The Persistence of Wishful Thinking
by
Charles H. Featherstone
by Charles H. Featherstone
Recently
by Charles H. Featherstone: On
Being an Israeli Arab
Americans – well, some of them, anyway – spend a lot of time thinking
wishfully about the Middle East, projecting our hopes and fears
on the place and the people who live there, thinking that we can
redeem them and make their lives better.
It's what motivated the Bush regime's invasion of Iraq, the hope
that "liberating" Iraqis, ending the tyranny of the Ba'athist
government of Saddam Hussein, would free Iraqis, changing their
conditions to allow them – and through their example, the whole
region – to flourish. (The invasion of Iraq would have very likely
happened and failed, for all the same reasons, had Al Gore been
president after September 11, 2001.) It's what motivated Barack
Obama's Cairo speech, and continues to motivate liberal/progressive,
conservative/neocon and nationalist/internationalist approaches
to the region. We Americans have progress and civilization on our
side, the region is plagued by cruel government, the situation demands
action, and we Americans possess the wisdom and intelligence to
act.
None of this is new, of course, nor is any of this limited to the
Middle East. The world has been a playground of sorts for American
moralists and planners for more than 100 years, and our worst impulses
to meddle abroad derive from the presidency of that great racist
Woodrow Wilson. As the pinnacle of Western (and thus world) civilization,
the United States is uniquely endowed with the ability to save the
world from its sin and evil. After all, if everyone can come here
and become an American, doesn't it make sense that one could equally
export Americanism to the entire world?
Anyway, this infatuation with the Middle East, with wiping out
corrupt power and freeing the region's people is not new. I recently
came across an ancient example of such thinking in the form of a
crumbling old book The
Eastern Question in Prophecy: Six Lectures on the Rise and Decline
of Mahometanism, and the Events to Follow, as Presented in the Prophesies
of St. John by Rev. Samuel J. Niccolls, pastor at the Second
Presbyterian Church in St. Louis, Missouri, published in 1877. By
the "Prophesies of St. John," Niccolls means Revelation,
the final book of the New Testament. He is especially focused on
chapters 9 (which he believes foretells the rise of Islam) and 16
(which then tells of the end of the Ottoman Empire, and thus the
fall of Islam).
These sermons were not just an intellectual exercise, they were
timely for 1877 – that was the year that Russia responded to Ottoman
massacres in Bulgaria (themselves a response to the Bulgarian uprising
of the previous year) by attacking the Ottoman Empire on two fronts
– through the Balkans and in the Caucasus Mountains. Russian would
win that war fairly easily, and in the following year, imposed a
fairly humiliating peace on Turkey that stripped it of most of its
Balkan territories. (That peace was quickly redone by the Congress
of Berlin.) So, Niccolls has what are for him current events in
mind as he considers "biblical prophesy."
About the rise of Islam, consider the images of Revelation 9 –
a great pit belching smoke and locusts "like horses prepared
for battle" (v.7, ESV) that roam the earth; the "mounted
troops" (v.16, ESV) released by the four angels bound at the
"great river Euphrates" (v.14, ESV) through which "a
third of mankind was killed, by the fire and smoke and sulfur coming
out of their mouths" (v.18, ESV). So, with Edward Gibbon as
his primary source, Niccolls preached the following:
He [the Prophet Muhammad] stands forth pre-eminently as the false
prophet of the Christian centuries; and still, after the lapse
of twelve hundred years, he is revered by millions as the apostle
of God. The Koran, a strange mixture of imposture and fanaticism,
of Arabian and Jewish traditions, and truths taken from the Scriptures,
in a comparatively brief space of time became the accepted revelation
of God, to at least the third part of the then known world. Like
"smoke" filling the air, it darkened the minds of men
and shut out the true light of the Divine Word. It was indeed
a revelation from the pit of darkness, a representation of the
living God, and of the truth necessary for salvation that well
might have been conceived in hell, in order to destroy the souls
of men. If the historian of the present, were to search for an
emblem to describe the mental and spiritual condition of those
who accept the Koran, he could find nothing more appropriate than
to say "that they are covered with a cloud of smoke that
shuts out all true light."
Under the teachings and inspiration of this new faith, grew
up those formidable bands of armed fanatics, who came from Arabia
to spread themselves like swarms of locusts over the Eastern World.
Gibbon describes those who flocked to the banner of the false
prophet, allured by the prospect of conquest and plunder, of compelled
by the sword, as "myriads." These hosts of bearded and
turbaned horsemen, known as the Saracens, passing rapidly to and
fro, as though carried on wings, were irresistible in the power.
