Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Commentary: Reclaiming Fear
Commentary: Reclaiming Fear
Apr 23, 2026 9:00 AM

Perhaps no other adjective better captures the American political climate than fearful, says Andrew Knot in this week’s Acton Commentary (published May 25). “The past decade has witnessed a spike in fear-driven politics, at least accusations of such. ing election appears no different,” he adds. The full text of his essay follows. Subscribe to the free, weekly Acton News & Commentary and other publications here.

Reclaiming Fear

byAndrew Knot

The march toward the 2012 presidential election inevitably brings a heightened level of political discourse. The campaign season is marked by advertisements and speeches larded with language so parsed and focus group-tested that it can be difficult to wade through the political hedging to get to any real meaning. The American populace is left woefully removed from the messages of its political leaders and inspires an mon reaction across the partisan landscape: fear.

Perhaps no other adjective better captures the American political climate than fearful. The past decade has witnessed a spike in fear-driven politics, at least accusations of such. ing election appears no different.

For the past four years and dating back to the Bush-43 Administration, Democrats’ chief charge against Republicans has focused on the GOP’s alleged fear-mongering. With varying degrees of legitimacy, the Left leveled claims of terror-infused politicking against its conservative opposition. Those accusations gained mainstream traction and successfully steered Barack Obama’s vehicle of Hope and Change to the Oval Office.

The 2010 midterm elections saw the introduction of the Tea Party to the political arena. As the Tea Party progressed in influence and success, so did the Left’s charges of fear trafficking.

The 2012 edition presents a stark contrast from the elections of 2008 and 2010. This time around, Republicans are promising change while Obama’s reelection bid is adopting a tune of trepidation. Ross Douthat and Maureen Dowd each have taken to the pages of theNew York Timesto note the devolution of Obama’s campaign strategies from inspirational to reactionary and fear-driven. Following the strategies of their political adversaries, the Right has responded accordingly: At the beginning of the month, American Crossroads put together a video montage juxtaposing Obama’s 2008 message of hope and change to a 2012 revised version of “fear and loathing.”

Political disillusionment and angst is widespread and bipartisan. Certainly, ing election carries weighty implications for the future of the country. A due amount of anxiety is allowed, but how has fear e the preeminent tone of today’s political discourse? And how, exactly, is the electorate to react?

The answer begins with the recognition that the paranoia problem isn’t partisan. Neither Republicans nor Democrats, nor conservative or liberal ideologies, have a monopoly on a fear. Today’s political conversations are just as likely to include calumnies from the Left about a supposed Republican “war on women” as conservative warnings of munist economic overhaul. Deeming one party the “party of fear” is its own form of propaganda.

Any solely political examination of fear is plete because this emotion is the subject of such a vast theological history. Old Testament writers consistently identify fear as the proper response to God. Psalm 111:10 and Proverbs 9:10 state plainly, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” Qoheleth, the speaker in Ecclesiastes, concludes that man’s final duty is to “Fear God and keep mandments” (Eccl. 12:13).

Of course, the Old Testament brand of fear is something entirely different from the type espoused in political advertisements. TheCatholic Encyclopedianot only differentiates between grave fear (metus gravis) and petty worry (fetus levis), it makes a third distinction:metus reverensalis, a variety of fear that stresses reverence, respect and trust. This is the sort of fear promoted in the Old Testament. It’s what John Calvin meant when he wrote, “Without the fear of God, men do not even observe justice and charity among themselves.”

Like the Founding Fathers, Calvin recognized the dignity of the individual. It stems from humanity’s created nature in the image of God. Thisimago Deirecognition is what’s absent when fearful reverence in political banter is reduced to fear-mongering.

