On Christian Nationalism in This Age of Trump

May be an image of 8 people, crowd and text
Pro-Trump protest at the Capitol, Jan. 2021

Hugh Hewitt got me going.  I was listening to his interview with Tim Alberta in last week’s program (12/6/23) about Alberta’s new book on the rise of Christian Nationalism (CN) in the evangelical movement.  Hewitt disputed Alberta’s claim of a growing Christian Nationalist sentiment among evangelicals.  Regardless of the trend’s size – and neither Hewitt or Alberta could put a finger on its actual magnitude – Hewitt misses the point.  I think that Hewitt certainly understates CN’s impact, and, more importantly, he ignored the probability of it as a manifestation of Trump’s baleful influence within a good chunk of the Republican base, evangelicals.  Today, Christian Nationalism is religious Trumpism.

Tim Alberta on with Hugh Hewitt - YouTube
Hugh Hewitt interviewing Tim Alberta

So, what is Christian Nationalism?  Historically, it’s the identification of Christianity with American patriotism.  The concoction is too strong for my tastes; however, I saw a reasonable commonality of interest of the two at a certain point in time.  The term goes back to the Cold War.  At the time, many Americans viewed the contest as a battle between a mostly Christian USA and godless Soviet atheism.  It was a contest of powerful and obviously incompatible ideas.  The latter was a serious threat to the former.  The intersection of Christianity and American patriotism made sense.

In the interlude after the implosion of the Soviet Union, CN went dormant.  In the last five or so years, it was reawakened in fits of despair over failures to break the Democrats’ and their neo-Marxist allies’ grip on political and cultural power.

And guess who appeared on the stage in 2015 to champion the dejected?  Why, of course, Donald Trump.  They wanted a fighter and they got one, and everything associated with it such as combativeness, bellicosity, and bombast.  No deep thought and contemplation here, just in-your-face belligerence.  The desire for drama quickly overshadowed policies and ideas.  The Trump wave particularly spread over evangelicals and a reconstituted Christian Nationalism became just another manifestation of Trump’s cult of personality.

Yes, personality.  Trump’s searing attraction was his pugilistic personality.  It’s no surprise that a tabloid star would garner such loyalty in this combustible atmosphere.  The Cold War’s battle of ideas degenerated into today’s mudslinging between the Democrats’ New Left and the Republican personality cult.

Trump didn’t bring anything to the table but histrionics, and a couple of policy ideas easily grasped and exploitable for visceral effect: the wall and evil foreigners stealing our jobs.  There’s a great deal of truth in the need for a wall on the southern border, and much balderdash about the theft of jobs.  While trade with Communist China is indeed a scandal for national security reasons, tariffing trade with allies is the height of stupidity.  As the CCP becomes a global enterprise in Belt-and-Roads and a 300-ship and growing navy, Trump told our Asian allies to pound sand by taking TPP off the table and threatened tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum, and on the exports of a host of present and future allies.  The guy loves and brandishes tariffs if all his talk of the glories of them is sincere.

Trump rolls out sweeping tariffs, defying trade war warnings | The Times of Israel
Pres. Trump signs executive order imposing tariffs on imported steel from Canada and Mexico.
President Donald Trump shows the executive order withdrawing the U.S. from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) after signing it in the Oval Office on Jan. 23, 2017.
Pres. Trump shows signed executive order withdrawing from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, Jan. 27, 2017.

The related issues of outsourcing and offshoring were demagogued; all the while, our contribution to driving American businesses away went down the memory hole.  Alongside empowered NIMBY’s everywhere on American soil, EPA-like commissariats at all levels of American government, armies of neo-Marxist activists cropping up everywhere, and unions driving heavy manufacturing into bankruptcy, we voluntarily bludgeoned our home-grown enterprises with the highest corporate income tax rate in the world (see The Tax Foundation below).  Yes, congressional Republicans and President Trump cut those rates beginning in 2018 (Tax Cut and Jobs Act), but that wasn’t part of Trump’s schtick in 2016 when the Trump sect made its appearance.  It’s much more politically fruitful to blame foreigners than Americans for the situation.  Instead, Trump’s tariffs were always the locus of his heart’s desire.  They fit his style.

