Christian Nationalism

National Director and Grand Wizard of the KKK and White Arkansas pastor says he doesn't know whether Black people can be saved and go to heaven​


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Fascist Christian nationalist pastor Joel Webbon tells Trump to "arrest Tim Walz, bring him to DC, try him and hang him. Honor Christ. Save the country."

 
Fascist Christian nationalist pastor Joel Webbon tells Trump to "arrest Tim Walz, bring him to DC, try him and hang him. Honor Christ. Save the country."

More reasons why I no longer identify as an evangelical…
 
Wow. Georgia Pastor

if this administration continues its current path, we will see more of these posts. We will see more leaders in the old denominations (Episcopal, Lutheran, Methodist and Presbyterian to name a few) a few Catholics and maybe some nondenominationals take this message from the pulpit and social media posts and into the streets.

Trump will treat them just like he has businesses and universities. He will threaten their financial livelihood by threatening to take away tax status. He will label them domestic terrorists and use that label as justification to take away tax status. He’s already doing it to nonprofits.

The greatest threat to speech, assembly and press is happening today. He will apply that to religion and to guns.
 
In a lawsuit, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton claims a state agency is discriminating against Christians who want to advertise in the Driver’s Handbook.

Small problem: The handbook doesn't run ads. For anyone.

No ads in a state publication is quite a blessing. The AG should quit trying to find a problem where there is none.
 
He spent decades bringing the religious right to power. Now he's marching to undo it.

"Being here, in solidarity, is part of the repair work in my own soul," says Rev. Rob Schenck, an Evangelical minister who spent decades helping build America's Religious Right—commingling church and state to advance conservative causes like the anti-abortion movement.

Now, he says he must confront the damage he helped cause, including what he believes was his role in delivering "the entities that are now inflicting all of this suffering on so many people." One example: Schenck's organization, Faith and Action in the Nation's Capital, created "Operation Higher Court," which trained wealthy couples as "stealth missionaries" to befriend Supreme Court justices to preserve, in his words, a Christian nation.

"So now I have to do the work of repair," he told Mother Jones digital producer Sam Van Pykeren in the icy streets of Minneapolis on Friday during the city's "Day of Truth and Freedom"—a citywide strike and march in which clergy played a prominent role.

"These folks are showing more grace in accepting me than I would have ever extended to them," Schenck says, flanked by organizers shouting, "Whose streets? Our streets!"The next day, after learning of federal agents shooting and killing Alex Pretti, Schenck extended his stay in the city. More from his journey, and the clergy's fight against ICE, coming soon.

"This is redemption," he told Sam. "This is redemption."

 
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