Chrustian nationalism is just Christians who believe we need care about America, first. No Christian I know wants a theocracy. We want a Republic, as we are very well versed in how this nation was founded and on the Constitution.Christian Nationalists? Seriously? More tilting at windmills, and more moral equivalents?
How would you define them?
Is your point that all Christian’s are actually secret Christian Nationalists?
Are there a lot of them? I’ve seen antifa, they have a uniform, we’ve seen them on a lot of cameras and a lot of cities.
I don’t recall a large Christian Nationalist protest?
I don’t recall them in any cities, maybe I missed it?
Your reading comprehension skills are funny.
Maga is a Christian nationalism movement.
Again AI: (again I can't believe you're trying to argue this..you are a fucking Christian nationalist to the tree).
While the two are distinct concepts, a strong overlap exists, and many political analysts, sociologists, and religious experts describe Christian nationalism as the driving force behind the MAGA movement.
Christian nationalism is a political ideology that asserts the U.S. was founded as a Christian nation and should remain one, with Christian values guiding its laws and public life. It holds that Christians should exercise dominion over all areas of American society.
Key Viewpoints on the Relationship:
Significant Overlap: Polling by the nonpartisan Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) in early 2025 found that a majority of Republicans qualify as either Christian nationalist adherents or sympathizers, and states with more Christian nationalists are more likely to vote for Trump. Proponents often believe God ordained Donald Trump to be president.
A Political Tool/Identity: Some observers argue that the MAGA movement has co-opted religious language and identity for political gain, creating a fusion of faith and partisan politics that demands loyalty to a leader and an ideology rather than the core tenets of the Christian faith itself.
Incompatible Ideologies: Many other Christians, including some who identify as evangelical but are "new evangelicals" (see The Revealer for details), argue that the MAGA ideology is fundamentally incompatible with the teachings of Jesus, which emphasize humility, compassion, love for one's neighbor, and service to the poor and marginalized.
Threat to Pluralism: Critics, such as those associated with the project Christians Against Christian Nationalism, express concern that the movement's push to merge American and Christian identity erodes the separation of church and state, marginalizes non-Christian communities, and threatens a pluralistic democracy.
In summary, while not every person in the MAGA movement is a Christian nationalist, and not every Christian nationalist is a MAGA supporter, the two movements are widely viewed by experts as deeply intertwined and mutually reinforcing.
Talk about reading comprehension, try reading all of your first Amendment.
The media and the left want low-information voters to believe Christian’s have mingled their desire for a conservative government to address the creeping socialism - we think men ought to be free. We do not want any government to decide what religion we all get to participate in, or what denomination they want us to follow.
When we say we want and desire and are working for a Christian nation, we mean we the PEOPLE to have a chance at sharing the gospel with our friends and neighbors and let them have a chance at coming ti Christ.
No Christian in my church, and none that I personally know, desire a theocracy. We are working to win all men to Christ. It would be great if the majority of our government were Christians, but we are not trying to force our religion, nor our government to convert. That is anethema to any Cheistian.
See, we know what we believe. We were told by the founder of our faith to “go into all the world making disciples.”
it cannot be argued that our nation was founded by men who believed in God. Not all of them believed in Jesus for their salvation, but a majority did. All throughout our history, Christianity had been a common belief. It only recently (historically speaking) that the ideal of Christians operating within the framework of a secular government - was the desired outcome. The left has purged any and all talk of Christ as the basis for our laws and common beliefs, from our schools. The fact that you don’t know that is because you have become indoctrinated. That’s why it seems foreign to you.
Christians aren’t trying to create heaven on earth - we understand that won’t happen. We’re working for a longer win, for as many as possible.
Christian Nationalism is an absolute fabrication to any believer in Jesus. It’s a made-up story to cast us in the light of a subversive group in order scare folks away from conservatism and Trump.
If you were a brother in Christ, you would know this. You were told this was thing, it’s not.
When we say we want this to be a Christian nation, we mean we want to work to make a nation of Christians, which would be a return to our historical roots.
What you believe about Christian Nationailsm is a bogeyman dreamt up by leftists to divide us.
We Christian’s aren’t above pushing back on the corruption of the culture. It’s what we’re called to - voting in free and fair elections is one of our most enduring accomplishments.
Chritsians already revolted against the idea of a state run religion, by a corrupt king, why would we seek to make it a new issue?
Have fun with your false flag. There have been zero protests by Christian’s Nationalists.
However it doesn’t mean we don’t feel very strongly about our republic, how to save it, and to whom we loan our power. Power to the people is kind of our thing.
If you want to chase that leftist canard, feel free, it will free us to continue winning more elections.
