Battling Christophobia in California & Serbia

Nov 17, 2009 

Srdja Trifkovic | The intention of postmoderns to destroy real people, with 
their natural loyalties, traditional morality, and inherited cultural 
preferences, is the same everywhere. Its specific manifestations may be 
different in the United States and Serbia—the homes of our two interlocutors 
and my good friends—but the underlying motivation is identical. It is 
Christophobia, the incubator of countless secondary pathologies that are 
imposed and celebrated on both sides of the Atlantic under the label of 
diversity. Having suffered countless disasters and progressive disintegration 
during the modern era, how may Christian civilization be effectively revived? 
“For true-blooded Western conservatives, this is the overarching question of 
their political life,” says Greg Davis, as we savor boutique vodkas in downtown 
Santa Monica. “Conservatives are forever trying to get back to something 
better, sounder, nobler, truer. But how far back? A decade, a century—a 
millennium?”

I met Greg five years ago, while he was producing and directing the must-see 
documentary Islam: What the West Needs to Know. He is a soft-spoken convert to 
Orthodoxy, in his mid-30’s, with a Ph.D. in political science from Stanford and 
an abiding sense that our civilization is collapsing. Western conservatives, he 
says, are hoping to save the key institution of the West—namely, 
Christianity—but Christianity did not originate in the West, and therein lies 
the crux of the matter: “The development of the West since 1054, in opposition 
to the Orthodox East, was a revolutionary act. The West, at its core, is 
revolutionary; hence the shouting of our conservatives for history to stop, 
while intermittently effective in slowing the slide, has proven vain. The 
West’s defining act was the fundamental innovation of the filioque. The fruit 
of the schism was apparent in successive heresies and rebellions, which led to 
the wars of religion that would kill millions and tear Europe apart. Later 
subversives would translate the revolutionary logic into decidedly unchristian 
contexts such as the French and Bolshevik revolutions, with monstrous results.”

While the unraveling of Western Christianity has been under way for a thousand 
years, it gained a new head of steam in our time. With Vatican II, Greg says, 
Roman traditionalists were dealt a tremendous blow, and they are still 
suffering its consequences. Meanwhile, “The more traditionally minded 
Protestant denominations are now sprinting toward Sodom, while the newer ‘Bible 
churches,’ holding the line somewhat more effectively on the moral front, show 
themselves very much of this world in their Dionysian revels featuring 
‘Christian’ rock music and self-help philosophies about how to succeed in the 
world of mammon without really trying. The job of shoring up what remains of 
traditional Western Christianity is, needless to say, not getting any easier.”

Orthodoxy, on the other hand, does not lend itself to the political realm, 
precisely because its kingdom is not of this world. It is impossible to turn 
Orthodoxy into a “movement” in the modern political sense, yet the Orthodox 
view on most political issues today largely tracks the views of traditional 
Roman Catholics and Protestants, in spite of their theological and 
ecclesiological differences: “Even in a decidedly Protestant and 
“revolutionary” country such as the United States, the Orthodox easily 
recognize the practical wisdom embodied in a document such as the Constitution 
and its principle of limited government. They are more than anyone averse to 
the deification of political figures and of the state that has been the bane of 
the modern era. But they are by nature ill-adapted to navigating the turbulent 
waters of modern politics, which grow ever more frenzied and anti-Christian.”

The Orthodox countries still outside the Western orbit have shown themselves 
routinely outclassed in the geopolitical great game to extend U.S.-style 
materialism and “democracy” to the far reaches of the galaxy. Davis points out 
how the Serbs have consistently underestimated the malevolence of U.S.-led 
designs on their country and culture, and how Russia naively undertook a series 
of Western-inspired “reforms” in the 1990’s that devastated the country: “Now, 
however, Russia is pulling herself together. Vladimir Putin, regularly 
portrayed in Western media as a cross between Nicholas I and Darth Vader, 
refuses to let his people commit suicide along the lines of Western Europe, 
which continues to renew its vote of no confidence in itself. With the ancient 
enemy of both Western and Eastern Christianity, Islam, once again making 
inroads into both, Western conservatives should see Russia and Orthodox 
civilization generally as a natural ally. Yet prominent conservatives continue 
to support the U.S.-led prosecution of Russia. Their support for an 
ever-expanding NATO, for the missile shield, and for Western-sponsored 
color-coded revolutions is the support for a revolutionary power that 
recognizes no limit to its hegemony.”

During the Cold War, it was still possible to regard the West, the adversary of 
revolutionary communism, as a netconservative force in the world, but no 
longer. Western, and especially American, conservatives are now in the 
illogical position of defending the actions of the world’s leading 
revolutionary power. For Western conservatives to remain “conservative,” Davis 
concludes, they must be willing to support the cause of the few genuinely 
conservative forces left in the world—namely, those Orthodox nations still 
willing and able to resist indefinite Western cultural and geopolitical 
expansion.

http://serbianna.com/analysis/?p=287

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