Thursday, February 10, 2022

The AntiChrist Doctrine of Christian Reconstruction (aka Church Dominionism)





The AntiChrist Doctrine of Christian Reconstruction
(aka Church Dominionism)

by R.E. Slater


What is Christian Reconstructionism, otherwise known as Church Dominianism, and why should the Christian follower of Jesus who is practicing the love of God to all men everywhere stand like granite against it?

Relevancy22 began largely because the form of Christianity I had learned in my fundamental, and later, conservative evangelical traditions, had become twisted under the teachings of Reformists Cornelius Van Til and Rousas Rushdoony advocating for a Christian theonomic government. Basically this means that the church is in charge of all government functions and not the people of a democratic nation-state or country. It would be similar to the religious government of Iran for instance where Islam as a spiritual doctrine has been forced to become one-and-the-same with its state leadership as it interprets the Islamic faith via wrath and judgment.

Further, this arrangement of religious theonomic government would be guided by the church's encapsulation, abrogation, and dissemination of Old Testament Mosaic Law as it understood and interpreted that ancient Semitic tribal legislation. At it's worse, the church becomes like the worst real-life examples of Middle East Jihadism. At it's best, a Davidic-Solomon-like kind of theocratic rule mediated by religious structures for good or for ill.

Jesus

For the churched Christian (I resist saying, the New Testament Christian, as this would show a significant ignorance about the Continuities & Discontinuites played out between the Old and New Testaments in typology, covenant, community, salvific history, etc) who follows Jesus, we see in our Lord's teachings and ministries his rejection of Mosaic Law for the Law of Love.

(Note: If I may, a bit of nuance here.... Jesus rejected the interpretation of the Mosaic Law of his day... which is what made Jesus so radical. But Jesus' proclamation of God's love both retained the Law while uplifting it from it's role as a harsh taskmaster to the people's faith. In Jesus the Law became a willing servant before all which God's love was meant to mean when first given to Moses. Sadly, in the finest of man's traditions, we, the church, like the religionists of Jesus' day, have idolized God's law, twisted it, and stained it with our sin. The law was meant for life to be lived to the fullest by a God of love - not for a life lived under the boot of a God of wrath and judgment.)

Paul

The hardline Rabbinic fundamentalist Paul (aka Saul) also discovered his zealotry for "truth" and his dominionist attitude towards the Mosaic Law quickly to disappear in it's argument for Jewish social compliance in the face of Jesus' act of loving atonement at the Cross on Golgotha's Hill. Paul proclaimed his religious and spiritual poverty in the face of Jesus' love on the Damascus Road and considered his spiritual dominionist training and legalized Jewish religion as a pauper for the remainder of his life as Jesus' doulas (servant) and emissary to the truth of God's love to the world.

The Harms of Dominionism

  • I've previously have described the radical Christian right in the United States as disingenuous, harming and harmful, and bearing false prophets and teachers to the gospel of Jesus Christ.
  • I have shown the paucity of Calvinism with its many ungodly creeds and confessions of God, bible, and sundry doctrines.
  • I have argued against alt-Christian movements such as Christian White Supremacy and (soft) fascist movements against the civil union and democracies of the United States.
  • I have argued for the extension and expansion of civil rights across all minority groups - especially those which alt-Christian groups would deny. Who are led by  alt-right proponents as Franklin Graham, Jerry Falwell Sr and his son Jerry Jr, Norman Geisler, Wayne Grudem, James Dobson, James Robinson, and such like.
  • And lastly, I have proposed a Christianity which leads out in its bible, its gospel of Christ, its ministries and works, doctrines and creeds, and in everyway possible, as testimony to the love of God for humanity and the world of nature. That the God of love is the true God we worship and who is best defined by His love in all ways, by all things, and in every aspect of our living and Spirit-held wonder.

Conclusion

Thus and thus, there is no room for self-righteous Christian hate, wrath or judgment. These ways are ungodly and un-God-like.

  • There is no room for civil insurrection as we see under the banners of Christian Trumpians' proclaiming succession from the Constitution of the United States.
  • And there is certainly no response acceptable to Black Lives, Refugees and Immigrants, or the cis-gendered oriented other than the response to love, to embrace, accept and befriend, all those whom the secular church and wicked society have abandoned, hurt, and disallowed from their civil rights and liberties in this life.

Relevancy22 is dedicated to renewing the Christian Church in its rights and prerogatives as given to it by the Lord on His Ascension Day. Herein we have sought a new foundation for the Christian Church founded on God's love and have spoken consistently for the reformation of Church Creeds and Confessions that once-and-all evidence God's love throughout the entirety of their church dogmas and sentiments.

I leave below two articles on the delineation of the history of Christian Reconstructionism, aka Church Dominionism; movements otherwise known for the bastardization of the gospel of Christ by the alt-Church of anti-Christ.

R.E. Slater
February 10, 2022

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CHRISTIAN RECONSTRUCTIONISM


The Christian reconstructionism movement became very popular outside the United States after 2000, especially in countries with large Pentecostal populations (Sub-saharan Africa,Central America and Caribbean). Christian Reconstructionism is a fundamentalist Calvinist theonomic movement.[1] It developed under the ideas of Rousas Rushdoony, Greg Bahnsen and Gary North[2] and has had an important influence on the Christian right in the United States.[3][4]

In keeping with the cultural mandate, Christian reconstructionists advocate theonomy and the restoration of certain biblical laws said to have continuing applicability.[5] These include the death penalty not only for murder, but also for propagators of all forms of idolatry,[6][7] open homosexuals,[8] adulterers, practitioners of witchcraft and blasphemers.[9]

Christian reconstructionists are usually postmillennialists and followers of the presuppositional apologetics of Cornelius Van Til.[10][11]

A Christian denomination that advocated the view of Christian reconstructionism until its dissolution in 2020 was the Reformed Presbyterian Church in the United States.[12] Most Calvinist Christians, however, disavow Christian reconstructionism and hold to classical covenant theology, the traditional Calvinist view of the relationship between the Old Covenant and Christianity.[13]

Reconstructionist perspective
Theonomy
Main article: Theonomy

Christian reconstructionists advocate a theonomic government and libertarian economic principles. They maintain a distinction of spheres of authority between self, family, church, and state.[14][15] For example, the enforcement of moral sanctions under theonomy is carried out by the family and church government, and sanctions for moral offenses are outside the authority of civil government (which is limited to criminal matters, courts and national defense). However, some believe these distinctions become blurred, as the application of theonomy implies an increase in the authority of the civil government. Reconstructionists also say that the theonomic government is not an oligarchy or monarchy of man communicating with God, but rather, a national recognition of existing laws. Prominent advocates of Christian reconstructionism have written that according to their understanding, God's law approves of the death penalty not only for murder, but also for propagators of all forms of idolatry,[6][7] open homosexuality,[16] adulterers, practitioners of witchcraft, blasphemers,[9] and perhaps even recalcitrant youths[17] (see the List of capital crimes in the Bible).

Christian reconstructionism's founder, Rousas Rushdoony, wrote in The Institutes of Biblical Law (the founding document of reconstructionism) that Old Testament law should be applied to modern society, and he advocates the reinstatement of the Mosaic law's penal sanctions. Under such a system, the list of civil crimes which carried a death sentence would include murder, homosexuality, adultery, incest, lying about one's virginity, bestiality, witchcraft, idolatry or apostasy, public blasphemy, false prophesying, kidnapping, rape, and bearing false witness in a capital case.[18] However, Greg Bahnsen points out that such a system would only be possible if the culture at large were a Christian culture, and that the force of government could not be used to impose Christianity on a culture that did not want it.[7]

Kayser points out that the Bible advocates justice, and that biblical punishments prescribed for crimes are the maximum allowable to maintain justice and not the only available option, because lesser punishments are authorized as well.[19]

