I don’t own an American flag. I’ve never flown an American flag from my porch. But, for the first time in my adult life, I want one. On Saturday, November 7, 2020, I was proud to be a citizen of the United States, part of “We, the people.” I was proud that almost 80% of eligible voters participated in the democratic process. I was proud that state officials of both major political parties protected the integrity of the election (despite accusations of widespread fraud). For the first time in a long time, I was proud of America.
Full disclosure: I am not a big fan of Joe Biden, but I am relieved – no, I’m almost giddy – about the outcome of the 2020 Presidential Election. We, the people, removed Donald Trump from office! We voted for an end to bombast and vitriol. Today, I can breathe.
Let’s be honest. The last four years have been exhausting. Every day, we woke up in the morning hearing about Donald Trump’s overnight ALL CAP tweets. We watched him mock people with disabilities and listened to him disparage immigrants, destroy the reputations of honorable people and spout quackery and outright lies while tacitly endorsing violence against people of color. We were assaulted with his arrogant self-aggrandizement and shameless self-promotion. Every time Donald Trump opened his mouth, we worried about what would come out of it. Every time Donald Trump picked up his pen, we worried about which law or regulation he would roll back and which group of people (or what part of the environment) would suffer. But all that is coming to an end. Whew!
On Saturday, for the first time in four years, I was able to sit through a presidential speech without my heart rate increasing out of anxiety that it would devolve into a train wreck. Joe Biden’s victory speech was balm for my weary soul. His calm call for healing in itself was healing. I felt safer hearing his promises to reactivate DREAMers, rejoin the Paris Climate Accord and revive a science-driven COVID task force. His tone gave me hope that we will become a quieter, more thoughtful, more compassionate nation under a leader who isn’t a playground bully. Aaah!
Yet, for all the relief I felt on Saturday, I have an tightness in my spirit that I cannot shake. My uneasiness was identified in a statement by the Associated Press: “President Donald Trump lost. But Trumpism did not.”
You won’t find the word, “Trumpism,” in an official Webster’s Dictionary—at least, not yet. It came into our lexicon in 2015 when Donald Trump first announced his intention to run for President. Today, Wikapedia has a page dedicated to the word, and various online dictionaries have weighed in on its meaning.
Urban Dictionary offers this definition: “A social/political movement based on elements of (a) racism, (b) religious bigotry, (c) demeaning attitudes towards women, (d) attempts to intimidate the press, (e) economic uncertainty, (f) rejection of scientific findings and (g) general expressions of hatred that are reminiscent of German National Socialism of the Hitler era …” and “… often characterized by completely baseless false statements.” (submitted by Andrew Sarkas)
Dictionary defines it as “a political philosophy that is an anti-establishment blend of economic populism, reactionary nationalism, and strong militarism summed up in Trump’s campaign slogan, “Make America Great Again.” Due to bigoted statements Trump had made and the viewpoints of some of his base, Trumpism [has been] associated with white supremacy.”
This election, despite Joe Biden’s win for the presidency, we failed to see the much anticipated “Blue Wave” materialize in races down the ballot. The loss of seats in the House of Representatives and the anticipated retention of the Senate majority by Republicans reveal that voters by a slim majority may have rejected the personality of Donald Trump, but not his politics and policies. It is disturbing to me that Donald Trump actually received 6,000,000 more votes in this election than he did in 2016! That’s 6,000,000 more people who wanted him to be the president for another four years! Unlike 2016, they didn’t cast a ballot for him because they were against his opponent. This time, they voted for Donald Trump. They believed in his MAGA vision.
Honestly, that scares the hell out of me. It scares me because those 6,000,000 people will likely vote again in 2024. And they will be looking for a candidate that mirrors Donald Trump’s policies and practices, if not his personality. They may even look for “the Donald” himself to return.
We may have a reprieve from Trump’s bluster for the next four years, but the seeds of Trumpism have been planted in the soil of our democracy, enriched with mistrust in the electoral process and suspicion of those who work for the government. Those seeds will germinate and burst forth in greater strength than ever. Like the enemy who sows tares in the wheat fields of Jesus’ parable (see Matthew 13:24ff), Donald Trump has masterfully sown invasive and destructive weeds in the field of our nation’s democracy and it may be a long time before those weeds can be removed without destroying everything around them.
If it is true that Trumpism actually won in 2020, that means we all lost.
- Truth lost.
- Science lost.
- The environment lost.
- Immigrants and Refugees lost.
- BIPOC lost.
- LGBTQ folks lost.
- The working poor lost.
- The Church lost.
As a person of Christian faith and a pastor, that last one is especially disappointing and challenging for me. I grieve that once again, more than 80% of my evangelical sisters and brothers in the faith have selectively chosen one or two issues upon which to build their political houses while seemingly ignoring the full revelation of God’s values and inclusive global agenda. I grieve that many influential faith leaders who preach the sanctity of life have tacitly accepted (or even boldly embraced) policies that lead to death and destruction, seeing their compromise as a small price to pay for achieving their narrow goals. I grieve that a generation of young people now see the church as having so tethered itself to the Trumpist politics of misinformation, “law and order”, nationalism and “whiteness” that it has become hostile to the higher values of inclusive love and social justice that Jesus taught. I grieve because many members of the white evangelical church have, in their embrace of Trumpism, amputated some of the most essential limbs of the body of Christ—our African American sisters and brothers.
I believe Christ is still the head of the Church, and He who holds the seven spirits of God says to the Church: “Wake up! Strengthen what remains and is about to die, for I have found your deeds unfinished in the sight of my God. Remember, therefore, what you have received and heard; hold it fast, and repent. But if you do not wake up, I will come like a thief, and you will not know at what time I will come to you.” (Revelation 3:2-3)
The sooner we wake up, the better. There is still time for the church to renounce its complicity in the spread false doctrines of Trumpism, but the window of opportunity is closing. The world needs a prophetic church now more than ever.