- The Marriage of Church and State
- Conserving Tradition
- Consequences at Ground Zero
For Americans, today is the celebration of the American colonies declaring freedom from their European owners. The problem with this is that it has become a common thing to celebrate within the church. My main concern is that church worship is supposed to be dedicated to the worship of God and Christ, not a government.
Perhaps the most telling reasoning behind this marriage is one that confronted me recently. Recently, I commented that today I get to go to church without needing to worship the State. An old friend replied that one should be thankful to the State for the freedom of worship, even if it cuts into the time one spends worshiping God and Christ.
Yet this is exactly the kind of civil religion that ultimately harms the church. Over the next few posts in this series, I will argue that the separation of church and state that we find in secularisation. Through secularisation, Christians have greater freedom to worship God because there is no pretense to glorifying the State before, with, or after God. In other words, a secularised society is better than one in which State and Church is married.
In this respect, American Christianity is largely backwards in its love of civil religion. I wish to analyse the theological underpinning of this marriage, showing that the marriage of Church and State has developed out of a poor understanding of Christian theology. It is only through a secularised politics that Christian theology will grow.
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Definitely looking forward to this.
That can definitely be a problem in some churches (I am uncomfortable with how some churches, including my own, can sometimes express their patriotism during a worship service)… however, many churches are merely thanking God for blessing us with a country built on freedom. One should use the 4th as the most appropriate annual opportunity to thank God for what He has given us.
http://www.dougwils.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7765:on-its-last-leg-and-hopping-around&catid=146:mere-christendom
Good link Darius. Doug Wilson often has some good stuff.