Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Onward Christian Nationalis­ts, marching off to war...

- Norman Tony Norman: tnorman@postgazett­e.com or 412-263-1631 or Twitter @Tony_NormanPG.

In my heart of hearts, I don’t believe newly minted GOP gubernator­ial nominee Doug Mastriano has a snowball’s chance in a burning hell of being elected Pennsylvan­ia’s next governor.

Simply put: State Sen. Doug Mastriano, R- Franklin, is a theocrat, and an unapologet­ic one at that.

According to the New Oxford Dictionary, a theocrat is “an advocate of a system of government in which priests rule in the name of God or gods.”

It isn’t a pretty word, especially to folks who value the separation of church and state. Theocrats have been a pox on this land since Plymouth Rock. They’ve had a variety of intimidati­ng names and have rebranded their movement for changing times. In the ’70s and ’80s elitist theocrats called themselves Theonomist­s. They had an enormous influence on what was then called the religious right.

The definition of Theonomy according to Wikipedia is: “a hypothetic­al Christian form of government in which society is ruled by divine law.” Let that sink in folks. Wikipedia continues:

“Theonomist­s hold that divine law, particular­ly the judicial laws of the Old Testament, should be observed by modern societies. The precise definition of theonomy is the presumptio­n that the Old Covenant judicial laws given to Israel have not been abrogated, and therefore all civil government­s are morally obligated to enforce them (including the specific penalties).”

Think about the absurdity of that. In an American theocracy, abortion under all circumstan­ces would be outlawed, but Old Testament law will allow you to kill your rebellious teenagers for “disobeying” you. You can also put the women, children and unborn babies of the enemy to death in particular­ly grisly ways during wartime. This sounds a lot harsher than Roe v. Wade.

I had a good friend in college who was slowly radicalize­d by theonomy. Happily, he’s no longer in that camp, but several decades ago he subscribed to every one of its most extreme precepts because he genuinely believed God wanted Christians to take “dominion over every area and institutio­n of American life” by force, if necessary. If blood had to flow, so be it.

In those days, my friend called himself a Dominionis­t or Christian Reconstruc­tionist. This definition from Wikipedia accurately describes what he once believed:

“In keeping with the cultural mandate, Christian reconstruc­tionists advocate theonomy and the restoratio­n of certain biblical laws said to have continuing applicabil­ity. These include the death penalty not only for murder, but also for propagator­s of all forms of idolatry, open homosexual­s, adulterers, practition­ers of witchcraft and blasphemer­s.”

You’re probably detecting a theme running through these descriptio­ns. There’s no room for grace, forgivenes­s or mercy in these movements. Jesus Christ and the turn-the-other-cheek, lovethy-neighbor ethic of the New Testament is completely missing because it would undermine the blood-soaked mission of the theonomic state.

Theonomy, Christian Reconstruc­tion and Dominionis­m are perfectly distilled in the theology of the Christian Praetorian guards that sprung up around Donald Trump during his presidency.

Doug Mastriano is one of these theocrats. He’s a happy, holy warrior for Mr. Trump not because he’s under any illusion that the former president is a “believer,” but because he is convinced God is using Mr. Trump to usher in an era of “Christian” control of government — fascism with a faithbased face.

The most accessible term for this kind of totalitari­an delusion is Christian nationalis­m. This sounds like something an unsophisti­cated patriot can grab onto and not feel self-conscious about. Being a Christian is good, right? Being a patriot is even better — so the two should go together like peanut butter and chocolate.

Here’s what Mr. Mastriano told his followers on Tuesday night after his decisive victory over a large Republican field: “We have the power of God with us,” he said during his victory speech. “We have Jesus Christ that we’re serving here. He’s guiding and directing our steps.”

Lest someone think I’m cherry picking quotes to fit an outrageous premise, I challenge readers to go through a Mastriano speech and not find a quote that proves I’m correct. Here’s a line from a speech he made in April:

“The forces of darkness are hitting us really hard right now,” he told a crowd of adoring white Christian nationalis­ts. “We’re going to bring the state back to righteousn­ess, this is our day, our hour to take our state back and renew the blessings of America.”

Mr. Mastriano’s crowd, especially the rural, evangelica­l and Pentecosta­l folks that form his base, are tired of a wimpy version of Christiani­ty content to “feel your pain” rather than inflict it. If Jesus

lacks the intestinal fortitude, thank God Mr. Trump and Mr. Mastriano are walking the earth.

On Jan. 6, Mr. Mastriano and his wife led a convoy of buses to Washington, D.C., to the “Stop the Steal” rally. That was the day our insurrecti­onist former president gave his followers permission to attack the government under the false pretense the 2020 election had been “stolen” from him. Mr. Mastriano swears he didn’t breach the Capitol, though he was videotaped well beyond the barriers that failed to keep out the mob.

After Mr. Trump’s election loss and even after the anarchy of Jan. 6, Mr. Mastriano refused to back down from his allegiance to the former president or his lies. In fact, Mr. Trump has yet to tell a lie Mr. Mastriano hasn’t co-signed. Mr. Trump returned the favor by endorsing his sycophant’s gubernator­ial run — once it became clear he was ahead of the pack.

If someone like Doug Mastriano were actually elected governor of Pennsylvan­ia, there is no doubt he would do his best to roll back the clock to the Bronze Age where men and God knew their places in the world. His fanatical ambitions won’t succeed, but it doesn’t make any sense to give a theocrat any rope with which to hang our democracy. Doug Mastriano is a theocrat. Full stop.

 ?? Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press ?? State Sen. Doug Mastriano, R-Franklin, a Republican candidate for Governor of Pennsylvan­ia, speaks at a primary night election gathering in Chambersbu­rg, Pa., Tuesday.
Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press State Sen. Doug Mastriano, R-Franklin, a Republican candidate for Governor of Pennsylvan­ia, speaks at a primary night election gathering in Chambersbu­rg, Pa., Tuesday.
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