A guide to the most influential Christian nationalists
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But in private, to groups of pastors and Christian activists, Trump has been promising something else: ideological influence over the White House, and the country.
Powerful individuals and interest groups have been working to erode the boundary between church and state, hoping to create a country ruled by Christianity, and they see Trump as a divinely appointed soldier to help them do so.
Many are guided by the principles of the Seven Mountains Mandate, a Christian Dominionist movement that teaches that Christians must control seven areas of social life: family, religion, education, media, arts and entertainment, business and government — by force if necessary — to ensure that Christian values are enforced in all areas of society. While not all Christian nationalists believe other religions can’t exist in their version of the U.S., all believe that Christians should be in charge of society to the exclusion of other groups.
As the country prepares for a second Trump term in office, here are a few of the most important names in Christian nationalism and extremism.
Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Boebert and Mike Johnson
Marjorie Taylor Greene, the representative from Georgia, is well-known for her odd pronouncements about Jewish space lasers. But she’s also a proud, self-declared Christian nationalist, who has pushed her party to cater more to a base of Christians.
“We need to be the party of nationalism,” she said at a Turning Point USA event in 2022. “I am a Christian and I say it proudly, we should be Christian nationalists.”
Meanwhile, Lauren Boebert, the Colorado Republican, has generally avoided overtly using the term Christian nationalism. But she has demonstrated her affiliation with its ideas, railing against “this separation of church and state junk,” saying that “the church is supposed to direct the government.”
Mike Johnson, the current speaker of the House of Representatives, hangs a flag associated with the New Apostolic Reformation, a Christian nationalist movement, outside his office. Though he, too, has avoided self-identifying as a Christian nationalist, he has claimed that the Constitution does not actually provide for a separation of church and state.
Lance Wallnau
Televangelist Lance Wallnau, a pastor in the Christian nationalist New Apostolic Reformation movement, was a major part of getting out the vote for Trump. His “Courage Tour,” a series of tent revival-style events across the country, framed Democrats as a demonic influence and Trump as a God-appointed savior who would put churches in charge of the nation.
Wallnau espouses the Seven Mountains Mandate, a movement he helped, including co-writing a book on the ideology called Invading Babylon: The 7 Mountain Mandate.
New Apostolic Reformation is a loose movement within Christianity that has been growing since Trump’s first term in office. It is characterized by its central teachings on the need for Christian political control, or “dominion,” achieved through spiritual and political “warfare.”
Wallnau has been called “the father of American Dominionism” and self-identifies as a Christian nationalist. He praised the rioters on Jan. 6 as fighters for God and has refused to condemn the attacks. “Jan. 6 was not an insurrection,” he said in 2024. “It was an election fraud intervention.”
David Barton
Author and political activist David Barton is perhaps best known for his books promoting a false historical account that the Founding Fathers never intended to separate church and state, and instead set out to create a Christian nation. His version of history has helped Christian nationalists argue that their vision of a Christian country is grounded in the Constitution, but is so filled with inaccuracies that his publisher, Thomas Nelson, a Christian publisher, pulled his book The Jefferson Lies — but not before it became a New York Times bestseller.
Barton, who was the chairman of the Texas Republican party until 2006, and has consulted numerous Republican campaigns, including for George W. Bush and Ted Cruz, argues that the Founding Fathers “never intended the First Amendment to become a vehicle to promote a pluralism of other religions.”
The Ziklag Group
Many influential Christian nationalist figures, including Barton and Wallnau, are involved with the Ziklag Group, a tax-exempt charity group that works to instill Christianity as the guiding principle in every sector of American society, guided by the Seven Mountains Mandate. It describes itself as a “private, confidential, invitation-only community of high-net-worth Christian families.”
A massive ProPublica investigation that got access to the group’s members-only emails and briefings found that the group had spent at least $12 million working to get out the vote for Trump. During Trump’s first term, the group brought in influential Republican speakers, including Ted Cruz and Mike Pence; the group also took credit for Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney-Barrett’s nomination.
Ziklag’s own internal documents on its mission say that the group is united by the belief that “the biblical role of government is to promote good and punish evil” and that “the word of God and prayer play a significant role in policy decisions.”
Stew Peters
A familiar figure at the ReAwaken America rallies, a traveling event about COVID-19 denialism that became a get-out-the-vote rally for Trump in 2024, Stew Peters hosts an eponymous podcast in which he espouses anti-vaxx conspiracies, LGBTQ+ hatred, antisemitism and Holocaust denial.
Peters, who has self-identified as a Christian nationalist, often clothes his conspiratorial views in Christianity, arguing that he is simply trying to protect Christians from nefarious actors — usually Jews — who control the government and persecute American Christians.
“We all have one common enemy, his name is Satan, and right now his minions are trying to run the country,” Peters said at a ReAwaken America event. “Liberals, Democrats, Communists, lizard things, we got a lot of words for these creatures.”
Andrew Torba
The founder of alternative right-wing social media site Gab, Andrew Torba, is not shy about his Christian nationalism. Torba’s openly stated goal for Gab, which also offers a suite of other sites including financial services, messaging, ad sales and video conferencing, is to build a “parallel Christian economy.”
Torba is openly antisemitic and encourages the spread of conspiracy theories against Jews who, he says, “psychologically and spiritually castrate” Americans.
The Gab founder’s Christian nationalism is codified into a book on the topic, Christian Nationalism: A Biblical Guide for Taking Dominion and Discipling Nations.
Nick Fuentes.
Trump made headlines in 2021 after inviting online personality Nick Fuentes and hip-hop artist Kanye West to Mar-a-Lago for dinner in the wake of West’s well-publicized stream of antisemitic comments.
While West is the more mainstream celebrity, Fuentes has a devoted online following among “groypers,” a group of right-wing extremists from various ideological backgrounds who all use Pepe the Frog memes as their calling card.
Fuentes’ extremist ideology includes virulent hatred of Jews and frequent Holocaust denial, as well as intense misogyny and homophobia. But he claims these beliefs are based in devout Christianity.
On his regular livestream, Fuentes says things like “God is real, Jesus Christ is God, and yet the country is run by people that don’t believe this, and don’t live by this. And we’ve talked about who they are, they are largely Jewish,” and, “we’ve got to save our country, tell the truth, and have Christian leadership.”
Trump apologized for dining with Fuentes, saying he didn’t realize he was a white nationalist, and Fuentes has since criticized Trump heavily for associating with too many Jews.
Still, Fuentes is an influential figure in the online right, along with other “manosphere” influencers who preach misogyny and hatred to young men. Though Fuentes was banned from mainstream social media platforms, he was reinstated on X (formerly Twitter) after Elon Musk took over the platform, where his posts get thousands of retweets and likes.
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Some old news from last year, but still relevant:
The Key to Mike Johnson’s Christian Extremism Hangs Outside His Office by Bradley Onishi, Matthew D. Taylor, Rolling Stone, November 10, 2023: "The newly elected House speaker has ties to the far-right New Apostolic Reformation — which is hell-bent on turning America into a religious state."
He’s also a dyed-in-the-wool Christian conservative, and there’s a flag hanging outside his office that leads into a universe of right-wing religious extremism as unknown to most Americans as Johnson was before he ascended to the speakership.
Johnson slots firmly within the more hardline evangelical wing of the Republican coalition. He holds stringent positions on abortion, thinks homosexuality is a lifestyle choice that should not be recognized under legal protections against discrimination, defends young Earth creationism, blames school shootings on the sexual revolution of the 1960s, and questions the framework of the separation of church and state. “The founders wanted to protect the church from an encroaching state, not the other way around,” he has said.
Johnson was also integral to Donald Trump’s effort to overturn the 2020 election. As The New York Times has reported, he collected signatures for a brief supporting a Texas lawsuit alleging, without evidence, irregularities in election results; served a key role in the GOP’s attempts to prevent the certification of Joe Biden’s election; and touted Trump’s conspiracy theories about election fraud, even saying, “You know the allegations about these voting machines, some of them being rigged with this software by Dominion, there’s a lot of merit to that.”
If this was all we knew about Mike Johnson, we could accurately say that he is a full-bore, right-wing Christian and an election denier who dabbles in conspiracy theories — qualities that might give one pause before putting him second in line to the presidency. But there is another angle to Johnson’s extremism that has received less scrutiny, and it brings us back to that flag outside his office.
The flag — which Rolling Stone has confirmed hangs outside his district office in the Cannon House Office Building — is white with a simple evergreen tree in the center and the phrase “An Appeal to Heaven” at the top. Historically, this flag was a Revolutionary War banner, commissioned by George Washington as a naval flag for the colony turned state of Massachusetts. The quote “An Appeal to Heaven” was a slogan from that war, taken from a treatise by the philosopher John Locke. But in the past decade it has come to symbolize a die-hard vision of a hegemonically Christian America.
To understand the contemporary meaning of the Appeal to Heaven flag, it’s necessary to enter a world of Christian extremism animated by modern-day apostles, prophets, and apocalyptic visions of Christian triumph that was central to the chaos and violence of Jan. 6. Earlier this year we released an audio-documentary series, rooted in deep historical research and ethnographic interviews, on this sector of Christianity, which is known as the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR). The flag hanging outside Johnson’s office is a key part of its symbology.
