Far Cry 5 Offers No Insight into Christian Fundamentalism
When creative director Dan Hay explained his narrative vision for Far Cry 5, he described a story that would address what he perceived to be the return of the “us vs. them” mentality in the United States. By his observation, in the last decade or so of American politics, a deep division had resurfaced to create an atmosphere of fear, or as he puts it, pressure. And he wanted to make a game about it.
This perspective, one that bears the social privilege of seeing the hostility of American politics, as Waypoint reports, as an “unrealistic experience” to build a game on, may explain why Far Cry 5 is so out of touch. Is it about cults? Is it about militias? Is it about white people and Christian fundamentalism? In a way, it’s “about” all of these things, but it doesn’t offer any insight. The player is positioned, much like Hay, to feel pressure and fear from a situation they don’t understand. And they are given no opportunity to critically engage or empathize.
As a result, Far Cry 5 completely misses its chance to offer any insight into How We Got Here, perhaps even deepening that same divide between Americans that Hay speaks of. If Far Cry 5 wanted to make a comment on our current political climate, it was as easy as doing the research. An explanation can be found not in drugs or music boxes or physical torture; mind control, as a concept, is just a fancy phrase for mental abuse. White America is already equipped with the tools for spiritual coercion, and already uses them. And that fact explains more about the “sudden” rise of the alt-right and violent conservatism than initially meets the eye.
I speak from first hand experience. As as a pastor’s daughter who grew up in the backwoods of Washington state, Far Cry 5 doesn’t seem anything like the rural separatism that I grew up with. I can see certain markers in the game that I am supposed to understand as Christian, but they don’t align with what I know from personal history. Rather, the game seems to base its portrayal of The Father and his acolytes on depictions of cults from pop culture, in turn influenced by the John the Baptist trope of the ‘60s, wherein a gentle, attractive leader gathers followers on the merit of their feel-good message and charismatic public speaking skills. Add to that a pair of yellow-tinted aviator frames and you have a contemporary take on the old hippie prophet stereotype, a hipster David Koresh. He’s not exactly your average Christian pastor.
Religious coercion and spiritual abuse, meanwhile, are one of the most common yet least-talked about issues within conservative America. Looking at the history of the white Christian church gives insight not only into how it came to swing fundamentalist, but why it remains so popular despite its oppressive nature. Evangelicism, the roots of modern fundamentalism, can be traced back to the Southern Baptist Convention, which despite its egalitarian roots, split off from the greater Baptist denomination in the 19th century in order to accommodate and justify slavery. This preceded the social role white evangelicals would later play in opposing desegregation and the civil rights movement and also led to a fixation on sexual purity that would be used to subjugate women. Since then, white supremacist patriarchy has continued to be upheld by an agenda-driven interpretation of scripture that positions men as a representation of divine authority. Self interested megachurch pastors like Mark Driscoll, or cult leaders like David Koresh, can then build up a following using the fear of their followers to reinforce their self appointment as God’s proxy without even raising suspicion. The resulting power structure, fermented by the geographic and social isolation of the congregation, inevitably escalates and leads to abuse. It’s a pattern that plays out in many white evangelical churches across the country.
I observed this first hand the first two decades of my life. My father was a minister in the Foursquare Church, a foreign-mission focused denomination that can swing fundamentalist in the right setting. Growing up, I watched how my well-meaning parents, who joined the church out of an honest desire to help people, were eventually swept up in internal politics, bickering and emotional abuse in almost every congregation we joined. We encountered pastors who embezzled money, failed to report assault or abuse, or just plain humiliated and bullied other believers. As they founded or helped establish “starter church” after starter church, each one inevitably slipped into petty, dogmatic spats over Biblical interpretation and escalating Pharisee-like performances of holiness that would eventually divide and splinter the entire group. Eventually, my parents got sucked into and exploited by it too, leaving me one of the many orphans to ideology that Christianity (and eventually, the alt-right movement) hurt and left behind.
My experience isn’t uncommon. The white Christian church is constantly splintering at the whims of self appointed prophets. Even in my tiny town of 4000 people, there are almost 40 churches, mostly due to a vicious social hierarchy that few outsiders even knew existed. Evangelicism has already been shaped to emphasize the sections of the Bible that support patriarchal white supremacy, and its legacy has enabled an uncanny ability to weaponize scripture to support individual agendas. Add to that an environment where members of a congregation are also geographically isolated and have few other options for social interaction outside of their local church (establishing a fear of ostracization), and voila: You have an easy way to both start your own following, and keep new converts in line. Perhaps it’s not so hard to imagine the spread of spiritual abuse in Evangelicism, after all.
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