
The idea of the scapegoat sits at the crossroads of psychology, religion, and culture. Both Carl Jung and René Girard grappled with this ancient human reflex, but from radically different starting points. Where Jung explored the scapegoat as a psychological mechanism rooted in projection and the Shadow, Girard saw scapegoating as the foundational structure of human culture itself.
Where Jung looked inward, Girard looked outward. Yet at key moments, their insights converge in surprising and provocative ways.
JUNG’S SHADOWY SCAPEGOAT WITHIN
For Jung, scapegoating begins in the psyche.
Central to Jung’s psychology is the concept of the Shadow: the rejected or unconscious aspects of the self. What we refuse to acknowledge in ourselves does not disappear; it gets projected outward onto others.
As Jung writes:
“Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.”
This is scapegoating in psychological form. We externalize what we cannot face internally. The enemy, the heretic, the immoral one, all of these often carry the traits we have suppressed most within ourselves.
This is like when Jesus urges us to “First, take care of the plank in your own eye, (and) then you will see clearly to help your brother remove the speck in his eye.” (Matt. 7:5) The “evil” things that bother us so much about other people are often the very weaknesses and failures we ourselves struggle with. What we hate about others is that their failures are so poorly hidden, and it makes us fearful that others might notice those same failures in us, so we lash out at their weaknesses as a way of distracting everyone from our own inner weakness.
Projection as Personal and Collective Mechanism
Jung did not limit projection to individuals. Entire societies, he argued, can project their Shadow onto minority groups, political enemies, or outsiders. Writing in the shadow of World War II, Jung warned that Nazism was a massive eruption of the collective Shadow in Europe.
For Jung, Scapegoating is unconscious projection where the “evil other” carries our disowned darkness. Our healing requires the integration of our own Shadow.
The work is psychological and spiritual. Redemption comes not by destroying the scapegoat, but by recognizing: “That darkness is mine.”
What’s also fascinating, is that this approach seems to suggest that the evil we see “out there” in the world around us is reflective of our own inner self. Since none of us can ever change anyone else, it makes more sense to heal the shadow within ourselves as a way of healing the world.
When we change, the world changes. That’s how transformation takes place.
GIRARD’S CULTURAL SCAPEGOAT
If Jung begins with the psyche, Girard begins with anthropology.
Girard’s groundbreaking theory of mimetic desire argues that humans learn what to want by imitating others. This imitation leads to rivalry. Rivalry escalates into conflict. When conflict threatens to tear a community apart, the group unconsciously resolves the crisis by uniting against a single victim—the scapegoat.
In I See Satan Fall Like Lightning, Girard writes:
“The scapegoat mechanism is the single most powerful instrument for the resolution of human conflict.”
For Girard, desire is imitative (mimetic), and mimetic rivalry produces social chaos. Communities restore peace by collectively blaming and eliminating a victim.
Unlike Jung, Girard does not see scapegoating primarily as projection of inner darkness. It is a structural social mechanism—a way societies generate unity through shared violence.
However, it can still be true that the social mechanism of collective scapegoating is a product of our own individual scapegoating.
For example, we all remember when Trump was running for President in this first term how every single other Republican candidate for President went on record that Trump was “a kook” and that he was “crazy” and that he was “unfit for office” and a “race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot.” They said if we wanted to “make a America Great Again, we should tell Donald Trump to go to hell.” (And that’s just Lyndsey Graham speaking).
So, what was happening? Were they all seeing reflected back from Trump a clear image of all the flaws and failures they subconsciously knew was true about themselves? Were they pushing back against Trump’s blatant flaws and failures that mirrored their own inner darkness?
Well, if we fast forward to 2026, what we notice is that the same Republican Party (and all the very same people who denounced Trump’s moral failures) are now defending those very same flaws and failures in their own party, as well as in their President.
The things they hated about him are now being revealed as the very flaws they were also trying to hide.
The Innocent Victim and Revelation
Rene Girard’s ideas about Mimetic Theory and Scapegoating are deeply theological. He argues that the Hebrew Scriptures—and ultimately the crucifixion of Jesus—expose and dismantle the scapegoat mechanism.
As he points out, in ancient myths, the victim is portrayed as guilty. In the Gospels, the victim is revealed as innocent. For Girard, the cross unmasks scapegoating itself.
This is why it says that “…We declare God’s wisdom, a mystery that has been hidden and that God destined for our glory before time began. None of the rulers of this age (or the “powers of darkness”) understood it, for if they had, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory.” (1 Cor. 2:7-8)
However, once we have murdered the Son of God on the cross, our own inner darkness is revealed and we are undone.
This darkness is ours.
OVERLAPPING PERSPECTIVES











