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Episode Date: January 12, 2025If you've been following the news over the last year, you've likely heard about the rise of the Christian nationalism movement. Today on The Sunday Story, Ayesha Rascoe sits down with journalist Heath... Druzin, creator of the Extremely American podcast series, to take a closer look at one group of Christian nationalists. Druzin interviewed leaders of an influential far-right church in the small town of Moscow, Idaho: Christ Church. There, Pastor Doug Wilson has been building what Druzin and his co-reporter James Dawson call a "Christian industrial complex." And its influence reaches far beyond the boundaries of Moscow, Idaho.You can listen to the latest season of Extremely American here, or download the full series wherever you listen to podcasts.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Discussion (0)
I'm Ayesha Roscoe and you're listening to the Sunday Story from Up First, where we go
beyond the news to bring you one big story.
So if you've been following the news over the last year, you've likely heard about the
rise of the Christian nationalism movement.
Today on the Sunday Story, we take a closer look at one group of Christian nationalists
and hear their vision for the country in their own
words. I'm here with journalist Heath Drusen. He's the host and creator of the Extremely American
podcast series from Boise State Public Radio and the NPR Network. The podcast series provides an inside look at how a national movement traces back to a church in Idaho.
Keith, welcome to the podcast. Thanks. So I know that you've immersed yourself in reporting on
Christian nationalism in America. Talk to me about what this very, very broad category means to you.
Talk to me about what this very, very broad category means to you. Right.
So Christian nationalism is a pretty broad movement.
It can mean a lot of different things, but there are some unifying ideologies in the
movement.
One big example is something called dominionism.
Now that's sort of a jargony term, but really what it means is that Christianity
should rule all aspects of life and that Christ's teachings should be the foundation for all
of society. And you know, I've been covering extremism since 2018, just looking at how
extremism interacts with politics.
And a lot of my early coverage was about militias.
I covered the COVID lockdown pushback, which was really strong in Idaho especially, and
even elected officials pushing conspiracy theories.
Eventually, my reporting turned to Christian nationalism.
When I started in 2018, I think people saw it as a really fringe movement.
I certainly did too.
And I definitely, even in making this podcast, there was a lot of skepticism as to whether
Christian nationalists would ever really matter.
But with the election of Donald Trump, I do think that a lot of that skepticism has melted
away.
The landscape is very different now.
Trump himself has said Christians are, quote, under siege and that the left wants to tear
down crosses and that we have to, quote, bring back Christianity in this country.
And when Donald Trump says these things, Christian nationalists say that it's their ideology
influencing the
now president-elect.
You did a lot of reporting from this college town in Idaho.
It's called Moscow.
Tell me about your reporting there.
Yeah, Moscow, Idaho seems like a really unlikely place to be a center of Christian nationalism
in the country.
It's a kind of sleepy college town of about 26,000 people in
north central Idaho. Kind of an idyllic area, like rolling wheat fields, a lot of
agriculture around the town, real kind of cool quaint downtown. Also a blue dot in
a really red state. I live in Idaho. It's very conservative, I can tell you that
firsthand, but Moscow is one of these kind of liberal strongholds, you know, as you'll find in a
lot of college towns.
So it's a little weird that it's become this kind of center for this unyielding, pretty
far-right Christian nationalist church called Christchurch.
The pastor of Christchurch is Doug Wilson.
He leads a congregation of
800 to 900 people. He's a Navy veteran in his early 70s and a prolific author of Christian-themed
books. He spent most of his adult life evangelizing and developing a conservative Christian education
model. And he's kind of built this network from Moscow where he's had a lot
of influence. He and his church members have been able to buy up some key real
estate, also working on a housing development on the edge of town. So a lot
of their influence is through money and real estate right now. And that's been
alarming a lot of people in town because the stated goal of Christchurch, locally at least, is to make Moscow a Christian town.
A Christian town?
Yeah.
So what does that mean exactly?
Doug Wilson and his associates at Christchurch, they want a kind of local theocracy, where
the political power is held only by people who identify as Christian.
Now they haven't had much luck at
the ballot box because it's a liberal town.
