I watched Disclosure Day this afternoon, and I am still sitting with the profound spiritual weight of its climax. Sitting in the theater, watching the previews roll by, it felt like an endless barrage of cheap sex and empty suspense. But when the feature started, Spielberg offered something else entirely: a heavy, necessary mirror. As the film tracked into that monitor for its final, simple piece of advice from an ancient civilization - "Listen" - it felt like a lightning bolt aimed straight at our current cultural moment.
Ultimately, the film serves as a devastating indictment of modern religious fundamentalism and authoritarian institutions, exposing how their obsession with ideological gatekeeping and control has stripped faith of its transformative empathy, trading the radical openness of the Kingdom for the rigid armor of Empire.
We live in a time where institutional religion feels increasingly defined by this precise need for control. There is an anxious, rigid desire to dictate what is considered "acceptable knowledge" for the masses. We see it in the cultural rhetoric that actually attempts to pathologize human compassion - using books like Allie Beth Stuckey’s Toxic Empathy to frame our natural, intuitive resonance with the suffering of others as a spiritual weakness. It betrays a deep mistrust of individual discernment, telling people they cannot even trust their own capacity to pray, feel, or love without an institutional filter.
This is not the work of the Kingdom. This is the work of Empire.
Empire vs. Kingdom
There is a sharp, historical distinction between these two forces:
Empire thrives on control, borders, and top-down authority. It demands absolute certainty and labels anything outside its approved boundaries as a threat. In Disclosure Day, the decades-long systemic cover-up represents the ultimate corporate and institutional hubris - holding onto power because the raw truth would upend their control.
Kingdom is inherently open, relational, and transformative. When the truth is finally broadcast to eight billion people in the film, it doesn’t arrive as a weapon of domination. It arrives as an invitation to radical connection, stripping away the armor of institutional power and leveling the playing field for all of humanity.
This systemic hubris isn't just an abstract concept; it has a very loud, very human face. I was reminded of this during a recent debate I had with an Oklahoma pastor. In his mind, it is his explicit job and spiritual responsibility to tell anyone and everyone that what they believe, how they live, and who they love is flatly wrong. He insisted he is required to "call out their sin" because he has positioned himself as the ultimate authority on what constitutes a lie versus what constitutes truth.
When the fear of shifting realities causes leaders to hide behind rigid structures and self-appointed authority, they stop believing in people. They trade the messy, beautiful work of spiritual growth for the cold certainty of political alignment.
The Radical Act of Surrender
The command to "Listen" is the ultimate spiritual subversion to this authoritarian mindset. It doesn’t hand us a complex new theology or a rigid set of rules to weaponize against our neighbors. It simply demands a pause.
In a culture driven by relentless noise, ideological defense mechanisms, and political posturing, choosing to listen is an act of profound surrender. It requires us to lay down our arguments, exit our echo chambers, and acknowledge our shared cosmic vulnerability.
Empathy is not a secular compromise or a progressive trap; it is the very mechanism of divine connection. If we want to find our way back to the Kingdom, we have to stop building the walls of Empire. We have to quiet the noise, look at the person across from us, and finally learn to listen.
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