Icon (Close Menu)

What West? What Christianity? Questioning Steve Bannon

Please email comments to letters@livingchurch.org.

There has been much talk recently in politics and the media, pro and con, about the new nationalism our president espouses. His chief strategist, Steve Bannon, is on record saying that this should involve a turn back to our “Western and Christian roots.” My question is a simple one: What does that mean?

For it clearly doesn’t mean an alignment with contemporary Europe strategically or intellectually. The former is embodied by the EU and NATO. With respect to the latter, Europe is adamantly secular. And Christian? We all know by now that the preponderance of the Church’s members, outside the United States, live almost everywhere except the West! Perhaps Christian here refers to a set of traditional civic or familial values, but then recent immigrants would seem to be prime exemplars. What are we talking about then?

The remaining options are less appealing. It might be code for a kind of nativism, but the last time our country turned down that road, many of those excluded were Italian and Irish, who are both Western and Christian. It might be code for a “clash of civilizations,” though all the leaders of churches in the West oppose this in their relation to Islam. It might mean a turn away from postmodern nihilism, which would be ironic indeed. It might be a vaguer, romanticist appeal to an age gone by, in which the content is left uneasily underdetermined.

I am an advocate of reclaiming the roots of Western Christian theology. But what is that really? It includes confessing a Church catholic from all the nations of the earth. It includes confessing the traditional doctrines of sin, grace, and redemption that make us look at the log in our own eye. In the modern era it includes claiming the tradition of religious and political freedom rooted in the doctrine of the image of God as our own. Between what Mr. Bannon means by “Western and Christian” and what we mean there is virtually no overlap.

Advertisement

The Rt. Rev. George Sumner, PhD served as Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Dallas from 2015 to 2025. Ordained in Tanzania in 1981, he served in cross-cultural ministry in Navajoland, led parishes in New England, and from 1999-2015 was Principal of Wycliffe College, University of Toronto. He is the author or co-author of several books, including The First and The Last: The Claim of Jesus and The Claims of Other Religions (Eerdmans, 2004) and a commentary on Esther and Daniel (Brazos, 2013).

DAILY NEWSLETTER

Get Covenant every weekday:

MOST READ

Related Posts

City of God—St. Augustine’s Political Psychology

In his City of God, Augustine offers a subtle and unsettling, civil diagnosis: political orders are built not on ideas but on loves.

Slower than the Headline: Christian Discernment in an Age of Instant Allegiance

Christians often fall into instant side-taking, even in complex situations, because we've allowed politics to become our primary catechist.

Speaking in Public as if Everything is OK

How should Christian leaders speak in moments of cultural crisis? How can the Gospel be announced in moments of convulsion and trauma?

Christmas & the Politics of Incarnation

To mistake Jesus's Incarnation, death, and resurrection for a purely spiritual reality is a misreading. The story leads to the public square.