But what's been fascinating and what drew me to the story,
is that the fight over the town is really dramatic and interesting.
But you could argue that he actually has more influence nationally.
Because Doug Wilson, he's built up, well, what my co-reporter
James Dawson on the podcast termed a, quote, Christian industrial complex. He's got this
church in Moscow, but he also has churches across the country and across the world. More
importantly, he's built up a Christian educational empire where he's got nearly 500
schools across the country, coast to coast, in nearly every state in the country.
And as he told me, he sees his educational enterprises as munitions factories.
He likes to use war terminology.
So he sees his students as basically foot soldiers in the culture wars that he wants to win.
And the school system has been really effective, as has his media empire.
He's got popular streaming shows. He's got a publishing house called Canon Press that
churns out dozens of titles. He himself has written dozens of books,
and they've been pretty influential in these circles.
Secularism is resting on America like a dense fog.
That's Doug Wilson speaking to me in Moscow, Idaho for the podcast in 2023.
And we want students who are threats to that fog. We want students making movies. We want students
appearing before the Supreme Court as attorneys. We want alums who are
writing novels that are bestsellers that help shape the worldview of hundreds of thousands
of kids who are reading those books and so on. So that's what we mean by shaping culture.
So, how did you get access to the church and the people behind it?
And do they call themselves Christian Nationalists?
As far as the Christian Nationalists label, they've become more and more comfortable with
it.
They really don't, for the most part, don't shy away from it anymore, even if they say
it's coming from people that they disagree with originally.
The way I got access was I just asked and I was upfront with
them. I said you know I'm sure you won't like everything in my podcast and you're
gonna hear from a lot of people who who are really critical of you but I do want
to hear you out and I want to get your voice in there. So they did end up talking
to me but what I quickly realized is that I think a big reason
they talked to me is simply because they're very proud of what they're doing. When I'm telling you
what their plans are, what their ideology is, and what they think, I'm not telling you what I think
it is. They said it all into my microphone, and they were very direct. They want America to be a
Christian nation, an explicitly Christian nation, just kind of
saying it like it is in their mind. When we come back, we'll take a listen to some of season two
of Heath Drusen's podcast, Extremely American. It starts off with a candid moment between Drusen
and Gabriel Wrench. He's a prominent member of Doug Wilson's
Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches, the Moscow, Idaho-based religious organization.
Then Druzen and his co-reporter James Dawson check out a Christian nationalist conference called
Fight, Laugh, Feast, headlined by Doug Wilson and other leading voices of the national movement.
We'll be right back.
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Hey, Gabe.
How are you doing?
Welcome.
This is our…
I'm talking to Gabriel Wrench, a media personality and activist in Idaho.
Most people call him Gabe.
Gabe has a lot of ideas about how America should change.
You said it would probably take a long time, but that you would like to see only Christians
be able to run for office.
So if you're Jewish, if you're Muslim, if you're atheist, certainly.
If I had you right, you said that, yes,
you would support eventually them not being allowed
to run for office.
That's correct.
I did say that.
Because Gabe is a proud Christian nationalist.
I think that the Christian faith is the ideal moral doctrine
and principles for a thriving society.
And the farther you get away from
that, the more in chaos we descend. And so the only way to maintain that, or one of the
ways to maintain that, is you have to have people who are running for office who believe
that, or you're gonna get back into that chaotic decline.
So I'll tell you straight up, as a Jewish American, I hear that, that I can't run
for office, other non-Christians can't, and I have to admit it's a little
terrifying to me because to me that means a fundamental freedom of mine in
this theoretical world is gone. Well, I mean you're saying that in a country where you experience all these immense freedoms
that was built on the Christian faith, so…
But where I can run for office right now.
Yeah, because your worldview is not good for society. So Gabe wants biblical law to apply to everyone.
That means a lot less democracy, especially for non-Christians like me.
I should probably pause a moment here to acknowledge the bizarre journey I've been on for the
past year.
I've mentioned before that I'm Jewish, and it has been surreal to be immersed in this
world of Christian nationalism.
