Why Are Christians So Gullible?

Friday, August 10, 2007
By Chuck Baldwin

That today’s Christians appear to be among the most gullible people on the planet seems to be a gigantic understatement. For example, it was just a couple or three decades ago when the largest and most influential churches in America were pastored by strong Bible men: men who preached hard against sin; men who didn’t try to tickle ears and didn’t mind stepping on toes; men who were not afraid to call civil and business leaders to account; men who called a spade a spade. Those days are gone.

Today, the largest and most influential churches are pastored by fluff-daisies such as Joel Osteen, Bill Hybels, and Rick Warren: men who preach entertainment evangelism, political correctness, and feel-goodism. Today’s largest churches share absolutely nothing in common with America’s historic revival-style churches. How can Christians be so gullible to fall for these snake oil salesmen?

Consider, too, how so many Christians seem to consider President George W. Bush’s “war on terror” to be bona fide and legitimate. Yet, this escalating and never-ending “war on terror” is doing more to ruin America than anything Osama bin Laden could ever dream about.

The war in Iraq is not only depleting our military readiness, it is facilitating America’s entrance into fascism and even endangering our economic stability. According to the Congressional Budget Office, Bush’s “war on terror” will soon cost U.S. taxpayers over $1 trillion. Private economists say the actual figure will double that prediction. It is no hyperbole to say that Bush’s war in Iraq has America teetering on the brink of economic recession or worse.

(To get a real-world glimpse into the sobering economic situation in the U.S., see: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SWksEJQEYVU ).

Beyond that, Bush’s “war on terror” has convinced Americans (including many Christians) that they need to surrender more and more liberties in order to be “secure.” And for those Democrats who expected that their party’s congressional victories last November would help thwart Bush’s insidious infatuation with fascism, they didn’t. Congressional Democrats have caved to the Bush “surrender your liberties or face terrorism” hysteria time and again. In fact, just before breaking for their current recess, Democrats in Congress approved Bush’s latest request to expand warrantless wiretaps and eavesdropping. (See: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/06/washington/06nsa.html?ei=5065&en=4e05f95a4b60ac78&ex=1187064000&partner=MYWAY&pagewanted=print ) .

Bush’s war is also working hand in glove with the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) blueprint for a North American Union, including a NAFTA superhighway and an increase of imports from Communist China. In fact, Jerome Corsi reveals that the bridge collapse in Minneapolis last week could be largely due to the extra burden of trucks coming from Mexico, per Bush’s SPP agreement with Mexico and Canada. (See http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=57017 ). If this is true, and I suspect that it is, we can expect to see more of this in the months to come.

Even Newt Gingrich, a globalist insider himself, said that Bush’s war on terror is “phony.” (See http://www.ajc.com/news/content/news/stories/2007/08/03/newt0803.html ).

Consider, too, that in spite of a dangerous lack of inspections of all products imported from China (including food products) President Bush is determined to increase imports from the communist country. His administration is now even working to loosen restrictions against poultry products from Red China. This is being done in spite of the dismal track record of China’s health standards. One could even say that China’s food imports may be poisoning Americans. And not only does this administration not care, it is in the process of assisting this atrocity.

Plus, this does not even take into account how Red China is supplying weapons and ammunition used to kill American soldiers and Marines, or how it is obtaining much of Iraq’s oil, or how this “president, proudly bestowing upon himself the title of ‘war president,’ supports trade policies with China that actively undermine the national security interests of the United States and our armed forces.” Neither does it take into account “that under the administration’s prevailing trade policies, America’s chief export to China consists of U.S. jobs, which are disappearing at an estimated rate of 2,250 per day.” (Source: Kevin O’Brien, President, Sovereign Advisers in Editorial appearing in The Washington Times, June 29, 2007. See SA at: http://www.sov-advisers.com/aboutus.htm )

In spite of all this, (and a whole lot more), Christians still support Bush in large numbers. How can they be so gullible?