The New Apostolic Reformation is a set of networks of Christian leaders that formed in the 1990s around a renegade evangelical seminary professor named C. Peter Wagner. These networks are part of the nondenominational charismatic segment of Christianity (“charismatic” here is a technical term of Christian theology and practice describing a spirituality built around miraculous manifestations and aiming to re-create the supernaturally imbued environment of the early Christian church). Wagner and his cohort believed that they were at the vanguard of a revolution in church leadership that Wagner often described as “the most radical change to the way of doing church since, at least, the Protestant Reformation.”
The hundreds of leaders who joined Wagner’s movement and leadership-networking circles almost all identify as apostles (enterprising church builders) or prophets (who hear directly from God), though some identify as both. In the mid-2000s, these NAR networks collectively embraced a theological paradigm called the “Seven Mountain Mandate,” a prophecy that divides society into seven arenas — religion, family, government, education, arts and entertainment, media, and business. The “Mandate,” as they understand it, is given by God for Christians to “take dominion” and “conquer” the tops of all seven of these sectors and have Christian influence flow down into the rest of society.
Drawn into American politics by this aggressive theological vision, many New Apostolic Reformation leaders became very active in right-wing political circles, including one of Wagner’s key disciples, an apostle-prophet named Dutch Sheets. Sheets is not a household name in Christian politics like Jerry Falwell or Ralph Reed or James Dobson, but he has real influence. Sheets has written more than 18 popular evangelical books, and his Intercessory Prayer has sold more than a million copies. He was an endorser and faith adviser to Newt Gingrinch’s short-lived candidacy for president in 2012, and he openly espoused the lie that Barack Obama was secretly a Muslim.
In 2013, Sheets was given an Appeal to Heaven flag by a friend who told him that, because it predated the Stars and Stripes, it was the flag that “had flown over our nation at its birthing.” Sheets describes this experience as revelatory, and he seized upon the flag as a symbol of the spiritual-warfare driven Christian nationalist revolution he hoped to see in American politics. In 2015, he published a book titled An Appeal to Heaven and rolled out a systematic campaign to propagate this symbol in right-wing Christian circles. That same year Sarah Palin wrote an opinion piece in Breitbart, endorsing the Appeal to Heaven campaign and thanking her “[s]pecial friends, Pastor Dutch and Ceci Sheets,” who had given her the flag.
Sheets and his fellow New Apostolic Reformation leaders were the tip of the spear of Christian Trumpism, endorsing Donald Trump’s candidacy early on and championing his cause to their fellow Christians. Over the course of the 2016 campaign, the Appeal to Heaven flag and the NAR’s vision of a Christianity-dominated America became entwined with Trump, a potent-though-covert symbol.
Since 2015, you can find these Appeal to Heaven flags popping up over and over: in the background of pictures of far-right politicians and election deniers like Doug Mastriano; as wall decorations in state legislators’ offices; at right-wing rallies. It even flew over the Illinois State Capitol for a time at the instigation of the Illinois Apostolic Alliance, a local NAR activist group.
We make the case in our audio-documentary series that the New Apostolic Reformation networks were at the molten core of Christian mobilization for Jan. 6, with many NAR leaders in attendance that day, including a handful of C. Peter Wagner’s closest mentees. Dutch Sheets was integral to this effort, propelling the Appeal to Heaven narrative alongside the Stop the Steal narrative through his popular daily prophecy podcast in the lead-up to the riot.
This is why, if you look closely at the panopticon of videos and pictures of the Capitol insurrection, Appeal to Heaven flags are everywhere. There are dozens, perhaps hundreds, of them punctuating the crowd, including even on the front lines of clashes between rioters and Capitol police officers — a powerful signal of the spread of Sheets’ ideas and influence.
Hundreds of Christian figures supported Trump’s effort to overthrow the 2020 election, but, having spent years researching and tracking the direct influences on Christians who actually showed up on Jan. 6, we contend that no single Christian leader contributed more to this effort to mobilize Christians against the very structures of American democracy than Sheets. One case in point: Sheets and his team were reportedly at the White House a week before the insurrection, strategizing with administration officials, as we reported on Jan. 6, 2023:
On December 29, 2020 — eight days before the insurrection — Sheets and his team of prophets were in Washington, D.C., staying at the Willard Hotel, the site of the various war rooms overseen by Rudy Giuliani and Steve Bannon. On that day, Sheets, along with 14 other apostles and prophets, had a multi-hour meeting inside the White House with Trump administration officials. Who exactly among White House Staff attended this meeting is unclear (and the Trump administration has made the White House Visitor Logs secret and invulnerable to FOIA requests until 2026). But members of Sheets’ team posted photos of themselves (with White House visitor passes) both outside and inside the building.
