The Case for Christian Nationalism
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Narrated by:
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Wade Stotts
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Written by:
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Stephen Wolfe
About this listen
Evangelical elites and the progressive media complex want you to think that Christian nationalism is hopelessly racist, bigoted, and an idol for right-wing Christians. Is Christian nationalism the golden calf of the religious right—or is it the only way forward?
Few “experts” answering this question actually know what nationalism is—and even fewer know what could make it Christian. In The Case for Christian Nationalism, Stephen Wolfe offers a tour-de-force argument for the good of Christian nationalism, taken from Scripture and Christian thinkers ancient, medieval, and modern. Christian nationalism is not only the necessary alternative to secularism, it is the form of government we must pursue if we want to love our neighbors and our country.
Wolfe shows that the world’s post-war consensus has successfully routed the United States toward a gynocratic Global American Empire (GAE). Rather than the religious right’s golden calf, Christian nationalism is the idea that people in the same place and culture should live together and seek one another’s good. The grace of the gospel does not eliminate our geography, our people, and our neighbors. Instead, it restores us to pursue local needs and local leadership freely and without apology.
If you want to be able to answer the political debate raging today, you must understand the arguments in The Case for Christian Nationalism.
©2022 Canon Press (P)2023 Canon PressWhat listeners say about The Case for Christian Nationalism
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Anastasia
- 2024-07-10
Waste of time/paper
Picked this book as part of research into modern radical Christianity. Author uses 15 pages to say something that could be a page, or perhaps a paragraph. There are pages upon pages of beating around the bush and arguments and conclusions are very hard to distill, almost as if Wolfe is unclear to what exactly he is trying to say. Most of the arguments are supported by pages of random examples, I assume author thinks more analogy arguments will make his case stronger. Very hard to read, even harder to process.
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