoughts...

End of Act I.

(Curtain falls.)


Act II - Christ and Empire

(Curtain rises.)

The storm had silenced. Evening dusk was gathering. The collected group was moving about stretching their legs, refilling their drinks, snatching a small finger sandwich, and standing or sitting loosely about. The ever strident Creed is the first to launch believing his role to be that of protagonist and admonisher. His voice are calmer. His sentences more deliberate. Almost professorial.

"Very well Tom, let us speak of empire. If Christianity has always stood apart from power, why did it not remain in the catacombs? Why did it allow Constantine? Why did the medieval institute of Christendom form over the centuries as if it needed to protect itself? More importantly, why were the laws that lasted throughout Western civilization seemed to be shaped by Christian moral vision? And why did those nations, however imperfectly, seek to order public life under a Christian God rather than some other god?"

He paused. Then leaned toward Wright. "Or shall we say, that two thousand years of Christian civilization was merely a mistake?"

In Creed's own mind, that was a magnificent salvo and deeply entangled provocation. It would force Wright to answer history - not merely to his Christian ideals.

But Wright did not answer immediately. He took off his glasses. Turned them once or twice across his fingers. Wiped them a bit absent-mindedly, then spoke quietly, "No, Jonathan. Not a mistake. But perhaps a temptation."

A stillness again settled from respect as much as for reflection...

Wright continued, "Constantine was not the first arrival of God's kingdom on earth. It was the historical accommodation by both church and state to create a more worthy kingdom of God on earth. Perhaps, a providential one, as some might say, but history might question that line of thinking."

"... Let us also say that accommodation of the gospel to the state - versus the gospel itself - are not identical things." He leaned slightly forward towards Creed in careful interplay, "The question is not whether Christianity had entered history, is it?"

"Of course it did, said Creed.

To which Wright replied, "Ah, but the question, I think, is if in entering into power the church also began forgetting how power had crucified its Lord?"

Jonathan’s jaw tightened slightly. "Surely you cannot dismiss Christendom so easily."

"I am not dismissing it," Wright replied. "I am distinguishing it. There is a difference between the church influencing society... and the church imagining itself secured by empire. Those are not the same thing."

Elias Vale, who had been pacing slowly near the window, turned. "Perhaps the deeper question is whether Constantine converted the empire... or whether the empire, in part, converted the church?"

Silas let out a small breath, "That," he said, "is a dangerous question to place on a supper table."

A small laughter moved through the room. Even Jonathan smiled. But only for a moment. Then he answered,

"And yet nations do not govern by Sermons on the Mount. They govern by law. By force, when necessary. By borders. By arms. Surely you do not imagine Rome, or America, can be run on Christ's Beatitudes alone!"

Wright looked up. "No. I imagine the Beatitudes were given precisely because empires cannot imagine them."

Another silence. Longer now. More thoughtful. Outside, a late wind moved through the wet trees. Jonathan slowly folded his arms as if setting his battlements, then spoke with more energy than before,

"If Christ and empire cannot be reconciled... What becomes of Christian civilization?"

Wright answered, "That depends, Jonathan, on how we respond. How the church determines its responsibilities in response to its governing powers... on whether Christian civilization is our hope... or our idol.

Jonathan did not answer at once. He looked into the lamp as though the question had altered shape before him. Then spoke out, "And if what you call idol..." he paused, "...another calls divine inheritance?"

No one spoke. It was Silas who finally answered. "Then perhaps the question is whether godly blessing you call 'inheritance,' serves life... or demands sacrifice by those excluded from it."

Jonathan turned quickly toward Silas, "Excluded?"

Silas nodded. "The migrant. The stranger. The woman refused voice. The neighbor and her family who are threatened with deportation. The ones empire always names as outsiders."

This time the room held still. It's breath caught mid-sentence. Elias sighed and stated, half under his breath, measuring his friend Silas' instincts, "Then perhaps empire is not first tested at its center... but at its borders." It was a practical observation that he and Silas both had observed in recent years.

Wrenching about, Jonathan looked at him sharply. Then at Silas. And lastly at Wright. "Borders...?"

"Yes, Jonathan," Wright answered, "Borders. We have at last arrived where you had intended to go. To bless a nation's cruel migrancy laws by cloaking its borders in a Christian gospel that drips with the pained lives of those living on the edges of Christian enculturation."

End of Act II.

(Curtain falls.)


Act III - Borders and Human Dignity

Part I

(Curtain rises.)

The remains of the day were falling. Supper was entertained in the dining hall. Wall sconces and chandeliers shone about. The uneasy occupants offered prayer, bread, and wine, in informal communion with one another. Though the room was larger, more lit, it somehow felt smaller. No further words on the subject had been offered. Only light banter and familiarity.

“Borders.” The word hung in the air unable to find escape through the nearest paned window. It was Silas who was the first to speak. Not loudly. Almost as if thinking aloud within his pastoral soul.

"When a nation speaks of borders, I often imagines lines. But when those standing on the line speak... they speak of children. Families. Fear. Hunger. Refuge. Asylum...."

He paused. Then looked directly at Jonathan. "I wonder, whether what governments call security... is what the vulnerable too often experience as abandonment and betrayal?"

