Fresh Air - How Trump Is Dividing The Evangelical Church
Episode Date: November 29, 2023Journalist Tim Alberta grew up in a conservative, republican, evangelical church, where his father was the pastor. He wanted to know why so many evangelical Christians had become extremists, and arden...t supporters of Trump. Over the past 4 years, he traveled to churches around the country, reporting on pastors and congregants who backed Trump, and those who felt forced out of their church because they couldn't support him. His new book is The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air. I'm Terry Gross. How did evangelicals become Donald Trump's most
unflinching advocates? That question plagued Tim Alberta as a journalist and as a self-described
son of a white conservative Republican pastor in a white conservative Republican church
in a white conservative Republican town. Alberta describes evangelicalism as the most polarizing and the least understood
tradition that is also more politically relevant and domestically disruptive than all the others
combined. To answer his own question about why many evangelicals support Trump, Alberta reported
from evangelical churches around the country, ranging from megachurches to half-filled small
churches and the church he grew up in in a suburb of Detroit. He also reported from Christian
colleges and religious advocacy organizations. He writes about how Trump has polarized the church
in his new book, The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory, American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism.
Alberta is a staff writer for The Atlantic and former chief political correspondent for Politico.
His previous book is the bestseller American Carnage,
On the Front Lines of the Republican Civil War and the Rise of President Trump.
Tim Alberta, welcome to Fresh Air. I'd like you to describe the split you're seeing now among evangelicals. simmering crisis in the American evangelical church for a couple of generations now, which
is essentially a divide in the evangelical movement among some Christians who are really
like-minded sort of theologically and culturally and politically in terms of their approach to different issues, where they fall on certain biblical applications in society, really where they differ is the question of emphasis, priority. of the church to be out front fighting the culture wars, trying to sort of exert dominance
over the country, because they feel as though their identity as Christians is rooted in something far
deeper and far more transcendent than just their American identity, as it were. And then on the
other side, I think you have a lot of people who view it differently and believe that this country, in some sense, was almost ordained by God to help spread the
gospel of Jesus Christ throughout the world. And the only way to effectively do that is to protect
their rights at home so that they can go about preaching the gospel around the world. And what that has led to is almost a militant approach to politics and to culture.
And so what you're dealing with here is not necessarily a divergence of theology or ideology,
but really a sharp divergence of tactics, and that divergence has really given way to ferocious infighting and deep,
deep schisms inside the American evangelical church.
Does Christian nationalism figure into this?
Of course it does, yes. And I would say that it figures into it now more than it ever has,
simply because, you know, one of the great distinctions I try to draw in the book is how, you know,
40, 50 years ago, when you would hear all of this rhetoric from evangelical leaders around,
you know, America being on its last legs, the country is in decline, the secularists are taking
over and kicking God out of American life. That was mostly rhetoric that they themselves did not believe.
It was used to raise money.
It was used to earn TV viewers and radio subscribers.
It was used to build Christian colleges.
But it wasn't really rhetoric that they themselves were invested in as a matter of fact.
I think the great difference today is that many of these people who
will traffic in terms of this Armageddon talk, they really do believe it. They feel as though
the American country as they have known it, the Judeo-Christian foundations of the country
are under assault and that this is something of a last stand.
And they have attached these existential stakes to that fight.
And that is what gives this moment such a level of urgency specific to this question
of Christian nationalism, because there is no longer a willingness for a lot of these
people to separate their identities as Christians from their identities as Americans.
And that is a particularly dangerous place for the church to be.
And this goes along with what some church leaders told you,
which is that some of the people in their congregations see Trump almost on a level with God.
Trump has become a cult-like figure, and people almost
worship him. He has, and they do. And of course, on its face, this makes no sense whatsoever,
because here is the thrice-married, casino-owning Manhattan playboy, right? We all know the story. We know that Trump has zero familiarity
himself with scripture, that he famously botched the pronunciation of a book of the Bible.
