Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
First Reformed: The toxic mess of syncretism
First Reformed: The toxic mess of syncretism
Dec 25, 2025 12:44 AM

There’s a lot to process in Paul Schrader’s latest film, “First Reformed.” The first half of the film sets up as a powerful, even brilliant, study of spiritual desolation and the cross-currents of modern idolatry and traditional religion. It is possible to sympathize with the protagonist, even as Rev. Ernst Toller’s desperation spirals deeper into darkness.

The plot revolves around the recurring question: Can God forgive us? That is, can God forgive us for our myriad sins of omission mission?

Ethan Hawke’s performance is captivating. Much of the power of “First Reformed” is found in its engagement with modern forms of idolatrous syncretism, the conflation of Christianity with paganism and worldly ideology. Perhaps the best treatment of the two great alternative “religions” is by Robert H. Nelson, who describes economics and environmentalism as secular forms of faith. For Nelson, secular faith in economics is the analogue to Calvinism, while secular environmentalism, with its pseudo-sacramental view of nature, corresponds to Catholicism. The spiritual reflections of Thomas Merton figure largely in the film, connecting Roman Catholic spirituality with Reformed identity.

Both economism and radical environmentalism are on display in “First Reformed.” Abundant Life, the church that oversees First Reformed, is described in one place as “more of pany than a church.” mon trope of an evil industrialist is embodied in Balq Industries and its leader, Edward Balq, whose cronyism seemingly corrupts both ecclesial and civil politics.

The church itself is based in the fictional Snowbridge of upstate New York. It is a church founded by Dutch, and notably Frisian, settlers. The Reformed theological casting of “First Reformed” rings true in many ways. The first church service of the film opens with a responsive reading of the first question and answer of the Heidelberg Catechism. This show’s Shrader’s Dutch Reformed roots, as “First Reformed” takes its inspiration both from the everyday piety of Reformed Christians and the shallowness of much religiosity, as well as real-world events, such as the case of Wiebo Ludwig.

In “First Reformed” we see the toxic mess that results bining Christianity with worldly ideology. We get glimpses of true faith here and there. But mostly what we see is religion turned into a rationalization of or justification for acting out of all-too-human despair. Just over halfway through, the film takes a new age turn, which emphasizes the deformation of Christian faith into a sub-Christian syncretism. As Nelson puts it, both economism and environmentalism are forms of scientism: “It has been characteristic of the entire modern age—from nineteenth-century Marxism to deep ecology today—that powerful religious beliefs, in most cases derived from Jewish and Christian sources, have been translated into a new positivist language of science.”

As in the days of Noah, in “First Reformed” we see what a world without God, or rather one consumed with various forms of idolatry, might look like. It’s not a pretty picture.

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
‘Coerced, Perfunctory, and Unreflective Patriotism’
Here’s the text of a letter sent this morning to the editor at Woman’s Day magazine (don’t ask why I was reading Woman’s Day. I read whatever happens to be sitting in the rack next to mode): Paula mentary on the Pledge of Allegiance (“Pledging Allegiance,” September 1, 2007) sounds incredibly McCarthy-esque. Are we to now believe that having qualms about mandatory recitation of the Pledge constitutes an un-American activity? Spencer dismisses the many reasons that one might object to...
Global Warming Consensus Alert
Today brings disturbing news of new consensus that seems to be developing: Modern women want men who are keen on recycling rather than good at making wisecracks, a survey said. The poll for men’s magazine Nuts said going green is now the main way to a woman’s heart, with a “good sense of ing in second. Oh great – a clean, tidy, and humorless future. Thanks, ladies. Thanks a lot. ...
Classical Music = Gang Repellant
My local library is apparently having a problem with youth gangs who are using the puters to access social networking sites, such as MySpace and Facebook. The hooligans are defacing each others sites, sending threatening messages, and causing other kinds of trouble. From the Wyoming Advance, “A place that should be safe for children has seen graffiti, assaults, loud and vulgar language, patron intimidation, public sexual encounters, carving gang symbols in furniture, and more.” What is the library to do?...
Who is favored?
My brothers, as believers in our glorious Lord Jesus Christ, don’t show favoritism. Suppose a es into your meeting wearing a gold ring and fine clothes, and a poor man in shabby clothes es in. If you show special attention to the man wearing fine clothes and say, “Here’s a good seat for you,” but say to the poor man, “You stand there” or “Sit on the floor by my feet,” have you not discriminated among yourselves and e judges...
Retribution and Forgiveness
Richard John Neuhaus, over at the First Things blog On The Square, posts an excerpt from the ing print edition that excoriates the NAB translation (also noted at Mere Comments). Neuhaus writes of Jesus’ answer in Matt. 18:22 to Peter’s question, “Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother when he sins against me? Up to seven times?” that “Jesus obviously intended hyperbole, indicating that forgiveness is open-ended. Keep on forgiving as you are forgiven by God, for God’s...
From Trash to Treasure
Last week I linked to this R&L item, “The Leaky Bucket: Why Conservatives Need to Learn the Art of Story.” And two weeks ago, I discussed the relationship between environmental stewardship and economics. You may recall that the first story featured in Acton’s Call of the Entrepreneur documentary is that of Brad Morgan, a Michigan dairy farmer. Faced with huge costs to dispose of cow refuse, Morgan’s entrepreneurial vision took hold: “His innovative solution to manure disposal, turning it into...
Affirmation Blankets
Just when you thought America’s Rogerian culture of prostrated self-worship couldn’t get anymore nauseating…. ‘I boldly ask for what I want!’ ….Enter, the Affirmation Blanket. I am almost reluctant to give these people more publicity, but this is way too funny to pass up. Some of my favorite lines are, “I am perfect just the way I am,” (found on the “Serenity” blanket), “Success and prosperity follow me everywhere I go” (from the “Joy” blanket — because we all know...
Bucer, “The Sixth Law: Poor Relief”
Readings in Social Ethics: Martin Bucer, De Regno Christi (selections), in Melanchthon and Bucer, Book II, Chapter XIV, “The Sixth Law: Poor Relief,” pp. 306-15. References below are to page number. Giving aid to the needy in the church is a manifestation of an attribute of the church, for “without it there can be no munion of saints” (307).What the church and its representatives are and are not responsible for: “First, they [deacons] should investigate how many really indigent persons...
Time Magazine Gets It Wrong: Boys Are Still In Crisis And Securing An Immoral Marketplace
The boy crisis is not a myth. David Von Drehle’s article, “The Myth About Boys,” in this week’s Time Magazine argues that the boy crisis of the 1990s has leveled off and is now improving. Not exactly. This assessment, however, pletely dependent on one’s moral framework. Boys are still in crisis, regardless of what feminists and other women, like some published in the Washington Post, are saying. It’s a crisis of morality. The ongoing crisis will have dire consequences because...
Bucer, “Care for the Needy”
Readings in Social Ethics: Martin Bucer, De Regno Christi (selections), in Melanchthon and Bucer, Book I, Chapter XIV, “Care for the Needy,” pp. 256-59. References below are to page number. Bucer praises the deacon as an office of the institutional church and an artifact of the early mending it to reestablishment in the evangelical churches: “it was their principal duty to keep a list of all of Christ’s needy in the churches, to be acquainted with the life and character...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved