Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The ‘King of Israel’: The Caesar strategy or cultural renewal?
The ‘King of Israel’: The Caesar strategy or cultural renewal?
Apr 17, 2026 6:27 PM

President Donald Trump ignited a national debate when he shared ment referring to him by the messianic title of the “King of Israel.” Whatever this says about President Trump, it unintentionally revealed a great deal about Western mitment to salvation by politics, and it brought to the surface a long-simmering question we must answer: Will we pursue cultural renewal through the sustained preaching and incarnation of the Gospel, or will we turn to a secular ruler for deliverance?

The evidence, to date, has not been encouraging. Many U.S. clergy seem to have adopted a strategy for preserving liberty that is diametrically opposed to that of the Founding Fathers. Instead, the modern Christian approach better reflects a biblical warning which, when ignored, leads to both tyranny and apostasy.

“King of Israel”

President Trump tweeted a message from Wayne Allyn Root, saying that Israelis consider the president “the King of Israel” and “the ing of God.” (Capitalization in original.)

….like he’s the King of Israel. They love him like he is the ing of God…But American Jews don’t know him or like him. They don’t even know what they’re doing or saying anymore. It makes no sense! But that’s OK, if he keeps doing what he’s doing, he’s good for…..

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 21, 2019

To be sure, this statement reflects the president’s singularly high self-regard. But in another sense, it merely encapsulates the views of too many of the faithful. Christians vest political leaders with messianic powers in two ways: They view civic leaders as secular liberators and ask them do the Church’s job.

One may read this mindset between the lines of a recent Barna survey found that the number of Protestant pastors “very concerned” about religious liberty declined between 2014 and 2017, even as U.S. mitment to religious freedom fell. The reason for their relief during this time is not hard to pinpoint: the change in presidential administrations. One tried pel nuns to distribute contraception; the other offered a generous conscience exemption to private business owners (although, nota bene, the HHS mandate remains on the books) and stopped trying to use federal education funding to blackmail schools into accepting an innovative view of gender identity.

Christians have a pervasive belief that, by securing the top office in the nation, they have secured religious liberty. I’ll call this “The Caesar Strategy”: Win Caesar’s approval, and the future is assured.

History proves having a leader favorably disposed to holy mother Church is a beneficial, though not necessary, condition for the promulgation of the faith. Winning the governor’s approval has regularly opened the door to spreading the Gospel. The most famous conversion in history may be the Emperor Constantine’s decision to conquer “in this sign,” which set Christianity on its way to ing the cultusof the West. St. Patrick evangelized Ireland after he earned the favor the king of Tara. Eastern Orthodox Christians call the conversion of Great Prince Vladimir to Christianity in 988“the baptism of [Kievan] Rus,” which catalyzed the gradual conversion of Russia as a whole.

However, a well-inclined leader is insufficient, and when his power stretches outside the bounds of liberty jealously established by the Founding Fathers, it can e disastrous.

Seduction and reduction

Blurring the lines of Church and State distorts both institutions. This can be seen clearly among Catholic integralists, who would deputize bishops to arrest heretics and schismatics. Thomas Pink, a philosophy professor at King’s College London, writes: “[A]ccording to traditional doctrine, the [Roman Catholic] Church has the right and authority” to enforce its jurisdiction over all baptized Christians “coercively, with temporal or earthly penalties as well as spiritual ones.” (Emphasis added.) Non-Catholic Christians may be punished by the Church for certain acts of “heresy, apostasy, and schism” in order “punitively to reform heretics, apostates, or schismatics, or at least to discourage others from sharing their errors.” Pink adds, ominously, that the Church has the “authority to use the state as her coercive agent.” (See also Pink’s response to our friend, Fr. Martin Rhonheimer.)

This violates the Gospel, which demands that human beings accept divine mercy of their own free will. A coerced faith is no faith. Heresy police would be patible with certain Islamic interpretations of dhimmitudethan the Christian, patristic doctrine of religious liberty. However, opting to “use the state” also tempts the Church to gradually withdraw from public life.

The baptism of state power predisposes the Church to outsource all her ministries to the State. After all, if government tend souls on the Church’s behalf, it can certainly perform the corporal works of mercy for Her. Witness the Church of England, which once had a thriving ministry of private, parochial schools. When politicians took over this function in 1870, clergy acquiesced or cheered the process on – as they did the formation of the NHS and other state organs that pushed the church to the margins of society. “Christian leaders failed to appreciate the consequences of endorsing a collectivist secular world without redemptive purpose,” wrote Frank Prochaska in his Christianity & Social Service in Modern Britain.

In any merger, both factions vie for control. In the marriage of Church and State, the Church will always be the weaker partner. This has not been lost on politicians.

Elected officials wonder, if they are doing the heavy lifting, why their views should not hold sway over religious life. One modern example came as the Social Democrats gained control of the Church of Sweden. Former Education Minister Arthur Engberg revealed his party’s plan to “de-Christianise the church through its connection with the state” and cause it to proclaim “an atheistic general religiosity.”The roles of Church and State reversed pletely across Europe that, as former Chancellor of the Exchequer Nigel Lawson said, today the NHS is “the closest thing the English people have to a religion.”

No king but …. ?

All of this contrasts with the U.S. conception of religious freedom. The United States emerged from the revolution as a nation without an established national church – but one firmly guided by religious, and explicitly Christian, principles. This view translated to its view of political leadership, as well. “If you ask an American who is his master,” a colonial official informed the Board of Trade in 1774, “he will tell you he has none, nor any Governor but Jesus Christ.”

The Founders saw the only limit to government is a strong, free, and virtuous people. “A good form of government may hold the rotten materials together for some time, but beyond a certain pitch, even the best constitution will be ineffectual,” said John Witherspoon, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, in a widely circulated sermon in 1776. “On the other hand, when the manners of a nation are pure, when true religion and internal principles maintain their vigour, the attempts of the most powerful enemies to oppress them monly baffled and disappointed.”

“He is the best friend to American liberty, who is most sincere and active in promoting true and undefiled religion,” Witherspoon concluded.

Today, American clergy seem to have forgotten that national prosperity rests on the bedrock of Judeo-Christian principles. Anyone familiar with the Book of Judges’ is marked by a “pattern of apostasy, judgment, repentance, and deliverance” knows there is nothing new under the sun. The Israelites’ sin led them into tyranny until, having driven His people to penitence, God sent them a judge/liberator. But the subsequent prosperity began the cycle anew, as “every man did what was right in his own eyes.” During times of plenty, the people of God made fort the arbiter of their morality.

Scripture meant this as a warning, not a model. Yet the same sequence takes place as Christians disengage from the culture whenever a friendly Caesar reigns instead of promoting a widely diffused virtue. Clergy and laity alike have tuned out each time a friendly candidate swept into the Oval Office – and liberty has declined as the result.

As the last few years have proven, what is given by executive order can be repealed by executive order. This is true even of the most consequential issues facing the most vulnerable. The fact that these sea changes seesaw with every change in political leadership points out the fatal flaw: Those who adopt the Caesar Strategy can never lose control of Caesar. The corollary from history, modern or ancient, is that they inevitably do lose control. And the nation craters once again.

The Fifth Great Awakening

The opposite program may be called cultural renewal. History shows how deeply genuine religious principles affect politics. The American Revolutionary War was dubbed “The Presbyterian Rebellion.” The late Harvard history professor Alan Heimert wrote that the Great Awakening so influenced mid-eighteenth century colonial thought that, when “America was confronted by a genuine revolution, it would often be concluded that what the colonies had awakened to in 1740 was none other than independence and rebellion.”

A twenty-first century cultural renewal requires Christians to speak to those outside the confines of the church, institutional or otherwise. Hostile secularism, which masquerades as rationalism, strikes at the root of Western progress.

American Christians, especially pastors, must appreciate how economic freedom facilitates the rights of all people to live their own values. “There is not a single instance in history in which civil liberty was lost and religious liberty preserved entire,” Witherspoon warned. “If therefore we yield up our temporal property, we at the same time deliver the conscience into bondage.”

They can make a case for the value of religious exemptions. But Christians also have to muster the courage to make a direct case for their moral viewpoint, forthrightly and without apology – and persuade others to share in their vision, as well.

They must arrest the ascendancy of Progressive Puritanism, which uses overreaching state power to tell people what to believe, economically punishes dissenters, and physically threatens anyone not enthusiastically taking part in the orgy of nihilism and destruction. And it weaponizes federal funding streams by forcing taxpayers to underwrite the violation of their strongly held moral and religious principles.

Christians must make the case that a peculiar confluence of faith, virtue, and freedom turned the West into the most powerful force in human history. They must have a firm understanding of the economic realities that fuel this advancement and the constitutional boundaries that prevent an unfavorable government from destroying the entire enterprise.

As gargantuan a task as this may seem, it is far from impossible. The public perception of the morality of racism, as well as cultural issues such as tobacco use, recycling, and the morality of an overly large carbon footprint has changed dramatically in a short period of time. And our job will get no easier as societal virtue ebbs.

