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2019, Commonweal
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2 pages
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A letter against the new Christian nationalism. Signatories include: Cornel West, Anthea Butler, Stanley Hauerwas, Eddie Glaude, David Bentley Hart, Fr. Greg Boyle and other top pastors and theologians.
America Magazine, 2019
Defined by Merriam-Webster as 'loss of voice and of all but whispered speech', I use aphonia here to characterise the striking absence of clear, oppositional (and in my view faithful) theological articulation of Christianity's relationship to the nation-state as an entity, to civil-religious nationalism as a phenomenon, and to the contingent tangle of racial and religious identities. The aphonia is there to be heard loudest—or not heard!—from Protestant, especially evangelical, Christian leaders in the US and Australia. When I look back at the sweep of twentieth century US history, the present era appears both striking and frightening for the ideological captivity and aphonia of evangelical Protestants. The pattern is more pronounced now than it was even in the 1980s—the moment when the Religious Right is popularly remembered to have been born. Then there was far more contingency over where evangelical political weight would fall, and a conceptual space remained open in evangelical discourse for critical engagement with the ethics of nationalism and borders.[2]
Christian nationalism is theocracy in a Christian context. It is being proposed by many evangelicals, especially those in the MAGA movement. Christian nationalism was implemented in a covert sort of way in the Trump administration. Should Donald Trump be re-elected president in November 2024, all indications are that what was covert will move to the overt. Theocracy, Christian or not, is inherently anti-democratic, exclusionary, and divisive. This paper places Christian nationalism into a historical context. It also discusses present developments and plans for the future. This paper argues that evangelicals have drifted far from their original calling and have turned politics into a sort of idol. It calls for a major course correction, for the sake of democracy, as well as for the integrity and reputation of the evangelical faith itself.
Scottish Journal of Theology, 2014
This book comprises a Christian apologia for nationalism in general and for Scottish separatist nationalism in particular. It is only fair that the reader should know that its reviewer is an Anglo-Scottish unionist.
Svensk Teologisk Kvartalskrift, 2022
America Magazine, 2019
This is a dialogue among thinkers who have signed two different open letters, one embracing a "new nationalism" and the other, in response, warning of its dangers. One pair of authors, David Albertson and Jason Blakely, later published a piece in America further explaining their concerns about the new nationalism.
It has been said that we love what we’re willing to die for. The history of this country reveals an abundance of readiness on the part of her citizens to heartily die for her preservation and future. America has no shortage of war heroes, those to whom we look for inspiration and whose courage we praise. How does this most immediate of passions relate to what should be our deepest passion for the prophetic, cruciformity demanded of the Christian Gospel? Can love for God and love for the nation-state peacefully coexist? What is a “Christian nation”? Is this an oxymoron? Is it even advisable? When is it apparent that the latter has trumped the former? Doesn’t the Bible make clear the need for us to live, move and have our being within indigenous cultural contexts? How does nationalism harm our spiritual formation? In both research and a largely anecdotal way, I herein strive to answer some of these questions.
The Occidental Observer (https://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/) , 2023
This is a review essay discussing a book by Stephen Wolfe, entitled The Case for Christian Nationalism (Moscow, ID: Canon Press, 2022). Although it was published only a few months ago, in November 2022, the book has had a tremendous impact in conservative evangelical circles. It has attracted a multitude of reviews, symposiums, and podcast discussions. Most of the criticism directed at the book from within evangelical circles has been prompted by its (rather ambiguous) defense of ethnic homogeneity as an important prerequisite to the foundation and preservation of Christian nationhood. Wolfe views the kingdom of God in the heavenly world in universalistic terms but believes that the earthly realm requires the maintenance of ethnic and national boundaries against mass immigration of alien peoples. He also criticizes the "gynocracy" that presently governs the USA and defends traditional patriarchal norms. This paper takes issue with Wolfe's "behaviourist" understanding of politics, and his abstract, universalistic, and mythological understanding of history and theology. It also critiques Wolfe's confused and confusing discussion of nationhood and ethnicity. Finally, the paper addresses the elephant in the room studiously ignored by Wolfe, i.e., the question of who has undermined the goods of cultural Christianity prized by Wolfe and why they have done it. In other words, who are the most dangerous enemies of Christian nationalism in the USA? Anglo-Protestants themselves or another ethnoreligious group that neither Wolfe nor his conservative evangelical critics dare not name?
Patterns of Prejudice , 2021
We do not advocate [….] segregation [….] That was a temporary political measure and that time is past [….] The Greater White Racialist movement intends to establish for our White Aryan Race what every other race on earth has: A Racial homeland. 3
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