Why the AntiChrist Matters in Politics
Matthew Sutton's reflections on the antichrist and American politics can be found in today's New York Times under the title "Why the Antichrist matters in Politics." There is some great food for thought here including how dispensational premillennialism (Sutton wisely didn't use this term in an op-ed) feeds anti-government sentiment. He also suggests that a power vacuum among politically oriented evangelicals have allowed libertarians and Tea Party activists (like Bachmann, Perry, and Paul) to exploit evangelical energies without the type of religious leadership (previously seen in individuals like Billy Graham and Jerry Falwell) who tempered the tendency toward apocalyptic excess. Perhaps a throw-away line, but I appreciated the analogy with Marxism to explain apparent tensions within the evangelical between expectation and action. After all, to those of us who study apocalypticism historically, it is easy to see Marxism as a secularized form of Christian apocalypticism (albeit a this-worldly type). The whole piece can be found here.
Update from Paul: Matt is going appear this evening on MSNBC's "The Last Word" with Lawrence O'Donnell, via satellite. Check your local listings!
Update from Kelly: Here's the clip!
Comments
Best concluding paragraph ever. Well done, Matt. Well done, NYT.
http://www.therightscoop.com/obama-heckled-called-anti-christ-at-ca-campaign-event/
The hole in the donut of the essay.
Walter Russell Mead has a more temperate take.
http://blogs.the-american-interest.com/wrm/2011/09/20/the-christianist-nightmare-its-just-a-bad-dream/