This is a message that people of faith cannot outsource to a king, a Caesar, or a czar. They must deliver it in person. But before they preach this message, Christians must first be certain that they believe it.

Donald Trump addresses Yokota Air Basein Japan in 2017.Senior Airman Donald Hudson. This photo has been cropped. Public domain.)

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
Connecting France with good economics
It seems that it may be possible. An interesting article from yesterday’s International Herald Tribune: Danielle Scache tries to avoid using the term “capitalism” in her economics class because it has negative connotations in France. Instead, she teaches her high school students about the market economy, a slightly less controversial term she started using last year after a two-month internship at the dairy giant Danone. That was an experience that did away with more than one of her own prejudices,...
Rights of skilled and unskilled alike
An op-ed earlier this week in the New York Times examines the emphasis and attention that has been placed on the influx of low-wage immigrants to the United States. According to Steven Clemons and Michael Lind, “Congress seems to believe that while the United States must be protected from an invasion of educated, bright and ambitious foreign college students, scientists, engineers and entrepreneurs, we can never have too many low-wage fruit-pickers and dishwashers.” They base this conclusion on many of...
Marriage in the city
In this mentary, Jennifer Roback Morse takes a look at the socio-economic factors that influence the age at which young people aim to get married. Many are waiting. One reason why so many young people put off marriage unitl their late 20s or early 30s, says Morse, is that the cost of setting up an independant household is too high — unjustifiably high. Physically, humans are ready to reproduce in the mid-teens; financially, young people are not ready to be...
AIDS: not that bad?
Bryan Caplan at EconLog says that he has long wondered about the validity of the statistics of the spread of AIDS on the African continent: The whole story had a quasi-Soviet flavor to it. The main difference: Soviet growth statistics were too good to be true, while African AIDS statistics were too bad to be true. Reflecting on the incentives cemented my skepticism: Just as the Soviet Union had a strong incentive to exaggerate its growth numbers in order to...
Hodgepodge is good
Silla Brush penned an interesting little piece in the latest U.S. News and World Report, using the Massachusetts health care bill as a springboard to a wider observation of policy innovation at the level of state government. Leaving aside what any of us may think about any of the initiatives mentioned (they mostly represent bigger government), the observation is a good one. But then this: When the feds stall, leave it to the states. The result may be a hodgepodge....
Bigger and better
When I was in college, living in the dorms, friends of mine would play a game called bigger and better. In this game, they would take an object–something that they owned–and trade it up for something that was worth a bit more to them, but worth a bit less to the person that they were trading with. This is a perfect example of a market economy. You have something that you can trade, somebody else has something that they can...
Chirac waves the white flag
French President Jacques Chirac has given in to the student protests in his country, protests that called for the removal of the First Employment Contract. This is a controversial new law giving employers greater freedom in whom they fire amongst under-26 employees. The law, as I am sure you’ve seen, sparked students protests for weeks. Michael Miller in last Wednesday’s Acton News and Commentary addressed the deeper issue here: economic ignorance and moral apathy–I won’t repeat his analysis here. But...
The sweetness of the Law
menting briefly on Psalm 19, C. S. Lewis observes the description of God’s Law as “sweeter than honey” and “more precious than gold,” the kind of descriptions that occur again and again throughout the Psalter. Lewis writes, In so far as this idea of the Law’s beauty, sweetness, or pireciousness, arose from the contrast of the surrounding Paganisms, we may soon find occasion to recover it. Christians increasingly live on a spiritual island; new and rival ways of life surround...
Catholics on immigration
Jordan’s post below observes the divisions among evangelicals on the hot-button issue of immigration. Its divisiveness—cutting across the usual lines of conservative/liberal and Democrat/Republican—has made the immigration debate an unusual and therefore extraordinarily interesting one. The issue also divides Catholics. Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony has been among the most promising national voices in favor of immigrant rights. But ments have not gone unchallenged among Catholics. Activist Jim Gilchrist denounced Mahony’s views. Kathryn-Jean Lopez at NRO questioned them more delicately....
Democracy and education
Here’s an abstract of some recent NBER research: “Why Does Democracy Need Education?,” by Edward Glaeser, o Ponzetto, Andrei Shleifer “Across countries, education and democracy are highly correlated. We motivate empirically and then model a causal mechanism explaining this correlation. In our model, schooling teaches people to interact with others and raises the benefits of civic participation, including voting and organizing. In the battle between democracy and dictatorship, democracy has a wide potential base of support but offers weak incentives...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved