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June 22, 2007
Reflections
on Patriotism
by Mark Alexander
From The Patriot Post
Reminiscing about his opposition to the
Spanish-American War, Samuel Clemens, better known
as Mark Twain, wrote in his diary for 1905-06,
"There are two kinds of patriotism: monarchical
patriotism and republican patriotism." He
continued, "In the one case the government and the
king may rightfully furnish you with notions of
patriotism; in the other, neither the government
nor the entire nation is privileged to dictate to
any individual what the form of his patriotism
shall be. The Gospel of the Monarchical Patriotism
is: 'The King can do no wrong.' We have adopted it
with all its servility, with an unimportant change
in the wording: 'Our country, right or wrong!"'
Sadly, Clemens' insights into patriotism has turned
to cynicism. Patriotism is, he concludes, a
"grotesque and laughable word."
Contrary to what "the father of American
literature" suggests, American patriotism is not
jingoism: Waving a flag no more makes a man a
patriot than waving his arms makes him a bird. Yet
worse than jingoism are attempts to recast
patriotism as unquestioning loyalty to the state.
If true patriotism is not jingoistic, neither is it
nationalistic.
Clemens' contemporary, Walt Whitman, erred by
construing patriotism as nationalism, concluding in
his famed lecture "Death of Abraham Lincoln" that
"battles, martyrs, agonies, blood, even
assassination, should so condense -- perhaps only
really, lastingly condense -- a Nationality."
Absent from Whitman's words is the reality that
American patriotism revolves around a set of
ideas, setting it apart from the older,
blood-and-soil nationalism of Europe by much more
than an ocean.
So, how do we understand American patriotism
without slipping into Clemens'
patriotism-as-jingoism cynicism, or Whitman's
patriotism-as-nationalism nostalgia? Or, as George
Washington warned, how do we "Guard against the
impostures of pretended patriotism"?
J. Gresham Machen, a rough contemporary of both
Clemens and Whitman, weighed these questions
carefully. As a theologian and a minister, Machen
never set patriotism at the heart of his work, yet
from his early days as a YMCA volunteer on the
front lines in the First World War (he did not
think it appropriate for a minister to be a
combatant), he pondered deeply and frequently the
nature of patriotism in the modern world.
Machen led the movement against progressivism in
theology at Princeton Seminary in the 1920s and
then went on to found both a seminary and a
Presbyterian denomination. It is no coincidence
that one of the century's most profound (if
ignored) thinkers on American patriotism was also
in the vanguard of the battle against theological
liberalism in its earliest days.
In his 1919 chapel address at Princeton
Seminary, "The Church in the War," Machen addressed
this very issue. As men fought and died amid the
horrors of WWI, he observed that American religion
had taken a turn for the worse: "Men have trusted
for their own salvation and for the hope of the
world in the merit of their own self-sacrifice
rather than in the one act of sacrifice which was
accomplished some nineteen hundred years ago by
Jesus Christ."
The sacrifice made by American soldiers in the
cause of liberty is not to be diminished, said
Machen -- far from it. Their sacrifice "deserves
not less but more honor than they are receiving
from their fellow citizens." However, such
sacrifice is not redemptive. To say
otherwise is not patriotism, but idolatry. The
seminary's failure to grasp this would lead Machen
to conclude privately, "Princeton is a hotbed of
patriotic enthusiasm and military ardor, which
makes me feel like a man without a country."
Yet idolatry in the name of patriotism -- what
Machen described as "modern paganism" -- did not
begin or end with World War I. He expanded upon
this idea in his 1931 essay "Christianity and
Liberty." Even in 1931, Machen remarked that the
term "liberty" (much less "patriotism"), sadly, had
been termed archaic. "The real indictment against
the modern world is that by the modern world human
liberty is being destroyed."
In the modern world, the ideal of the state as
the guardian of liberty was replaced with the
concept of the utilitarian government: from the
advent of a federal Department of Education in the
United States (instead of "all sorts of queer
private schools and parochial schools to confuse
the mind of youth," as Machen wrote) to Italy's
example, where "Mussolini is thought to be a
benefactor of the race because, although liberty of
speech is destroyed in Italy, the streets of
Italian cities are clean."
The examples of liberty surrendered, says
Machen, are endless. He reinforced this sentiment
in his 1937 classic, The Christian View of
Man, in which he showed that liberty and
patriotism -- as one would expect -- are
inextricably linked. Here, Machen expressed his
concern over a society increasingly detached from a
morality and law rooted in the Word of God.
"Everywhere," he wrote, "tyranny is stalking
through the earth, and decadence disguised under a
hundred newfangled and high-sounding names."
"What shall be done about it," Machen asked
prophetically, "to prevent [man] from
destroying himself, for example, by another world
war?" Patriotism, he said, lies at the heart of
that answer.
We must, however, be wary of hollow and
dangerous imitations. "Patriotism," said the great
English author and lexicographer Samuel Johnson,
"is the last refuge of a scoundrel." Likewise, said
Machen, for those tyrants who would direct
patriotism away from the ideals of liberty and
toward the absolutized state, as in "Hitlerized
Germany" or the "march of communism." "A thousand
nostrums are being brought to our attention,
different in many particulars but all alike in
being destructive of that civil and religious
liberty which our fathers won at such cost," he
warned. "Such measures will never accomplish even
the end that they have in view. Patriotism can
never be implanted in people's hearts by force. The
attempt to do that serves only to crush out
patriotism when it is already there."
In other words, true patriotism is inseparable
from liberty, and "liberty under the law of God,"
said Machen, is the key to the preservation of a
free society. We must, he said, "get rid of this
notion that judges and juries exist only for the
utilitarian purpose of the protection of society."
Rather, he posits, "They exist for the purposes of
justice."
Patriotism, liberty and God's moral order: These
ideas are utterly inseparable, together forming the
foundation of our nation. Patriotism cannot be
separated from liberty, just as liberty cannot be
separated from God's law and justice, lest both
become perverted, meaningless or even
dangerous.
The
Patriot Post
Copyright 2007 by Publius Press, Inc. and
reprinted with permission.
The
Patriot Post Archive
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