Catechism 6/6 Faith, hope, secularity

Faith, Hope and Secularity

6.1 The Gospel gives us secularity

The blessing of God calls us to service. God gives us the office of servant. Our vocation is to promote all the creatures of God and hold out to them the freedom, the responsibility and the universality that belong to high status of man. It is this call to serve, which has motivated the West by giving us a vocation to minister and serve, and so work for whoever we encounter including lower than ourselves, and thus follow our Lord down the long course towards maturity and self-mastery.

Christian public worship forms the habits of public speech. Through it we may learn how to say no, and so resist the more hysterical demands of the current regime. Without public discussion and some reference to the customs, common law and sources of our culture, and thus some reference to the gospel, no one can tell us what to think. No one can shut us up. No one can restrict our freedom of movement. It is right that we resist proliferating regulation, confiscation and arbitrary arrest. There is not one law for the rich and one for us. We insist that there is just one law, the same law for all. At bottom that law is grounded by the law of God. With this basic understanding that we must refer to our conscience, judge for ourselves and resist the unlawful exercise of state power, Christians uphold the secularity of the public square.

We are confident that we can persuade and convince one another, trust one another and trade with one another, and when relationships fail, we can restore them through reconciliation. It is only this confidence that sustains a functioning economy in which people can make new discoveries, take initiatives, create enterprises and employ people. No one can confiscate what we have worked for, so you can provide for your own nearest and dearest. Universal confiscation means universal demotivation: no one will work, for no one will bother. 

In this Christian conception, our economy as an aspect of our shared, more or less self-regulating public square. We are not dependents of the government. Government is not required to be the universal mediator. Those who govern us are public servants, who are accountable to us. We are not children, or wards of court, and the government is not our parent or probation officer. Until recently this political culture of consent, and self-regulation has been so dominant that for many it has seemed natural, remained unchallenged, and gave us the years of economic growth. Now it is clear that this secular public square only for as long as there is deliberate public effort to cherish what is good and to defend it from envious and angry people who would like to see it destroyed.

Western modern secular culture is good. It values individual responsibility and individual freedom, and for this reason we say that it is superior to all rival cultures. It takes everybody seriously, and encourages us to consider everyone as a free moral agent, not as a child, or a servant, or an animal, not as an unclean, untouchable non-person. This dignity is inalienable, even despite great evil, it cannot be utterly lost. It says that everybody is a person and nobody is a non-person.

It is Christianity that creates secularity. Only Christianity insists that there is a free and open public space in which all political and pragmatic issues can be examined. Christianity says this because it insists that each person is a public agent with their own critical faculties. It insists on individual conscience, which means that each person can judge, for themselves. Each of us can judge where authority really lies; we can decide for ourselves the truth of the rhetoric of the corporations and institutions and the claims of the current regime. Our ability to judge improves as we undergo the long apprenticeship of Christian discipleship. 

Christianity teaches that there is freedom of speech, and it is the public practice of free speech. On behalf of the powerless we make our petitions to the powerful, and we appeal over the heads of powerful to God. Every Sunday in full sight of the political nation we meet and declare that God is the true authority, and the sole source of political authority. We not only say this but we sing it, in unison. All of us, the great and the small, sing it in harmony, so that this single message is given by the united Christian community to the political nation. We tell them that the powerful are accountable to God and to all men, and that they must humble themselves and serve the nation, and thus that there may be no tyrants and no totalitarianism.

Christianity has created the independent legitimacy of authority and of law. Each of us, and all of us together, regardless of God religion and religious authorities are free agents. We make our public and political contribution on whatever grounds we wish, and we offer our justification of our belief and action to our community. Religious authorities have no authority over those outside that particular religion. There is clear space between everyday civil life and religious membership and belief. This doctrine about the legitimacy of the secular sphere, and all the practices of publicly giving an account that justifies our political decisions, is entirely dependent on the teaching of Christianity. Christianity is ‘faith’, that is believed, freely and voluntarily. Christianity is intrinsically anti-totalitarian. It repudiates all autocracy and theocracy. In the Christian tradition, to say ‘God told me to take this decision for you all’ is never an adequate response. You have to give reasons that appeal to that society’s shared understanding of public good, and so find pragmatic ground that you share with people who do not share your faith.

Other religions are not ‘faiths’ in the sense that Christianity is ‘faith’. They are complete packages, comprised of cult, worldview, legal system and morality. They deny any free space in which, on the territory they control, people can stand outside and independently assess them, on shared pragmatic, non-religious, grounds of a common good. There is no secularity, no separation of religion from politics in any other rival cult. Criticisms of Christianity are made from entirely Christian-derived moral standpoints and presumptions. The haters of Christianity may never know how Christian their challenges are; the fury they direct to Christianity perhaps expresses their own intuition that they are unable to escape the deep logic that Christian culture has revealed, for it is the gravity that holds us all. There will be public discovery of truth, and an anticipation of this true judgment occurs in every event of public worship.  

The Church is the assembly that states publicly stating that the powerful answer to God and answer to us. The powerful are not above us, are not unaccountable, and so do not hold the authority they claim. The Church declares that the authority of powerful is given to them by God, but it remains God’s authority. They serve us and must respond to us. In Christian worship we intercede for them and so remind them that they are our servants. Simply by doing this, publicly and weekly over many hundreds of years an accumulation of expectations has built up to become this culture that we now refer as ‘secular’.

Christianity creates secularity. The practices of self-examination, judgment and reconciliation create the public square in which many voices can be heard and in which challenges are made. Christianity is the practice of affirming the dignity of all, of talking back to the powerful, and of listening to and repeating the words of the otherwise voiceless. Christianity is the set of practices that create civility. It is that creates tolerance, and gives us our ability to be patient with people who disagree and even with those who have no patience for others, for the arrogant and those in a hurry to impose their way. It is the means by which we endure the arrogant, to a degree. Christianity is the practice of allowing the slow publicly examination and processes of the law and administration of justice to take place. Christianity is civilisation.

But our political class decided that secularity comes from rejection of Christianity. This is the big mistake that has resulted in the creation of the monster state and the loss of all our liberties. The monster state is the god of the present age. Its liturgy announces that it is secular, which means that it originates in itself (which is of course meaningless, since nothing is source of itself) and so does not originate with God. The liturgy of the present age and current regime is just a flow of rhetoric. It refuses to give an account of itself so it offers no credo. A creed is a statement of what everybody does not believe, what is not accepted and understood to be too obvious to need saying, so it a refutation of the received wisdom. It sets out the grounds on which we refuse the rhetoric of the powerful, and challenge the refusal of the powerful to justify their power. Their rhetoric declares that everything is agreed, that this agreement is a given of nature, that only morally inferior people would question. Whether or not their claim is made explicit, it rules out the possibility of questioning and challenging, which makes it impossible to see that our interests are not the same as those of the political class, that their interests are to control us and prevent us from seeing that this is what they are doing. Our claims, recited publicly in our worship, reveal that their claims are not made public, but are kept in concealment, for this is what their power rests on. 

Christianity is a complete departure from the closed cycle paganism that once gripped the continent of Europe. It has initiated a course of cultural development powered by the continuous participation in the liturgy in which man is exalted as the creature of the God of Israel, from which all forms of manliness and sociality and social mobility have follow. Generation of elites have attempted to get the lid back on, and resume control and recently seem to have got upper hand and at last achieved the re-paganism and paralysis of Europe

Christianity is all that keeps a society open and fluid. Input from the Christian community prevents the build-up of resentment that might overflow into violence. By insisting on the possibility of reconciliation Christians voices reduce tensions and allow the boil to be lanced. Christians name the pressures which cause such tensions and helps to make them seem less threatening and unmanageable. Christianity encourages a slow and gentle social mobility. People can be moved out of a public position without suffering public shame. The impulse to take revenge is weakened by Christianity. It promotes the consensus that truth is supreme, and that free speech and public challenge lead to agreement about the terms of a change of personnel and policy. Those who are replaced do not usually start threatening journalists and juries or resort to revenge.

Challenge and Confrontation are inevitable, and so is unpopularity. If you take the risk of adopting the gospel as your working theory, you will attract hostility. People will take offence at you, in ways which you regard as insignificant and mistaken, but they do so with such seriousness and umbrage that it becomes clear that something deeper is going on. A great deal of our society, and of our own individual selves, is built on envy, deception, hatred and the desire to control. Humanity and civility are thin and brittle. Under the surface there is rage and venom. A great deal is at stake. Their power over you is what at stake for them. They have convinced themselves that their identify depends on putting you in your place. They can only operate on the basis of their superiority and your inferiority. They are the enforcers of a new class society, which will grow to become a special of castes separated by function and status in a steep hierarchy, in which most of us will be drones which they can move in and out of economic activity in their service. This is the pagan society. Paganism is extreme violence. It works on the basis of an upper class keeping lower class powerless, spell-bound by the constant theatrical performance of media and social media. 

6.2 The Gospel and its rivals

Modernity as heresy, fake gospel, and the return of paganism

Our political class gospel has long believed that Christianity is essentially about equality. Equality is the kernel, and it is their job to remove the husk to reveal man this kernel. But though equality is a fundamental, it cannot be removed from Christianity, for no part of the gospel is husk, and no part is dispensable.

The gospel is the message that cannot be separated from the voice pronouncing it. The gospel is the voice of a person speaking to us, and in expectation that we respond and reply. This voice is relayed by the church which it creates and which is a manifestation of it. All the sounds of creation are over-tones of this voice. All creatures are the resonance of God speaking to us and enabling us to speak back, to him and to one another. The communication of creation is largely encrypted and concealed from us until amid this cacophony we hear the single voice of Christ addressing us.

The gospel is Christ himself. He is it. It is him. This message is this person. The gospel is information about Christ only while Christ makes himself present and available to us. He is the data that he gathers and shows us. He shows it only to those who are ready to consider it; to those who are not ready, no data is available. The gospel is about truth which we can examine and freely accept or reject, because this truth is this person, and this person offers make himself present while offering his account of himself. The truth cannot be separated from this person who introduces himself to us, and who can accept or reject us. He is as free in this encounter as we are, for he is as much a person as we are. He is not simply a set of information or an inert object which we can stand in judgment over without ourselves being judged. We may consider him as he is able to consider us. We may approach him or take leave of him as he can approach us or leave us. He makes himself available to us, but equally he can turn and vanish, and we are unable to recall him and make him appear. He can be appealed to, but he cannot be commanded. The person and the information about him are indivisible.

But this does not suit those who do not seek Christ. They want to create a gap between Christ and information about Christ so that, by mediating this information, to them they can make themselves indispensable to others. They want to gather obedient servants. They want mastery but have no wish for self-mastery. They don’t want to submit themselves to any apprenticeship in the self-mastery of Christ. They don’t want to be servants of the one true master. They want to build their own empire so seek power from some other source. They want to rule, but all the while their passions rule them, and their envy and resentment, their fear and their fury are their god. They want glory, but manage only self-deception. They inflict damage on the gullible, and misery on themselves.  

As long as they can say that Christianity is essentially about equality, or about anything else, some self-appointed elite is in charge. When the person, whose voice the gospel is, is set aside as the husk to reveal some abstraction – such as equality – as its kernel, the political class is in business. This division of the indivisible gospel into kernel and husk, inner truth and outer disposable wrapping gives them the status they crave. The self-promoters are in power. They have a job to do, which is to advance that equality. Everyone is equal, except they themselves who must impose this equality from above, an endless task, that requires ever-greater powers, making increasing demands on us and devising new tests for our compliance. They must advance their goal by promoting their authority, so that all public discourse becomes about them, this priesthood that raises itself beyond accountability. The pursuit of equality serves the narcissism of a ruling class that we should have capitulated to. They promote their agenda as though they required our consent yet impose it on us who withhold that consent. They know that we know it is nothing more than a disguise for their own power over us. This generality, this message about some non-personal and anti-personal concept – equality – is the vehicle for their endless self-promotion and our subjugation. Then the advocates of equality, the clergy of this cult and enforcers of the current political agenda, are caught within the trap of their own construction. We see this paradox and contradiction: they promote themselves into first class and demote us to second class in order to be rid of this very distinction of class. The political class itself is the evidence that denies what it propounds. Its very existence is refutation of the message which is its sole justification. The superiority that their message of equality gives them is proof that message is invalid because it represents a contradiction and is therefore untrue. The tension they feel but cannot express is what enrages them, and motivates them to take out their fury on us. They have spiked themselves on this hook, yet we must be punished for it. They are trampling on us because they are wrecking themselves by the pride that prevents them from confessing what they have done. They are deceived, but no one has deceived them: they have done this to themselves.

They take what is living, the person within whom and from whom life grows, and break this life up into generalities or abstractions. They turn what is living into what is dead. They then force what is living into the confines of what is lifeless. They attempt to cram life into some dead husk, so that they may give themselves the task of seeming to make it alive again. That is their trick and their performance, by which they make themselves the living master animating the dead object. They are faking life.

‘Christianity’ is simply Jesus Christ, the person who has given us this as his name. He is living, and what is alive, is so because he gives it the life that is solely his to give. He is himself and not part of any generality. He introduces himself and makes himself known; if he did not, we would have no knowledge of him at all. He is not part of a larger phenomenon. No generality takes us any distance towards him. He is through and through the person he is. He is sheer life, and no lifeless or finite husk can communicate him to us. At no point is he anything less than this person, this particular identity he reveals to us, and which he continues to extend to us and by which we have life of our own. He is all life. We can capture nothing of him with any lifeless tool of our own. Without him, we cannot grasp him or gain any knowledge of him. Without him, we have no continuing, living knowledge of one another or of ourselves. Our life comes to us from him, and so our knowledge of one another, and even of ourselves comes to us, from him. We can know ourselves truly only as he gives life to us and as he reveals to us simultaneously himself and ourselves, the two of us together. 

The West is the product of Christianity. It is the accumulation of habits and attitudes of those nations which, over many centuries, have been immersed in the gospel. Christianity is the house that Christ built. It is the house, considered apart from Christ, as though Christ were absent from it. Though the inheritors of the West, the moderns may say that Christ has been removed from it, and is now even barred from it, and insist that the house remains the same without him, or is even much improved without him, yet it is still the house that Christ built. It is the covenant that he extended to us. It is the edifice he raised in order that we should be protected from the savagery of the forces that would otherwise rage against us. 

But Christ is not absent, and certainly cannot be pushed out, from the place he built for us. Within this household he keeps himself inconspicuous, passes unnoticed by us, giving it the maintenance that keeps this house serviceable. Though we wreck it, he restores it and so the building survives. This house is the work of generations who heard that gospel and passed it on, and who learned a civility, that made it possible for us to live together in large societies. Over centuries we developed a division of labour and long supply chains that have united the world into something like a single household, in which the wants of multitudes are met by the minimal efforts of multitudes, working in ways that harmonise, to satisfy the needs of those multitudes and keep them content.

Whatever the West has learned about humanity and civilisation is Christian. It was the gospel that brought into being this civility and humanity. But they are a dead-end if we imagine that they will continue without Christ. Christ only appears to be absent to us, who snatch and grasp, because he willingly cedes place to us. He allows us a place in which we can be without him, a secular sphere. The truth is that this place does not exist without him for it is the product of his work and his patience. There is no place without him, but only places in which he has made himself imperceptible, a servant so anonymous as to be unnoticeable. The source of this orientation to a shared humanity of the West is simply is the Christian gospel. And since the West is nothing but this hope of becoming civil and humane, we can say that the origin of the West is the gospel. Western culture is Christian culture. Christianity creates the modern world. It not only created once, but it creates and recreates it now, and when its public contribution is denied and prevented, the world stops being modern and crumbles away into something else. That something is not a culture, because it is not able to promote growth, but is merely a rubble made up of fragments alternately adopted and discarded in an attempt without logic or coherence to validate the ongoing deracination and dispossession and so justify the power of the powerful and the powerlessness of the disempowered. 

There is a modern cult, but there is no modern culture. Left to itself, and considered in isolation from its source in Christianity, modernity is no culture, but a force of compulsion. Liberalism without the culture, practices and virtues of self-restraint does not stay liberal. It is not a course of persuasion, which either does or does not persuade you, which you may or may not find convincing for yourself. It is not aimed to gain your conviction and consent, but only to enforce your conformity. It wants homogeneity. It wants to extract you from the culture that formed you and from the relationships that give you your identity. It wants to put you, your relationships and culture through the blender, to produce a homogenous human existence, with no one standing outside it to judge it on criteria extrinsic to it. Modernity is the demolition of culture. Whatever this anti-culture encounters, it dissolves.

The gospel offers a set of guides and limits that may enable you to grow, and over the long term may enable a society to grow, from childhood to adulthood, from dependence to independence, from helplessness to self-reliance and self-mastery. Christianity is therefore an account of the possibility of human growth. It is a culture because it cultivates; by it we may become cultivated, educated, self-controlled, civil and liberal. There can be no modern culture. Whatever is modern is a derived from Christianity, and is a deviation and ultimately a departure from it. Modernity cannot prevent itself from disintegrating into the struggle for power by irreconcilable groups, until there is only childishness, rage and savagery.

You were born into this political culture. Though you may not be aware of its source in Christianity, it is still your mindset. Though you may disown that culture and despise Christianity, you have no other language in which you can even describe what you hate. Above all things you want to leave this Christ-derived culture behind, but you are unable to do so because it alone manifests that logic which allows you to think. This is the world you were given. You cannot live, think or speak except in the world given to you.  The more you reject, the more you find that you are surrounded by the deepest imperatives that this Christ-derived culture has set you. It has given you this will, and your will is directed to the good; the more you attempt to destroy this orientation towards what is good, and do what is evil, the more clearly the good remains out of your reach, untouchable and indestructible.

Modernity is of course an attempt to take control of Christ without allowing him to take control of you. It is an attempt to make a relationship that is unilateral, in which we take what we want, and discard what we don’t. We refuse to allow ourselves to be formed and matured through this relationship. We do not acknowledge that he has the maturity and independence that we desire, and that we may receive it from him, and hold on to it only through continued relationship with him. It is the claim that we are already mature and immutable, that we are already gods. It is to reverse and falsify the relationship, which really depends on the authority and generosity of Christ.

Without the gospel, people beg to have their responsibility taken from them so they can remain children. They demand that their rulers provide everything for them, make their choices for them and become authoritarians. This is the paradox of modernity. The upslope of modernity is all about individual aspiration and striving towards freedom; the plateau is all about the enjoyment of freedom through the amplification of choice, with smugness standing in for virtue, and the patronising of whichever groups you identify as not yet enjoying the same freedom as yourself; the downslope, however, is all about committing governments to the project of first of replacing cultural freedom with a small set of individual moral freedoms, and it is the surrender of (basic, constitutional) freedom in order to secure (peripheral, cultural) freedom and then being overwhelmed by the vista of cultural freedoms receding away from you, then despair and then the rush to oblivion. 

The Church came first. Then came the nation under one law, then the government. The state emerges out of the public life and service empowered by Christian discipleship. It is Christian discipleship that makes us willing to participate in this service that is public, our readiness to acknowledge one law and to submit to the obligations and penalties of that law. We have willingly taken these conventions to be ours and we acknowledge that we members of this nation, that is, we acknowledge that these people are our equals and our fellows and that we do not wish to live without them or apart from them, that they are our neighbours. We consent to this, and only thus as implication, to the government that upholds the law that protects the culture shared within this nation, and so to the state. We commit ourselves to this nation, and thus to its self-government, in freedom. This freedom and this consent are possible because we are witnesses of the gospel. First comes the gospel, the discipleship and community of witness, the Church, that bears it to the nation, and then comes the public service, that create government and a state.  The gospel raised us up out of coercion, compulsion, and vendetta, into freedom, in which we give our consent to one another and so become members of a nation.

Christianity makes culture. It cultivates people who aspire to be masters of themselves, who are able to live from, and be content with, what they produce for themselves. Christianity made us a cultivated people, formed by the discipleship that evolved into a culture over so many hundreds of years. Our culture and our high view of one another and the law that protects them, have given us an economic development, a standard of living and technology far beyond what our ancestors knew. It is the culture that has generated this economic development, and this technology and standard of living. But that economic development and standard of living are not stable. They depend for their continuation on the culture that generates them. That culture is not stable. It depends on the discipleship that generates that aspiration to self-mastery that arrives with the gospel. Our culture is nothing but Christianity. That culture continues when it allows itself to be refreshed by the public speech of Christian worship, and it dwindles and hollows out when it does not. Our development and a standard of living are products of Christianity. Without the public witness of the Christian community, this culture of human dignity, and this aspiration and achievement that it has empowered disappears. When that witness is given, though the standard of living, the technology and economic development may disappear, the aspiration does not. As long as we welcome the gospel, the hope and dignity remain.  

6.3 Christian worship and witness

Christian worship is public proclamation of the truth about power. In their public worship the Christian community challenges those who make excessive claims to power. 

The fundamental act that establishes human freedom, and with this freedom, establishes humanity, is that we defy the powerful. We do this by declaring that the powerful are responsible and accountable, to us and to all, and that they are answerable to God just as we are. No one is morally above us or out of our reach. Every power-holder must hear the appeal we make and heed the warning we give. We insist that there is truth and justice, and there are long-developed codes which enable us to say what is good and just. These codes are given to us in Christian teaching and in the culture, morality and law that that have developed through each nation’s reception of that Christian teaching. The fundamental act that establishes our freedom is the gathering and worshipping of the Christian community created by this revelation and formed by this teaching. This community is making a public stand. It demonstrates and manifests what is true, good and right.

The Church states the limits of the claims of the powerful to determine what is true. When it fails to convince them of these limits, the powerful place themselves above what is true, so the truth is no more than whatever they state, and there are no other authority or criteria for discovering what is true. But more than that, the Christian assembly not only state what is true, but they manifest and demonstrate it in their own gathering, which is always a reconciliation and integration of what was previously fragmented and partial. As former antagonists are brought face-to-face, and as they remain publicly together in peace, they are an enactment and the embodiment of that reconciliation and truth. The proximity to one another in which they stand itself indicates the depth of this reconciliation, and the truth of the claims they make. Moreover, they not only say what is true, that God reconciles all opposites, but they say it together, so one voice does not dominate while the many are silent, but all voices are heard. Moreover, they do not merely say this, but they sing it, and so they harmonise, each adjusting their words and tone to blend in with and so complement the singing of the others, to amplify and affirm what their leaders say and sing, and so their voices together represent the harmonisation of creation, the arrival of order and transformation from disorder.   

Christian worship is the public chanting of the truth that no elite is absolute or untouchable. Every leadership is answerable to God. It can be challenged, dethroned and replaced. The least significant members of any society can combine to proclaim this truth in public, and so warn their leaders of the limits of their authority. Our leaders are on sufferance. God is the ultimate authority: all other authorities are mandated to serve the common good. They are given authority only in order to subordinate themselves to our well-being. Authority comes through service, and is lost when that service is withheld. We tell them that have no authority to serve themselves or to weaken us by their endless confiscations and predation. This is why elites hate the gospel. The hatred that motivates them becomes central to the education promulgated by the educational institutions when they are taken over by the state, until it becomes the universal worldview of that society. The elite teaches every grade of state employee to express contempt for the gospel until disdain for our culture becomes second nature, even to those who are most despised by that elite.  

