SUBSCRIBER LOGIN

Search
First Things

Loading

RSS

Masthead

Recent Comments

  • teleologist: Thanks you for the opportunity to express our opinions with the time that we had. Tongues will cease,...
  • Orthodoxdj: As Tolkien said to Lewis as they parted on that fateful night in Oxford, “Goodbye.”
  • Livingston Dell: I didn’t always comment as frequently as I had liked to on these articles, but I always...
  • Nikolai Volk: You know, we had a hell of a run in these comment sections. I’ve had many a great discussion with...
  • David Strunk: Hey Joe, I also appreciated what you guys did here, and always had this blog on my RSS feed to see the...
  • Amy K. Hall: Thanks for starting the blog, Joe. It was an honor to be included.
  • Archives

    Categories

    Monthly


    « Previous  |Home|  Next »         

    Friday, October 30, 2009, 9:41 PM

    Back, again, to my primary social concern: Marxism. No surprise there.

    The first impression of Marxist motives usually leads us to the idea of statism. The principle that Marx proclaimed, that religion is the opiate of the people, sets the church beneath the state. That may seem more Hegelian than particularly Marxist, but still plays into the goals of Marx.

    Today’s popular Marxists, like the ACLU, proclaim the state and church as separate entities. That is, there is to be no reciprocal relationship between then. The church is best of being outside the control of government and likewise the government must not approach anything resembling the old theocracies. So the question becomes plain: How do we fit this into the Marxist paradim?

    It is a simple error to miss the revolutionary intentions of Marx and his end game. In the end the Marxist intends that the church serves the interest of the state. To get there, that’s another story. It goes to Marx’ view of virtue and ethics, of what is real and what is unreal. For to Marx only the material is real and that leaves all religion and faith unreal. And what is unreal is to be rejected, to be set aside and replaced with his materialism.

    The process winds its way through two general steps. The first is to marginalize the church. The second is use this marginalized position to present the Marxist alternative to a church that is impotent.

    Marginalization came by way of a redefinition of theology. By employing Freuerbach and others of similar persuasion, religious belief was changed from the immanent God who is involved in human affairs to something unreal and merly emotional. Bockmuehl states it this way (p. 31, The Challenge of Marxism):

    Is Christianity real? This attack leveled by Marx and Engels is of special concern to Christians because the slogan “real humanism,” which sums up the attack, was also used to point out the alleged unreality of Chrsitian theology. “Real humanism” was the battle cry shouted at the thin spiritualism of contemporary Protestant theology as well as at speculative, idealistic philsophy. bot of these never got anywhere near the actual situation of the proletariat, because they were so occupied with more spiritual things. Therefore, Marx and Engels looked at this kind of “religious inhumanity” as one of their main enemies.

    This approach is part of the Marxist criticism. His “critical thinking” was not what we would probably term “critical analysis.” For Marx it was an intentional attack on what has been heretofore assumed to be true. Critical thinking was and his the Marxist method for tearing down obstacles for the establishment of his world view as a system. This was his “ruthless criticism of the existing order” that we might today read on bumper stickers as Subvert the Dominant Paradigm.

    The door has now been opened to replace an unreal and impotent Christianity (or any other religion) with a strictly human way of doing things. As Lennon said, and employing many of the core principles of a Marxist world view:Imagine there’s no Heaven

    It’s easy if you try
    No hell below us
    Above us only sky
    Imagine all the people
    Living for today


    Imagine there’s no countries
    It isn’t hard to do
    Nothing to kill or die for
    And no religion too
    Imagine all the people
    Living life in peace

    You may say that I’m a dreamer
    But I’m not the only one
    I hope someday you’ll join us
    And the world will be as one


    Imagine no possessions
    I wonder if you can
    No need for greed or hunger
    A brotherhood of man
    Imagine all the people
    Sharing all the world


    You may say that I’m a dreamer
    But I’m not the only one
    I hope someday you’ll join us
    And the world will live as one

    This criticism of religion is Marx’ foundation. Again, as Bockmuehl says (p. 51):

    In 1844 Karl marx published his essay entitled “A Contribution to the Critique of hegel’s Philosophy of Law: Introduction.” Contrary to its abstract title, this piece carried significant concrete weight: It was the manifesto of early Marxism. the very first sentence contained a two-point thesis: For Germany the criticism of religion is in the main complete, and criticism of religion is the premise of all criticism.”

    This is intended to leave religious faith vulnerable, and that was his goal throughout. But while we may philosophyically prove the assumption to be in error, the step that we must take is to raise our theology above the compromise of pluralism and to make Christianity more and more real — practically beneficial — to the world around us. Calvin did this in Geneva. Rome did this by ending slavery in Europe during the first millennium. English protestantism initiated the end of secularism’s slavery through Newton and Wilberforce.

    And, looking back on the heritage of Marx, we can clarify the impotence and abuses of his world view despite the rantings of Obama and Schaeffer. The compromise of faith is a plain dismissal of that faith, for the acceptance of Marxism is an acceptance of its atheism.

    Today gods from the right and the left compete to impress the church and persuade it, causing it to reduce itself to nothing but the moderate expression of the accepted opinions of the day. In contrast to this the first task of the church is to find and keep its identity. (Bockmuehl, p. 21)

    8 Comments

      R Hampton
      October 30th, 2009 | 9:55 pm | #1

      James Madison explained the rationale for the separation of Church and State in “Memorial and Remonstrance Against Religious Assessments” (1785). Written in support of Thomas Jefferson’s bill for religious freedom in the state of Virginia (which served as the template for the First Amendment) he outlines 15 reasons. This one is my favorite:

      “5. Because the Bill implies either that the Civil Magistrate is a competent Judge of Religious Truth; or that he may employ Religion as an engine of Civil policy. The first is an arrogant pretension falsified by the contradictory opinions of Rulers in all ages, and throughout the world: the second an unhallowed perversion of the means of salvation”

      Note that whereas Thomas Jefferson was primarily concerned about protecting the State from religious corruption, James Madison wanted to protect the Church from governmental corruption.

      Blue Collar Todd
      October 31st, 2009 | 1:22 am | #2

      I wonder if you have read Darkness At Noon by Arthur Koestler? I think it offers some good insight as to what we can expect from Obama and insight to what we are presently witnessing. It also shows the incompatibility of Christianity and Marxism. Liberals/Marxists seek to replace the Church with the State and I think this is what Obama and his ilk are seeking to do.

      Ken Davis
      October 31st, 2009 | 7:51 am | #3

      “In the end the Marxist intends that the church serves the interest of the state.” This is something I think about every time I get the newly married couple to sign a document that will be sent to a government office where their marriage will be registered. Why should I be co-opted to act as an unpaid employee of the state? Or is it more along the lines of the later remark in the post:
      “the step that we must take is to raise our theology above the compromise of pluralism and to make Christianity more and more real — practically beneficial — to the world around us”?

      Michael K
      November 11th, 2009 | 11:54 am | #4

      The more separate church and state are, the better. Religion has no place deciding public policy, when that policy affects millions who do not share the same religion. State policy should be based entirely on what is beneficial to the people, and on solid, verifiable facts. Science has far more place in the public sphere than religion.

      Religion belongs in a person’s private life. It does not belong where it can effect people who do not share the same beliefs.

      Sarah J. Flashing
      November 11th, 2009 | 12:11 pm | #5

      Michael, you don’t think secularists have a body of beliefs that they want to impose on everyone else?

      Andrew
      November 11th, 2009 | 12:46 pm | #6

      “State policy should be based entirely on what is beneficial to the people, and on solid, verifiable facts.”

      Which Christianity is.

      Michael K
      November 12th, 2009 | 9:06 am | #7

      “Michael, you don’t think secularists have a body of beliefs that they want to impose on everyone else?”

      Mind naming a few?

      “‘State policy should be based entirely on what is beneficial to the people, and on solid, verifiable facts.’

      Which Christianity is.”

      Haha, oh wow, good joke.

      Oh, you’re serious? Wow. Mind providing evidence for that assertion?

      Andrew
      November 12th, 2009 | 3:52 pm | #8

      “Oh, you’re serious? Wow. Mind providing evidence for that assertion?”

      Anything written in the field of Christian apologetics would do.

      Here’s a start:

      http://www.triapologia.com/hays/
      http://www.christian-thinktank.com/
      http://www.tektonics.org/

      Some of the main lines of argument would be the resurrection of Christ, the classic arguments for God’s existence (moral, cosmological, teleological, ontological, epistemological/transcendental), fulfilled prophecy, and the religious experience of countless Christians.

    Links

    Blogs

    Find Us

    Contact