Jonathan sensed the challenged, not really appreciating it, never having lived as an "unwanted" or "illegal." He was careful to answer, but remained thickly dense to Silas' challenge. Callously, if not cruelly, he retorted, "And I wonder whether a nation without borders remains a nation at all?" He had fully excluded the difficulty of the challenge and re-entered his early assessments of the priority and right of Christian nationalism.

"Compassion cannot erase order," rose Silas' reply, ignoring Jonathan's repositioning.

"No society survives if it cannot distinguish guest from citizen... or, refuge from chaos," rejoined Creed.

Silas nodded. "That may seem a fair assessment. But perhaps the question is not whether borders exist. But how Christian theology justifies that they be enforced."

Silverware continued to clattered about the plates. Cups were raised and lowered. The unspeaking figures listen carefully to the heated repartee. Then N. T. Wright spoke up, "... And whether Christians see strangers as threats... or as neighbors as the good Samaritan had."

Unsatisfied, Jonathan leaned back ready for the challenge, "Must every political prudence now be called cruelty?!"

Elias can no longer sit quietly. He must say something. "No. But every cruelty defended as Christian prudence should be questioned!"

A long pause.

Then Jonathan quickly retorted once again, as he did in his podcaster's booth, safed from the world outside - and before a nation's rank-and-file audiences, "And what of order in creation?" he stressed. "What of male and female? Of biblical gender difference? And what of personal and societal morality? What of natural inherited forms we did not invent but are found in nature's vocabulary?!"

And there it was... it finally was declared with the heat of conviction and backed by the dead-sure assurance of Scripture - Gender. Human dignity. Morality. Ethics. And the Bible. It had all come to a head.

(curtain falls.)

Part II

(Curtain rises again.)

Wright did not respond at once. He was looking down at the remains of his meal that the kindly matron had cooked and at that moment was removing from the table. He then looked up at Jonathan, and said quietly,

"Jonathan, you have just joined several questions together as though they were one. Creation. Gender. Nationalised borders. Biblical authority. They are not identical questions."

Jonathan answered almost immediately as he always did before the TV cameras, "They are joined by divine order from a divine book under divine inspiration by the Holy Spirit of God. If you remove order, you dissolve moral reality. It's that simple."

Even as Wright nodded he disagreed with the logic and the assurances.

"I understand your concern. But order is not the same as rigidity. And moral seriousness is not secured by fear of difference."

He lifted a hand gently, "The question is not whether inherited forms matter. They do. But the deeper question is whether inheritance is interpreted through domination... or through love."

Jonathan frowned at this answer. Tom was being obtuse again. He wasn't listening. He was being his old "muddle-in-the-middle" English self responding with Anglican logic....

"Scripture has boundaries! Any common reader will find them again-and-again in the Bible!"

Unpersuaded, Wright answered, "Yes, but Scripture also has its trajectories."

Elias Vale next leaned in, "Perhaps the deeper issue is whether one reads sacred texts as fences... as borderlands... or as living witnesses?"

To this Silas nodded, then added, "And whether persons-of-difference are treated as problems to be managed... or neighbors to be encountered and embraced."

Jonathan’s voice sharpened at these exchanges. They weren't listening. None of them. He flew in again with his national-voice-of-the-people heightened in pitch, "So now all limits are oppression? All policies and morals, harsh and immoral?"

Wright quickly replied, "No. But every limit claiming divine authority should be open to moral scrutiny. For without critique and accountability, harm and oppression surely arise."

Here the dining had stopped. Forks and knives were at last laid down. For a moment a divide was being crossed. A watershed of sorts. Here, Wright marched resolutely forward as any well-bred Englishman worth his Anglican tradition would do, "The tragedy, Jonathan, is that Christians have often defended exclusions in the name of Christian order... only to later discover they were ripping apart wounds and trampling upon indignities."

No one moved.

Even Creed for once, did not answer. He had felt Wright's preternatural heat rising.

At length he said, "And who decides when order becomes wound?"

Wright answered, then paused, "That... may be where we allow the vulnerable to finally speak and share their experience."

End of Act III.

(Curtain falls.)


Act IV - Faith and Power

(Curtain rises.)

Diner is over. Early evening has arrived. The associates rise, remove themselves from the supper table, collect themselves. Perhaps go outside to inhale the rain-soaked air before returning inside.

The dishes have been cleared. A new round of coffee and drinks are made available. The lamps are lowered a bit to encourage a conversational room. But what was once collegiality had become tense, more tribunal-like.

No one seems eager to begin. But of course, the first out of the gate with no remittance, no second thoughts, no penitence, was Creed... his voice harder, ready for dispute, and eager for a fight.

"If what you have said is true... If empire tempts... If borders wound... If even Scripture can be misread, misjudged, misapplied... then tell me plainly. How are a Christian people to resist worldly evil? How is a Christian nation to survive the threat of opposition that it might not be persecuted again? And how is churchly power to be exercised - if at all?!

He looked directly at Wright and said, "Or have you left us only with love too weak to govern?"

This was a tremendous opening statement. It was - at its heart - the deepest, soundest nationalist objection that a Christian might project.