Elites are interested in power, and pursue other goals only as they serve to increase its power. All pursuit of power without limit is pagan. It is the gospel that sets out the limits. Western conceptions of the desirability of goals other than power, such as truth, goodness and beauty, come from the gospel, and were learned through the worship and witness of the Christian community. Christians are often not well regarded by our political class. It does all that it can to belittle Christian witness and the community that proclaims it in public.

Their effective paganism can be kept within limits, and the political class can be kept honest, only by the implicit reprimand of the propositions sung in the public square by the Christian community. Christian worship is this public service of declaring the limits of power. Those who, driven by their own desires, pursue power give lip-service to the culture derived from the gospel, and take on Christian identities in order to promote one another within the hierarchy. For such people that it is the hierarchy that is the Church, and that if they hold the hierarchy, they hold the Church. But it is not so.

When Christians set out these limits, they are reviled. It is their job to continue this public witness of our weekly event of divine worship, unperturbed by opposition and marginalisation.  It is all that that elite can do to create other groups and voices that offer accounts in which the elite is unquestionable, and the Christians are not worthy of an audience, too intellectually disreputable or socially inferior to be allowed to participate in the public square.

All ideologies are imitations, and reductions, of the gospel. They invert it, so that the movement towards reconciliation and re-integration goes into reverse, and pushes us into antagonism and mutual distrust. When each of us is persuaded to identify ourselves with some minority that believes itself disadvantaged, resentments grow, and the unity of a national community is lost. Such fragmentation and sectarianism are intended to dilute and distract from the sense of obligation to one another which sustains a nation, and keeps that nation an articulate people, able to resist the excessive claims of its political class. The single public truth insisted on by that faithful Christian community says that the elite is accountable to the whole nation, that we can all be full members of it, and that no government interventions are required to sustain our public national life. The state is a function of the public service of a society. Society is prior to the state. The state with its ideology can pass away, and society will remain. No elite is absolute. All rulers will pass away. When all else has passed away, God will remain, and those who acknowledge him will remain with him.  

The elite purposefully creates and promotes other communities that offer alternative messages, perhaps with similar language, perhaps with similar religious conceptuality. They create narratives to be repeated by those believe that the elite will reward them for it. Social climbers will adopt the system that offers advancement, believing that if they are loyal to the regime, the regime will be loyal to them. Those who do not accept the Christian premise that God only promotes all men and is judge of what is true, are endlessly gullible. 

Public speech is a Christian practice. Reasoning in public is a Christian practice. Or more simply, free speech and public reasoning are what Christianity is. Public reason simply is Christianity. In all our public speech we insist that we are dealing with this or that specific person, and these persons can speak and discuss and argue and reach agreement, with us. It denies that at bottom we have to do with a something, something or other. It insists that we have to do with persons, who may be like us but are not us, and that they are as free as we are. Christianity is solely about some person, this one and that one. The guarantor of each particular person is himself a person. Christ is that person.

Christianity says that there is public speech and public reason because there is this one person who insists that we give him account of ourselves, and that we respond with our account by responding to him. This means that we acknowledge that he must be responded to, that he will not go away and leave us alone. The gospel tells us that this person appeals to us through every person we meet, such that everyone we meet represents Christ’s call to us. Everyone appears before us we meet is there as one instalment of Christ’s approach to us. Despite their own obliviousness and even resistance to this, they are all transparent to Christ, and we are transparent to him as we meet and hear and respond to them.

Christianity is simply Christ. The gospel is this person who calls us and waits for us to respond and to say who we are. As we respond, we are obliged to admit that we are positioned and identified by persons other than ourselves, and so we are identified by a tradition and history. We do not simply imagine or create the context in which we live and speak; many other persons, past, present and future, make up the historical location that gives us our identity. All these are redeemed by the prophets, apostles and witnesses that Christ sends us, who reveal him to us, and make us ready for life with him within his holy community. Jesus Christ calls us all together here to respond to one another, and to him. Without him bringing us all before one another, there are no other persons, no persons at all. All existence is simply Christ’s demand that we respond to him and them. Christ is the only existing thing. With him, there is existence. Without him, there is nothing, no existence at all. Christianity offers the hope of becoming a mature, independent person. Christianity is simply this one specific person who insists that we are all persons just as he is. He insists that we hear and respond to the summons that all other persons make to us, and that we receive every one of them as members of his body. Christ is the source and basis, underwriter and guarantor that there may be public speech, that everyone can make themselves heard, and there is public reason, in which everyone can, and must, give an account of themselves and have that account examined, tested and affirmed by all others. With all those he presents to us, we can receive his self-mastery and make it our own, so it is both his and ours. Each of us must allow all others to be our judge and to be our companions and so be content to share life with them. Christ enables us to become masters of ourselves, and so freely able to commit to and serve one another. He calls us to become, and remain, truly persons and truly human.  

Catechism 5/6 The Blessings

The Sermon on the Mount – The Seven Blessings

5.1 The Blessing – The High Status of Man

The blessing of God has come to us in Jesus Christ. It tells us that our identity is secure and that it is waiting for us in Christ. The blessing protects man from all that would diminish him. It is the arming and equipping of man, so he can tell the difference between truth and falsehood, and between true authority and false, and so defend himself from evil. It is the sword of the Spirit that cuts through confusion and distinguishes truth from falsehood. 

The gospel celebrates the blessedness of the poor. As a result, its impact over many generations has been to limit the disparity of wealth. It emphatically and repeatedly celebrates the poor, and those who are disparaged and disregarded, and those who are regarded as of no account. The gospel warns the arrogant and so makes it more difficult for the wealthy to consider themselves above everyone else. It gives the poor and the uneducated the means by which to withhold their approval of the rich and withdraw their consent to their rule. There is no permanently subhuman caste in any society in which the gospel has been heard.

He has put down the mighty from their seat and has exalted the humble and meek. He hath filled the hungry with good things and the rich he hath sent empty away…

Has raised up the humble and meek.

The first shall be last, and the last shall be first.

Christianity gives a society the skill set of reconciliation, by which torn social fabric can be repaired. When that society is able to respond to each rip in the fabric by taking steps to achieve reconciliation and so to make good damage to its fabric, it will continue, and can prosper.

Reconciliation involves accusation, investigation, judgment and discovery of the truth, perhaps through a public trial. It requires an attempt to encourage confession from antagonists, involving expression of remorse and penitence. It requires discussion of penalty, criminal sentence and recompense perhaps through the payment of compensation.

These steps require a degree of public revelation, and so depend on news media. They require public consent. Though the victim may not concede this, the public has to concede that the punishment is adequate to the crime, and that justice has been done. When these steps are taken, reconciliation is achieved, damaged social capital is repaired, and confidence and trust are restored.

But when they fear that there will no justice, people begin to withdraw from public participation and stop taking risks. When they fear that their property or their lives are in danger, because government and justice system do not do enough to keep them secure, they will take fewer economic initiatives.  When there is long-term failure to implement enough of these steps to enable reconciliation, there is a long-term loss of public trust and morale. Relationships are allowed to lapse, contracts are not honoured, new contracts not made, and that society drifts towards long-term economic decline. When the environment in which people are willing to take risk is not maintained by public practices of reconciliation, that society becomes poor.   

What is the trick that makes a society prosperous? What is it that restores trust when it is broken?  What is the mechanism that repairs damaged social fabric? How can people continue to trust one another when so much social capital has been destroyed? 

There are three procedural parts to this moral faculty of reconciliation. The first is acknowledgement of continuing generosity, the second is judgment, the third is forgiveness. Grace is the gospel term for this generosity of God. This means that that reconciliation is not a mechanism or technique, but is the function of a person. It relies on Christ, the one person who, having mastered self-mastery, has the power to endure, and so will not let us down. He is indeed able to bring judgment, and forgiveness, and to supply the grace which will enable a new start. God will establish the truth, and enable a society to investigate so that the truth of any loss or crime is adequately made public, so that that society is satisfied, and the process of reconciliation can start. These processes of judgment and reconciliation are begun, but they are not made complete. What that judgment will be, and what is eventually required to bring justice and reconciliation, is not yet known. We look forward to Christ’s coming to reveal the truth and establish complete justice. But the society that is convinced that the process has begun and that it will be completed, is able to endure the present injustice, make good the losses and live in expectation.

The culture formed by the gospel assumes an unlimited supply of good will. Christ can make good what is missing and will be able to satisfy all those who have been betrayed. God is provider and guarantor of the generosity available to any society that asks for it.

To bless someone is to give them an opening. You give them the opportunity they want. You tell them what you are giving them, and you give it to them in the moment that you tell them so. You bless me when you admit me to the firm, by telling me, and all other members of your firm that I am from this moment a member of it. We say, ‘Your application has been successful. We give you the job and we look forward to sharing a successful future with you.’ You employ them, or give them pay increase, or a loan or a place to live. You give them some new responsibility and larger budget. If they take this opportunity as it is given, they may grow a step towards maturity and self-mastery. Through it they may learn how to receive and pass on the generosity that comes from God, and which enables future opportunities and greater self-mastery. God blesses us, and calls us to receive, learn, practice and pass on the blessing we have received from him and so grow to maturity.

The Sermon on the Mount, starts with seven Blessings, the Beatitudes, which are then enlarged on by the teaching that follows. So the first blessing, Blessed are the poor in spirit…love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you…’ (Matt 5.44) is amplified by You have heard it said, Love your neighbour and hate your enemy. But I tell you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you…’(Matt 5.44). In the heresy of modernity this has been taken to mean we should abandon and despise your nearest and dearest, and promote over them those who seem new and exotic. But the blessings are the amplification and fulfilment of all teaching, not its abandonment. The Law of Israel tells us to pay your debts, return to them whatever they give you, respect for respect, scorn for scorn.

Some Christians have attempted taken the second line away from its basis in the first line and so altered and evacuated this elementary and foundational understanding. The Lord universalizes the law of love, so that we must return not only love for love, but also love for hate. This has meant that our post-Christian societies are unable to allow public expressions of what they hate, that is, they are unable to reject the cult and the society that opposes them and which repudiates our high account of human dignity, our citizenship and our freedom and secularity, and the open civil society. Instead, our political class directs its hatred at those who express their revulsion at the crime and the criminal, and so they hate anyone who honestly expresses the horror of evil. 

Love and truth are foundational teaching of our Christianity and society. Love of a person allows that person to be free. They are not bound to love the one who loves them. True love allows them to be themselves and so be free.

The gospel does not consider ‘belonging’ or ‘community’ as solely fundamental, and it does not consider that ‘freedom’ or ‘autonomy’ as solely fundamental either. It does not define community and freedom as opposites. It is not a flight from belonging or into it. Other people can demand that we give up freedom and individuality. 

5.2 Seven Blessings

The blessing of self-mastery is set out in seven statements. They understand that self-mastery become available to us in Christ and through an apprenticeship with him. 

Blessed are…

the poor in spirit

those who mourn

the meek

those who hunger and thirst

the merciful

the pure in heart

the peacemakers

those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake

Blessed are the poor in spirit…    

    The blessing is to be humble. To be arrogant is a curse. The humble man is open to the world, and so he can learn and he has a future. The proud and self-assertive man is closed: he has decided that he is sufficient to himself, and is unprepared to receive new challenges or experience. The humble self-deprecating man is content to take the least conspicuous role. He may be promoted, but he does not elevate himself.   

    • Blessed are those who mourn…

    The man who mourns waits and remains alone, without support and is content to do so. He builds himself no political support and so appears unvindicated.

    • Blessed are the meek…

    The man who is meek is modest and self-restrained. He does not try to throw off those constraints and discipline of the apprenticeship. They are not pushing a political agenda or looking for political solutions. They forgive the debts and trespasses committed against them. They do not want revenge or retribution for the robbery and aggression directed against them.

    • Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness…

    The man who hungers for righteousness looks for what is right, just, fair, straight, pure and simple. He avoids whatever is bent, twisted, unclear, ambiguous or contradictory. 

    • Blessed are the merciful    

    The merciful man is the generous man. Blessed are those who are generous. The generous bless those they meet and pass on to them the blessing they have received.

    They have worked and saved and so have provisions to share with those who need them.

    • Blessed are the pure in heart

    The man who is pure is single-minded. He is undivided and unadulterated. He does not envy anyone. He wants just one thing, which is the kingdom of God, so he is not tugged this way and that.

    • Blessed are the peace-makers   

    The man who makes peace reconciles those who are at war. There is no envy, resentment or rage in him. He is not driven by desire for revenge. He can absorb the aggression of others.

    One more blessing tells us what follows from these seven blessings

    5.3 Persecution – the eighth blessing

    Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven …

    In summary of these blessings, what are these humble, mourning, meek, justice-seeking, merciful people going to receive? 

    They will receive suffering and persecution and martyrdom.     

    Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me… in the same way they persecuted the prophets before you

    As you become a Christian, you learn that you are going to be hurt. People want to transfer their hurt to you, making you carry as much pain as they can inflict on you. They do this in the belief that this will transfer their pain away from themselves so that they no longer feel it.

    This realisation, that you are going to suffer for this, occurs at the moment you become a Christian, and it is this that makes you Christian. You realise that Christ has taken your pain so that you are free of it. Christ has it, so you don’t. Your injuries, your fury and distress have been taken on by him. By this discovery moment you are born anew, so your baptism is the moment of this realisation.

    To be a Christian is to know that you are in line to be persecuted by other people. You will be persecuted undeservedly, while knowing that all this time you have been persecuting Christ, and persecuting the people sent to you by Christ, undeservedly. You were the persecutor. You were deceived, but you were also vicious and deliberate. At the moment you realise this, you cease to be that persecutor and become one of the persecuted. Now you are in the queue for punishment by people who hate you without cause, just as you hated Christ without cause. Your tormentors are waiting for you. They are going to try to punish you, but though you may fear them, you also feel pity for them. You see that are doing terrible damage to themselves for no good reason. You may tell them that it will not help them to inflict their pain on you. Yet you also know that only you, Christ’s servant, can take their pain. Only your steadfastness could convince them that their pain is caused by their own viciousness, and convince them that Christ can help them escape this viciousness. Your endurance of their rage and your self-mastery all through this passion is the one constructive you can do. If you love them, you must remain unmoved. For their shake, you cannot not be shaken or broken by them. You must not give in to their fear, or their fury. You must remain unyielding in the face of their accusations and threats. You feel fear, of course, but you know that under this onslaught your Lord is standing just ahead of you, and taking the brunt of it, and his strength is sufficient to hold you there, just behind him. 

    Christians attract the hostility of those who do not exercise self-control and do not wish to. Those who do not seek self-mastery, do not learn how to endure and be content. Those who cannot endure can only lash out at those who do. They believe only that they have a mandate to punish those who do not share their passions. They punish those who do not conform, who do not express the same rage they do, and who do not lash out as they do at whoever seems easy prey. They believe that Christians are moral delinquents: those who stick out must be brought back in line.  Those who challenge the authority of those in power must be belittled, ostracized, silenced, and have their livelihood taken away from them.  Rejoice and be glad, for great is your reward in heaven…

    5.4 Seven Warnings

    Blessing comes to those who are disciples of the Lord, who take up the discipline and discipleship and follow him. Their happiness is in that apprenticeship in the self-mastery of Christ.

    But there is no blessing for who only want to express their present tantrum, who want to avoid the persecution that could teach us to endure and so gain mastery over ourselves. The cult of modernity we pursue autonomy by imposing our mastery on other people, express our resentment, find scapegoats and inflict our rage on them. It widens the gulf between those who freely take up service and apparent powerlessness and find their contentment in that service, and those who want to evade that service, hold on to power, and exert their power to increase their autonomy.

    In the Gospel of Matthew Jesus reinforces the blessings by contrasting them with seven warnings, traditionally called ‘curses.’ The seven blessings, now expressed as seven warnings, call us away from the narcissism given expression by the cult of modernity. They hope to turn us from arrogance to humility, from superiority to humility, from violence to peace.

    They are exclamations of pity for those who reject these blessings, each woe describing the unhappiness that would result from this rejection.  These are the curses that the leaders of our society want to inflict on us, but will only succeed in inflicting on themselves. Only misery can come from rejecting the blessing of God. The warnings mirror the blessings

    1. Those who are not humble and poor in spirit exalt themselves.
    2. Those who are not content to lament and mourn now, build little kingdoms for themselves.
    3. Those who are not meek and self-controlled, imagine that they are the source of their own power and authority
    4. Those who do not hunger and thirst for righteousness, neglect justice, mercy, and faithfulness
    5. Those who are not merciful and generous are full of greed and self-indulgence
    6. Those who are not pure in heart are full of hypocrisy and wickedness
    7. Those who do not bring peace, are violent in the same way as those who killed the prophets. They suppress the witnesses God sends and are prepared to be violent against us.Woe to you…  who exalt yourself

    You shut the kingdom of heaven in man’s faces. You do not go in and you stop other people from going in. (Matt 23.12-13)

    You assert yourself, and have no wish to learn humility. You promote yourself over those around you. You climb over them and tread on as you go. You shut the kingdom in men’s faces: you don’t enter that kingdom and you won’t let them do so either.

    But it is the humble who are blessed, for Blessed are the poor in spirit.  For whoever exalts himself will be humbled. Whoever humbles himself will be exalted…

    • Woe to you… who when you make a convert make him twice as much a son of hell as you are…

    You seek supporters and make converts to your cause. You demand that they obey you and call you master. You have a reputation to build. You want glory and renown. You grow your power by rent-seeking and confiscation. You tie up heavy loads to put them on other men’s shoulders (Matt 23.4).Woe to those who convince others to do the same, climbing over others, and keeping them out of the kingdom. 

    You encourage your converts to become more extreme and destructive than yourself. Each generation becomes more uninhibitedly power-seeking, departs further from the sources, resorts to more extreme self-invention, and is less willing to acknowledge any limit to their power.

    But blessed are those who mourn. Blessed is the man who seeks no glory for himself. He is on his own, and has to be content to remain alone. He mourns, laments, waits and endures. Blessed is he who gathers no supporters, builds no power base, and seeks no empire of his own.

    • Woe to you who say that temple means nothing, but only the gold in it is what counts …

    Woe to those who try to recruit God to their purposes. Look out, you who claim to act with the authority of God. You claim to lend your authority to our culture, to the education of our children and to our national life. You want the status and the income that you think that your association with church and culture will bring you.

    Our political class wants us to believe that we receive our authority from them. But the authority of this generation cannot come from this present generation. The source of its authority must be much deeper. Authority comes to us across many generations. Our nation has received its identity and its authority from the gospel and from the many generations of Christian witnesses who have shared that gospel and that discipleship with us. Through their efforts we have inherited a more or less politically mature society and learned a level of civility and humanity. All authority comes from God to the people formed by the gospel through all the various forms of discipline, enquiry and science that have developed out of it. Authority does not originate in our current political class, that mistakenly believes that it can lend or withhold authority from the Christian witness, worship and culture. It is not the present regime that has formed this nation. The gospel, and the Church created and sustained by it, are the origin on the nation and the source of authority within it. 

    They claim too much. They take the name of the Lord in vain. They do not give God credit for the generosity that they have received. They should look out. All that they have has come to them as gift, that belongs to God, and which comes from God, and will return to God again, leaving them without authority.

    Look out, you who do not acknowledge that God is the source of generosity. Look out, you who make out that you yourself are the source of all that you have. Our people received grace from God and acknowledged him and gave thanks to him. But you want to cut them off from God and so from all grace and generosity. God is the source of the life of every society and nation. You now wish to cut us, as you have cut yourself, off from the source of life and so hold us captive, so we are hostages in your campaign against life itself. Look out, you who do not worship God. You want to be honoured and respected; you want that worship for yourself, but we will not give it to you. 

    It is not any globalising elite that lends legitimacy to our nation or our culture or our history. It is that faith, that public worship and discipleship, that culture and history that has given our leaders and institutions the authority they have. This authority is lent to them, so that they may invest it in those who would most benefit from it. It is not a piece of their property, which they can keep, bury, sell or exchange for something else. If it is not theirs, they cannot dispense with it. It is God only who gives authority: he gives it first to the community of his witnesses, the Church, and then through the Church, to each people and nation and the world.   

    Look out, you globalists. Look out, you who set out to eradicate every particular local, regional and national identity. You have appointed yourself the dissolver of all national identity. You have made yourself priests in the cult of the universal identity. You want to start, of course, with the particular identity of the Christians. You want to push us out, hound us and silence us so that we are no longer able to speak up for all the other particular identities. Totalitarians always, and rightly, identify the Church as their first opponent. You want to dissolve and homogenise. But you will be dissolved and homogenised in your turn.  

    He who swears by the temple swears by the One who dwells in it…. Whoever looks to the church, and to Christian worship, Christian discipleship and culture, looks to God from whom that church, worship and culture come, and by whom that culture is supported and renewed. Any appeal to our culture is a reference to Christianity and so, however faint, it is an acknowledgement of God. God made us what we once were, what we are now, and what we always could be if we turned around. Our nation and our culture are not so moribund that a single appeal to the Lord would not at once revive and restore them. 

    But blessed are the meek. Blessed are they who submit themselves to the authority of the Lord. Meekness is self-mastery. Self-mastery comes from Christ who learned it and perfected it. He did not flinch; he took on the anguish and fury of the whole world. He did not attempt to escape it, but bore it, alone. And he bears this fury still, for us, who continue to fight him, by our hostility to all, and particular to those whom he sends us. Christ mastered his passions. He withstood and overcame the forces that we used against him, and so he mastered our passions. We have not been able to break him. We cannot make him give in to the fury that moves us, rules us and destroying us. His strength is revealed in his limitless ability to endure. We cannot break him. His restraint and patience are perfect. Christ has perfected self-control. The truly meek one, from whom all meekness comes.   

    Christ offers his own self-control to us. Through his companionship and discipling we may gain the same meekness and participate in his self-mastery. Meekness comes through submitting yourself to the discipline that will make you independent and mature. It will give you self-restraint and so make you civil, and able to receive all others without attempting to recruit them or dominate them, and so you can be members together of an open liberal society. Meekness and self-restraint are fundamental to a secular society.

    • Woe to you who… neglect justice, mercy and faithfulness.

    Whose image is this? And whose inscription? Caesars. Then give to Caesar what is Caesar’s (Matthew 22.20-1) .

    Give back to the dictator what he offers you. Return it. Refuse it. Don’t touch it. Have nothing to do with the works of darkness.

    You pay your taxes, and so you support the state which wants to expand its powers over us, becoming unstoppably idolatrous and tyrannical. It is your failure to bring justice locally in your own community that encourages this endless resort to state power, intervention and centralisation. As you feed the tyrant so he grows, devouring the powerless, enforcing compliance, destroying resistance. You find yourself doing homage to him, giving assurances of your obedience, ever more extravagant displays of worship in his personality cult, until you discover that you have become powerless too. The tyrant is intent on making himself divine. He is the product of our own faithlessness and failure of courage. He is the result of your complicity. It is your worship of him that has created this monstrous world-devouring idol.  

    From whom do the kings of earth collect tax and duties? From their own sons, or from others? From others (Matthew 17.25-6)

    You neglect justice, mercy and faithfulness. You have no appetite for justice. You have given away your own powers. You should have provided justice, quickly and locally. But, instead, you delegated that responsibility to far-away authorities, from whom no justice is forthcoming.

