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Analysis of Christian nationalists in America found that "Christian nationalism is the strongest predictor that Americans fail to affirm factually correct answers". When asked about Christianity's place in American founding documents, policies, and court decisions, those that embraced Christian nationalism had more confident incorrect answers ...
Smith’s book is about much more than Christian nationalism, but it does diagnose some of the underlying causes of the political movement. Yahoo News' podcast "The Long Game" and James K.A. Smith ...
“Christian nationalism is the desire to see the fusion of a very particular expression of Christianity with American civic life. And it believes that this particular expression of Christianity ...
Wolfe approaches nationalism as becoming conscious of, and "being for", one's own "people-group". [1] He argues that homogeneity within each people-group allows it to more properly pursue the good by ordering earthly life toward heavenly life, and that while a principal image of heavenly life can be found in Christian worship, only a Christian nation can provide a complete image. [1]
Religious nationalism can be understood in a number of ways, such as nationalism as a religion itself, a position articulated by Carlton Hayes in his text Nationalism: A Religion, or as the relationship of nationalism to a particular religious belief, dogma, ideology, or affiliation.
The Trump campaign is signaling that it intends to make the U.S. a "Christian nation." Here's what that idea looked like in history.
The more adults affirm Christian Nationalism, the more they are likely to say, “the problem with the death penalty is we don’t use it enough.”
Defining Christian nationalism can be difficult, so we’ll accept the statement as a working definition. But with a cascade of articles and books on Christian nationalism, ...