Views on pluralism

Rousas Rushdoony wrote in The Institutes of Biblical Law: "The heresy of democracy has since [the days of colonial New England] worked havoc in church and state" and: "Christianity and democracy are inevitably enemies", and he said elsewhere that "Christianity is completely and radically anti-democratic; it is committed to spiritual aristocracy," and characterized democracy as "the great love of the failures and cowards of life".[20] He nevertheless repeatedly expressed his opposition to any sort of violent revolution and advocated instead the gradual reformation (often termed "regeneration" in his writings) of society from the bottom up, beginning with the individual and the family and from there gradually reforming other spheres of authority, including the church and the state.[21]

Rushdoony believed that a republic is a better form of civil government than a democracy. According to Rushdoony, a republic avoided mob rule and the rule of the "51%" of society; in other words "might does not make right" in a republic.[22] Rushdoony wrote that America's separation of powers between 3 branches of government is a far more neutral and better method of civil government than a direct democracy, stating "[t]he [American] Constitution was designed to perpetuate a Christian order". Rushdoony argues that the Constitution's purpose was to protect religion from the federal government and to preserve "states' rights."[23]

Douglas W. Kennard, a Professor of Theology and Philosophy at the Houston Graduate School of Theology, wrote with regard to Christian reconstructionism, that Christians of non-Calvinist traditions, such as some "Baptist, Methodist, Catholic, [and] Orthodox", would be "under threat of capital punishment as fostered by the extreme Theonomist."[24] On the other hand, Ligon Duncan has stated that "Roman Catholics to Episcopalians to Presbyterians to Pentecostals", as well as "Arminian and Calvinist, charismatic and non-charismatic, high Church and low Church traditions are all represented in the broader umbrella of Reconstructionism (often in the form of the "Christian America" movement)."[25]

Influence on the Christian right in general
See also: Dominionism

Although it has a relatively small number of self-described adherents, Christian reconstructionism has played a role in promoting the trend toward explicitly Christian politics in the larger American Christian right.[26][page needed] This is the wider trend to which some critics refer, generally, as dominionism. Also, they allegedly have an amount of influence which is disproportionate to their numbers among advocates of the growth of the Christian homeschooling movement and other Christian education movements that seek independence from the direct oversight or support of the civil government. Because their numbers are so small compared to their influence, they are sometimes accused of being secretive and conspiratorial.[27][28]

In Matthew 28:18, Jesus says, "All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth." This verse is seen as an announcement by Jesus that he has assumed authority over all earthly authority. In that light, some theologians interpret the Great Commission as a command to exercise that authority in his name, bringing all things (including societies and cultures) into subjection under his commands. Rousas Rushdoony, for example, interpreted the Great Commission as a republication of the "creation mandate",[29] referring to Genesis 1:28

Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing...

For Rushdoony, the idea of dominion implied a form of Christian theocracy or, more accurately, a theonomy. For example, he wrote that:

The purpose of Christ's coming was in terms of the creation mandate… The redeemed are called to the original purpose of man, to exercise dominion under God, to be covenant-keepers, and to fulfil "the righteousness of the law" (Rom. 8:4)… Man is summoned to create the society God requires.[30]

Elsewhere he wrote:

The man who is being progressively sanctified will inescapably sanctify his home, school, politics, economics, science, and all things else by understanding and interpreting all things in terms of the word of God.[31]

Many evangelical Christians of all types have embraced Christian Reconstructionism in part or in whole. Evangelical leaders who endorsed it explicitly or implicitly include Jerry Falwell Sr., Bill Gothard, Jay Grimstead, D. James Kennedy, Tim LaHaye, Doug Phillips, Howard Phillips, Pat Robertson, Francis Schaeffer, and Wayne Whitehead. Gothard and the two Phillipses, for example, used Christian Reconstructionism to build the evangelical homeschooling community of the 1970s and 1980s. Robertson and Kennedy hosted Rushdoony on their television programs, and Robertson also used dominionist language in his book, The Secret Kingdom, and in his 1988 presidential campaign.[32]