    But blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness

    • Woe to you who clean the outside, while the inside is full of greed and self-indulgence ….    

    Blessed are the merciful. Blessed are the generous.

    But you have shown no generosity. You feel no pity for them and show them no mercy. You do not provide people with the resources they need, do not relieve them of their burdens or cancel or pay their debts. You maintain the appearances, but inside all remains filthy.

    But blessed are the merciful. They are generous, who share what they have received and what they themselves have worked for, who, when the poor ask, bring out of their storeroom provisions that they have long saved and what they have just grown, inherited resources and new ones.  

    They show no mercy. They are ungenerous. They do not share with the poor. But blessed are the merciful…

    You use one measure for outsiders and opponents, and another for your own people. You conceal what you are doing, so you claim to be what you appear, consistent and fair, but you are not. You employ two different standards, and are divided and double-minded, so you are unknowable and unpredictable. You can only create confusion. Without an intrinsic unity and integrity, you cannot be reliable or trusted. 

    The hypocrite wears a mask. The appearance is not the reality. Under the surface they are devious and malevolent. They are not pure, since they are not the same on the inside as on the outside. The outside is all pleasantness and reason, but the inside is all vindictiveness. They want to get back at whoever they imagine opposes them, or has slighted them, or who would refuse them. They are two irreconcilable things, goodness and evil. They discriminate against the poor, and against those who refuse to obey and pay them tribute. They impose a harsh law and penalty on them.

    You stay compliant in order to keep in with the present regime. You make accusations against others, and turn them into the scapegoats that the regime wants. You insist that others obey the regulation of the current regime and conform to current thinking in the hope that you will not be persecuted. You will not hear the call of Christ to follow him through suffering into the long apprenticeship in self-mastery. Wickedness is malice, that wants to destroy whatever is independent and good.

    But blessed are the undivided and single-minded. Blessed are the pure in heart

    • Woe to you who….  are descendants of the those who killed the prophets…

    Woe to those who take up arms against God. Word to you who do not welcome the gospel of peace. Woe to those who raises their voices, hurl insults widen divisions, threaten punishment, and seek no reconciliation. Woe to those through whom violence comes.

    If you allow violence to start, you may be drawn in, and will be unable to escape when the blood-letting starts. Violence will become your master, and your violence will be returned to you. Though you are violent, violence owes you no loyalty, and you will be destroyed as easily as you destroyed others.

    Those who do not follow them, turn against the prophets that God has sent us. They may find themselves drawn into the persecution and murder of the servants of God. They do not want to hear that it is God whom they are fighting, and it is God who will end that fight. 

    You are on the same path as those killers. Woe to you who express contempt, bring division and encourage sectarianism. Woe to you who want to see our resentments grow. Every generation has its psychopaths. If you do not actively attempt to reconcile opposing parties while they are still able to listen to one another, you may find that that the psychopaths are in control and you are no longer listened to. If you insist on following the same path you will end up in the same orgy of violence as they did. They murdered those who brought you the gospel, the news about the peace that God has brought us. You say that you would not have rejected and killed the prophets as your forefathers did. But you are about to reject and kill the prophets sent to you now, the Son of Man and his disciples, and by turning away from the gospel, this nation exposes itself to the same violence. 

    Our cultural leaders today celebrate just a few of the best-known figures of our national history, who were regarded by their contemporaries as Christian prophets. With their heritage industry and by replacing education with indoctrination in schools they sanitize and control our national memory. But they suppress the history and witness because these prophets were Christians, and suggest that, apart from a small selection of exceptional figures, all previous generations were fools and bigots.

    Many want to win the approval of our tyrants, in the belief that they will be rewarded. So they reject most of the prophets given to us today and suppress anyone who does not affirm the claims the regime makes for itself. They decide who is an opponent and dissident and prevent their message from reaching the public, just as their ancestors did in their time. In this way the present regime is the heir of the regime that killed the prophets, punished the missionaries who brought the gospel and so turned the people of Britain from violence to peace. They are not peacemakers, but create the tensions that bring conflict. But blessed are the peace-makers, for they shall be called sons of God

    Seven Things Christians Need to Know

    Seven Things in summary

    1/ God is the sole source of authority

    No state, government or other institution has authority over us unless it is exercised with our consent, a consent that we can withdraw, and acknowledges that it is accountable to us through law. 

    2/ The Gospel gives us a discipleship, a way of life and a Christian culture

    The gospel gives us Scripture, the wisdom that comes through the experience of our fellow Christians and our own well-discipled conscience. The nation and its political culture are formed from Christian culture and require the constant renewal of that culture. Christian culture requires constant renewal through the lives, and through the public witness and the worship, of Christians.

    The gospel has resulted in a vast informal covenant of Christian culture, which has given us a very high view of human sovereignty and the rule of law. This culture crumbles away when it is not renewed by Christian public worship. 

    3/ There is an anti-gospel

    The gospel is imitated, and the imitations are offered as alternatives to the gospel, easier ways to the same end, the hope of human autonomy. We have to contrast the gospel with the anti-gospel, the culture of life with the culture of death.

    4/ There is a contest between the gospel and the anti-gospel

    The gospel raises man, gives him the hope of reaching maturity, and provides him with the company and the discipline by which he may endure the apprenticeship that will enable him to grow up into this maturity. All other rival versions take away this hope, leave him without the discipline or the company that would enable him to aspire to self-mastery, so that he remains foolish, frustrated and angry.

    The gospel made our public institutions, but these have separated themselves from the gospel and are now turning away from public service to the sole pursuit of power, totalitarianism disguised by agendas and ideologies. The gospel re-affirms the truth of their vocation and warns the powerful of the consequences of this betrayal of the hopes of man. This takes place in public confrontation and contest between the gospel set out by Christian witnesses and all the representatives of all rival ideologies and institutions.   

    5/ Each of us has to become aware of this contest

    Each of us has to become aware of this contest, and take measures to protect ourselves.

    We may defend ourselves by learning and internalising for ourselves the whole experience of God’s people, given to us in the Scriptures. We do this in the worship in which the assembly of Christians give their public witness, in which those Scriptures are read and sung to the nation. There is no substitute for the experience we receive through the bible and through the worship that brings us into confrontation with the envious and aggressive rival powers of the age. 

    6/ We may have to resist the ideological and cultic demands of state and corporations.

    We have to say that God only is the source of authority. All exercise of power must keep to its proper calling, which is to serve the common good. It must acknowledge its limits and remain modest. When it does not, its claims expand until it is making absolute claims on us, and compelling our obedience and punishing our autonomy.

    We may have to refuse and resist the demands made on us and endure the consequences of doing so. We may talk through these pressures and threats, and our responses to them, and must make it possible for other Christians to do the same. We must pray publicly for those who are being persecuted, and for those who have overstepped their powers who are persecuting them. 

    7/ Public Worship

    Our public worship is our public speech. You have to meet together in one place with other Christians and raise your voices together, singing and giving thanks to God, praying and lament as Christians have always have done. Our worship of God in Christ is the best thing we can do for our society and nation.

    Seven Things

    1/ God is the sole source of authority

    The gospel is the source of life. The life we have, we have received from God through Jesus Christ, and from no other source. God gives us the promise of a future, in which we live with him, and through him, with one another. This is the gospel that has makes us human and that keeps us civil. It alone can bring us salvation, deliver us from death, and give us the unbroken life that God intends for us. It alone has created, and can sustain the culture of consent out of which the modern world has emerged. The gospel promises us that life, and Christ supplies it to us and defends it against all rivals.

    Christianity is the blessing of God to us and so it is religion of life, and creates a culture of life. But there is another religion, the cult of death, which is the reverse of that blessing. It intends to undermine and remove the blessing. The Life Cult is honest, because it tells us what it is, but the Death Cult conceals what it is. It does not want us to realise that it is a cult, so we are not able to decide against it and defend ourselves from it. It does not present itself as a religion, that is, as a single package, which we can believe and follow, hides behind many claims, which are all claims to power. They present themselves in terms of our personal well-being, of our health, our safety and security, in terms of measures to increase our efficiency, to save whatever is under threat, to manage the economy and bring back growth. These are all claims to power, made by people, by institutions and governments, and behind them, by forces that acknowledge no limits and do not respect us because they do not fear God.  The drive for limitless power is what the Death Cult is. It cannot bring life, so it hates everything that has life, and so only works to take life away. It exercises power through destruction. All our institutions were founded by Christians, but whenever they separate themselves from the gospel, they turn into the opposite of what they were, and become destructive.

    2/ The gospel creates a way of life and a culture

    As the gospel is heard and the Christian life lived, so a Christian culture is formed. The gospel tells us that we are made in the image of God, and so has it created a uniquely high view of the dignity of man. As a result we aspire to be independent, accountable, mature, unafraid, sovereign beings.  We are given freedom, and Christian discipleship gives us the disciple to practice that freedom, to hang on to it, to use it well, which means use it in the service of those around us.

    Religion – the Christian religion and no other – is the means by which we identify what is public, secular and therefore political. It is the means of the identifying what we have in common and then protecting public speech so we can deal with those concerns together. 

    This Christian culture has enabled generations to discover their identity through public service. Public service develops into political service, administration and government. Government is the outworking of the self-government of the many members of nation who understand that dignity comes through service. 

    It is the law, not the state, that is the source of authority. The law gains its authority from the political and moral culture of a nation, which comes from the gospel. The law is an expression of the sovereignty of the people formed by the gospel. The law therefore comes from Scripture and from the natural law of creation, both of them given by God. God is the ultimate source of law, as of all things. The nation is healthy when the state recognises that God, and not itself, is ultimate arbiter, and that the nation, with its long-accumulated wisdom expressed in its customs and culture, is the secular arbiter of law. God gives each of us sovereignty, so together as a nation we have authority to discover the law of God, the blessing revealed by the gospel.  

    This Christian culture that created our law and created this nation, and many other nations. This culture has also created an economy which has expanded around the world. This culture and nation exist only because of this Christian culture. When the gospel is heard, they thrive. When the gospel is not heard, they decay and die. Our culture and nation are dying. All the hospitals and schools and charitable institutions once founded and run by Christians have long been absorbed into central government. As people have demanded that government takes on more responsibility it has made greater claims about its own authority, and taken responsibility away from us. People give their own powers away, and so at our own request the state has demoted us from citizens to clients, customers and supplicants and so it has become our secular saviour. Even Christians have erected this idol and sustained this idolatry, unable to let go even whilst it has grown into a monster that hates them.

    This Christian culture makes you a cultural Christian. It does not make you a Christian. For you to survive, and for that culture to survive, you yourself must take up your cross and become a Christian. You must be born again, be baptised into Christ’s passion and receive the promise of being raised with him at the resurrection of all. You must understand that this baptism makes you a member of his body, and makes you his witness, and it means that you have to receive the power of the Holy Spirit, be fed and equipped, and accompanied by those holy witnesses of all generations. Only so will you grow up, endure that service and be able to suffer the resentment of those who envy you, and so remain a disciple. 

    Our life depends on our preferring the culture of life, and the culture of Christianity therefore. It is for us to promote that culture that can regenerate our nation, adopt that discipline and learn those habits of mind that enable us to regard one another as equals and fellow members of nation, as political participants, and as bearers of the image of God. We may do this when we understand that that culture is not self-supporting. The culture, along with the political peace and economic prosperity that derive from it, must be constantly re-stated and renewed by the gospel. We regenerate our culture by our public worship of God. We cannot be cultural Christians, but must be actual witnesses and worshippers of God. 

