When the State Becomes God: The Ancient Classical Lie That Still Rules Modern Politics Today
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When the State Becomes God: The Ancient Classical Lie That Still Rules Modern Politics Today

<span style="display: inline-block; width: 0px; overflow: hidden; line-height: 0;" data-mce-type="bookmark" class="mce_SELRES_start"></span> How Politics Became Man’s False Savior Long before our modern capitals rose up in steel and glass, there was Athens… the glittering crown of the ancient world. It was powerful, proud, and home to 20,000 or so “citizens” (not counting women, foreigners, and slaves). The Greek word polis… where we get “politics”… didn’t just mean “city.” Its root meant fullness. The Latin pleo carried the same idea, and from it we get pleroma… completion, wholeness, the sense of something finally made right. Even words like polite and polish come from that same family… words that hum with order, refinement and purpose. To the Greeks, the polis wasn’t just a cluster of city buildings; it was the beating heart of civilization, the place where humanity might finally find meaning and redemption through civic life. Politics, at its birth in Greece, had its own “salvation” motif. The Ancient Dream: Salvation Through the State When the walls of Athens echoed with dreams of political salvation, a humble gathering lit a new fire—one kingdom built on law, the other on grace. Where the city looked to its gods for glory, a cross in the shadows promised a different kind of hope. For centuries, people clung to the belief that the city itself could save or even redeem them. The polis, the empire, the republic… each promised order, belonging, even eternal meaning. Plato’s Republic wasn’t a policy paper. Hardly. It was a plan of salvation dressed in philosophy. This was the ancient dream: salvation through the state. But then, a radical shift occurred with the advent of the Christian Revolution. In practice, these were “salvation machines” that turned the gods of Greece and Rome into government mascots. Sacrifices weren’t really acts of worship… they were insurance payments for peace and power. And so the divine was drafted into civil service. This marks the beginning of one of the great human delusions. The belief that if we could perfect the political system, elect the right rulers, or tweak the laws… salvation would follow. Empire after empire fell for the same old lie… that man could be saved by politics, only to be disillusioned by the inevitable collapse of their grand designs. The Great Christian Revolution: Turning the World Upside Down Then came a carpenter from Nazareth… and He tore the script in half. The early Christians didn’t storm the palaces or organize protests. They didn’t try to tweak Caesar’s laws or polish Rome’s ethics. They walked into the empire with a single explosive sentence: “Jesus Christ is Lord.” And you know what? In those days, that was treason, plain and simple. Because Rome had its own gospel… salvation through Caesar, through empire, through power and might. The Christians said, “No. Salvation comes through Christ alone.” They didn’t want a corner in Caesar’s world. They didn’t demand a seat at the table. They built a new world… a new humanity with a new King, a new set of priorities, and a new kind of community. To follow Christ was to leave the old world behind… the city of man… and enter the Kingdom of God. The Battle Between Blood and Grace The clash wasn’t abstract. It was the battle between blood and grace… between fallen Adam and the risen Christ. Augustine nailed it centuries later: “Remove justice, and what are kingdoms but great robber bands?” The City of God stood for justice. The city of man stood for looting and plunder. Politics, harsh laws, and bureaucracy could, in some sense, restrain crime, sure. But it could never touch the heart. The cross could. Only grace could. The Modern State: The Old Dream Reborn Fast-forward two thousand years… and here we are again. Modern politics has dusted off the old classical pagan script. Governments promise to save us if we’ll just vote differently, pay more, and believe more deeply in bureaucracy. From Washington to little Thomson, IL, where I live, the machinery of secularized government feeds itself first and serves last. The idol wears different clothes and uses more “democratic” rhetoric now, but it’s still the same false god. And yet, even our secular world can’t escape its longing for truth. Folks still cry out for justice, mercy, equality… virtues that make no sense without God. Kill God philosophically and theologically, and you kill the very ideas of right and wrong. That’s what Nietzsche meant when he said, “God is dead.” I don’t think he was cheering. I think he, in a twisted way… was warning his readers. Today, we simply invent substitute saviors just like the classical world: politics, activism, environmentalism, drugs, sexual liberation… all promising meaning, all empty. The vacuum remains. The state keeps trying to play God… and it keeps failing miserably, unable to deliver the salvation and satiation it promises. The Church and the State: A False Hope Even the church gets tangled in this vicious trap. We start trusting “polity systems” instead of the Savior… whether it’s Congregational, Presbyterian, or Episcopal. But no structure by itself can make men holy. Only Christ can. So look, God’s kingdom begins with self-government… hearts ruled by grace, homes built on His law. Scripture speaks to individuals and households before big government hierarchies. When Rome finally bent the knee to Christ, it wasn’t power politics that won the day… it was self-government and family faith that spread like wildfire. Centralized statism, then or now, is just “born again” paganism: power without principle, unity without truth. The Kingdom of Christ: Grace and Law. Here’s what we need to relearn: Christ’s kingdom runs on the fuel of the atonement. His cross turns outlaws into citizens of heaven. His resurrection gives us authority, not to dominate others, but to bring His order, peace, and truth into every corner of life, inspiring hope and transformation. The point here is that systems do not primarily govern us. We are governed by a Savior. His law should be etched on our hearts. His Spirit should fuel our obedience. So the truth is that real government begins at the dinner table, not the Capitol dome. “For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world,” John wrote, “and this is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith.” Faith… not politics… is the true ruling power. Grace is the true currency of the universe. That doesn’t mean Christians should not be political or involved in politics. It’s a question of “seek ye first” here. Govern yourself and your family first. Then help govern your church and community. Once you master these tasks… then, and only then, think about politics and civil government. The Call to Stewardship and Biblical Dominion The Westminster Catechism puts it pretty plain: when we pray, “Thy kingdom come,” we’re asking God to crush evil’s rule, expand His grace, and draw near His glory. That’s the call… to be good stewards under Christ, not over others outside your biblical jurisdiction. To build homes, businesses, and communities that reflect His justice, mercy, and truth, and to live out these principles in our daily lives. The city of man always crumbles. The city of God endures. So let’s stop chasing salvation through systems and slogans… and start living out the only fullness that lasts: Jesus Christ, our true King.