There was no caricature. Only serious objection.

The remaining three, now gathering up their own thoughts and convictions, did not answer immediately. They waited for Jonathan to settle down. To not feel threatened or excluded. Not diminished nor made to feel of little worth.

His vivid assertions hung in the room like acrid smoke. It was Elias, not Wright, who finally spoke in a voice which offered an unusual calmness to it.

"Jonathan, you have mistaken love for weakness. That is an old mistake. Empires have made it often. Love does not mean powerlessness. It means power refusing domination. It means force disciplined by conscience. It means refusing to make fear the architect of so-called divine order. Rightly, it sees the other as a person in their own right; responds to the other lovingly, and refuses to degrade or delegitimize the other as has been done countless times within Christian societies."

It was exactly the kind of answer Creed had heard before. He wasted no time and answered at once, "But evil does not yield to conscience. It yields to strength!"

Purposefully, Silas set down his cup. His hackles rising. "And yet, strength without conscience becomes the very evil we are to resist. How do you explain that."

That landed heavily. Jonathan turned to Wright. "And you, Tom? Do you believe Christian nations must be allowed to defend themselves both internally and externally? For if they do not preserve themselves they will fall."

Wright rose up, paced a bit, then spoke with some gravity, "Of course Jonathan. The question is not whether power exists. The question is whether Christians baptize it too quickly." He paused. "Once the church begins calling domination providence... it crosses a very dangerous threshold to the health of a nation, let alone it's people, and the faithful within."

Jonathan leaned forward testedly, "And what of rulers who would defend the church from corruption, failure, and demise? What if imperfect leaders, even flawed leaders, are nonetheless committed to preserve Christian order against dissolution? May preachers not bless such rulers?" He was giving each word weight now....

And there it was. The room sensed it before it knew it. The question had finally surfaced. A sensible reply must find accordance with the declaration clearly made.

Silas answered immediately, "Pastors may pray for rulers. Scripture permits that. But blessing power is not the same as sanctifying it. When preachers confuse these things... they cease speaking prophetically... and begin speaking as court theologians." Yes, he too could stress words and vocabulary.

Elias gave a faint smile. "Chaplains to Caesar," he quipped.

Jonathan did not laugh. Not even a little bit. But then asked, more directly than before, "... And if the threat is apocalyptic to a Christian nature? Foreordained in Scripture itself? God's very words of warning to His people? If a people believes Christian civilization hangs by a thread? What then?"

And here we conclude. For the first time that night even Tom Wright looked troubled.

End of Act IV.

(Curtain falls.)


Act V - Recovering Witness

(Curtain rises.)

No one spoke. The question remained where Jonathan had left it. Intentionally. Forcefully. He felt his beliefs deeply within his bones and had no intention of leaving his three friends so easily off the hook denying the realities of life as he saw it.

If the threat is apocalyptic... what then? Like many others, he felt this intently.

Outside, the evening sun had set. The air had been washed clean by the new rain. Darkness was closing up and it was time to draw the drama to a close. 

They had each been down these roads before - perhaps not with one another, but with their congregations and audiences; with their loved ones and close friends; with the news outlets and their bible students. 

At length it was not Wright who answered. Nor Jonathan. But Silas Reed. But he did not answer the question. He offered something alongside of it...

"If a people believe civilization hangs by a thread... that would explain the societal fear of disassembly - that a nation's faith might become something other than it's inherited national identity... if not it's belief in its own national destiny by divine decree."

"... Yet this does not sanctify what fear becomes when fear acts unChristianly. Rather, it urges it's Christian faithful to inspect who they are - and who they are becoming - in light of those fears. Whether those fears, if legitimate, require a revisit to Jesus' teachings in their response to the new opportunities growing around God's children."

Creed did not respond. Neither did Wright. He had spoken enough for the evening and was becoming tired. But Elias Vale spoke-up, almost as if continuing a thought older than the room itself with its vast liturgies on printed page lining their souls.

"Perhaps every age believes itself near the apocalypse. Empires certainly do. They often name their anxiety providence. And their self-preservation destiny. But what is deemed divine exclusivity - or divine blessing - may more surely be excuse to act profanely before a loving, embracing God.

Jonathan looked at him sharply. "Then you would deny civilizational peril? Claim the onus is on us in how we act or don't act!"

"No," Elias said. "I deny that peril automatically authorizes enforcedauthoritative domination. That it is we, ourselves, who must be circumspect before God in all our ways, alliances, and activities, ahead of our nation-of-residence.

Altogether weary, Wright spoke, almost to himself, "Too often the church has often mistaken crisis for divine permission rather than realizing the event as opportunity for divine seed-sowing and harvest. Power and force redeems no one. Acts of impugned self-righteousness, self-aggrandizement, overstatement, persecutorial allowances, or outright cruelty are not acts of the Holy Spirit. By divine permission, I mean permission which acts humbly, in league with one's fellow citizens, kindly, in thoughtfulness and with tenderness."

Then Jonathan, after hearing long-winded Wright out, replied "And what if you are wrong? What if history belongs to those willing to wield power while you hesitate to love and sow seeds?"