    3/ There is an anti-gospel

    There is the gospel and there is an anti-gospel, and there is a contest between the two. There is a shadow gospel, a pretend gospel. The true gospel is so admired and so envied that many imitations of it have spawned. All of them are images of the thing itself, but they are no more than imitations and fakes. None of them can do what the gospel does, for none of them can create life. They want to pass themselves off as less costly and demanding, and want to give you the impression of the same functionality. They claim to do what the gospel does, and yet they are lifeless. The anti-gospel creates an anti-culture, a culture of death.

    The political class say that the political and the religious are two spheres, and that religion is a threat to freedom. But we say that the political and secular, the sphere of our mutual engagement, is generated and renewed by the religious resources of the Christian tradition, and that freedom, along with responsibility and self-discipline, comes from Christianity and can only be renewed by it. 

    Now we are at the turning of the time. If enough of our nation are determined to dismiss God, they will remove from the protection that the covenant has given us, our constitutionality will disappear and our nations will break up. They have taken for granted the advantages given by Christian culture. That protection has given us the priority of truth, the sovereignty of freedom, the dignity of the individual and the rule of law.  None of this is given by nature; it is only given by the gospel, and if we dismiss the gospel, we remove ourselves from this political covenant that gives us truth, freedom, respect, justice and rising standard of living. Our elite has made a mistake, in taking this for granted. As a result, it will disappear, to be replaced by delusion, coercion, subjugation, violence and misery.  We have done this to ourselves. We have not taken up this cross for ourselves, we have not received it and so have not passed it  on, and the result is over so many years in the West each generation has become thinner and weaker. Few Christians are able to explain the purpose of this gospel, or make the connection between the gospel and Western and modern culture. few are able to see that modern culture may collapse as soon as there is no effectively vocal church to provide the public speech and so sustain that political culture of consent. 

    God may leave us. The gospel and the church will continue in other parts of the world, but in Britain and Europe, and these countries and their peace will be replaced by loss of the politics of consent, economic breakdown, civil strife, demographic collapse, and then by a slave society living under totalitarianism. 

    4/ There is a battle going on

    There is a battle going on, over your head and all around you. It is a battle for you. You are the prize they are fighting for. Christ wants you. Satan wants to take you away from Christ. You are vulnerable until you realise this. If you do not take precautions, you will soon be swallowed up by those who want to take your dignity, freedom and life away from you. Each side intends to recruit you, so you must either fight with Christ, and so for your own life, or against Christ, and so against your own survival. This battle is between God who loves you, and the devil who hates you. It is spiritual, but it is fought through many different arenas, so that it may seem sometimes domestic and intergenerational, emotional, mental, psychological, intellectual, financial and economic and public and political. You have so many ways of losing this battle, and only one way of winning and surviving. If you realise that Christ has fought, and is fighting, for you, and you so say so and publicly give thanks, you will survive.

    When you tell us that you don’t believe in God this is not a sign of independent thought. It only tells us that their propaganda has worked on you, conveniently for them. The line that you are convinced is your own, an expression of your own independent thought, has been repeated and drilled into us by the political class over many generations. Even without being a Christian, you are a beneficiary of Christian culture, as you are even when you deride the gospel and belittle Christians. The political class has told us generation after generation that those who confess God are ignorant and unworthy people. You may have submitted to them, and tell us that you don’t believe in God, but this is only because you believe them instead, and believe that they will reward your loyalty to them.

    But it is not ignorant to insist that the powerful may not set themselves in God’s place as our judges, and that it is not for them to decide that we may not be their judges. Our fathers held the powerful to account, and the gospel is how they did so, and we should do the same. It is our essential public service to tell the powers-that-be emphatically that they are not our masters. They have always told us that we have no God just so that they themselves could take God’s powers and use them against us. They don’t want to be interrupted. Nevertheless, it is our job to interrupt them, and to tell whoever, both the powerful and the powerless, that God is the one true source of life and truth, and of all power and authority, and he is the guardian of our dignity and sovereignty. 

    5/ Discipline and discipleship teaches us freedom and responsibility

    The gospel brings service and responsibility, and through them comes freedom. Freedom is learned and exercised through the discipline, and so through the practice of self-control and restraint, that comes with discipleship. 

    The contest is between the culture of freedom that results from the gospel, and the culture of power and force. The culture of freedom creates a space in which a people are able to take each other seriously, listen and speak, debate, agree and disagree, achieve consensus, and make decisions so that policies are formed, solutions are found and settlements emerge. The culture of freedom creates this constitutional way of life, in which everyone understands that everyone else is a participant, a voice and can offer their input, or dissent, refuse, and withhold their permission. It is a slow orderly anarchy, in which enough order emerges to keep most people just about satisfied most of the time. It is not top-down, but an emergent order. This is not the government taking all decisions for us. This is not powerful men deciding that we are too immature to decide for ourselves and doing everything they can to make us even more dependent and childish.

    The culture of freedom exists only as long as people, shaped by Christian discipleship, insist on the dignity of each other person. We are taking part in the contest between the culture of freedom and wide political participation, and the culture of authoritarianism. It is a contest between consent and coercion, between independence and submissiveness, between the political culture of sovereign people, and surrender to the culture of death. We have to make this distinction between the culture of life, and turn to it, and the culture of death, and turn away from it.

    If you do not protect yourself with the protection God’s gives you, you will be picked off, assimilated. Worse than that, you will be turned into an advocate of some self-declared new and improved version of Christianity and, though you may still consider yourself a Christian, you exercise your powers against those Christians who have not been absorbed. Or you may believe that you have grown beyond Christianity. It doesn’t matter which. You are now swapping the gospel, for misleading abbreviations of it, offering half-truths in place of the whole catholic and apostolic truth, and of course you are doing the opposite of what the Holy Spirit intends you to do, and so you working against him. You are now a threat to those around you.

    We have lived under the blessing of God and so under the covenant. We have been sheltered by it for so many hundreds of years, that we assume that it will always be there. But it won’t. That culture is crumbling away and its protection is being taken away from us by forces that despise us. If our regime insists in rejecting God and dismantling the culture that has arisen through the gospel, God may give us what that regime demands. He will hear its prayers. God will let our political class have the consequences of their action, the consequences of which he has long protected them from. The culture of life is preserved by the God of life, but so is our freedom to shun that culture and pursue the culture of death. If our leaders continue to spurn the covenant and its protections, they will no longer have them. God who has held back the anti-culture of decay and the force of demotions will hold them back no more. When we allow our leaders to dismiss the covenant, seven other spirits push their way in and destroy the culture that once made us strong.

    6/ We may have to resist the ideological and cultic demands of state and corporations

    We should keep a proper distance from the state. You may have to refuse and resist the demands made on you. You are a Christian. God has made you his witness. As long as it is renewed by the gospel, you have a mind of your own. You are therefore able to conclude for yourself that our leaders have claimed too much, have lost their way, and do not have authority they claim. You may have to decide that the state has become an enemy of the people it once claimed to serve. You may have to decide that the state has just become a mob that must be withstood. You only have to stand, and give no sign of fear. It is a monster that is all fury, but which has no courage and no staying power. 

    You may have to decide that the particular circumstances in which you are being forced and tormented are not significant. They are not challenging you for the reasons they claim. It is not a matter of your own failings, as they claim, so the particular charges they bring against you may be irrelevant. They are frightened, despairing, angry people, fleeing from God, and determined to humiliate and silence whoever does not join in with them. They think that directing all responsibility and all blame at one individual will absolve them, and that punishing a single scapegoat and will make each member of the mob safe again for a while.  The institutions of the state are this mob. You may decide that you can do no more than have pity on them, and though they cannot hear you, you can declare that God is witness to all this. Whenever the mob becomes enraged against you, you may look up over their heads and see that the Lord is always directly before you.

    You have a conscience. You have a mind of your own. You may have to use it. You may simply have to say, ‘Here I stand. I cannot do otherwise.’ The state is not your friend. You may have to follow your conscience and go the other way, against the crowd, into unpopularity and into constant wrangling with your employer and every institution. The government no longer speaks with one mind and a reliably meritocratic public service intention. It is now many rival forces, some more or less rational, others inadvertently or even deliberately obstructive and destructive. We may to conclude that they are deliberately doing what is destructive and we cannot be their enablers, and will not pay the taxes that make this possible, that we will not be complicit.

    The government may not be your friend anymore. That is the possibility we have to consider and we have to allow one another to say this. We have to listen to one another reservations, weigh up and make decisions, perhaps even the decision to withhold our consent, and to say that we can no longer be members of this political fix, and that we are conscious objectors. Over many centuries Christians in the UK have been regarded as dissenters and nonconformists.

    We cannot give the state or any political party or institution unconditional obedience.  Our governments cannot cede their jurisdiction to any international institution, whether claiming to secure our peace, our defence, our health, or our human rights. Such institutions represent the attempt supplant our own governments and to acquire an unaccountable power over us, exercised from outside our own territory, without consideration of our sovereignty and without reference to our culture and law. The worship of God is all that keeps our public political life modest, limited, truthful, rational and liberal. To worship God is to ensure limited government with a high view of our individual sovereignty. Not to worship God is to allow unlimited government and diminish personal sovereignty. The worship of God is all that keeps a nation political and secular, and prevents it from becoming ideological, cultic and absolutist. Not to worship God is to worship other gods, and to remove our own God-given dignity and autonomy.

    7/ Public Worship

    Our public worship is our public speech. It is the best thing we can do for our society and nation. You have to meet together in one place with other Christians and raise your voices together. You have to pray and lament as Christians have always have done, and by singing and giving thanks to God. 

    Our public worship is our public speech. It is the best thing we can do for our society and nation. You have to meet together in one place with other Christians and raise your voices together. You have to sing what Christians have always sung. You can save your own life by singing. Sing and you and your culture and declare what Christians it is only your voices.

    Singing is saying what is true, but doing it in unison. By standing and singing with others we show that the forces that want to split us up are powerless. the power of God to reconcile us and unite us is more powerful than any other power. The worship of God makes us mature, self-controlled, responsible, social and civil. Only God makes it possible for us to become human, and the more we acknowledge that this is what God does for us, the more the glory he intends for humanity appears in us.  

    Have you seen this 50-page Catechism?

    Part one is here –

    Catechism 4/6 The Creed

    The Creed

    We give a public account of our Christian faith. We give reasons in the hope that others will realise that this faith grounds us in the truth and logic of creation, and enables to live in harmony with all creatures in it. The Creed gives us this account. The first of the ten commandments is that we should worship God, while the Creed identifies for us the God who is to be worshipped.  

    4.1   Our Public Statement of Faith

    We say the creed together in unison in each church service. We read the Scripture and give long recitals of the narrative of God’s saving acts, and we give this short summary of that narrative, and we give many brief acclamations that summarise our faith in a single line. By saying the creed, we offer a single unchangeable and non-negotiable account of our faith, and by doing this, we remain catholic and apostolic and prevent ourselves from veering from the truth.   

    The creed is a record of the faithfulness of the early generations in fending off all the forces that want to bend Christian witness into pagan shapes, and which try to replace the truth with imitations of it. They were all intended to undermine the incarnation and overwrite the revelation of the truth of God’s dwelling with man that the incarnation brought. They want to negate the challenge to the self-appointed divinities and so to maintain the hierarchy in which those at the top have all power and authority, while the powerless remain at the bottom where they are no threat.

    Many powers and spirits try to control us. We can resist them, when we receive power to do from God. We can remain independent of all forces when God makes us so. The pagans who are bound by fate and driven by their resentments to their ancestors, and since they don’t have a choice, they have experience of hope are freedom, and so no gratitude. The gospel must always be stated and expounded again in order to pass the gospel on to each generation. Faithful theology must be set out in the face of faithless theology. As it was in the first centuries of the Church, so it must be in the twenty-first century.