So perhaps what today’s political landscape needs is not a prohibition on fear, but a reclaimed sense of fear—moremetus reverensalisthanfetus levis. This is the fear that’s found in America’s cultural DNA. It’s present, not over the airwaves or behind a bully pulpit, but in the country’s Judeo-Christian backbone. Only when that reverential sense of fear is restored to our nation’s politics can we experience a society marked by justice and charity.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Peter Jackson’s World War I film is superb
In 1909, the British scholar and later Nobel Peace Prize winner, Sir Norman Angell, published a short pamphlet entitled Europe’s Optical Illusion. Subsequently republished a year later as The Great Illusion, Angell argued that the economic cost of a mass war in the industrial capitalist world would be so great, that, if it happened at all, it would be momentary. Angell also thought that the integration of capitalist economies across national boundaries which prevailed at the time made the likelihood...
Cronyism and conservatives
A major problem with America’s economy is what’s often called “crony capitalism” or simply “cronyism.” In other places, I’ve defined cronyism as the situation in which free markets are hollowed out and replaced by political markets. Businesses e less interested in meeting consumer demand and much more focused on extracting privileges, favor, grants, etc., from the state. When people speak about “the Swamp,” cronyism is often what they have in mind. Economic entrepreneurship gets displaced by political entrepreneurship. With good...
How San Fransisco’s housing policy makes it harder for the homeless
I recently highlighted California’s counterproductive restrictionson private efforts to feed the homeless. But the state’s policies aren’t just inhibiting the bottom-up activities of non-profits and charities. They’re also restricting potential solutions via entrepreneurial investment. Alas, many municipalities have severely restricted new residential development, causing the housing supply to diminish and the cost of living to soar. In a city like San Francisco, such an approach has led to the highest rents in the world and a housing market wherein 81%...
The false promise of an ‘ultramillionaire’ tax
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) is running for president in 2020, and she has gained attention for proposing an “ultramillionaire” tax: a 2 percent tax on households with a net worth over $50 million and an additional 1 percent on households worth over $1 billion. Warren’s proposal has more popular support than Rep. Ocasio-Cortez’s (D-NY) proposal to raise the marginal e tax rate on top earners to 70 percent, according to FiveThirtyEight. Indeed, Warren’s proposal has support among a majority of...
Explainer: What you should know about Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Green New Deal
What exactly is the Green New Deal? Yesterday Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) released a proposed resolution titled, “Recognizing the duty of the Federal Government to create a Green New Deal.” The document is a simple resolution, a proposal that addresses matters entirely within the prerogative of the House of Representatives. It requires neither the approval of the Senate nor the signature of the President, and it does not have the force of law. Simple resolutions concern the rules of one...
Socialism, by any other name
At the end of January I had the pleasure to speak with my friend of many years Ricardo Ball about the ongoing crisis in Venezuela. The conversation was livestreamed from the Acton Institute allowing an international audience to listen in as we discussed recent developments from the streets of Caracas. The conversation is still available for viewing on our livestream page. The tragic case of Venezuela is but one in a seemingly endless series of failures of socialism from which...
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Green New Deal is the same old socialist hooey
Official Washington is all atwitter today over the release of the “Green New Deal” by New York freshman Democrat Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Massachusetts Senator Ed Markey, also a Democrat. The proposal bundles many long-desired goals of the environmentalist movement into a neat legislative package, described by left-leaning Vox in this way: The resolution consists of a preamble, five goals, 14 projects, and 15 requirements. The preamble establishes that there are two crises, a climate crisis and an economic crisis...
Venezuelan Cardinal stands down Maduro’s Vatican mediation request
The Venezuelan bishop of Merida and current apostolic administrator of Caracas, Cardinal Baltazar Porras Cardozo, stood tall and firm while rejecting the validity of President Nicolas Maduro’s recent appeal for Vatican diplomacy. Maduro had written to the pope this week seeking his help amid an escalating violent opposition to his socialist government which has all but destroyed the country’s economy and thrust millions of people into abject poverty. Cardinal Porras publicly denounced Maduro’s letter to Pope Francis – of which...
The libertine road to serfdom
The Sexual State: How Elite Ideologies Are Destroying Lives and Why The Church Was Right All Along. Jennifer Roback Morse, Ph.D. TAN Books, 2018. 406 pages. Reviewed by Rev. Ben Johnson Keen-eyed analysts have probed every ideological trend threatening liberty – from socialism and fascism to the Alt-Right – with one glaring exception: the revolt against personal responsibility. Jennifer Roback Morse, the founder of the Ruth Institute,capably fills this void in The Sexual State. Building on her previous book Love...
A rule of thumb for the Green New Deal
I have a couple rules of thumb that I hope help me cut through some of the noise around various policy proposals and political debates. One has to do with budgetary reform (a topic I covered at some length last week): If the plan doesn’t engage with entitlements, then it isn’t really a serious proposal. The same goes for policies that have to do with environmental stewardship, and particularly those focused on lowering carbon emissions. If nuclear power isn’t a...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved