Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Return of the false gods
Return of the false gods
Oct 31, 2025 8:20 AM

Return of the Strong Gods: Nationalism, Populism, and the Future of the West | R. R. Reno | Gateway Editions | 2019 |208 pages

Numerous books have been written in recent years on the demise of liberalism in today’s age of “populism” and social disintegration. The newest entry is Return of the Strong Gods: Nationalism, Populism, and the Future of the West by Rusty Reno, the editor of First Things. While Reno has been seen as the main protagonist behind that journal’s new, critical view of liberalism, he, in contrast to others, says that this is “not a crisis of liberalism, modernity, or the West.” A liberal society “can be wealthy and moderate,” and “the marketplace can generate wealth and give us elbow room to make up our own minds about how to live.” Those who try to trace “the cancerous tumor that is killing the West” to liberalism or nominalism miss the target. Instead, he sees the “post-war consensus” of “liberalism” at fault.

Throughout his book, Reno returns to the peculiar and vague concept of “strong gods,” which are “the object of men’s love and devotion, the sources of the passions and loyalties that unite societies.” They can include traditions, national or local identities, historical narratives like the American founding, or modern ideologies – such as the concept of objective truth itself.

Strong gods can be destructive, as they were in the first half of the twentieth century. “Dark gods stormed through Europe, eventually setting aflame most of the world and bringing death to millions,” he writes. They can lead to eccentricity, as we saw in the age of “militarism, munism, racism, and anti-Semitism.”

Reno posits that, as a reaction to this destruction, the postwar consensus adopted a system that opposed strong gods per se, whether good or evil. The newly adopted mantra held that “whatever is strong – strong loves and strong truths – leads to oppression, while liberty and prosperity require the reign of weak loves and weak truths.” The alleged weakening process, he writes, developed into a “negative piety” in which all objective truth is scorned as “a threat to liberal norms.” Postwar liberalism amounts to the “strong conviction about the danger of strong convictions.”

Reno is “not opposed to the anti-totalitarian struggles of the last century.” Indeed, “by certain measures, the postwar consensus has been remarkably successful” in establishing peace and prosperity. Yet, Reno writes, it has e unhealthy.

Reno analyzes many different thinkers across the postwar political spectrum who, in his opinion, advocated such views: Karl Popper, Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman, Albert Camus, and Jacques Derrida. He writes that they shared mon attempt to disenchant the world, which, in contrast to the pre-war era, was now considered laudable. Instead of trying to nurture strong gods, the West should let technocrats and experts develop impartial policy through scientific, cost-benefit-analysis. Economically, the market, through spontaneous order, would lead to a similarly impersonal process. He derides this as “a utopian dream of politics without transcendence, peace without unity, and justice without virtue.”

In a particularly luminous chapter, Reno shows how even architecture has sunk into this world of sameness and simplicity. The great cathedrals of Europe tried to connect buildings with munity, its past, and transcendent truths. Today, architecture “reflects an explicit ideology of negation,” where simple design – or any sign of openness – is considered great, as long as it does not relate explicitly to a country’s munity’s heritage, or offend anyone.

This culture of negative piety leaves societies and individuals ill at ease. By ignoring the possibility of objective truth and replacing it with hyper-personalized values, Western society naturally feels lost. In an uncentered, technocratic world, those who are losing out in the alleged win-win of liberalism need to “worry that they will have no role in the globalized economy.”

What is his solution? For Reno, it should be a cautious return of the strong gods: “The political and cultural crisis of the West today is the result of our refusal – perhaps incapacity – to honor the strong gods that stiffen the spine and inspire loyalty.” In contrast to the previous century, the West should adopt “noble loves,” which must be broadly shared so that munity can develop. This requires society to reevaluate the concept of mon good.” Indeed, our world “begs for a politics of loyalty and solidarity.”

Yet the identities of these strong, unifying gods remain vague. And although Reno clearly opposes totalitarianism, the concept remains a slippery slope. He mentions the noble loves of solidarity, country, and religion – but also of self-government, sovereignty, freedom, and reason. But taken to the extreme, any of these gods can create unintended consequences. For instance, extreme solidarity can lead to socialism, extreme patriotism to nationalism of the imperialist variety, extreme freedom to libertinism, and extreme reason to a scientism that rejects faith and tradition on supposedly rational grounds. Postwar liberals’ realization that strong gods tend to create fanaticism deserves our gratitude. Many of them correctly argued that moderation creates the stable and cohesive society necessary for these “noble loves” to be followed in a prudent way.

Reno cogently explains how ever-greater openness and diversity eventually lead to disenchantment and a soft totalitarianism. However, he underestimates the positive principles liberalism successfully instituted in the postwar era, like greater equality and justice. Further, some of the thinkers he accuses of emptiness or negation, such as Hayek, passionately believed in a positive view of society. Indeed, the postwar West is far from devoid of its own “strong gods.” The Left believes in equality, social justice, or Mother Earth; libertarians believe in freedom as an inherent good. Just because Reno does not agree with these strong gods does not mean that liberals lack them.

Reno’s diagnosis is missing one ponent of the postwar consensus: the consistent advance of political centralization since 1945. Throughout the book, Reno erroneously argues that postwar politics has favored free markets, free trade, deregulation, and entrepreneurship. It almost seems as if he thinks EU bureaucrats and the Washington “swamp” get their plans from the works of Ayn Rand and Ludwig von Mises.

Over the last seven decades, governments have e more and more intrusive – building lumbering welfare states, which they financed through massive public debt and sky-high taxes, and inserting regulations into all areas of private life. Their thirst for centralization has shackled the market through regulation and cronyism. Some national powers have been assumed by supranational organizations like the European Union, constraining the very sovereignty that Reno says he seeks to revitalize. This centralization has hurt social institutions like the family and the church. It leaves people feeling alienated, while a small political elite sets policy for hundreds of millions of strangers.

Due to this oversight, Reno discounts any decentralizing ideas by the postwar thinkers he analyzes. He admits that “only a few actually make the laws.” At the same time, he criticizes William F. Buckley Jr. for calling for more pluralism, because “it disperses, rather than concentrates” power, and he lambasts Hayek for arguing in The Road to Serfdom that people seek the peace and “freedom to build up once more their own little worlds.”

Reno brilliantly shows how “our leadership class is so thoroughly blinded by the postwar consensus” that it ignores the problems citizens face today, including “atomization, munal bonds, disintegrating family ties, and a nihilistic culture of limitless self-definition.” Why, then, does he still trust these few to govern the many? Why not advance real self-government by decentralizing and strengthening local institutions? Why not include subsidiarity as a strong god? It often seems as though Reno takes centralization for granted, underestimating its damaging effects and its role in the negative piety and social disintegration he diagnoses.

It almost seems that Reno realizes his oversight in his afterword. “Men always rally around the sacred,” he writes, so we have to be careful that the public square does not displace the sacred. “We easily imagine the nation as more than our civic home; it is our savior. bat this idolatry,” we need to supplement this munity with “the domestic society of marriage and the munity of the church, synagogue, and munities of transcendence.” Or, put differently, public life needs to plemented by a strengthening of civil society and private institutions.

This is the crucial point to take away from Reno’s sometime vague but overall thought-provoking book: A renewal of our society, of our institutions, and, for us Christians, of our faith, is possible. This renewal “will be painfully difficult.” It might take time. But “our task is to use our freedom and intelligence in doing so. We must return to the terrain that can be stabilized, though never finally fixed. This is a religious, cultural, and political task. It is ours.” It should remain ours, and it can most effectively be achieved when power is devolved from the leadership class into the hands of the people.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
The Wizard of Oz as an Allegory for the 1896 Presidential Election
  Mention “bimetallism” today—the coining of both gold and silver as legal tender—and the eyes glaze over immediately. However, in late 19th century U.S. politics, along with the tariff, bimetallism was the major political obsession of the era. Everyone talked about the subject. It featured as the foremost political issue in the presidential election of 1896. William Jennings Bryan won the...
An Education in Thanksgiving
  “This is my story, my giving of thanks.” So begins Wendell Berry’s 2004 novel Hannah Coulter, narrated by the titular character, a 79-year-old woman recounting her life’s story. It is a work of thanksgiving, and it is a work about thanksgiving—how it is practiced, how it is learned, and what happens when it gives way to restless longing for “a...
Realistic Answers to America’s Debt Problem
  For years, Republicans have vowed to focus on the biggest issue plaguing the United States: our federal debt. Now, in the wake of their victory earlier this month, they have a chance to make good on those promises.   One step that has already been announced is that Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy will head up a new “government efficiency commission”...
The Shallowness of Celebrity Politics
  The plot of Fritz Lang’s enigmatic 1927 silent film Metropolis revolves around a group of powerful elites determined to maintain their hold over the masses. To do so, they set out to invent artificial crises with the intention to set the everyday folk against each other and thus distract them from the real crisis of the elite’s inordinate and corrupt...
A Prayer for Patience for the Good God Promises
  A Prayer for Patience for the Good God Promises   By Keri Eichberger   Bible Reading   “I say to myself, “The LORD is my portion; therefore I will wait for him.” The LORD is good to those whose hope is in him, to the one who seeks him.” - Lamentations 3:24-25   Listen or Read Below:   It’s been a really hard year. One...
Avoiding Toxic Talk at Thanksgiving
  Avoiding Toxic Talk at Thanksgiving   By Vivian Bricker   Bible Reading   “Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen” (Ephesians 4:29).   Thanksgiving is known to be a holiday where food is a major theme. We meet together with...
Why Your In
  Why Your In-Laws Shouldn't Be Your Biggest Enemies   By: Vivian Bricker   A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another (John 13:34).   It is very common for married couples to dislike their in-laws.This is a trendI have seen too often and it makes me feel pretty bad, to be...
Terrence Malick’s Thanksgiving Masterpiece
  Thanksgiving is unique among American holidays because it’s not simply political, like Independence Day, which belongs only to Americans, nor simply a religious celebration shared among all Christians, like Christmas or Easter. It’s a mix of the two, but it is also more emphatically than others a family celebration. It is legally established, part of our political institutions, but it...
3 Ways to Be Thankful through the Holidays (Colossians 3:15)
  BIBLE VERSE OF THE DAY:“Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, since as members of one body you were called to peace. And be thankful.” -Colossians 3:15   3 Ways to Be Thankful Through the Holidays   By Lynette Kittle   Especially during the holidays, it’s easy for a heart of thankfulness to fade.And as with most things in life, it’s...
The Middle Path Forsworn
  The Russian Revolution unfolded in such an astonishing and immensely complex series of events that it is difficult to grasp what really happened. This is why Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, in his work of dramatized history, The Red Wheel, tried to capture the truth and meaning of the Revolution by exploring certain nodal points, or short periods of time, that give us...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved