The Spirit of Tribalism Causing Division in America
Guest Commentary


Audio By Carbonatix
By Dr. Dennis Sempebwa, Crosswalk.com
When Tribes Rule, Truth Dies
The deep divisions in America today reveal something far more dangerous than partisan politicsâthey expose the rise of tribalism in the public square. The hostility we see is not mere disagreement; it is the reflex of one group rejoicing at the silencing of another.
I recognize this spirit. I grew up in the middle of Kampala, the capital of Ugandaâa city where all 52 tribes of our nation converged. We were Baganda, and we were told we did not get along with the Acholi. As children, we didnât understand the tension. We were expected to own it, respect it, observe it, and pass it on.
The Northerners were called âwarrior tribes.â They had produced Idi Amin, who had brought our people pain, even deposing and murdering our king. So we hated themânot because of anything we had personally suffered, but because the script had already been written for us: âYou do not get along with the Northerners.â
I remember the moment this became real to me. I had come to Christ as a boy, and one of my closest friends was Robert Okema, a Luo who lived just a few doors away. He was one of the kindest people I knew. I brought him home often, but the neighbors would whisper, âThat Luo kid is bad for you. You cannot have him in your house.â
I would plead with them: Please, heâs my friend. I like him. But it did not matter. To them, he was of the wrong tribeâand that alone disqualified him.
That early woundâbeing told that someoneâs tribe outweighed their characterâetched itself into my memory. And when I look at America now, I see the same spirit resurfacing in new forms.
The Death of Dialogue
When a nation descends into tribalism, evidence no longer matters, dialogue no longer works, and reconciliation becomes impossible. The ultimate wish of one tribe is not coexistence but the elimination of the other.
The Bible warns of this very spirit: âIf you bite and devour each other, watch out or you will be destroyed by each otherâ(Galatians 5:15). America is walking that road. Executive actions pile up because tribes cannot agree, cannot trust, cannot yield. But governance by decree is not democracyâit is monarchy. And when a people refuse to reason together, they invite a king.
Historyâs Warnings
I have seen this movie before.
In Uganda, we traded fear of one another for the false security of a dictator. The âkingâ we demanded became the tyrant we could not escape. And I will never forget watching as Rwanda descended into unspeakable horror in 1994. Nearly a million lives were lost in just 100 days. Entire families vanished overnight. I was close enough to hear the cries of a nation being torn apart.
Tribalism always begins with suspicion and caricature but ends with bloodshed. Once a society believes âthe other tribe is irredeemably evilââwhether defined by ethnicity, ideology, or partyâmass violence is never far behind.
Americaâs Own Echoes
The Civil War remains the bloodiest chapter in the nationâs history, with more than 600,000 dead. Yes, it was fought over slaveryâbut beneath that moral crisis was the deeper fracture of two âtribesâ who no longer believed they could share a country.
Later, entire communities were treated as less than human in their own land. The logic was tribal: âtheyâ cannot be trusted, so âweâ must be protected.
Even the Civil Rights Movement, as righteous as it was, revealed the depth of Americaâs tribal reflex. Peaceful demonstrators were branded enemies, not because of their actions, but because they threatened the dominance of another tribe.
Todayâs divisions may look different, but the spirit is the same. Left and right no longer see opponents; they see enemies. Blue and red are not preferences but tribal identities. To question your tribe is to betray it. To reach across the aisle is to consort with the enemy.
The Inevitable Strongman
This is the danger America faces. Tribal nations eventually demand a strong hand, a dictator, to keep them from tearing each other apart.
Ancient Israel made the same mistake. Rejecting Godâs reign, they cried out: âNow appoint for us a king to judge us like all the nationsâ (1 Samuel 8:5). But God warned them: a king would not unite themâhe would exploit them. And still they insisted, âWe want a king over usâ (v. 19).
Jesus said it plainly: âEvery kingdom divided against itself is laid waste, and no city or house divided against itself will standâ (Matthew 12:25). America will not be the exception to His words.
The Gospelâs Answer to Tribalism
What, then, is Americaâs hope? It will not be found in stronger arguments, louder rhetoric, or sharper tribal lines. The only cure for tribal hatred is the cross of Christ.
At Calvary, Jew and Gentile, slave and free, male and female were reconciled into one new humanity (Ephesians 2:14 16; Galatians 3:28). Only the gospel dismantles the walls of hostility that tribes erect. Only Christ creates a table where enemies sit as family.
The early church knew this well. In Antioch, believers were first called Christians (Acts 11:26)ânot Jews, not Greeks, not Romans, but a new people defined not by tribe but by Christ. That was their prophetic witness then. It must be ours today.
A Call to the Church
As a minister, I know how tempting it is to baptize partisan politics and call it gospel. But I also know this: whenever the Church lowers itself to a tribal pulpit, it loses its prophetic authority. Only when we stand above the tribes can we speak to them with Godâs voice.
This is not about choosing sides but about choosing Christ. Our task is not to echo the cultureâs divisions but to embody heavenâs reconciliation. Our citizenship is in heaven (Philippians 3:20), and our allegiance is to a King whose throne cannot be shaken.
America stands at a tipping point. Tribalism is not merely politicsâit is spiritual warfare. The enemy delights in division because he knows a house divided cannot stand.
My prayer is not abstractâit is the cry of a man who has seen nations devour themselves. I pray, âLord, have mercy on America. Do not let tribalism consume her as it has consumed others.â
And may the Church be found faithfulânot as a tribe among tribes, but as a prophetic people who refuse to trade the cross for a flag, or the kingdom of God for the kingdoms of men.
Photo Credit: ©Unsplash/Samuel Schneider
Dr. Dennis Sempebwa was born and raised in Uganda. He has served in 89 countries as an award-winning recording artist, leadership coach, educator, and sought-after speaker. Holding numerous doctoral degrees and authorship of 18 books, Dennis is recognized as one of Africaâs top thought leaders and public intellectuals. He and his family reside in Texas, USA. Learn more at sempebwa.com.