Grimstead, of the Coalition on Revival, summarized the position of many evangelical leaders: "'I don't call myself [a Reconstructionist],' but 'A lot of us are coming to realize that the Bible is God's standard of morality … in all points of history … and for all societies, Christian and non-Christian alike… It so happens that Rushdoony, Bahnsen, and North understood that sooner.' He added, 'There are a lot of us floating around in Christian leadership—James Kennedy is one of them—who don't go all the way with the theonomy thing, but who want to rebuild America based on the Bible.'"[33]

Christian critics

Michael Horton of Westminster Seminary California has warned against the seductiveness of power-religion. The Christian rhetoric of the movement is weak, he argues, against the logic of its authoritarian and legalistic program, which will always drive reconstructionism toward sub-Christian ideas about sin, and the perfectibility of human nature (such as to imagine that, if Christians are in power, they won't be inclined to do evil). On the contrary, Horton and others maintain, God's Law can, often has been, and will beput to evil uses by Christians and others, in the state, in churches, in the marketplace, and in families; and these crimes are aggravated, because to oppose a wrong committed through abuse of God's law, a critic must bear being labeled an enemy of God's law.[34]

J. Ligon Duncan of the Department of Systematic Theology of Reformed Theological Seminary in Jackson, Mississippi, warns that "Theonomy, in gross violation of biblical patterns and common sense, ignores the context of the giving of the law to the redemptive community of the Old Testament. This constitutes an approach to the nature of the civil law very different from Calvin and the rest of the Reformed tradition, which sees the civil law as God's application of his eternal standards to the particular exigencies of his people." Duncan rejects the reconstructionists' insistence that "the Old Testament civil case law is normative for the civil magistrate and government in the New Covenant era". He views their denial of the threefold distinction between moral, civil, and ceremonial law as representing one of the severe flaws in the reconstructionist hermeneutic.[35]

Professor Meredith Kline, whose own theology has influenced the method of several reconstructionist theologians, has adamantly maintained that reconstructionism makes the mistake of failing to understand the special prophetic role of biblical Israel, including the laws and sanctions, calling it "a delusive and grotesque perversion of the teachings of scripture."[36] Kline's student, Lee Irons, furthers the critique:

According to the Reformed theocrats apparently… the only satisfactory goal is that America become a Christian nation. Ironically... it is the wholesale rejection (not revival) of theocratic principles that is desperately needed today if the church is to be faithful to the task of gospel witness entrusted to her in the present age… It is only as the church… puts aside the lust for worldly influence and power – that she will be a positive presence in society.[37]

Rodney Clapp wrote that reconstructionism is an anti-democratic movement.[38][39]

In an April 2009 article in Christianity Today about theologian and writer Douglas Wilson, the magazine described reconstructionism as outside the 'mainstream' views of evangelical Christians. It also stated that it "borders on a call for outright theocracy".[40]

George M. Marsden, a professor of history at the University of Notre Dame, has remarked in Christianity Today that "Reconstructionism in its pure form is a radical movement". He also wrote, "[t]he positive proposals of Reconstructionists are so far out of line with American evangelical commitments to American republican ideals such as religious freedom that the number of true believers in the movement is small."[41]

Popular religious author, feminist, and former Roman Catholic nun, Karen Armstrong sees a potential for "fascism" in Christian reconstructionism, and sees the eventual Dominion envisioned by theologians R. J. Rushdoony and Gary North as "totalitarian. There is no room for any other view or policy, no democratic tolerance for rival parties, no individual freedom."[42]

Traditional Calvinist Christians have argued that Christian reconstructionists have "significantly misunderstood the positions of Calvin, other Reformed teachers and the Westminster Confession concerning the relationship between the Sinai covenant's ethical stipulations and the Christian obligation to the Mosaic judicial laws today."[13]