The Appeal to Heaven flag was the banner of this mobilization, which brings us back to Mike Johnson and the flag outside his office. What does it signal that the speaker of the House of Representatives is purposely flying this symbol of Christian warfare?
When Rolling Stone reached out to Johnson’s office for comment, a spokesperson for his personal office noted that all members have three flag posts outside their office and that Johnson flies the Appeal to Heaven flag alongside the American and Louisiana flags. “Rep. Johnson’s Appeal to Heaven flag was a gift to him and other members of Congress by Pastor Dan Cummins, who has served as a guest chaplain for the House of Representatives over a dozen times, under Speakers from both parties,” the spokesperson wrote, adding that Johnson appreciates the “rich history of the flag,” citing its connection to George Washington and John Locke.
Accepting this backstory as true, it does not in any way refute our basic premise that this flag, since Dutch Sheets’ spiritual-warfare appropriation of it in 2013, connotes an aggressive form of Christian nationalism. In fact, Pastor Dan Cummins, whom Johnson credits as the one who gave him the flag, is a mentee of another major NAR leader (and Trump evangelical adviser) named Jim Garlow. Johnson has described Garlow as having “a profound influence” on his life and spirituality.
Garlow and Cummins have long operated as Christian nationalist activists targeting members of Congress. The Appeal to Heaven Flag was flown over Garlow’s former California church beginning in 2017, and Garlow himself has celebrated how the flag “has recently become an important flag in the present day spiritual warfare prayer movement.” If anything, Johnson’s office’s statement only highlights another vector of NAR and Christian nationalist influence on the new speaker.
The Appeal to Heaven flag isn’t Johnson’s only connection to Sheets, either. Johnson has spent his entire career in Congress linking arms with one of Sheets’ top acolytes, a Louisiana apostle named Timothy Carscadden. Carscadden leads a church in Johnson’s district called Christian Center Shreveport. Johnson has spoken at the church, had Carscadden come to Washington, D.C., and expressed his closeness to Carscadden’s views.
For his part, Timothy Carscadden speaks alongside Dutch Sheets, mimics Sheets’ theological ideas, and shares in Sheets’ vision to see Christianity reign supreme in every sphere of American life. Carscadden’s Facebook profile page is a photo of him holding an Appeal to Heaven flag, and the Louisiana apostle posted his support for the gathering crowds of protesters on Jan. 6, 2021, writing: “We will be live in person and online as we stand with the million plus in Washington DC today. We Appeal To The Courts of Heaven today!! !!”
It is simply untenable to think that Johnson is unaware of what the Appeal to Heaven flag signals today. It represents an aggressive, spiritual-warfare style of Christian nationalism, and Johnson is a legal insurrectionist who has deeply tied himself into networks of Christian extremists whose rhetoric, leadership, and warfare theology fueled a literal insurrection.
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I would wholeheartedly support that.
Can't be done. First Amendment.
Also, banning religion would never fly politically. The majority of Americans still have some attachment to a religion. As of 2022, 63% of Americans still identify as Christian, and about 7% belong to other religions, according to Pew Research.
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funeralxempire
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I would wholeheartedly support that.
You're on record that you'd support a lot of unrealistic, unconstitutional totalitarian s**t.
Why not advocate for things that can actually be done instead of the most asinine nonsense imaginable?
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"Many of us like to ask ourselves, What would I do if I was alive during slavery? Or the Jim Crow South? Or apartheid? What would I do if my country was committing genocide?' The answer is, you're doing it. Right now." —Former U.S. Airman (Air Force) Aaron Bushnell
If the Christian nationalists would try and push their beliefs in a Muslim country( like Iran) they would be put to death. Yet they still don't get why America does not want a dominant religion. Any form of zealotry is very intolerant of other beliefs.
Last edited by Aspinator on 14 Nov 2024, 12:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
funeralxempire
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They look at Iran as a model of what to do with America.
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When a clown moves into a palace, he doesn't become king, the palace becomes a circus.
"Many of us like to ask ourselves, What would I do if I was alive during slavery? Or the Jim Crow South? Or apartheid? What would I do if my country was committing genocide?' The answer is, you're doing it. Right now." —Former U.S. Airman (Air Force) Aaron Bushnell
I would wholeheartedly support that.
You're on record that you'd support a lot of unrealistic, unconstitutional totalitarian s**t.
Why not advocate for things that can actually be done instead of the most asinine nonsense imaginable?
I have noticed this also.
Tim_Tex, it is okay to be left-wing but what you advocate for is a seemingly totalitarian twist on extreme left ideology.
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