(p.2021)
The emergence of Islam, described in the first 11 verses of chapter
9, culminates in the rise of the Ottoman Turkish state in the remaining
verses. But it is a corrupt, violent and quickly expiring power.
And he ties it directly to scripture. After all, Niccolls asks,
haven't the Turks, in massacring Bulgarians and other Christian
Slavs (and non-Slavic Christians) within their empire killed "a
third of mankind?" Turkey's power is declining, and will soon
end, largely because of the empire's barbarism, decadence and corruption:
Read the accounts of Turkish barbarities, of their robberies
and oppressions, practiced upon their own subjects in these later
days, and you may have some faint conception of what their rule
has been for ages; and you may understand, also, why under long
centuries of oppression, the populace of Turkey has decreased
and become abject and base. (p.5354)
The fanaticism of Islam (it is not real religion, according to
Niccolls), the lack of civil law, the legal inequality of Christians
within the Ottoman lands, and polygamy, which destroys the family,
have all contributed to the degeneracy of Ottoman government and
society. These wouldn't be matters for biblical prophesy, but Niccolls
is convinced that Revelation 16, particularly v.12 describes the
coming end of the Ottoman regime:
The sixth angel poured out his bowl on the great river Euphrates,
and its water was dried up, to prepare the way for the kings from
the east. (Rev.16:12, ESV)
Like many preachers trying to explain prophesy on the basis of
current events, Niccolls ignores the context of v.12, what comes
before and after. Indeed, like many of his ilk, he completely ignores
Revelation as a narrative and story, and instead fixates on specific
verses that seem pertinent given the events in the Balkans that
he, and his congregation, are reading about in the newspapers.
The next act in the great drama, is the "preparation of the
way." Something is to transpire, which shall not only remove
the curse of Mahometan rule from the Euphrates to the Nile, but
it will also open up the way for another glorious event a
new rule, a new kingdom that of the "Kings of the East."
(p.5657)
European diplomacy can forestall the fulfillment of prophesy, but
cannot prevent it. He has some harsh words for Britain, France and
Austria – states that have, in the past, acted to preserve the Ottoman
Empire against Russian encroachment (such as in the Crimean War).
But he is, at the same time, dismissive. Ottoman power is doomed,
so he can speculate on what the future will look like:
But, the Mahometan power removed, what next? What power will
take its place? What is the nature of that strife which makes
it necessary for Turkish rule to be out of the way? … If the crescent
and the cross meet, who can doubt the issue? But it is not by
the sword, that the true gospel triumphs. Sword and battle may
prepare the way; they are God's pioneers to remove barriers, aad
[sic] take away hindrances, but the gospel is something essentially
different in its workings.
Imagine the oppression of Turkish rule taken off the region
that it now occupies, the crescent supplanted by the cross, on
the dome of St. Sophia, and the Mosque of Omar what wonderful
and beneficent changes must follow? A land, by nature one of the
richest and most fertile on earth, a land which draws its pilgrims
from every quarter of the earth, to visit the ruins of its former
greatness, would soon be redeemed and made to bloom like a garden.
"The Kings of the East," the new power that is to take
the place of the old, who are they? This is the question the future
is to answer. Prophesy gives us hints concerning it, which we
will consider on a future occasion. I can only say now, it is
not Russia. The latter may be God's chosen pioneer to open the
way for the "Kings of the East," but it is not the power
destined to rule over the land of promise. (p.5860)
The "land of promise." Niccolls celebrates the increased
Jewish presence in the Middle East, but this is more than 20 years
before the Zionist Congress, and that Jewish presence is not central
to his theology. There is no whiff of Darbyism here, no rapture
or great war and tribulation. He is more post-millenialist than
pre – the progress and power of the West are evidence enough that
the time of Jesus coming back is drawing nigh. There are also elements
here that are typical of both religious and secular ideas of liberation:
people captive to corrupt and evil power, living in a land of potential
wealth who, if simply freed from that evil by outsiders noble and
well-intentioned, could be the people God intends them to be.
As an aside for those Lutherans among you, if Niccolls, a 19th
century progressive Presbyterian, sounds like he's preaching a theology
of glory – and was there any other theology in the 19th
century? – this ought to confirm it:
The power of Christ is daily becoming more manifest in the world,
and his enemies are more bitter and outspoken. The hour also seems
to be at hand, when He shall make a still more glorious revelation
of his power. Who among you can rejoice in the triumph of his
cross, and look with eager hope for the day of his appearing.