I believe one of the reasons, if not the main reason, that Christians are so gullible lies in a mistaken, and even dangerous, intrinsic trust of government. I hear and see this attitude expressed among my brethren constantly.

Part of this problem stems from an illogical and unscriptural interpretation of Romans Chapter Thirteen. Christians have been drilled (and dare I say, brainwashed?) into believing that government is endemically good and should be thoroughly trusted. Of course, this was not the belief of America’s Founding Fathers, and neither was it the belief of Church Fathers.

In fact, our entire system of government is predicated upon a deep-rooted DISTRUST of government. Our three branches of government stem from the suspicion that no one branch could be thoroughly trusted and must have at least two other branches to help keep it in check. Yet, even that was not considered enough of a deterrent to combat the propensity of government to become tyrannical. What the separate branches of the federal government could not do to police each other, the states and people were to do. In other words, if Christians were really good Americans, they would distrust, not trust, their government.

(For a more complete discussion of Romans Chapter Thirteen, I invite readers to listen to my radio interview with Dr. Greg Dixon, former pastor of the Indianapolis Baptist Temple in Indianapolis, Indiana. Go to http://www.chuckbaldwinlive.com/Interview_Dixon.html )

Of all people, Christians should understand the fallen nature of man: that man in a sinful state is capable of anything (unless they attend a “Purpose Driven” church, of course). How is it, then, that they cannot seem to comprehend the evil machinations of people in high office? Are they totally taken in by the “I am a Christian” façade so many politicians use? Perhaps.

However, I believe that constant preaching from milquetoast preachers instructing their people to trust their government is the main culprit. The lack of discernment and courage of America’s pulpits is frightening. They have produced a generation of Christians incapable of understanding, much less opposing, the manifestations of evil and oppression.

I doubt that most American pastors have even heard of, much less read, R. J. Rummel’s book, Death By Government, in which he factually documents that more people have been murdered by their own governments than by all of the world’s terrorists, gangsters, and outlaws combined. They have probably never read Frederic Bastiat’s book, The Law. They have never read Erwin Lutzer’s book, Hitler’s Cross. I’m sure they have never heard of or read the book Vindiciae, Contra Tyrannos, one of the most famous of the Monarchomach treatises ever written, which advances a systematic justification of resistance against legitimately constituted political authority. I doubt that they have ever read William Rawle’s A View Of The Constitution, Secession As Taught At West Point, etc.

In other words, most American pastors are unschooled and untaught in the finer points of Biblical authority, the doctrine of jurisdiction, the causes and necessities of civil disobedience, constitutional government, natural law, etc. As such, they have not taught and trained their congregants to be good Christians, much less good Americans.

In short, Christians are blind and gullible because our pulpits are blind and gullible. As the shepherd goes, so go the sheep.

(Please help me locate the Black Regiment preachers. See: http://www.chuckbaldwinlive.com/c2007/cbarchive_20070724.html )

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8 Responses to “Why Are Christians So Gullible?”

  1. 1
    conservativation Says:

    Chuck, you’d have a good point there, except by not even mentioning divorce and the church you have included yourself among the enablers of societal collapse. In fact, ranting about the churches position on the war, while looking the other way as the church coddles feminized policies regarding no fault divorce, is most surely a forest and tree matter.
    You, like some of who you criticize, are so filled with yourself that you cannot deign to speak to suck pedestrian issues as marriage and divorce. No way; you must speak of armies and nation states, not parents and children…those are small potatoes.
    I’ll go so far as to say that, even though these “feel good” churches have their message wrong on marriage, they do address the topic from the pulpit, at least recognizing that there is a problem. You though want to make church a geopolitical seminar.
    They may wish to tickle ears in the audience. You sir are apparently afraid of your wife and her gaggle of gigglers in the pews!