And yet, at the same time, Trump emerging as this champion of the Christian right makes sense when
placed in the context of this kind of apocalyptic sky is falling,
barbarians are at the gates mentality that you hear from many Christians today. In other words,
they feel as though by playing by the rules of Christianity, by turning the other cheek,
by loving their neighbor, that they have given away so much
ground culturally that they've lost. And they've lost the culture wars and they're in danger of
losing the country. And so now, feeling as though they are marginalized and under siege and at the
brink of extinction almost, they have turned to someone who does not have to observe their etiquette, who does not have
to play by their rules, who doesn't believe in the things that they believe. And ironically,
they will tell you that that sort of gives him, Donald Trump, the freedom to do things to protect
their movement and to fight against their enemies that they themselves would never be able to do.
You saw that split within your own church. You saw people within the church move to the far right
and become more militant and more angry, more extreme. And you grew up in the church because
your father was the pastor of a church that went from hundreds of people to thousands of people.
It was a church in Brighton, a suburb of Detroit.
It was white.
It was Republican.
And my impression was fairly affluent.
Not rich, but affluent.
That's right.
Yeah.
That's right.
And you literally grew up in the church because you spent your time off from school, you know, studying in the church, playing in like storage rooms of the church.
So describe what you saw in the church in which your father was the pastor, the split that you saw emerging.
Yeah.
You know, I can't emphasize this point enough.
You know, my mother was on staff at the church as well, and I was the youngest sibling.
And so my entire life was inside the church, physically grew up inside the church.
It was my home.
It was my community.
And the interesting thing, Terry, is that even as I grew older and became more aware of some of the ugliness, let's just say, around me, some of the rhetoric,
some of the attitudes, some of the behavior that seemed to be antithetical to the Christ
that I followed and that I read about in Scripture, I sort of always stayed quiet about it.
It was something that I never really wanted to address, something that I never thought I would address, frankly, in part because I think when you're part of a tribe, you look at that tribe as yours, even though there are imperfections.
And you just you reflexively reject the caricatures and the attacks from the outside.
And I spent most of my life sort of in
that category. Again, even as I was older and getting to a place where some of the sort of
naked hypocrisy, some of the really bad behavior, the corruption and the abuse and the bullying
that you would see both in my church and in the church writ large, they were things that
I just couldn't bring myself to confront because ultimately I saw so much good simultaneously
in the church.
And I felt as though this was a zero-sum proposition that I couldn't both be a believer in Jesus
Christ and a faithful member of his church while simultaneously airing
the dirty laundry of the church. And that was sort of a false choice that I had locked myself into.
And it really wasn't until sort of personal tragedy struck that I felt kind of a wake-up
call that I needed to speak out about this in a way that sounded the alarm because clearly something had gone
very, very wrong here. In 2019, you were on a book tour for your book, American Carnage,
on the front lines of the Republican Civil War and the rise of Donald Trump. So at the end of
your book tour, you're on the Christian Broadcasting Network. Tell us what you were talking about.
Yeah, of all places, I'm on the set of the Christian Broadcasting Network. Tell us what you're talking about. Yeah, of all places, I'm on the set of the Christian Broadcasting Network,
and I'm being asked about Trump's relationship with the white evangelical movement. This question,
the million dollar question of how, how is it that this guy, of all people, came to be
the champion of this movement? and really trying to unpack some of
these schisms and the divide inside the church that was growing more apparent by the day.
And here I am doing this very delicate dance on the set of the network because, as I said, I really had been quite reticent to criticize
the church as a whole. And I really was trying to make the point about some of this unhealthiness
inside the evangelical movement without like throwing down the gauntlet, so to speak.
And the interviewer was pressing me deeper and deeper on, you know, just how damaging these schisms could be.
And by the time I walked off the set, I'm saying to myself, oh, boy, like, I really blew it.
Like, why am I holding back here?
Why don't I just say what I'm really thinking?
Because what I'm really thinking is that the American evangelical church is approaching a moment of
crisis here, and something has to be done about it. And as soon as I walk off the set, I'm looking
down at my phone, and I have all of these missed calls, and my dad had collapsed from a heart
attack and was dead. Of course, a very upsetting, tragic moment in your life at the memorial service for him.
You got a lot of heat from people who you've known, who you'd known all of your life.
Tell us some of the things.
Well, let me back up and say that Rush Limbaugh started quoting you and assailing you on his radio show.
What was he saying about you?