Wright looked at him sadly, "Then, in God's work of reconciliation, we fail. But better failure in acts of love than triumph in acts of falsehood and evil."

Silas closed his eyes briefly. Vale looked about. The point had been made. Nothing more could be said. Christians come or go on the dais of God. If they were to be guilty of anything, let them be guilty of loving those around them.

At length Elias spoke the final words of the evening,

"Perhaps witness begins... not when power is acclaimed,
but when power is refused ultimacy."

No one answered. Jonathan stared into his empty, darkened glass. Wright folded his tired hands. Silas looked toward the door. And Elias felt a bit alone, not for the first time that night.

The time had come to depart. A Christian fellowship had failed to unite and laid tattered about the enclave. Each had felt the heavy arguments of an outside world either wrestling for answers or stomping across the fortress lines in battlement dress.

Nothing was won or lost. But a pervasive loss was felt nonetheless. And that, more deeply by some....

Outside, the blowing wind moved through the wet branches and brush, then lifted up across the night sky towards the dawning of another day. The chimes had struck and it was time to bid goodnight.

And underneath the lamplight, on the backside of the invitation, when turned over, was read -

"The wind bloweth where it listeth. Thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh or whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit" (John 3.8)

 End of Act V.

(Curtain falls.)


Sunday, April 19, 2026

When Christianity Forgets Christ & Witness Becomes Propaganda


Illustration by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT

When Christianity Forgets Christ
& Witness Becomes Propaganda

A Christian Confession of Faith v Power

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT


You cannot serve God and mammon.
- Jesus (Matthew 6:24)

Put your sword back into its place.
- Jesus (Matthew 26:52)

They shall beat their swords into plowshares.
- Isaiah (Isaiah 2:4)

Christ Against Empire. Love Against Fear.
- A General Christian Sentiment

Christianity + Power = the Deformation of the Gospel
- A General Christian acknowledgment




On the Corruption of Faith

On Power and Corruption

Where power asks devotion, idolatry has begun.
- R.E. Slater

Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
- Lord Acton

The most radical revolutionary will become a conservative the day after the revolution.
- Hannah Arendt

Unlimited power is apt to corrupt the minds of those who possess it.
- Simone Weil

On Religion and Idolatry

The Gospel is Not a Political Ideology.
- R.E. Slater

The greatest danger to Christianity is Christendom.
- Soren Kierkegaard

It is not the violence of evil that most threatens us, but the refusal to resist it.
-Jacques Ellul

Silence in the face of evil is itself evil.
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer

On Justice and Human Dignity

I cannot believe what you say, because I see what you do.
- James Baldwin

Real generosity toward the future lies in giving all to the present.
- Albert Camus

Do not be silent; there is no limit to the power that may be released through you.
- Howard Thurman

On Truth and Ideology

To see what is in front of one’s nose needs a constant struggle.
- George Orwell

The real test of a person is not how he plays the role he has invented for himself, but how he plays the role destiny has imposed on him.
- Vaclav Havel


Preface

Recently, American Maga-phone and mouthpiece for Maga-Christianity, America's own "Protestant Pope," Franklin Graham, spoke up defending President Trump's aggressive rhetoric against the Catholic Church's Pope Leo XIV who had spoken against the violence being done in the world under the Trump administration, both domestically and internationally (cf., Franklin Graham Says Pope Should Be Thanking Trump; and, Top MAGA Evangelical Blasted for Urging Pope to Praise Trump; also, Reddit thread here).

Four concerns arise when reading of Christians responding in this way:

First, there is the problem of confusing witness with power. Christianity has often been strongest when speaking prophetically to power, not sacralizing power.

Second, there is the problem of messianic overreach. Whenever a political figure is treated as uniquely anointed, indispensable, or beyond moral critique, Christian language begins drifting toward political idolatry. That is not a small accusation, but historically it is a recurring danger.

Third, there is the problem of inflated civilizational rhetoric, where “saving Christianity,” “restoring the nation,” or “protecting the church” can become totalizing slogans that absorb the gospel into a culture-war narrative. This is the lane which Maga-Christianity has directed itself into.

Fourth, there is the problem of inheritance distortion. Many observers, including some evangelicals, have quietly noted the contrast between Billy Graham’s generally broader public posture and Franklin Graham’s sharper political alignment. Whether one sees that as fair or unfair, it is part of why his-and-other Evangelics overstatements stand out.

Generally, my own thoughts run along these lines of reasoning: large-scale Christianity might not be the problem. Public Christianity might not be the problem. Even politically engaged Christianity might not necessarily be the problem.

The problem begins when the scale of the platform amplifies the scale of the claims, until hyperbole starts substituting for discernment.

That is when proclamation can become propaganda.

And if we might rearrange our theological grammar closer to Whiteheadian instincts, it is where relational faith can harden into ideological fixation. Where relational process becomes hardened systems. And, processual witness becomes an instrument for propaganda.

These then become serious concerns. Concerns which have been growing since the 1980s when a group of evangelicals met in Chicago and began recasting the bible in terms of "inerrant, infallible, trustworthy, true, reliable, authoritative, etc." All of which have been written of here at Relevancy22 over the years.

And so, let us offer yet another process-theological critique of Christian nationalism and how Graham’s populist rhetoric might be read through the lens of Jesus....


The Background for a Christian Response to Christian Politicalization

Let us sharpened our response by distinguishing between i) Christianity as a faith centered on the way of Jesus, and what might be called ii) an ideological capture of Christianity.

A process-theological critique of Maga-Christianity, including rhetoric associated at times with zealous overstatements by Evangelical pulpiteering, would begin not with partisanship, but with first principles. (*Maga = Make America Great Again)

In Whitehead's Process theological sense, If God is understood not as a God of coercive domination but as a God of (loving) relational lure toward truth, beauty, justice, and richer forms of coexistence, then any movement organized around fear, exclusion, domination, or ethno-national hierarchy stands in tension with the divine aim to loving encircle and reframe one's life.

This theological assessment is not merely a political disagreement with Christian nationalism's idea of God - it is a metaphysical contradiction of God's Self, Character, Ministry, and Love as seen from both a gospel and process perspective.

One could frame this critique across five fractures:

First, it fractures Jesus-centered ethics. The teachings associated with enemy love, peacemaking, hospitality to strangers, care for the poor, and solidarity with the socially vulnerable become displaced by identity defense and power retention. The center shifts.

Second, it fractures the doctrine of the human person. A process view treats persons as relationally constituted, possessing value in and through being and participation. White nationalism, supremacist insinuations, or categorical diminishment of immigrants, women, trans persons, or gay persons deny that relational dignity. They reduce persons to threat categories.

Third, it fractures the idea of truth itself. Persistent overstatement, conspiratorial apocalypticism, providential claims about leaders, and theological jingoism often substitute mythic political narrative for discernment. In process terms, this blocks novelty. It closes inquiry.

Fourth, it fractures peace. The fusion of Christian identity with militarism or expansive “just war” rhetoric can sacralize coercion. Yet a process-relational theology tends to see peace not as passivity, but as the difficult creation of sustaining relations. Peace is constructive, not merely the absence of conflict.

Fifth, it fractures ecclesial communion. As previously noted in past articles, family breakage, church breakage, and communal estrangement are not side effects. They are signs of theological disorder. When a theology leaves a trail of social fragmentation, one must ask what spirit animates it.

Hence, we could put a Christian reply to Maga-theologies as follows:

The deepest Christian question is not whether a leader protects Christianity.

But whether in that activity Christianity still reflects a loving Christ.

And that is not the same question.

To observe that “Maga-Christianity has fractured Jesus theology” can be expressed thusly:

A political theology becomes distorted when allegiance to power overrides the primacy of love, truth, and shared human dignity. Not only "empire-power" but any kind of power that distorts God's love for creation and creation's response back to God.

This is a serious theological claim, and it is an arguable to legitimately take.

There is also a specific historical irony here. Christian nationalism often invokes civilizational protection, while repeating patterns the church has struggled with before:

Constantinian triumphalism, crusading logic, apocalyptic absolutism, and ethno-religious boundary making. None of these historical precedents are new. They are old, fallen temptations. And all of them put civilizations at cultural risk and at extreme unprotection by a religious faith claiming that activity.

Let us now move to a deeper category... that of accommodation of religious power as theological deformation.


From Gospel to Ideology

The above phrase, "... accommodation of religious power as theological deformation," bears historical weight and precedent:

The church has long wrestled with what happens when faith ceases to critique power and instead seeks protection through it. What is known as ideological idealism is, in part, a sacralized political imagination where contingent political arrangements are treated as if they carry transcendent - i.e., divine - warrant.

This posture is always dangerous to the health of societies.

A sharper formulation might be described as something like this:

Seven Marks of Theological Deformation in Accommodated Christianity

  1. Accommodation to power
    When the church seeks proximity to state, nation, party, or strongman as a source of identity rather than maintaining prophetic distance.
  2. Ideological idealism
    When political myths replace moral realism, and national destiny is narrated in quasi-redemptive terms.
  3. Departure from social and ethical responsibility
    When concern for the poor, vulnerable, migrant, outsider, and excluded is subordinated to identity preservation or grievance.
  4. Cruelty masked as moral order
    This is a severe but necessary category. When coercive treatment of trans persons, restrictions rooted in gender fixation, or categorical exclusions of women’s leadership are defended as “biblical order,” one must ask whether order has become detached from compassion.
  5. Mythologizing of scripture
    Not using myth in the literary sense, but turning the Bible into an ideological arsenal, where texts are abstracted from history and weaponized for prior commitments.
  6. Presumptive theological assertions
    Claiming divine sanction where humility would demand silence. Announcing what God has endorsed in matters far more ambiguous than such certainty allows.
  7. Fracture as evidentiary fruit
    When the social result is broken families, estranged communities, intensified fear, and diminished solidarity, those outcomes themselves become theological evidence.

This last point matters.

In Christian thought, "fruits = outcomes" matter.

A tree is partly known by what it produces. So too a bush, a garden, a person's works.