  2. 2
    red pill Says:

    Many deluded Christians assume that they can affect some sort of earthly paradise on earth. They can’t and it was not intended to be so by their own efforts. Politics is about the animal and there is no merging the real and the ideal. To faithfully practice Christianity as politics is to die quickly. Christianity as a political model is suicide. On this planet, turning the other cheek will get you killed. Giving away all you have will get you dead. Loving all unconditionally will get you abused. Sorry that’s all there is to it. Follow the NT faithfully and you will get to the kingdom of heaven rather quickly. That’s fine if you choose that for yourself, but to force others to do that against their own survival instincts is clearly not what Jesus intended…

  3. 3
    DadWith2Girls Says:

    Christians are gullible because they are afraid. (Fear makes one vulnerable…)

    Afraid that the superstitions they believe may not be credible.

    Afraid that Jesus is not coming back, anytime soon … enough.

    Afraid that their sins have not truly been forgiven.

    Afraid that “everlasting life” may just be a marketing scheme.

    Christians are right to be afraid.

    Fear is a survival instinct in the human species.

    Thankfully based on DNA, not ritual Sunday morning dissimulations.

  4. 4
    Halo Says:

    Chuck, you had me until you fell in with the leftists (like DW2G for example). Whether the war costs 1 trillion or 2 trillion is irrelevant – 9/11 cost us (at the very least) 10 trillion.

    I believe in the Iraq war because it’s the right thing to do, not because I like Bush (which I don’t). The war on terror is one of only three things he’s done right – the other two being the Supreme Court, and the tax cuts.

    As for you DW2G, Christians are the only group who aren’t congenitally afraid. We fear no evil.

    Besides, even if we were wrong about an afterlife and us going to heaven, we have nothing to fear from death. It would just be an ending. You, on the other hand, need to be very afraid if you’re wrong.

  5. 5
    DadWith2Girls Says:

    Halo wrote — “As for you DW2G, Christians are the only group who aren’t congenitally afraid. We fear no evil.

    Besides, even if we were wrong about an afterlife and us going to heaven, we have nothing to fear from death. It would just be an ending. You, on the other hand, need to be very afraid if you’re wrong.”

    I admire an honest ideologue. Difficult to find these days.

    So, if Christians fear no evil, why all the fuss about it in the creed, err … faith… err… superstition?

    The Devil, Hell, Purgatory, Eternal Damnation, and my personal favorite … LIMBO!

    Imagine the mindset of a religion that can consign babies who die before being baptized to a cosmic eternal Twilight Zone called “Limbo!”

    Is this comedy or sincere doctrine? (Or, perhaps just paranoia run rampant?)

    It is always impossible to know.

    “You, on the other hand, need to be very afraid if you’re wrong.”

    Is that your very best impression of existentialist guilt-attempting schtick?

    Wow… I’m gonna convert right away.

    I think Rastafarianism is looking rather profitable these days… JAH LIVES!

    I feel so much better now that I know what to believe in, and what to never question.

    Thanks, Halo!

  6. 6
    Halo Says:

    Imagine the mindset of a religion that can consign babies who die before being baptized to a cosmic eternal Twilight Zone called “Limbo!”

    I can’t imagine that. Catholics are weird. According to Jewish law, children aren’t responsible for their actions until they turn thirteen. Therefore it still goes.

    Wow… I’m gonna convert right away.

    Convert to what? Someone who’s not a jerk? As for making you feel better, I couldn’t care less. You’ve heard the truth – what you do with it is your business alone. The responsibility for where you end up lies with you. That is soooo American, ain’t it?

  7. 7
    DadWith2Girls Says:

    Halo — “Convert to what? Someone who’s not a jerk?”

    I believe that offer was made already.

    Someone you believe in got crucified for refusing it…

    Jesus the Christ was the most offensive “jerk” that the world has yet seen.

    The guy destroyed the money lender’s carnival. He consorted with whores.

    And, he never said he was the “the son of god.” (Gotta do some research to locate the actual Christ…. try googling “The Jesus Scholars”)

    Your chosen prophet was a radical angry men’s rights activist!

    ;-)

  8. 8
    Squiggy Says:

    Halo, you’re wasting your time. He’s not so much a jerk as he is a nut.

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