    4.2   We believe in God

    I believe in one God, the Father the Almighty…

    We believe in God. God is first. We are second to him. God calls us to be his second, and so he honours us.

    Maker of heaven and earth, of all that is seen and unseen …

    God is the creator of all things. Creation is his act of hospitality to us. It is the good place in which we can meet, grow and live. In Christ God took flesh, showing that our created materiality is good, and redeeming it so it become glorious. 

    Creation is not an unfortunate lump of evil material within which each of is trapped and from which we have to free ourselves. Material is not evil. The world is not a mistake. The materiality of the cosmos does not impose limits on what God can achieve with it. He is its supreme commander. All creation obeys him, though we do not see that obedience is complete yet.

    The gospel declares that there is such a love that brings God right up close. In the incarnation God appears to give himself away utterly to everything that dishonours him. No other religion or philosophy concedes this. Cultures not shaped by Christianity believe that man is unworthy of God, and that it is not in God’s nature to take any interest in man, and that God cannot endure a relationship that is so ungodlike and so unworthy. 

    The powerful of earth tell us that God does not make himself known to men, and that God himself could never come close to us. A very few men may raise themselves, for a while, but they will inevitably fall again. A few may be exalted to the position of gatekeepers, in a properly pious cult, that intends to preserve the heavens from contamination. The most philosophical expressions of other traditions insists that men are wretches, who cannot and should not be associated with what is precious. They say that they alone can be mediators and go-betweens between God and the poor. All who believe themselves worthy consider us unworthy. When you add to this incarnation the news of the cross and passion of our Lord, the offence becomes even deeper. The news of Christ is always controversial and contested. Every regime understands the threat to its authority.

    Much human art and culture represent our refusal to believe in this love, our wish to hide from it and decide that such love is not possible, and such a vast hope may not be permitted. Some would rather not take the risk than face such crushing disappointment. Some would rather believe that God is a sadist than that he loves us as he says he does. Some believe that their ability to defy him and insist on their own awfulness, is stronger than God’s ability to love them. Pessimism and fatalism are given until the appearance of the gospel, and every act of Christian witness must be pushed upstream against them. 

    We believe in one Lord. Jesus Christ, the only Son of God…

    Man is not brought too near to God; by being brought near to God his identity is secured, not endangered. God is not threatened by the new proximity of man. Man does not bring anything additional, either good or bad, to God. Man neither adds nor subtracts in this relationship. God is not glorified when man is abased or crushed, cast off or ignored. 

    We can consider everyone and everything when we concede that they are creatures of God, each given their own dignity, each knowable within their own set of relationships, in the light of the Jesus Christ.

    Eternally begotten of the Father, God from God, light from light, true God from true God, begotten not made, being of one substance with the Father, Through him all things were made…

    The Father makes himself known to us through his Son, who is of one being with the Father. The phrase, secured by the council of Nicaea, ‘of one being (homoousion) with the Father’ is the confession that fastens man to God. Now we may no longer understand ourselves in any other way than as God’s man. The true God is God-with-man.

    All Christian theology is set out in debate with those who want to take God away from man and from creation. They say that the Son is not of the same being as the Father, but of lesser being, divine only by association, and immediately new intermediaries appear to fil the gap they have opened between God and man, and they are those intermediaries. As soon as it looks as though they have created a job for themselves, a job of pretending to make the relationship between man and God possible, but by pushing themselves in and attempting to create a gap where there is none, they are attempting to take God away from man, and so hoping to make themselves effectively the only God whom man can know.

    This fundamental statement that the Son is ‘of one being’ (homoousion) with the Father is the most succinct expression of the gospel that God is with man as the Father is with the Son. Any departure from this homoousion, is a reversal of the gospel that it is really God who has brought man into communion with himself. The unity of Father with Son, is the unity of God with man.

    When God is with man, man is with man. When God is with man as his companion. Companionship flows from God to man, and man can extend this companionship to his fellows. The division and isolation that spreads across humanity is halted and turned back. Division and death are driven out. The power of homogenisation that reduce the distinctiveness of each person is reversed. No longer is each entity pulled into the collective and finally absorbed back into the ground. Each person is established in their distinctiveness. They will eternally receive their supply of life, of companionship, of freedom and holiness. Communion and unity bring reconciliation and integration.

    The Western conception of God has never been adequately informed by Christian teaching about the incarnation, so it deist rather than Christian. Without the fully Christian doctrine, set out in this creed at Nicaea, the implicit conceptuality of the West assumes that God and man are two monads, units defined in opposition to one another, each fundamentally without communion or communication with anything other than itself. Whatever relationship between them is at most distant and brief.

    The Christian concept of God comes with an equally distinctive concept of Man. Man is the secret of God. God is the secret that only God can make known and does make known. In coming to know this secret man comes into his own true existence. In revealing himself, God both reveals man and calls into being the man he reveals. 

    By the power of the Holy Spirit, he became Incarnate from the Virgin Mary and was made man.

    The Lord took human flesh and dwelt among us. We have seen his glory, because he has taken on our flesh. He has made himself visible, audible, and tangible to us in the same way we are to one another. He has a body just as we do, and so he made himself perceptible to us. He clothed himself in what is created so he can be seen by people like us. 

    The Holy Spirit gave him to us, asking Mary, one member of the people of Israel to act for the whole people in hosting the Lord in her own body. He took her flesh, a sample of the flesh shared by all of us.

    The true and only knowledge of man is as God’s creature and companion. God loves man and has united man to himself. The inexhaustible and unknowable has made himself known, to us. Man may not be known apart from God. God may not be known other than as God who has united man to himself. This achievement must be maintained against the intellectual and ideological pressures around us that intend to divorce God from man, cast man off from God, and tell us such love and union are impossible, and that man is never the worthy recipient of it. God does not enter the circle of the universe. All theist and atheist protests against the outrage of the incarnation and against the audacity of the Christian revolution that express it, are a refusal to take this love as given and receive this communion opened up to us. 

    For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate, he suffered death and was buried…

    To those appalled by the Lord’s association with those who are unclean and unworthy and by his passion and death the gospel is offensive. It is fear of the cross and suffering that makes us reluctant to concede that God has joined himself so irrevocably to our destiny. They represent the end of the attempt by any political or religious elite to raise themselves above all others, act as mediator, and so to promote themselves into a junior God, a second besides God. They persecute us when we contradict them.

    On the third day he rose again from the dead according to the Scriptures…

    Christ took on all that death could inflict, and withstood it, and broke the power of death.

    God himself is our mediator. The hierarchies that claim to be our way to ascend towards perfection are now redundant and their power over us is broken. The layers of priestly middle men are dismissed; our political class has lost its hold over us.

    God is entirely at home in the creation of his own making. Nothing about it manages to repel him. In Christ, God knows the full range of human experience, and of human degradation endured in the passion and crucifixion. 

    The resurrected Christ underwent the incarnation and passion. The glory and power of God is demonstrated in that the Son of God took on all the constraints of a creature, and within them, continued to display that same glory and power. This weakness taken on in the incarnation and passion is evidence of the power of God. The incarnation, passion and crucifixion are the work of the resurrection, which demonstrates that Christ always acted freely.

    Christ did this ‘according to the Scriptures…’ in fulfilment of the covenant and completion of the promises given to Israel. The people of Israel are witnesses of the long and patient approach of the Lord to man, and the record of the patriarchs, prophets and people is available is given to us in the Old Testament.  

    He ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of God…

    Jesus Christ is the truth about mankind. He is the true man who now sits at the right hand of the Father. The truth of us is there where he is. In him, man is already united to God and no power is strong enough to take us away from God.

    Since man has this future, he is not entirely knowable. Man cannot utterly know man, and thus he is not the object of our control or domination, and our attempts to do so are not only totalitarian but futile. Man belongs to God, who secures his identity forever. 

    He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead and his kingdom will have no end….

    God is able to bring judgment and forgiveness and to supply grace. God will establish the truth, and enable a society to investigate so that the truth of any crime or loss is made public adequately, so that that society is satisfied, and the process of reconciliation can start. These processes of judgment and reconciliation are begun, but they are not made complete. What that judgment will be, and what is eventually required to bring justice and reconciliation is not yet known. We look forward to Christ’s coming to establish the truth and to make bring justice complete. The society that is convinced that the process of justice has begun and that it will be completed, will be able to endure the present losses and injustice; it will live in hope and expectation.

    The fundamental act that establishes human freedom, and with this freedom, establishes humanity, is that we defy the powerful. We do this by declaring in public that the powerful are accountable to God, and to us and to all men. All of us are responsible and accountable, the powerful just as much as we are. None of us can put ourselves beyond accountability. We insist that there is truth and generosity and justice, and there are long-developed codes which enable us to say what is good and true and just. These allow us to challenge one another and hold one another to account. This code is given to us in Christian teaching and in the culture, morality and law that that have developed through each nation’s reception of that Christian teaching.

    We believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life, who proceeds from the Father and the Son, who with the Father and the Son is worshipped and glorified…

    The Holy Spirit anoints Christ, and brings us to him, making us the Lord’s people, the body of which Christ is the head. The Spirit is the anonymous servant who brings us together, hosting and enabling each of our relationships, who is able to bring good out of every encounter, who mediates between us all, who gives us power, by reinforcing us with the whole company of heaven, so we act in concert with them and their act is our act, and so making us social and gregarious. The Holy Spirit brings us out of ignorance, confusion and silence to recognise, give thanks and worship the Lord, and so grasp and articulate the whole truth, and to break out of delusion and confinement into the glory he has prepared for us, and so to become free and joyful. 

    The Holy Spirit makes us the people of Christ, members of his holy company. Without constant infusion of fellowship from God, man defines and identifies himself solely in contradistinction to others. He cannot say what he has in common with them and he cannot provide it. This commonality must arrive from outside, from some third party.

    Between every two persons, there is a third, the Holy Spirit. He is that self-effacing servant who makes it possible for each two beings to come together, acknowledge one another’s distinctiveness and become reconciled to each other. He is our interpreter and mediator, the supplier of what each of us needs in order to endure the other. The Holy Spirit continually provides the holiness that makes possible a society of persons, distinct from one another yet compatible with one another.   

    Who has spoken through the prophets

    The long experience of the people of Israel, recorded in the Scriptures and passed down to us, tells the Lord was already on his way. He foresaw what was coming, and through his witnesses he warned us of the opposition he would receive, so that the Old Testament tells us about the cost of our salvation. The Lord long anticipated what he would suffer at our hands, and yet went through this horror for our sake. 

    I believe in the One, holy, catholic and apostolic church…

    The fundamental act that establishes our freedom is the gathering and worshipping of the Christian community shaped by this revelation and this teaching. This community is making a public stand. It is a public manifestation of what is true, good and right. It is not only stating the limits of the claims of the powerful to determine what is true, that is to place themselves above what is true, so the truth is no more than whatever they state.

    But when the communion of saints meets, they demonstrate the authority of God over all the powers of dissolution. every Christian gathering is a reconciliation, an integration of what was otherwise fragmented and partial.

    The Church is the bringing together of the implausible, the unlikeliest of the manifestation of the reconciling of irreconcilables. As they stand there, together, opposites brought face-to-face in, former antagonists, and as they remain publicly together in peace, they display that message. The proximity to one another in which they stand itself indicates the truth of what they say. moreover, they not only say this, but they say it together, so one voice does not dominate while the many are silent, but all voices are heard. Moreover, they do not merely say this, but they sing it, and so they harmonise, each adjusting their words and tone to blend and complement the singing of the others, to amplify and affirm what their leaders say and sing, and so their voices together represent the harmonisation of creation. 

    Jesus Christ makes himself available to us in the public worship of the Christians that gather in each city. This body is the particular, gentle form in which he makes himself known. 

