I was tracking down rumors about Christian nationalism(s) rising in the region.
But I wasn't prepared for just how *big* it'd become, how powerful it is in the state, and how it may impact the future GOP. religionnews.com/2023/02/22/how…
2. I should note that this is likely the first in a series of pieces, some of which will look at Idaho (which is beautiful, by the way, albeit cold).
But as I'll explain, I found surprising trends at work here that may impact lots of places in the U.S. in different ways.
3. The first big factor is actually pretty unique to Idaho and the surrounding region: The American Redoubt.
Back in 2011, a survivalist blogger named James Wesley, Rawles (he adds the comma) called on followers to participate in what he called a religious separatist movement.
4. He wanted people to move to Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and eastern slices of Oregon and Washington to establish a (conservative) Christian society.
It's unclear how many people actually did this, but it became a sort of subculture, and even sparked a "Redoubt Realtor" industry.
5. Meanwhile, another major trend emerged: a growing exodus of blue state expats fleeing states like California for states Idaho.
Most of these folks likely weren't Redoubters, but their impact is significant: Per a recent study, *1 on 4 Idahoans didn't live there 10 years ago.*
6. There's actually a *lot* going on with this blue state Exodus, and I should note a scholar explained to me the effect is heightened by significant movement *out* of Idaho as well.
7. And then another *major* thing happened that supercharged everything: The pandemic.
Lots of conservatives in blue states fumed over COVID restrictions, and sought refuge in places like Idaho, a red state that drew national attention for churches outright *refusing* to close.
8. And you know what *also* happened during that time?
Christian nationalism, already ascendant under Trump, fused with anti-lockdown, anti-mask, and anti-vaccine sentiment that was spiking among a subset of conservatives. religionnews.com/2021/09/14/pos…
9. One church just south of North Idaho — Christ Church in Moscow — drew national attention when members were arrested protesting local COVID measures.
10. The church's pastor is Doug Wilson, who also founded schools and other churches in Moscow and has been controversial for a long time.
But he recently took a turn into Christian nationalism — largely by elevating others, acting as a Christian nationalist influencer of sorts.
11. E.g., Last year Wilson blurbed a book on Christian nationalism co-written by Andrew Torba (who founded Gab and has been widely condemned for posting antisemitic messages) and Andrew Isker (who graduated from one of Wilson's schools).
In addition…
12. Wilson's publisher, Canon Press, published a book last year titled "The Case for Christian Nationalism" by Stephen Wolfe, which caused lots of controversy for a variety of reasons — including Wolfe's…views on interracial marriage?
13. I talked with Wilson about his own views regarding Christian nationalism, but a bigger dynamic at play here is the political impact he and others are having — sometimes indirectly (in Wilson's case), sometimes explicitly.
For instance…
14. Shortly before the midterms, The Altar Church, a congregation in Coeur d'Alene, called 15 candidates for state and local office up on stage. Most had basically already won (the primary is often the main battle), but all pledged to vote for "biblical values" while in office.
15. One of those candidates, State Sen. Ben Toews, was reportedly a founding incorporator of the Idaho Family Policy Center, a new group that has championed or authored some of the most conservative bills in the state Legislature.
The head IDs as a Christian nationalist.
16. What's more, two of the IFPC's board members have connections to Wilson's projects in Moscow — one is on the board of his college, and the other pastors one of his church plants.
17. Meanwhile, many of Idaho's new residents — especially in North Idaho — have rallied around conservative causes shortly after arriving in the state.
In fact, when they show up at local government meetings, many are pretty open about the fact that they just arrived.
18. All of this creates an environment where it isn't surprising when figures like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who IDs as Christian nationalist, come to speak. Or when the Reawaken America tour, whose headliners also ID as CN, chooses a tiny North Idaho town to stage an event.
19. Now, North Idaho has a particular history, and some of these trends seem specific to the general region.
But as Politico noted this week, there are *similar* things happening elsewhere, hinting at multiple versions of a similar phenomenon. politico.com/news/magazine/…
20. Anyway, this super-long thread doesn't even get to many of the things I cover in the piece.
1. So, this article and its headline (which are, hilariously, partly about me while not naming me) are inaccurate, but I want to talk about it, because I think it actually ends up making my oft-voiced argument as to why folks should hire more religion reporters.
2. First, a factual note: A charitable reading of this article/headline is the author missed some things. E.g., I didn’t “dispute” anything here — I just asked why Speaker Johnson believed scripture supports the position he has often outlined.
3. It’s not clear how the writer missed this, since it’s *in the video of the press conference he links to.*
But perhaps even more curiously: despite the fact that I identify myself and my outlet, RNS, when I asked my question, the author doesn’t note that at all.
1. To be clear: This is a theological argument, not descriptive one, as is the declaration* that Mainline Protestantism is a tradition whose theology is "hollowed out."
The Baptist denomination of Carter's church to is often classified as mainline, but it's a bit complicated.
2. *This is roughly the same insult evangelicals have lobbed at Mainliners for roughly a century, back when what was then called Fundamentalism broke from what is now called Mainline Christianity.
This argument often suggests that Liberalism (whose definition shifts)…
3. …is tantamount to an abandonment of Christianity. The idea is that "secular" culture is forming Mainliners, as opposed to the other way around.
Again, this is a theological argument, not a historical one, and something Mainliners have rejected since the beginning.
1. Spent a good part of this year investigating Christian nationalism in the U.S., particularly where the ideology is strongest.
In February, I tripped to North Idaho, where Christian nationalism and Christian separatism are transforming local politics. religionnews.com/2023/02/22/how…
2. This summer I ventured to Arizona, where Turning Point USA is based.
In addition to partnering with churches there, TPUSA is encouraging pastors to embrace CN and right-wing rhetoric as a church-growth strategy — and, as I witnessed, it may be working. religionnews.com/2023/06/09/wit…
3. Then I hopped down to Florida, where upstart conservative group Citizens Defending Freedom — which critics call "Moms for Liberty in suits" — is taking Christian nationalist politics local, working to influence school boards, county officials and more. religionnews.com/2023/07/12/whe…
1. The latest in my Christian nationalism series delves into the Texas public school chaplains debate.
One activist described public schools to me as a "mission field," and others are thinking big: school chaplains bills are likely coming to other states. religionnews.com/2023/12/14/in-…
2. Background: Back in May, the Texas legislature approved a bill allowing public schools to hire chaplains.
It's not clear why it passed and other faith-themed bills didn't, and it survived ample Democratic pushback.
3. For starters, liberal TX activists and Dems such as state Rep. @jamestalarico noted those behind the bill (who, per a GOP rep and an activist, advised and/or helped author it) used rhetoric that appeared to support chaplains proselytizing to students. religionnews.com/2023/05/24/mee…
1. The thing about Speaker Johnson insisting in his *first speech as Speaker* that elected leaders = ordained by God: it raises a pretty specific theological question about his effort to stop Biden's certification in 2020.
2. People forget, but this was actually a live question among Trump's evangelical advisers back in 2017 — particularly Paula White, who made *this exact argument* about Trump in 2017:
3. I asked White about that later, and she told me (and a room full of religion reporters) that she regretted those remarks and expanded them to include all elected officials — but didn't fully address the question regarding "going against" God. religionnews.com/2017/09/09/pau…
2. Of note: there’s been lots of coverage of Turning Point’s faith pivot. Rolling Stone had a whole feature on it recently.
But I was curious about the churches involved — who they are, why they do it, how their involvement impacts congregations, etc. rollingstone.com/politics/polit…
3. To investigate this, I went out to Phoenix, AZ, to visit "Freedom Night" at Dream City Church — a congregation that has slowly become something of the model for TPUSA's church outreach.
And other things, church leaders expressed a desire to make Arizona "a Christian state."