It sure seems like those who think they’re in power really don’t like nationalism.
They really don’t like Christians.
And they especially hate it when those powers combine under the banner of Christian Nationalism.
Whenever your enemy states what they hate, you should listen and pay attention.
They usually admit a truth they wanted to conceal.
Their anger and disdain clouds their judgment. And as Jesus the Christ once said, “Out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks.”
We are a threat to their control.
#DemVoice1 #DemsUnited
“Rights given by a god can be taken away by men claiming to speak for god. That's exactly the fight we're in now.” Seidele.g., MAGA Mike calls himself ‘Moses’ and claims to speak for God.
Christians vs Christian Nationalism. pic.twitter.com/W7F9MCgKZU
— Margie 🌊🌊🌊 (@MargieVotes) March 1, 2024
Here’s USA Today’s panicked reporting on this topic:
Suddenly, it seems, the term “Christian nationalism” is everywhere.
News reports about a rising conservative think tank express concerns about its ties to the movement. A high profile documentary asks whether a new wave of believers will wash away democracy in America. And Donald Trump, the presumptive GOP nominee, is increasingly embracing the narrative that he has been chosen by God — that only he can save America from Satan.
Last month, a trio of convoys calling themselves “God’s Army” converged on the U.S.-Mexico border to protest what they called a flood of immigrants into the country. On stages draped with Trump flags and banners with phrases like “An appeal to heaven,” they prayed and proselytized. Between trailers in parking lots, they held baptisms in stock tanks. Worship music floated through the red, white and blue of hundreds of flags.
Trump has ramped up his spiritual imagery. He told a convention of religious broadcasters last week that he was “taking bullets” for Christians. “They want to tear down crosses where they can,” Trump said of his opponents. “But no one will be touching the cross of Christ under the Trump administration, I swear to you.”
The concept of Christian nationalism — technically, the belief that the secular government should favor Christianity or even be replaced by it — existed long before Trump’s rise to power. But experts said the former president’s embrace of the movement and his increasing use of Christian nationalist language is something altogether new…
READ FULL ARTICLE HERE… (wltreport.com)
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I’m pretty sure this nation was founded on “Christian nationalism”.