Posted in Political

Political Soteriology: The Desperate Search for a Political Messiah

Soteriology is the study of salvation, traditionally rooted in religious contexts. Political soteriology shifts this concept from spiritual change to public action by relocating salvation from the inner life to the public square; to a leader, a movement, or a state treated as the saving agent, a political messiah. An agent not for peace, care, and order, but a means of deliverance: win power, cleanse the enemy, restore our world.

Political soteriology comes with a familiar liturgy. True believers begin with diagnosis: we are oppressed, humiliated, betrayed. Then blame is assigned, and vilification begins: they did this to us, the elites, outsiders, immigrants, or those who are just different; pick your villain. Next comes self-identity: we are the chosen people, the rightful heirs, those whose voices have been stolen. And then the yearning for, seeking, and anointing the savior. The political messiah: the only one who can restore what was taken, punish what was done, and reverse the shame. After the savior is anointed, purification follows. The system must be “cleansed.” Norms and laws become nuisances to be ignored. Anything can be justified if it’s done in the name of the lost cause. Victory is described in pseudo-religious terms: once we win, order, justice, and our greatness return.

This type of soteriology provides what ordinary politics cannot. It gives meaning: your pain has a cause. It offers immediate hope: you can finally do something—vote, march, expose, punish, purge—making you feel empowered and motivated to act. Through this association, it creates the delusion that something can be done about the perceived injustice and plight, even if that entails retribution and purification. The ‘believers’ are normal people convinced they are suffering a chronic threat to culture, morality, demographics, and becoming irrelevant. But they are your neighbors and family members, desperately grasping for someone to defend them because they feel helplessly inept in the current ‘corrupt’ system; they are us, and we are them.

Spiritual salvation is slow, demanding, esoteric, nebulous, and often ambiguous. Political salvation feels immediate and muscular. It doesn’t ask for patience; it demands loyalty. It doesn’t promise transformation; it espouses reversal. In that climate, religion itself can be conscripted—its language, symbols, and institutions repurposed as fuel for political deliverance.

The result is moral nearsightedness: salvation now, consequences later. This isn’t a new choice. A similar one occurred when the mob chose Barabbas, changing the course of history. A choice for the man of action, the insurrectionist and murderer, over the one offering a different kind of eternal kingdom. When a society chooses the “rescuer” who breaks rules to save “us,” it quietly trains everyone that law is optional and freedom is whatever our side declares it to be.

So, who will we choose? Who will you stand behind and support? A liberator who will reclaim what we believe we’ve lost, by any means necessary; or one who refuses the easy thrill of vengeance for the more complex work of long-term good? If political soteriology is chosen, what exactly is being saved? Is it our country, or an appetite for conquest and control dressed up as freedom? NeverFearTheDream   simplebender.com

Joy in Alzheimer’s
W.C. Barron
Lap Around the Sun
Daily Steps Forward — W.C. Barron

Posted in Philosophy

Victims Are Not Villains

Fiction portrays superheroes battling archetypal villains—Superman vs. Lex Luthor and General Zod, Batman vs. The Joker and Two-Face, and Buzz Lightyear vs. Emperor Zurg. But in reality, self-proclaimed “heroes” often manufacture enemies from vulnerable populations to justify their pursuit of personal power.

Throughout history, authoritarians and dictators have vilified specific groups to establish themselves as saviors: Pol Pot (Cambodia) targeted intellectuals and professionals to impose his radical agrarian vision, Saddam Hussein (Iraq) persecuted Kurds as part of a broader political and ethnic conflict, Idi Amin (Uganda) expelled Asians and Indians to consolidate power, Mao Zedong (China) targeted the wealthy and educated in his Cultural Revolution, and Joseph Stalin (Soviet Union) engineered famines and imprisoned political opponents to maintain control. Adolf Hitler (Germany) vilified and massacred Jewish people, while his protege Benito Mussolini (Italy) targeted ethnic minorities to strengthen his nationalist image. Benjamin Netanyahu (Israel) is in a genocidal quest against Palestinians. Vladimir Putin (Russia) has used both Chechen insurgents and Ukrainians as political scapegoats to justify military aggression and solidify power. Meanwhile, his United States counterpart, and admirer, has been scapegoating minorities and immigrants and demanding the persecution of political opponents to consolidate support.

These leaders rely on lies, unchecked narratives, and twisted pseudo-facts to sway the public and position themselves as national saviors. Repeating falsehoods and distorting facts, they endeavor to create the illusion that only THEY can protect society from fabricated threats.

Authentic leadership doesn’t create chaos to demonstrate value—it brings calm to existing turmoil. History ultimately judges these “saviors” as humanity’s supervillains, while vindicating their victims.

We don’t need self-proclaimed heroes dividing us against each other, and we don’t need someone victimizing groups to feel powerful. Today’s “villain” could be YOU tomorrow. When someone claims they alone can “save” society, their motivation is often self-interest, not public welfare. Progress comes through finding common ground and embracing differences, not through polarization and isolation. We are stronger united than divided by those who would name themselves our protectors.

NeverFearTheDream simplebender.com @simplebender.bsky.social Mundus sine ceasaribus