(p.60)
I will grant Niccolls some sense of humility. He makes no predictions
as to who the "kings of the east" are. He places some,
but not many, of his hopes in Russia. But like many 19th
Western Christians (and his brethren in the 20th and
21st), Niccolls tends to confuse gospel, civilization
and progress into One Great and Wonderful Thing that reason, and
reason alone, can and ought to grasp.
These old kingdoms and dynasties, so long cursed with oppression,
ignorance, and superstition, would feel the power of a new life
among them, consequent upon the introduction of Christian civilization.
The removal of Turkish power would prepare the way for the evangelization
of the kingdoms of the East.
All this is undoubtedly true. The Turkish rule, the embodiment
of Islamism, has been a curse to Asia as well as a plague to Europe.
It has spread like a flood over the great highway of the world's
trade and commerce, and for 800 years made it impassable. Europe
had to seek Asia by the Cape of Good Hope. The social life and
the government established by the Mahometans have been a "hindrance"
to the nations of the East; Mahometanism more than heathenism,
has been an obstacle to the spread of the Gospel. It is death
for any of its adherents to embrace Christianity. All of the essential
conditions of its rule are hostile to the Gospel, for the latter
does not thrive in an atmosphere of tyranny and immorality. Unquestionably,
the removal of the Turkish rule would be a blessing to civilization,
to humanity and to religion. It would open the old channel of
trade and commerce to the heart of Asia, so long blocked up, and
along this highway would go the influences that would renew the
lands of the East. The manhood of oppressed Christians would be
developed, the blessings of a just rule and stable laws be brought
to them, education would displace ignorance and superstition,
and thus, all working together, would prepare the way for the
triumph of Christianity. It is not unreasonable to suppose that
the utter downfall of the Turkish Empire would mark the beginning
of new and better days for Asia. (p.6364)
We have the fortune of living 140 years after Niccolls preached
(as I recall, he died about a century ago). He never lived to see
the end of the Ottoman Empire, and whether he would have seen the
League of Nations mandate system for the Arab states of the Ottoman
Empire, as well as Ataturk's militant secularism and the founding
of the nation-state of Israel, as "Christian civilization,"
is a question that can never be answered.
Niccolls saw the sweeping away of the Ottoman Empire, something
that would take a simple exercise of power, as opening the world
to all sorts of new and wonderful possibilities. His image of the
Middle East is that of the blank slate, the people oppressed who
once freed of their oppression can become what the holder of the
slate (and the chalk) wants them to become. They are mere objects
in Niccolls' drama, not subjects creating their own future. They
are not really free, because they cannot be anything more than Niccolls
wants them to be (indeed, I suspect he thought them incapable).
I am willing to bet his notion of the "Kings of the East"
did not include Hashemites, Aal Sauds, Baa'athists, Naserists, Palestinian
revolutionaries or the Ikhwan al-Muslimin. There is no messiness,
no struggle, no self-definition, just wonderful potential waiting
to be unlocked by an act of will undertaken by a properly motivated
outsider. Raise your hand if any of this sounds familiar.
And by failing to appreciate Islam on its own terms, he can see
it as nothing that anyone could honestly embrace, believe and live.
Thus, ending corrupt "Mahometan" state power ends Islam,
because no honest and decent human being could truly believe in
it unless they were compelled in the first place. He would have
been utterly befuddled, and perhaps apoplectic, about the "persistence"
of Islam in much the same way Antonio Gramsci was about the "persistence"
of capitalism.
Or the way I am sometimes aggravated by the persistence of this
kind of wishful thinking.
Because the thinking Niccolls exemplifies is still with us, present
in liberal democracy advocates and conservative nationalists who
celebrate "colored" revolutions, who believe that Iranians
ache to bid rid of their state, if only Americans would act. One
push, the evil is done for and people can be free to flourish. It
doesn't work that way, of course. Such thinking, which animated
Niccolls and later Woodrow Wilson, who saw in German militarism
a similar evil (is there something about late 19th century
Presbyterians?), leaves no room for unintended consequences and
the limits of human power and abilities. And yet those limits and
those consequences are very, very real. Thus, one act of meddling
begets another act of meddling in order to secure the desired outcome,
and for nearly 100 years, the West has been trying fruitlessly to
secure this better future for the Middle East that Niccolls dreamed
of.
I suspect few would agree with Niccolls these days when he preached:
"Unquestionably, the removal of the Turkish rule would be a
blessing to civilization, to humanity and to religion." Which
ought to give anyone pause the next time anyone speaks such words
about any people in any part of the world.
June
22, 2009
Charles
H. Featherstone [send
him mail] is a seminarian who lives in Chicago,
where he loves and cares for his wife, Jennifer, and spends too
much time thinking about the state, power and the gathering of God's
people called "the church."
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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