From a process perspective, "any form of accommodation to power narrows relational possibility. It reduces the field of becoming. It suppresses novelty, mutuality, and creative transformation. It tends toward closure. In Christian jargon, "the Holy Spirit is unable to redeem, restore, renew, transform, or resurrect" because of the interference of God's people, and here, the church, have produced across a society or culture.

And in reference to the term, "closure" - in a Whiteheadian/Process sense - is often a form of diminishment.

As example, when the church perpetuates the inhuman actions of "forced gender fixation,"  it is not merely a social criticism of the church - but a critique of its rigid religious metaphysics - of turning historically contingent constructions from the biblical past into indefinite, eternal structures of cruelty and brutality.

This is a philosophical argument as much as a pastoral one.

And so, "Yes," the presumptive claims of Maga-Evangelicalism should be answered, and can be answered - not merely by opposing them politically, but by exposing the theological grammar beneath them.


Christianity, Power, and the Deformation of the Gospel

The Christian faith is compromised when accommodation to political power displaces allegiance to the ethical, relational, and spiritual center of the way of Jesus.

The problem is not public faith, civic responsibility, or moral engagement in political life. The problem arises when Christianity is fused with ideological identity, nationalist mythology, coercive social order, or providential claims made on behalf of political leaders or movements. At that point, faith risks becoming not witness, but instrument.

This deformation may be recognized in recurring patterns:

  • It appears when proximity to power replaces prophetic distance.
  • When ideological idealism substitutes political myth for moral discernment.
  • When social and ethical responsibilities toward the vulnerable, including migrants, women, trans persons, the poor, and the socially marginalized, are subordinated to systems of exclusion, control, or grievance.
  • When cruelty is defended as order.
  • When the Bible is mythologized into an ideological weapon rather than engaged as historically mediated witness.
  • When presumptive theological assertions claim divine sanction where epistemic humility should restrain speech.
  • When the fruits of such religion include family fracture, ecclesial division, fear, estrangement, and diminished human solidarity.

These are not merely social failures. They are theological distortions.

From a process-relational oriented understanding of God, divine power is not best understood as domination, but as persuasive lure toward justice, beauty, truth, compassion, and richer forms of coexistence. Therefore, movements shaped by exclusion, supremacy, coercion, or sacralized nationalism stand in contradiction to that divine aim of a loving, mediating God.

Moreover, the Christian faith must also alertly reject:

  • the casting of political leadership as God-like, providential figures,
  • the conflation of Jesus' gospel of God's love with enculturated nationalism,
  • the sacralization of violence through expansive "Just War" reasoning,
  • the distortions of apocalyptic absolutism - as in, "This is America's Destiny!" And,
  • the use of religious certainty to justify inequality or deny the dignity of persons.

A theology centered in Jesus is measured not by its capacity to preserve power, but by its fidelity to love, truth, peace, justice, hospitality, and the flourishing of life together.

The central Christian question is not whether religion can be used to defend a nation, a party, or a social order.

The question is whether Christianity still reflects Christ.

Where faith hardens into ideology, where witness becomes propaganda, where power eclipses compassion, and where fear overrides love, theological resistance becomes necessary.

For these reasons, we affirm a Christianity of prophetic distance from power, ethical responsibility toward all persons, interpretive humility, non-coercive peace, and relational solidarity. We reject forms of accommodated Christianity that deform the gospel through nationalism, supremacy, cruelty, exclusion, or ideological absolutism.

If divinity is to mean anything, it must mean love, or it must mean nothing.

Consequently, these stated affirmations in response to Christian Nationalism read less as reaction and more as principled theological policy. It has the shape of a manifesto, or perhaps even the opening of a longer "Confession Against Christian Nationalism."

Let us then proceed to the formation of such a confession....


The Necessity for a Christian Confession of Faith v Power

In response to Evangelicalism's consistent pro-Trumpian rhetoric over the years let us create a foundational baseline "confessional" statement for the Christian Church in line with Jesus' own person,  actions, ministry, and witness....

Firstly, though we could easily offer a partisan response to Graham, it may be more helpful in providing a theological reply stripped of politics. Moreover, this confession arises in response to consistently recurring forms of Christian rhetoric over the past decade that has been voiced-and-acted-upon in public life - including claims advanced by prominent religious figures who have fused Christian witness with:
  • nationalist idealism,
  • providential political claims,
  • civilizational fear and alarm,
  • apocalyptic eschatology, and
  • ideological certainty.
Such rhetoric requires response - not because Christians should avoid public life - but because public theology, when distorted, can wound and harm both faith and neighbor.

The problem addressed here is not in "Christianity's engagement with society" - but "how" it is engaging with society. That Christianity has accommodated itself to political power - not for the first time, nor for the last - but presently and forcefully. That it's engagement has not only become a staple of Christian news - but has negatively affected Christianity's attitude, national posture, and politicized policies - which must be responded to clearly and vigorously:
When faith seeks protection through political dominance, when religious speech inflates leaders into providential agents, when exclusion is moralized, when coercion is baptized, when cruelty is defended as order, and when nationalism borrows the garments of gospel, theological resistance must become necessary.
The following Christian Confession is offered in the spirit intended. To speak against these politicized inflations of accommodating theological positions....


