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Rev. Jeremy Smith's avatar

In “Christians Against Christianity” by Dr. Obery Hendricks Jr. (2021), well within your time frame, he details how the rise of Christian Nationalism was embedded in social movements that were framed by originators as Christian movements but were not always understood as such by the general population. The power was gained by a small statistical minority promoting their values as Christian to gain power to effect change.

My contention with your article is while Christian Nationalism may now be better understood and verbally rejected by larger swaths than before, the top-down power of the movement has only increased in that time frame and we are well on our way to it becoming a reality.

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Edward's avatar

Two questions: First, which of the books you mentioned is most interesting/accessible? Second, to go back to a comment above, the questions in the survey aren’t really the hot button issues that you hear linked to Christian Nationalism. Trans/Gay issues, “wokeness” etc. are the bigger issues it would seem.

I also wonder if there is an intensity component that isn’t being measured. That is, for people who take the items in the survey as very important, there is a smaller but critical subset that are intensely supportive.

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