That's right. So the book that I had written was in the news. My dad died less than two weeks after
that book had come out. And so Rush Limbaugh was on his show describing some of my unflattering
characterizations of Donald Trump and of the evangelical movement. Trump himself was tweeting about my book. I was
getting a lot of threats, a lot of nasty email, a lot of criticism from right-wing media. And so
when my dad died, you know, I go home to Michigan for the funeral. And the day before the funeral,
we're having the visitation inside the sanctuary of our home church where, again, you know, my dad had been the pastor for over 25 years.
It was home for us.
And as I'm standing in the sanctuary with my brothers greeting people, suddenly I'm having folks come up to me and they're talking about Rush Limbaugh.
And I didn't even know why at first.
And then I'm sort of piecing it together. Oh, I guess he must have been kind of ripping me on his show. And then there were
more people. And then there were more. And some were arguing with me about Rush Limbaugh. Some
were confronting me about Donald Trump. People were asking me if I was really still a Christian,
if I was on the right side of good versus evil. And all a just, and all the while, of course, my,
my dad is in a box a hundred feet away and, you know, I'm there in shock 72 hours after he's
passed, uh, you know, having barely slept all week, trying to mourn and trying to process all
of this. And I've got people who I've known for most of my life, known me since I was five years old, who are, instead of hugging me, instead of crying with me,
instead of just trying to wrap me in love at that moment, they're wanting to argue about politics.
And they're insulting you.
They're insulting me. And, you know, as I write in the book, it was clear in that moment that for them,
they didn't see a hurting son. They saw a vulnerable adversary.
And if they saw that in you, the son of their pastor, you who many of them had known your
entire life, what about people who they don't know? How easy is it to dehumanize them and just
make them into the enemy? Well, that's a great point. And this is where, listen, you know,
Jesus said that the two great commands are to love the Lord your God with all your heart and mind and
strength and to love your neighbor as yourself. And this was just a moment where it
became so clear to me that like this thing has tilted so far off of its axis that, you know,
it's one thing to try to minimize or explain away the hostile approach to the secular world,
even though I think that that is in and of itself completely unbiblical and unchristlike.
But this was something different, altogether different, Terry, to your point.
This is inside of the church to a fellow believer taunting and mocking and hurting someone at their moment of great vulnerability.
And over what?
Over a political disagreement.
And that's, you're right.
I mean, a moment that just sort of opened my eyes to say, boy, if this could happen
to me in this setting, then what are we doing out in the world?
What sort of damage are these Christians doing?
Had your father seen the split in his congregation, and what did he make of it?
Well, you know, it was interesting. I think at some level he did, because my dad was a really
serious theologian. He had advanced degrees from the country's top seminaries. He spoke Greek. I mean,
he was a very, very serious intellectual Christian. And I think he knew, in fact, I know that he knew
that there were a lot of people in his pews who were very casual with their faith and who
were at some level there to engage in a sort of cultural right as much as they were to grow deeper in their faith in the Lord.
And so I think he I think in some way my dad also fed into or
encouraged some of those sort of uglier base instincts. And I think specifically what I mean
by that, Terry, is, you know, politics in the pulpit is always a very touchy thing. And I think
for a pastor like my dad, his most important issue politically, although he wouldn't even view it as a political issue, he views it as a moral, ethical, spiritual issue, was abortion.
And so he was, you know, his entire life, his entire career in ministry was a really, really outspoken voice against abortion. But what happens is that when you place so much emphasis on an issue like
abortion, you tend to start treating the people in politics who are against abortion as your allies
and the people who are pro-choice as your enemies. And so it became almost a gateway drug, abortion,
and suddenly you're talking about other things from the pulpit.
You're talking about Obamacare.
You're talking about education curriculum.
You're talking about same-sex marriage.
And even though I think my dad was able to compartmentalize in a lot of ways and understood that ultimately, you know, America is not part of God's grand design for the ages and that winning and losing elections here in this country has no eternal significance.
I think for a lot of his more casual congregants, they were not able to make those distinctions.
Your father was critical of Trump.
He thought he was a narcissist and a liar, not moral, but he voted for him anyway.
Do you know why?
I think at the end of the day, it was the question of abortion and the fact that you had multiple Supreme Court nominations hanging in the balance.
I mean, those were the conversations we had, and they were pained conversations in 2016.