A CHRISTIAN CONFESSION
of FAITH v. POWER


Preface

This statement is offered not as a partisan tract, but as a theological reply to Christian Nationalism.

It arises in response to recurring forms of Christian rhetoric in public life, including claims advanced by prominent religious figures who have fused Christian witness with nationalist idealism, providential political claims, civilizational alarm, and ideological certainty. Such rhetoric requires response, not because Christians should avoid public life, but because public theology, when distorted, can wound both faith and neighbor.

The problem addressed here is not Christianity engaged in society.

It is Christianity accommodated to power.

When faith seeks protection through political dominance, when religious speech inflates leaders into providential agents, when exclusion is moralized, when coercion is baptized, when cruelty is defended as order, and when nationalism borrows the garments of gospel, theological resistance becomes necessary.

This confession is offered in that spirit.


I. The First Principle: The Gospel Is Not an Ideology

Christian faith is compromised when accommodation to political power displaces allegiance to the ethical, relational, and spiritual center of the way of Jesus.

The problem is not public faith, civic responsibility, or moral engagement in political life.

The problem arises when Christianity is fused with ideological identity, nationalist mythology, coercive social order, or presumptive claims made on behalf of political leaders or movements.

At that point, faith risks becoming not witness, but (oppressive) instrument.

The gospel does not exist to sanctify a nation.

The gospel does not exist to protect a ruling mythology.

The gospel does not exist to baptize grievance.

The gospel calls persons and communities toward truth, compassion, justice, reconciliation, and peace.

Where these are eclipsed, deformation has begun.


II. Seven Marks of Theological Deformation

1. Accommodation to Power

When the church seeks proximity to state, nation, party, or strongman as a source of identity rather than maintaining prophetic distance.

2. Ideological Idealism

When political myths replace moral discernment, and national destiny is narrated in quasi-redemptive terms.

3. Departure from Social and Ethical Responsibility

When concern for the poor, vulnerable, migrants, outsiders, women, and socially marginalized persons is subordinated to exclusion, identity preservation, or grievance.

4. Cruelty Masked as Moral Order

When coercive treatment, forced gender fixation, categorical exclusions, or inequalities are defended as righteousness.

Order detached from compassion becomes domination.

5. Mythologizing of Scripture

When the Bible is abstracted from history and turned into an ideological arsenal.

6. Presumptive Theological Assertions

When divine sanction is claimed where humility would require restraint.

7. Fracture as Fruit

When the result is broken families, ecclesial division, estrangement, fear, and diminished solidarity.

A tree is partly known by its fruits.


III. Against the Inflation of Political Power

We reject the inflation of political leaders into providential figures.

We reject the conferral of messianic overtones upon rulers.

We reject the suggestion that Christianity’s future depends upon loyalty to a political personality.

Such claims do not strengthen faith. They weaken discernment.

They substitute devotion to power for fidelity to truth.


IV. Against Christian Nationalism and Sacralized Violence

We reject the conflation of gospel and nationalism.

We reject the sacralization of violence through expansive just war reasoning.

We reject jingoistic Christianity that mistakes militarized identity for moral seriousness.

Peace is not naivete.

Peace is disciplined moral courage.

A faith centered in Christ cannot make coercion its grammar.


V. On Human Dignity and Relational Worth

We affirm the dignity of persons as irreducible.

No person should be reduced to threat category, cultural symbol, or ideological enemy.

This includes immigrants seeking liberty and justice. This includes women whose gifts and leadership are constrained by rigid systems. This includes trans and gay persons whose humanity is often diminished in the name of moral certainty.

Any theology that requires inequality to sustain itself has already entered crisis.


VI. A Process-Relational Clarification

From a process-relational understanding, divine power is not domination.

It is persuasive lure toward richer forms of coexistence.

Toward justice. Toward beauty. Toward truth. Toward compassion. Toward peace.

Movements shaped by exclusion, supremacy, coercion, or sacralized nationalism stand in contradiction to that divine aim.

Accommodation to power narrows relational possibility. It suppresses novelty. It diminishes mutuality. It closes what should remain open.

And closure is often a form of diminishment.


VII. What We Affirm

We affirm:

A Christianity of prophetic distance from power.

A Christianity of ethical responsibility toward all persons.

A Christianity of interpretive humility.

A Christianity of non-coercive peace.

A Christianity of relational solidarity.

A Christianity measured not by its power to preserve dominance, but by its fidelity to love.


VIII. What We Reject

We reject forms of accommodated Christianity deformed by:

Nationalism.

Supremacy.

Cruelty.

Exclusion.

Ideological absolutism.

Apocalyptic manipulation.

Presumptive religious certainty in service to political power.


Coda

The central Christian question is not whether religion can defend a nation, a party, or a social order. The question is whether Christianity still reflects Christ:

Where witness becomes propaganda, resistance becomes necessary.

Where power eclipses compassion, repentance becomes necessary.

Where fear overrides love, reconstruction becomes necessary.

And where divinity is invoked to justify domination, theology itself must answer.

For the crisis before the church is not merely political. It is spiritual, ethical, and theological:

It concerns whether the language of faith will serve truth or illusion.

Whether religion will deepen human dignity or sanctify exclusion.

