There is a spiritual counterfeit more dangerous than outright unbelief — one that wears the vocabulary of grace and covenant while replacing the transcendent center with a political program. Both the religious right and the religious left have produced their versions of this: ideologies that recruit God as mascot, that resolve the irreducible paradox of the Gospel into a legible platform, that mistake the ferocity of tribal belonging for the fire of genuine faith. The mystics had a word for this. They called it idolatry — not the crude kind, but the subtlest kind: worshipping a thing of our own making in the place where Mystery was supposed to dwell.
Tag: Christian nationalism
The Name of God on the Lips of Caesar
When the ego seizes the name of God, it does not feel like hubris — it feels like calling. This is Kali Yuga’s most refined inversion: the sacred language remains, the symbols proliferate, the certainty intensifies, while the interior substance — the genuine emptiness through which divine intelligence actually moves — quietly withdraws. The mystics offer the corrective not as argument but as embodied demonstration: the one through whom God truly acts is not the one who carves the commission into flesh, but the one who has become hollow enough to carry it.