This was a really tough election for him because my dad had preached to me and to my brothers our entire lives that politics is
really an exercise in character, that morality and ethics are the prerequisites for political
leadership. And so I think he had a very difficult time getting his arms around the idea of voting
for Donald Trump. But once he did, there was almost a little
bit of a switch that flipped, and that caused some tension in our relationship.
Well, let me reintroduce you again. If you're just joining us, my guest is Tim Alberta,
author of the new book, The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory, American Evangelicals in an Age
of Extremism. He's a staff writer for The Atlantic. We'll be right back after a short break.
I'm Terry Gross, and this is Fresh Air.
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Let's get back to my interview with Tim Alberta, author of the new book, The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory, American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism.
His previous book was the bestseller, American Carnage, on the front lines of the Republican Civil War and the rise of President Trump.
He's a staff writer for The Atlantic.
The new book is about how Donald Trump has polarized the evangelical church. On one end,
he's created a cult-like following within the church. On the other end, many pastors and
congregants have left their churches over disagreements with Trump and his followers.
When you decided you wanted to write about the split in the
evangelical church and how that is affecting American politics as well as America's church
life, you decided to go back to the church that you grew up in, your father's church in the suburb
of Detroit. And the person who had succeeded him as the pastor was the person who had been his associate and was being groomed to take over eventually as pastor.
His name was Chris Winans.
And he was more liberal.
He wasn't a liberal, but he was more liberal.
What were the problems he started having when he took over. Well, there was some uneasiness from the beginning when Chris was being groomed as the heir apparent
because you're right, it's not that he was a liberal, but in a deep red, extremely conservative
place like Brighton, Michigan, any whiff of liberalism would be enough to make someone suspect. And for a guy
like Chris Winans, this young pastor who was preparing to take over for the pastor, my dad,
who'd been at the church for over 25 years, there was a lot of uneasiness, a lot of skepticism. And, you know, Chris is a guy who, he just doesn't like
guns. He doesn't, he doesn't particularly care about cutting tax rates. He, you know, he doesn't
like wars. This is, this is a guy who his entire perspective politically is informed by scripture.
And he really, you know, he, he views politics through the context of his faith rather
than viewing his faith through the context of his politics, which of course, that is at the heart of
this schism in the church. And so when Chris Winans takes over, he's making even just off-the-cuff
remarks about Donald Trump or about some issue of the day, and people are up in arms about it. Because,
again, at a church like this, any sort of deviation from the norm, culturally, politically,
ideologically, is going to put a target on your back. And you had people leaving the church
in droves because they viewed him as not enough of a culture warrior.
And I'm sure that was very upsetting for him. I'm sure he must have felt that he was failing.
Did new people come to take the place of the people who fled?
Not initially. In fact, he described it to me. We were having a lunch just after the January 6th attacks, and he was really at his low point.
The church attendance had plummeted. He called it an exodus. People were just flooding out of
the church. And in particular, they were relocating right down the road to a sort of blood and soil
Christian nationalist congregation that had turned its Sunday morning worship services into like political
pep rallies. And it was just a deeply hurtful and discouraging period for this young pastor
who had taken over for my father. He was beginning to have like a panic disorder where he was almost
fainting in between services. The stress of this was just so much. He described it as a psychological
onslaught. And he told me,
in fact, that he was thinking about quitting, that he was thinking about walking away from
the church. That's how bad things got for him during that stretch. Why did he stay?
I think he ultimately felt that God had called him to be a part of the solution to this very real problem that both he and I were beginning
to identify around that period of time. I think he also felt an obligation to the ghost of his
predecessor, my father, who treated him like a son. And in many ways, you know, my dad had his
faults and his flaws. But one of the most courageous things
that my dad ever did was he very purposely and strategically chose as his successor after 26,
27 years, this young pastor who my dad knew was not a conservative MAGA Republican. I think for my dad, this was an opportunity to broaden the
conversation inside the church, to challenge some of his congregants who perhaps had grown complacent
in their church-going mannerisms. And so I do think that even as ugly and dark as things got
for this new pastor, by that point, I think that he felt a certain
responsibility to try to see this through. So when people did start coming to the church,
replacing some of the people who left the church because it wasn't far right enough,
who were the new people? What did they represent? Well, it was interesting. You know, this new pastor, Chris Winans, he really tried to be welcoming and tried to be—he tried to downplay a lot of the fighting and basically just said, look, you know, we're going to preach the gospel here.