Whether Christianity will remain captive to power, or recover the difficult freedom of prophetic witness.

For the church does not lose itself all at once. It is diminished gradually:

Each time fear is called faith.

Each time cruelty is called order.

Each time nationalism is called discipleship.

Each time power is mistaken for providence.

Yet what is deformed may be reformed.

What has been accommodated may be disentangled.

What has been captured by ideology may be reclaimed by truth.

And what has been hardened by fear may yet be opened again by love.

That work of reorientation is not secondary to faith - it is part of faithfulness itself.

For the calling of Christianity is not to preserve dominion, but to bear witness.

Not to sanctify power, but to humanize it.

Not to defend empire, but to embody compassion.

Not to conquer through certainty, but to participate in truth.

If divinity is to mean anything, it must mean love, or it must mean nothing.



Expanded Bibliography


I. Process Theology and Philosophical Foundations

Alfred North Whitehead
Whitehead, Alfred North. Process and Reality: An Essay in Cosmology. Corrected ed. Edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne. New York: Free Press, 1978.

Whitehead, Alfred North. Adventures of Ideas. New York: Free Press, 1967.

John B. Cobb Jr.
Cobb, John B., Jr. A Christian Natural Theology: Based on the Thought of Alfred North Whitehead. 2nd ed. Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2007.

Cobb, John B., Jr., and David Ray Griffin. Process Theology: An Introductory Exposition. Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 1976.

Catherine Keller
Keller, Catherine. Political Theology of the Earth: Our Planetary Emergency and the Struggle for a New Public. New York: Columbia University Press, 2018.

Marjorie Hewitt Suchocki
Suchocki, Marjorie Hewitt. The Fall to Violence: Original Sin in Relational Theology. New York: Continuum, 1994.


II. Political Theology, Power, and Nationalism

William T. Cavanaugh
Cavanaugh, William T. Migrations of the Holy: God, State, and the Political Meaning of the Church. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2011.

Cavanaugh, William T. The Myth of Religious Violence: Secular Ideology and the Roots of Modern Conflict. New York: Oxford University Press, 2009.

Stanley Hauerwas
Hauerwas, Stanley. The Peaceable Kingdom: A Primer in Christian Ethics. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1983.

Hauerwas, Stanley, and William H. Willimon. Resident Aliens: Life in the Christian Colony. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1989.

Reinhold Niebuhr
Niebuhr, Reinhold. Moral Man and Immoral Society: A Study in Ethics and Politics. Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2001.

Niebuhr, Reinhold. The Irony of American History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008.


III. Prophetic Critique, Scripture, and Public Faith

Walter Brueggemann
Brueggemann, Walter. The Prophetic Imagination. 2nd ed. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2001.

Brueggemann, Walter. Reality, Grief, Hope: Three Urgent Prophetic Tasks. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2014.

N. T. Wright
Wright, N. T. Jesus and the Victory of God. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996.

Wright, N. T. Paul and the Faithfulness of God. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2013.

Richard B. Hays
Hays, Richard B. The Moral Vision of the New Testament: Community, Cross, New Creation. San Francisco: HarperCollins, 1996.


IV. Justice, Marginality, and Ethical Theology

Howard Thurman
Thurman, Howard. Jesus and the Disinherited. Boston: Beacon Press, 1996.

James H. Cone
Cone, James H. God of the Oppressed. Rev. ed. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1997.

Cone, James H. The Cross and the Lynching Tree. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2011.

Gustavo Gutiérrez
Gutiérrez, Gustavo. A Theology of Liberation: History, Politics, and Salvation. Rev. ed. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1988.

Kelly Brown Douglas
Douglas, Kelly Brown. Stand Your Ground: Black Bodies and the Justice of God. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2015.


V. Christian Ethics, Peace, and Nonviolence

John Howard Yoder
Yoder, John Howard. The Politics of Jesus. 2nd ed. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1994.

Glen H. Stassen
Stassen, Glen H., and David P. Gushee. Kingdom Ethics: Following Jesus in Contemporary Context. 2nd ed. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2016.

Dorothy Day
Day, Dorothy. The Long Loneliness: The Autobiography of Dorothy Day. New York: Harper & Row, 1952.


VI. Hermeneutics, Scripture, and Theological Method

Hans-Georg Gadamer
Gadamer, Hans-Georg. Truth and Method. 2nd rev. ed. New York: Continuum, 2004.

Paul Ricoeur
Ricoeur, Paul. Figuring the Sacred: Religion, Narrative, and Imagination. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1995.

Ricoeur, Paul. Interpretation Theory: Discourse and the Surplus of Meaning. Fort Worth: Texas Christian University Press, 1976.


VII. Contemporary Critiques of Christian Nationalism

Kristin Kobes Du Mez
Du Mez, Kristin Kobes. Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation. New York: Liveright, 2020.

Jemar Tisby
Tisby, Jemar. The Color of Compromise: The Truth about the American Church’s Complicity in Racism. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2019.

Samuel L. Perry
Perry, Samuel L., and Andrew L. Whitehead. Taking America Back for God: Christian Nationalism in the United States. New York: Oxford University Press, 2020.