Theologian John Calvin once noted men’s hearts are “a perpetual factory of idols.” As people across the political spectrum move away from religion and fill the void with politics, idol worship runs rampant.
All of us have a voice within us that whispers there is more to life. Many people go in search of it. Atheists spend an inordinate amount of energy turning the voice off, often turning science into the religion of scientism. Others, on the left and right, turn from “love your neighbor” and “do unto others as you would have them do unto you” and embrace “save the culture and win at all costs.” This voice pulls them away from the Creator towards creation.
Once a person has turned from Creator to creation and begins manufacturing idols, it is also necessary to turn from theology to mythology. The new mythology requires a new cosmogony, which is a theory of how the universe began.
The Greeks explained the sun’s apparent move across the sky as the sun god Apollo driving a chariot across the sky each day. The seasons were caused by Persephone, daughter of Demeter the goddess of harvest, descending each autumn to be with her husband Hades, only to rise in the spring to be with her mother.
In the United States currently, some on the right have substituted the Creator of all things as their savior for Donald Trump as their savior. They have descended into idolatry, which requires a mythology, and that mythology has spun up a new cosmogony for the origins of Donald Trump. Because many of them are from Christian backgrounds, they have latched on to Isaiah 45, in which Isaiah prophesied about “Cyrus” and the Septuagint version called Cyrus “my anointed” or “messiah.” These Christians fed by conspiracists related to QAnon, which claims a military background, believe Donald Trump is God’s anointed, a second Cyrus come to battle the deep state and a satanic global elite who traffic children.
Over the past five years, QAnon’s conspiracies have settled into the minds of middle American church goers, mostly over fifty. Younger Americans are so used to slickly packaged TikTok and Snapchat videos that they tend to be dismissive of most things they see circulate on the internet. But the fifty and older crowd sees the same and connect high production quality with truth. Thus, through internet channels, “citizen journalists,” and a deep skepticism of the mainstream media, QAnon mythology and Donald Trump’s cosmogony have taken parasitic root.
Many adherents of QAnon still believe Donald Trump will be sworn in to a second term. Over the last week, on social media channels that promote Donald Trump, wild claims circulated that banks will close on January 18th, which they will because it is Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. But the conspiracists claim it will be to prevent the global child traffickers and traitors from fleeing. On the nineteenth, Donald Trump will finally round up all the traitors in Washington and he will be sworn in on the twentieth. As proof of this scheme playing out, they claim the Pope was arrested the other night (do not ask which night), as part of the President’s global sting operation against elite child traffickers.
It is fantastical. It is not true. It is mythology. But it is amazingly difficult to tell those who believe this stuff that they are wrong. What had been fringe is seeping into the mainstream, sometimes even shared by pastors. Idolatry happens as people replace religion with other things and politics takes on a disproportionate role in one’s life. Mythologies then become easier, but are made even easier by a media that has traded fact for narrative and truth for tribalism.
A media that wants to tell stories instead of the truth and a media that relates less and less to one side in the political debate has helped alienate many Americans, who turn to social networks for news. There, affirmation and confirmation bias reign supreme. There, QAnon, Antifa, and other radical elements await to reprogram minds. Myth becomes truth and Americans turn against each other as new cosmogonies, like the 1619 Project or Donald Trump as God’s anointed, triumph over our shared national story.
I would like to reassure you that all of us over 50 people do not fall for conspiracy theories like the ones you described. I was not a Trump supporter in the beginning, though I reluctantly voted for him since Hillary was not an option. I was surprised to see that he did accomplish some things that I believe were good for the country. I am not a fan of his over the top tweeting at times. On the other hand, the democrats have been so vile and vicious, there were other times I admit I completely understood his attacks. I have never read or watched a Qanon anything, don't even know where to find them. I don't believe Trump instigated the breach on the Capitol the other day. I do believe that the lawsuits that specifically questioned the validity of votes that were cast under rules changed at the last moment by state officials and judges which were in violation of their own constitution should have been heard by the courts. I don't believe that all the people who stormed the capitol were ANTIFA. I do believe that some of them were. One has now been arrested, so we know for sure there was one and if there was one there were more. I think it is very likely that ANTIFA stirred the pot amongst the Trump supporters who are more easily led to this kind of activity, and probably got it started online before the event even happened. All of that is not only likely but logical. So when anyone says "There were no ANTIFA involved", it is as unlikely as those who say "It was not Trump supporters, it was all ANTIFA". Far more likely to have been both, egged on by ANTIFA. And I excuse none of it because I don't think anyone has any right to attack any building full of people. We may have a "revolution". It seems inevitable to me. But if there is, it has to be in accordance with the Constitution.
Well this explains--and very well--the recent obsession with "the narrative" on both sides.
And Erick, I must say that your side journey from politics to theological study certainly proves to be beneficial! Your theological lens focuses on the deep issues of cosmogony an mythology that you incorporate so well into this analysis. . . which is the best explanation I have seen, to account for what has happened to America in these last two months, and especially these last two weeks.
Keep up the good work. And let us remind the distracted world that Jesus is Lord!