We're not going to get into politics.
We're not going to use partisan affiliation as some litmus test for coming to this church.
And I think what was interesting, Terry, is you could see a real generational turnover here.
A lot of the folks who had left the church were baby boomers who had come of age during the moral majority and who really viewed politics and culture wars as inextricable from Scripture
and from their responsibilities as Christians.
And so suddenly, a lot of those people are leaving the church because they've become
very upset and very disillusioned with this young pastor's new approach.
But at the same time, that new approach is drawing in a lot of younger believers
and a lot of young families. And the thing I would emphasize here is that a lot of those younger
believers coming and joining this evangelical church, they're not a bunch of progressives.
They're not a bunch of far-left Christians. In fact, most of them are awfully conservative. You know, this is a very conservative community.
But I think the great generational divide here is over this question of emphasis and priority.
And again, what is the mission of the church? who were looking for a continuation of that full-throated political engagement from the pulpit,
you had a lot of their children, that next generation, who they might vote the same way,
they might think the same way about some of the issues themselves, but they do not want it in the
church. They come to church for something altogether different. Well, let's take another
break here. If you're just joining us, my guest is Tim Alberta,
author of the new book, The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory, American Evangelicals in an Age
of Extremism. We'll be right back. This is Fresh Air. This is Fresh Air. Let's get back to my
interview with Tim Alberta, author of the new book, The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory,
American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism. His previous book was the bestseller American
Carnage on the front lines of the Republican Civil War and the rise of President Trump.
He's a staff writer for The Atlantic, former chief political correspondent for Politico.
In his new book, he goes to the church in which his father was the pastor and looks at the split among evangelicals in that specific church and travels around the country looking at various churches, talking to various evangelical leaders, ones who are to Jerry Falwell, who is a founder of the moral majority.
And the moral majority is credited as being the evangelical group that helped Ronald Reagan get elected and that brought the evangelicals into the political realm and into a very forceful influence in American politics. So can you talk
about that a little bit, the connection that you see? Yes, I think in many ways, when people ask,
well, where does this story begin? I think it starts with Jerry Falwell Sr., and I think it
starts with his moral majority. I think perhaps even more to the point, Terry, it starts with the founding of a small Christian college in Lynchburg, Virginia, that was later renamed from Lynchburg Baptist College into Liberty University. 1970s, when Jimmy Carter is president, when the culture wars are beginning to rage around abortion
and prayer in public schools and pornography and drug usage and all of these things,
Jerry Falwell Sr. senses an opportunity to use these massive organizations, his Christian school,
his large Christian church, and this new organization, the Moral Majority,
to use them in concert to apply pressure on the secular left and to enlist like-minded religious
conservatives to join his cause. And what he discovered was this incredibly explosive dynamic formula for raising money, for mobilizing the grassroots
to vote Republican. And I think what was so dangerous about it was that there's ample
evidence to suggest that Jerry Falwell Sr. himself did not believe in most of this fear
that he was peddling, this fear that he was using to exploit the masses of this fear that he was peddling,
this fear that he was using to exploit the masses of evangelicals
who he was raising hundreds of millions of dollars from
and buying a private jet and flying around the country
saying that the end is nigh.
Falwell Sr. himself did not personally believe that,
but he was planting this...
How do you know?
Well, I've spoken with a lot of people
close to him. I've read some of his correspondences. There is ample evidence to suggest that Falwell
and his contemporaries at the time, some of whom spoke to me for this book, they knew that what
they were doing was dishonest, that it was duplicitous, and they
didn't particularly care because they saw this as sort of a means to an end, the end being a
conquest of the secular culture. And so once you justify things that way, then it's fair game.
Would you say that Ronald Reagan kind of opened the door to evangelicals
basically becoming the base of the Republican Party? I think in some ways, yes. This kind of
shotgun marriage between Jerry Falwell Sr. and his moral majority and the Ronald Reagan campaign in
1980, I think it completely reoriented American politics as we knew it to that point.