His allure washed over Republicans and the evangelical wing of the base.  For the religious-minded, the cultural issues took center stage and Trump delivered the Supreme Court.  For some with an evangelical bent, Trump would be identified with the Old Testament’s King Cyrus, a foreigner, a pagan who nonetheless was God’s agent to do good according to the prophet Isaiah.  That formulation is the seed of a new Christian Nationalism centering on Trump.  Today, when I read Christian Nationalism, I read Trump.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) speaks the Turning Point USA Student Action Summit held at the Tampa Convention Center on July 23, 2022 in Tampa, Florida.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) speaks the Turning Point USA Student Action Summit held at the Tampa Convention Center on July 23, 2022 in Tampa, Florida.

The bright glow of the Trump personality attracted all sorts of imitators like moths to a lamp.  Marjorie Taylor Greene, that Trumper of all Trumpers, pulls no punches in donning the garb of Christian Nationalism in 2022 at a Turning Point gathering when she declared, “We need to be the party of nationalism and I’m a Christian, and I say it proudly, we should be Christian nationalists.”

Lauren Boebert prayed Biden's 'days should be few' as 'Christian Center' crowd laughed and cheered
Lauren Boebert

For such people, brashness is a virtue.  There’s no one more brash than Congresswoman Lauren Boebert (R, Colorado, 3rd Dist.).  She scoffed at the commonly understood separation of church and state when she announced during a sermon at Cornerstone Christian Center in 2022, “I’m tired of this separation of church and state junk — that’s not in the Constitution.  It was in a stinking letter and it means nothing like they say it does.”  She goes further, “The church is supposed to direct the government.  The government is not supposed to direct the church.  That is not how our Founding Fathers intended it.”  Brashness has no room for subtleties and nuance.  Trumpian brashness is entertaining.  There’s always time later to clean up the verbose mess.

Lauren Boebert speaking at the Cornerstone Christian Center

I suspect that Hewitt tried to diminish the influence of Christian Nationalism to protect the Trump brand from potential turn-offs to large swaths of the voting electorate in 2024.  He’s got a big job ahead of him.  Overt brashness, conceit, and narcissism invite trouble for those trying to piece together a winning coalition of voters.  Hewitt’s tactic is to dismiss CN’s representativeness in the Trump base, and Trumpism, which is more stage temperament – i.e. personality – than policies or ideas.

We are entering dangerous territory in our current state of hyperbolic politics.  Both parties are becoming extremely problematic.  The Democrats’ neo-Marxism is a national suicide pill.  For Republicans, toxic currents are swirling in their pool.  What do I mean?  The trumpeted marriage of Christianity to nationalism in the bluster of people like Lauren Boebert is, in fact, an inaccurate description.  More properly, it’s nuptials between Christianity and Trumpism, that attempt to peddle the personality trait of brashness as a substitute for adult thinking.  It’ll be a big turn-off once the 2024 campaigns begin in full swing no matter Hewitt’s declaration of Christian Nationalism to be insignificant.

Hewitt’s only hope is a greater loathing for Biden than Trump, a contest between who smells worse.  Hewitt is doing his best to spray Glade over Trump’s pungency.

May be an image of hospital and text

RogerG

Read more here:

* “Corporate Income Tax Rates around the World, 2017”, Kari Jahnsen and Kyle Pomerleau, Tax Foundation, 9/7/2017, at https://taxfoundation.org/data/all/global/corporate-income-tax-rates-around-the-world-2017/#:~:text=Key%20Findings%201%20The%20United%20States%20has%20the,percent%20when%20weighted%20by%20GDP%29.%20…%20More%20items

* Marjorie Taylor Greene’s endorsement of Christian Nationalism: “Opinion: Marjorie Taylor Greene’s words on Christian nationalism are a wake-up call”, Amanda Tyler, CNN, 7/27/2022, at https://www.cnn.com/2022/07/27/opinions/christian-nationalism-marjorie-taylor-greene-tyler/index.html

* Lauren Boebert’s endorsement of Christian Nationalism: “Boebert says she is ‘tired’ of separation between church and state: ‘The church is supposed to direct the government’”, Brad Dress, The Hill, 6/22/2022, at https://thehill.com/homenews/house/3540071-boebert-says-she-is-tired-of-separation-between-church-and-state-the-church-is-supposed-to-direct-the-government/

* The full Boebert talk at Cornerstone Christian Center can be viewed in full on YouTube at https://youtu.be/P-G-oAl9pF8?si=qbQnoTmB4xxRSJE4

Comments

comments