    Christ makes his people one indivisible whole, and the Church is this future whole, making itself present to us in time. God sends us instalments of this whole which make it publicly present within the world, in the communion of this people. The Holy Spirit holds the disparate community of the Church together as this one body.

    Saints are those whom God has made holy so that they may be our companions on our journey with the Lord to God the Father.  We are not divided from them by death. the world is full of people we don’t see. But we may yet see them. We may see them when we become holy enough to do so.

    We acknowledge one baptism for the forgiveness of sins. We look for the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come…

    We enter the holy community through baptism, by which we die to the world and are incorporated into Christ’s passion and death. The truth stands whilst falsehood rages all around it. As we are baptized into the truth, we are immersed in this turmoil, and must now live in the middle of a battlefield. For the truth is to be declared and made public and protected from those who oppose it and want to crush it. This is the vocation of the Church, the community called together by God in order to be witnesses who through the constant public iteration in their worship, state and re-state the truth, broadcasting what would otherwise be suppressed. 

    The Church is always there. Regimes try to assimilate it, but it cannot be assimilated. It is not only the one counter-culture that survives, but the survival of any culture depends on it. The church’s public act of worship penetrates what might otherwise be complete gloom. That worshipping assembly only needs to be stubborn. The representatives of the regime can ridicule, ostracise and ban the church yet still it is here. And just by continuing to be here, those two or three who gather infuriatingly show them the limits of their power.

    As long as any society is vaguely aware that there is this other culture, offered by the Church, this community within the community of the nation it lives on. The best thing for any culture is that it acknowledges that there is this other culture, that cannot be assimilated, that is ancient, and that remains and continues to say now what it has always said, over many centuries. The presence of the Church shows the leaders of that nation the limits of their reach, and so indicates that there are indeed limits, and that the nation is healthy when it acknowledges these.

    Christians say that there is a reservoir of generosity, which we can tap. There is a supply we can draw on, and a delivery of fresh generosity can get us out of difficulty. These moral resources include the means by which damage can be repaired and relationships restored so that life may continue. We insist that the truth may not be controlled or suppressed, but there must always be the possibility of public discovery of truth, a process of acceptance by all parties, and time for that process. There must be confrontation, accusation, judgment, confession, penitence, and punishment. There must be public discussion of restitution. We can do better than resort to collective punishment or appeasement. With enough honesty we can probably identify who is responsible and to punish the right individuals.

    Any society formed by Christian culture shares the assumption that when there is political or financial disaster, we need not stay paralysed. Fresh generosity can make good shattered relationships. We are not obliged to go round and round over the same terrain, making the same mistakes and never learning from them. There is not only the present, but there is also the future.

    The Christian insistence that God is able to provide what we cannot, and that we can appeal to him for more generosity to get us out of trouble, is enough to keep our moral economy partly open to what it has never yet experienced. The future could be larger and more generous than the present. Since there is generosity, there is also hope. Since there is hope, there is the possibility of a world to come.

    4.3   The Impossibility of Man without God

    The doctrine of God is the source of the doctrine of man. The doctrine of man cannot be separated from the doctrine of God. Man exists among men. Each man is one among many, who lives among responsive beings, whom he recognises and who are able to recognise him for what he is. He is able to give them this recognition only because each of them receives recognition from the source that is prior to all of them. Their circle is sustained by the life it receives from the being who is outside it and prior to it. But when man defies this, withholds acknowledgement from God, denies God, and attempts to be the source of his own being, he attempts to wrest life from those around him. Without acknowledgement of any reciprocity, no man can let any other man be, or concede him his own independent existence. Each wants the other to be only what fits the man who considers him. Without God, all life is an attempt to exert a relationship that is unilateral and so to dominate one another.

    But man may exist and hope to grow to maturity he stands in second place, turned to the one who is there before him. God is first. Whatever is first, is God. God is the basis on which there may be more than one, and on which there may be many. The priority of God is the basis on which there may be anything and everything. God makes it possible for each thing allows and enables it to be not-God, distinguishable from God, a distinct being. Man is second to this first. If man is first, nothing follows him or can exist distinct from him – all his creations are transient, and failing. No resources reach them from man, and so they fail and pass away. Man just does not stand on his own. Western ‘theology’ in which doctrine about (deistically-conceived) God always become secularist, that is, in revolt against Christian witness to God. The West continually lurches into heresies about secularism, in which a some conflict is identified between one group of human beings and another. God makes it possible for each being to recognise and be responsive to other beings, and so to be a person. 

    Treating other persons as things, that is, as mere functions purely of our own self-promotion and self-construction is the modern mode of life. We do not concede that we are not the first being, and thus we assert that we are alone, and that we must make ourselves alone. We are determined to make ourselves beings without relationship, without a society, without a context, without our place characterised by history or even by the natural world around us. We recoil from them and denounce them. We are averse to everything. We drive ourselves towards greater self-differentiation and separation, towards fragmentation and isolation. The stripping away of all relationships is what modernity is. It is the long cul-de-sac, into which the generations before us have marched us. We flinch and evince before whatever appears in front on us.

    But we may avoid the direction taken by our most recent generations, turn around, and retrace our steps and pick up the way taken by much earlier generations, who were content. We need to renounce the aversion and unhappiness, and rediscover the contentment and happiness and transmission and continuity from one generation to the next that can only be found through marriage and family life, and through the Christian culture that turns a society away from this despair and which can supply any society with a forward orientation, with confidence, anticipation and which in the Christian gospel goes by the name ‘hope’. In particular we can resist the stripping of men from women, and women from men, and of parents from children, the stripping of the present generation from the future generation. This stripping is what modernity is. It is a syndrome and a pathology. It is the determination not to acknowledge anything it does not construct. It hates the world it finds itself in, and in its place constructs ‘technology’, by which we attempt to increase the distance between ourselves, repudiate the demands of other people and frustrate their attempt to reach us. It is the machinery of distance-creation, intended to enforce our dominion. It is the determination to reduce everyone to the status of servants, and then assert that we do not rely on them but are sustained sheerly by our own will. 

    The Western intellectual tradition contains the resources of the apprenticeship by which man can rise to self-mastery. That tradition is which is the accumulated experience and insight of centuries, of those who followed took this course of those who did not. They contain the resources by which man can decide that the apprenticeship has no attractions, that such a course would be demeaning for him. So this apprenticeship can be conceal and so the ways blocked so others never find it.

    The education offered by schools and universities is composed of intimations of that apprenticeship, and so it directs us towards self-mastery for ourselves, and so enables each generation to hold together as a society and even to flourish. But they when they offer us only bowdlerised and abbreviated forms of that apprenticeship those educational institutions can also inoculate us against that great tradition, so that we never grasp the vastness of the apprenticeship, or realise that the self-mastery that it makes available, is required for the continuation and flourishing of that society.

    But in each generation the elite generation has by attempting to silence the chief proposition of the gospel which is that God holds them to account. God hears the distress of the neglected, of the silenced and the poor. God holds that elite accountable for them.

    That elite is determined to conceal from the poor that they can appeal over the heads of their rulers to God, and that God always hears them, and that they are never cut off from him. The elite has no absolute power; it is always on probation. The elite that attempts to conceal from the poor their true dignity, that does not want them to understand that God hears them, and that those who rule over them and belittle and silence them. Such an elite is running out of time. In every act of public worship, the Christian congregation repents on behalf of such rulers and encourages them to make this repentance for themselves. 

    The rich man says that he does not believe in God. His message is taken up by the entire intellectual class, by university humanities departments and professions. They do not believe God. No, of course not. Their job is to replace God, and so make themselves God, the sole arbiter. They can stand no limits. They must bust them. They must assert their own sheer and limitless will.  The job of the department of religion is to root out the heresy that is ‘belief in God’. They are unable to deal with the complexities of life shared with large numbers of other people. They are narcissists and hysterics, who having a breakdown.

    The victim is a bully. Those who seek power are the same people that are willing to surrender all their freedom and dignity in exchange for security. But this surrender doesn’t give them security. They are anxious and their fear makes them vengeful. They will take it out on you.  They see themselves as victims, and do not want to hear that they are not victims. They find this status comforting, for they want to be able to blame someone else for their misery. They seem to want to be pushed around, and they are amazed that you don’t want to be pushed around. They want to share with you the fellowship of the abused and traumatised. Willingly they surrender their sovereignty. But we cannot do so.  

    4.4 Rejection of the gospel – the claim of ‘Atheism’

    I believe… We believe…

    You may become a Christian. You may believe, that is, you may realize that things are as the gospel describes, and it brings with it power to change our minds. This realization may come to you. It can come if you want it. But the Lord takes his cue from you. He will call. If you call back, he will call again. He will step closer only with your consent, at least until the time at which he makes himself known to all. 

    Our knowledge of God must be a matter of our consent to what the Lord wants to show us, and therefore it is the function of our consent, our faith and readiness to believe. We are not confronted by a revelation that is so indisputable that it takes away our freedom. We can see nothing if we choose.  

    He could do no miracles there because of their unbelief – They didn’t want what he wanted to give them. They had given up, and though he waited for them to change their mind, they did not. They denied their own need

    The question is not whether God exists. The question is not whether there is God. it is whether there is man. God is the condition of possibility of there being man. It is God who brings each man together with and holds them apart, and so sustain their distinctiveness, so that they do not become a sludge. We may become men, and learn about other men, and recognise and honour and respect them, because God enables us to do this. God who is first companion, is the basis of give. He is the fundamental host. There is humanity and there are individual human beings because God makes this so. 

    The rebellion against God is our rebellion against our own best hopes. This rebellion is conceptual and deep, for the West long ago evacuated the concept of God, by imagining that God is a second god to man. God is a possibility, but man is a certainty, and as such is the judge and criterion of all other knowledge. God is at the edge, man at the center. In Europe Christianity took this hit below the water line four hundred years ago, when there was a Reformation, which was simultaneously a reform of the Church and return to faithfulness, and an overreaching and failure of faithfulness. The Church in Europe went through a Reformation that reformed and renewed. The bad Reformation imprisoned the proclamation of the Church within the bubble which has the individual – or the mind, idea, or the will – at its center ever since. It was a return to a Hellenistic idea of the soul imprisoned in a hostile world, and a step back from the idea of the Church as the gathering of God’s people. The individual was the criterion by which all things are judged, while God was out on the periphery. The implicit corollary later made an explicit claim that there is no God. This means that the term ‘God’ has no meaning, and may not be used, and so ‘God’ is simply the idea that you are not allowed to have, the impermissible thought. This is equivalent to saying that there is no judge, that is, there is no such thing as a judge, and thus that truth is through hostage to the will of the individual, or the political class or the regime. The solitary unaccountable will is supreme. Willpower, or simply power, is all there is.  The will of the individual is God. Sheer power is God.

    The claim that there is no God, no such thing as ‘God’ or a ‘god’, is simply a universal act of powerplay directed against us, by those who don’t want us to identify the claims they are making as divine claims, and as unjustifiable ones. They want their own claims to without challenge. They do not want us to demand that public justification of their claims. They do not want us to be able to say that they are making absolute and therefore divine claims. They simply do not want to be challenged, and so wish to deny us the conceptuality by which we can do so. The doctrine of God enables us to challenge and demand an account from those who wish to remain unaccountable. We say that no one is unaccountable. They may consider themselves so far above us, and consider us so far beneath them. We reply that they are making a claim to mastery, but their claim is false, but is only an expression of their own misery. They are making a claim to divinity, but no one is divine, except God alone, and God has made himself accountable to us. Only the God who has sent his Son, who took on and now bears our flesh and our humanity, is God. The God of Jesus Christ is the sole mediator for humanity, and who, and in providing for all our needs, is our Saviour. That is the gospel and that is the good news.