

They seek to give their “biblical worldview” the force of law in local, state, and federal governments.

By Tim Dickinson
Reporter
Rolling Stone
Jason Rapert has likened himself to an Old Testament seer, conveying hard truths on behalf of an angry God. On his broadcast Save the Nation, the 50-year-old preacher and former Arkansas state senator calls himself a โproudโ Christian Nationalist, insisting: โI reject that being a Christian Nationalist is somehow unseemly or wrong.โ
Long a shadowy force in American politics, Christian Nationalism is having a coming out party. The movement seeks a fusion of fundamentalist theology with American civic life. โThey believe that this country was founded for Christians like them, generally natural-born citizens and white,โ says Andrew Whitehead, author of Taking America Back for God: Christian Nationalism in the United States. Whitehead emphasizes that the danger of Christian Nationalism to democracy is that the movement โsees no room for compromise โ their vision must be the one that comes to pass.โ
Thanks to Rapert, the Christian Nationalist movement now commands a burgeoning political powerhouse, the National Association of Christian Lawmakers. A first-of-its-kind organization in U.S. history, NACL advances โbiblicalโ legislation in Americaโs statehouses. These bills are not mere stunts or messaging. Theyโre dark, freedom-limiting bills that, in some cases, have become law.
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