Defining "Christian Nationalism"

By Sean Feucht

The pen is mightier than the sword, and words are worth fighting for.

There is a fierce debate within Christian circles about the influence and scope of so-called "Christian Nationalism." Some want to apologize for it, others want to embrace it, but who really defines "Christian Nationalism?" This is critical. We are fighting a battle not about ideology, but about the very language we use every single day. Truth doesn't change, but words certainly do.

A recent report from the Public Religion Research Institute claims that 55% of Republicans "qualify" as Christian nationalists. Did you catch that word? Qualify. We "qualify" as Christian Nationalists because they are creating the definition. I refuse to cede defining "Christian Nationalism" to those who weaponize and politicize the dictionary. If you can't properly define what a woman is, you lose the right to define "Christian Nationalist."

Let's unpack the term "Christian Nationalism." Separate it into its parts and something becomes clear; the people who define "Christian Nationalism" hate both. Christianity and Nationalism are anathema to the liberal ideology. The globalist mindset we see of our leaders pushing today was flatly rejected by God in Genesis. In Genesis 11, there was only one people and one tongue, and yet the Lord,  "scattered them over the face of the whole earth." That's how globalism should be dealt with.

 

FINISH READING ON SUBSTACK →  https://seanfeucht.substack.com/p/defining-christian-nationalism

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