And what we see today in terms of Donald Trump's relationship with the religious right, the
through line is Jerry Falwell Jr., who was probably the single biggest endorsement for
Donald Trump back in the 2016 campaign, because it was establishing a continuity between not only generations of the Falwell
family, but generations of these evangelical activists who had finally found relevance
and success in the political arena and were really reluctant to give that up. You describe one picture of Jerry Falwell Jr. and Donald Trump,
and the background was one of Trump's walls at one of his homes, and it's filled with like
photos, and some of those photos are like playboy models and other things that should be like far outside of what Jerry Falwell Jr. would be endorsing.
Yes. And the great irony was that it was Jimmy Carter's presidency that really galvanized Jerry Falwell Sr. to get engaged and to mobilize these tens of millions of evangelical voters. And one of the specific things that Falwell Sr.
cited was the fact that Jimmy Carter had the audacity to give an interview to Playboy magazine,
which Jerry Falwell Sr. singled out as like an avatar of America's cultural and moral decay. And here is his son and his namesake, Jerry Falwell Jr., a generation later,
posing in front of a Playboy magazine with Donald Trump giving a thumbs up and smiling broadly and
tweeting that out to all of his followers. And just that split screen, that juxtaposition,
tells you so much about the trajectory of this movement.
Jimmy Carter was a much more liberal evangelical than the Falwells. But also,
that's the interview, the Playboy interview is the interview in which Jimmy Carter confessed that he sometimes had lust in his heart. Not that he acted on it, but, you know, that he had it in
his heart. And I think the implication was he felt kind of guilty about it. But like Trump's lusted out loud, you know, like he's he's had affairs with Playboy models. And he's talked about like sexually harassing women and how cool that is. So that's a contrast, too. I'm so glad you're raising that, Terry, because,
yes, in that Jimmy Carter Playboy interview that I believe he gave in 1976, that was what Falwell
and some of his associates at the time seized all over. How dare this person who would run
the United States of America, be the leader of the free world,
how dare this person admit that he has felt temptation and lust in his heart?
That is totally unacceptable for the leader of God's ordained country, the United States.
And yet here we are, you know, 50 years later, dealing with a president who has become the unquestioned leader of that religious right movement,
who has spent years parading his mistresses through the tabloids, boasting about sexually assaulting women,
who was found guilty recently or found liable recently of sexual abuse by a jury. I mean, so understanding the backslide here of what the standards are
and what they aren't inside the American evangelical movement,
and really, I think, just to put it very bluntly,
understanding the rank hypocrisy that has guided this movement in recent years
is at the core of this story.
Do you see parallels between the split in the evangelical church and the split in the Republican
Party? Just as many people have left their churches for more open-minded churches,
a lot of Republicans who are more from the Republican mainstream have abandoned the party. Oh, absolutely. The parallels are uncanny.
I think they start with just this basic fact that, you know,
Donald Trump in many ways represented the fringe of the party becoming the mainstream.
That is probably the single biggest consequence of the Trump presidency,
is that these voices that once existed at the periphery of the GOP during the Tea Party years and even farther back, where anyone who is attempting to sort of adhere to traditional conservative Republican policy beliefs
is sort of an outcast because they no longer belong in the party.
We've seen that same dynamic at work in the evangelical movement,
which is to say that, you know, 15 or 20 years ago,
when you would see Westboro Baptist Church protesting outside of funerals with
these heinous, hateful banners that they would hold up, those people were rightly viewed as a cult.
They were viewed as the fringe. But today, you have pastors who are even more incendiary,
even more extreme than Westboro Baptist, And they have massive followings. They
preach to millions of people online every Sunday. They've been invited to Trump's White House.
One of these pastors in particular, Greg Locke, who has built this massive tent revival church
in Tennessee, and who is known for things like saying that autistic children are oppressed by
demons and for staging burnings
of Harry Potter books, and he's debating flat earth theology next week at his church. In fact,
this pastor, he was invited to the White House and he posed for a photo there with Franklin Graham,
the son of Billy Graham. So these people who once would have been treated as outcasts and pariahs, they are now very much in the evangelical mainstream.
Well, we need to take another break here.
So let me reintroduce you.
My guest is Tim Alberta, author of the new book, The Kingdom, the Power and the Glory, American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism.
We'll be right back.