Relationship to dominionism

Some sociologists and critics refer to reconstructionism as a type of dominionism. These critics claim that the frequent use of the word dominion by reconstructionist writers, strongly associates the critical term dominionism with this movement. As an ideological form of dominionism, reconstructionism is sometimes held up as the most typical form of dominion theology.[26][page needed][27][43][page needed][28][44][page needed][45][page needed]

The Protestant theologian Francis Schaeffer is linked with the movement by some critics, but some reconstructionist thinkers are highly critical of his positions. Schaeffer himself disavowed any connection or affiliation with reconstructionism, though he did cordially correspond with Rushdoony on occasion.[46] Authors Sara Diamond and Fred Clarkson suggest that Schaeffer shared with reconstructionism the tendency toward dominionism.[27][43][page needed]

Christian reconstructionists[who?] object to the dominionism and the dominion theology labels, which they say misrepresent their views. Some separate Christian cultural and political movements object to being described with the label dominionism, because in their mind the word implies attachment to reconstructionism. In reconstructionism the idea of godly dominion, subject to God, is contrasted with the autonomous dominion of mankind in rebellion against God.

See also



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ADDENDUM
 by R.E. Slater
I could probably have red-highlighted the entire article below which I came across when looking for a fairly complete history of Christian Dominionism. As I read it I was appalled by how much was going on underneath the church's skirts hidden away from unwelcomed inquiry through the 1980s and 90s.

And yet, to the reading public held within the sanctums of Christian bookstores, at Christian colleges, and across Christian home schooling organizations, each-and-all were buying into the errant ideologies of the Christian Right hand-over-fist. All in plain sight, whether on the Christian book shelf, at the Christian pulpit, and across Christian media airwaves. A supplanting ideology of anathema being promoted by Pharisaical Wolves dressed up in sheep's clothing.
And where was my generation when all this was happening? Certainly not where we should have been on the front lines speaking up and defending the OT/NT faith of a God of love. Myself, I was actively ministering; serving the business community in the work-a-day-world; running youth  recreational teams and adult sport programs; serving our local school district - and later, serving area political, economic, and ecological organizations; raising a family; and overall, simply too busy to notice the evil which was seeping into my good faith gone bad by surreptitious "bible" scholars with sanctioned "Christian" Ph.D's written behind their names.
Such protagonists to the Church of God have shown themselves to be iron-hearted religionists working feverishly under their many secretive guises to raze God's church for a church unto-their-own-image. Idolatrous images not unlike what their historic Christian brethren have wrought through Christian ages past who willfully ruled Christian districts and states in shaming harm and unnecessary human suffering across both the church and society all in the name of Christ. Legislating, preaching, and writing severe legalistic dogmas supplanting God's church of love-and-ministry to the world with their own idea of what an anti-church should look like under their cruel ministerial rule in the name of a God of wrath and violence.
As the article below will show in stunning detail, Christian Dominionists (aka, Kingdom Reconstructionists) were actively building today's Trumpian Churches aligned with alt-Christian Supremacy groups and the anti-democratic Radical Right as seen in the present Republican party. But to those like myself, these wayward Christian "scholars" were wrong-headed right-from-the-start, having taken good biblical themes like "redemptive covenants formed by God with man to the salvation and healing of all" back upon themselves unto the bitter ends of a Christian-like Jihadism pretending love and peace yet all the while formenting evil across family, community, and democratic institutions of America.

These false prophets and teachers are the ones we are to oppose and stand against. We, who follow Jesus, do testify to the Jesus faith of love in every way possible across every structure of mankind. We testify to a God of love whose love cannot be forced, coerced or legislated from anywhere except a Cross and upon the selfless sacrificial service of God's children. Amen? Yea, Verily, Amen!

R.E. Slater
February 10, 2022





CHRISTIAN RECONSTRUCTIONISM

Theocratic Dominionism Gains Influence

by Frederick Clarkson
March 1, 1994

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