This is Fresh Air. We've been learning about some of the people Trump would be likely to bring into his administration and to try to appoint as judges if he is reelected.
Are any of the people you've been reading about people who you would describe as Christian nationalists? question that if Trump is reelected, he will surround himself in the West Wing with people
who would identify, self-identify as Christian nationalists. And it's not a coincidence that
just recently on the campaign trail, I believe it was in New Hampshire, Donald Trump floated the
idea of imposing a religious litmus test on any new migrants coming to this country.
So this has escalated significantly from the Muslim ban in 2017.
Trump is now saying that if you are Jewish, if you are Hindu, if you are secular,
if you are not a Christian, then maybe we won't let you into America anymore. And that really,
Terry, that is a stunning thing for someone to say who might soon be the president of the United
States, because it's really just one step removed from an embrace of state religion, from the
pursuit of actual theocracy, the sort of thing that the founders in their founding documents were
terrified of and made clear that they wanted religious freedom to be, in many ways, kind
of the cornerstone of this country.
And Donald Trump, not just Donald Trump himself, but some of the folks who are in his ear,
who are advising him and who are building out the policy blueprints for
another Trump term, they are in many cases quite invested in this idea of effectively merging
church and state and doing away with some of the old firewalls that would have prevented the sort
of things that Trump has talked about. We're living in a very difficult, kind of frightening time.
There's the war in Ukraine, the war between Israel and Hamas,
the tragedies in Israel and in Gaza, divisions in church and politics
that are resulting in death threats in the U.S.
We had an insurrection here.
What verses in the Bible do you turn to in a time like this to help get you through the difficulties of the era that we're
living through? I am so glad you asked, Terry. I really am. I think I would just single out two,
if I could. You know, the first was one of my dad's favorite verses that he talked to us about since we were really, really young, which is Mark 836.
What does it profit a man to gain the whole world but forfeit his soul? all, whatever your belief system, we should all reflect on that the things that we argue about
and fight over every single day in an attempt to gain fame, money, influence, are we selling our
soul in the process of doing that? The other verse that I would point out has been my favorite verse
since I was a child. It's from Paul's second letter to the early church in Corinth, Greece. And he says, you know, we, we followers
of Jesus, we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen. Because what is seen
is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal. And I think that is the ultimate call to Christians
to recognize that if you are called to the kingdom of God, that your citizenship is ultimately not in America.
It's ultimately not on this earth, that you are called to something greater and that your priorities and the way that you treat people and the way that you engage with the culture around you, it must reflect that. When you're meeting somebody for the first time who doesn't know you're reporting,
and you say that you're Christian or Christian evangelical, do you immediately try to qualify that in terms of what your beliefs and politics are so that the person who you're talking to
doesn't think you identify with the far right? You know, it's interesting. I didn't used to,
but I've had to do that more and
more. And I've had to do it not only to assure people that I don't identify with the far right,
but when I go into evangelical spaces, I have to do it to make sure that they don't think I'm part
of the far left. In other words, it's no longer sufficient when talking with Christians to say,
yes, I'm a Christian. I'm a follower of
Jesus. I can cite scripture. We can talk in depth about our theology and our doctrines.
That's not enough. And that's really, in many ways, the whole problem is that you have to then
sort of qualify, well, what kind of Christian are you? Where are you on guns? Where are you on, you know,
sexuality? Where are you on poverty programs? Where are you on the deep state and Donald Trump
and his indictments? In other words, we've taken the biblical standards and we've set them aside
to embrace an entirely different standard that has nothing to do with God, has nothing to do with our relationship to Jesus Christ, and really is that eternal ephemeral thing that we are told time and time again in Scripture to avoid.
Tim Alberta, I want to thank you for talking with us. It's been really, really interesting.
It's been a pleasure. Thank you so much for having me.
Tim Alberta is a staff writer for The Atlantic and author of the new book, The Kingdom, the Power and the Glory, American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism.
Tomorrow on Fresh Air, our guest will be journalist Ari Berman, who's been covering efforts in the courts to dismantle the Voting Rights Act. He'll talk about the history of the act,
which is considered one of the most effective pieces of civil rights legislation ever enacted in our country,
and the implications of dismantling it.
I hope you'll join us.
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I'm Terry Gross.