Don't get me wrong, people like Gabe have been unfailingly polite, which frankly makes
it weirder.
I'm being politely told I don't deserve key rights.
But the reason I'm here listening to Gabe explain why I should lose my rights is not
to feel uncomfortable.
It's because plenty of people agree with him.
Gabe is part of a younger vanguard of Christian nationalists
trying to make their vision a reality.
And they're spreading their word
through popular streaming shows,
including Gabe's creation, Cross-Politik.
Merry Christmas, welcome to Cross-Politic.
You could not wait for the weekend to end and Cross-Politic to begin.
Cross-Politic is a mashup of fundamentalist religion, politics, and drinking.
So it's kind of faster paced show and, you know, a little rough around the edges.
So I think that's attractive to a younger generation.
Our music is a little more hard hitting.
These aren't the megachurch pastors of yore
with their faith healing and fire and brimstone.
Those guys focused on arena-sized church crowds.
Gabe and his allies use popular streaming shows
and savvy social media.
They have followers around the country.
They write books extolling the patriarchy
and want their followers to get political
and get more Christ into government.
They love to get into my tribe, your tribe,
tribalism and all sorts of nonsense.
Gabe and his Christian nationalist peers
are a whiskey drinking, cigar smoking set
that favor expensive boots and well-coiffed hair. What are we drinking? This is a Glen Fittich 14 year. I don't know if this is
this is from a listener. Kind of hipster theocrats with a distinctly bro motif.
And business is good. These guys have popular books, a large podcast, and a YouTube channel with about 20,000 subscribers.
All right, y'all.
Come on back.
Come on in.
Sit down.
Squanch in.
That's not a word.
Squanch is a word from Texas.
And each year, leading Christian nationalist thinkers, as well as rank and file believers,
gather at a conference.
As soon as I walked on campus, someone handed me a glass of whiskey.
And I was like, all right, I'm at the Fight Laugh Feast conference now.
It's official.
It's official.
This is Gabe's creation.
Fight Laugh Feast is four days of fundamentalist Christians talking to Christians about being
Christian.
One of the gifts that God has given us is to be able to kind of be a place where we
could bring like-minded Christians together.
So Jimmy and I went.
We flew across the country to where Gabe and his compatriots were brainstorming a Christian
takeover of America.
We're in the northern Kentucky countryside.
The landscape is rolling and wooded with lots of farms and of course distilleries.
But we're not here just as an excuse to go bourbon tasting.
We're here to attend Fight Laugh Feast.
The theme is the politics of the six days of creation.
This of course is the granddaddy of Bible verses, Genesis 1.
In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. From there, each
day God creates a new facet of the earth. And on the seventh day, he rests. And yeah,
Christian nationalists definitely go with he.
Creation in six days. A gigantic floating zoo with giraffes sticking their heads out the windows, burning
bushes, talking donkeys, dragons and unicorns, resurrection from the dead.
Yeah, we believe all of it. We are not embarrassed by any of it.
That's Toby Sumter, a pastor and a Christchurch affiliate and one of Gabe's co-hosts on the
show Cross-Politik.
If you're wondering about the dragons, it's Revelations 12.3.
And unicorns are actually mentioned throughout the Bible.
Fight Laugh Feast is billed as a conference, but it feels more like a festival.
Or this year, even a political convention.
Because everyone we talk to here thinks America should be a Christian nation.
I want the authority of the Lord Jesus to be confessed by the House and the Senate,
and I want the President to sign it.
If you recognize that voice, it's Pastor Doug Wilson, who's a featured speaker here.
Fundamentalist thinkers have come from around the country
to be here, nearly 1,500 people,
according to co-founder, Gabe Rentsch.
And that's despite a per person ticket well north of $400.
These Christian nationalists are here
to put their heads together.
They're planning how to take over America for Jesus. And they have
ambitious goals. This is Pastor Toby Sumpter again in a speech at the conference.
...and mockery, and may you see your children's children standing in the gates of our cities,
confounding our enemies until every knee bows and every tongue confesses that Jesus Christ is Lord and this land and all the earth
is full of the knowledge of the Lord.
We talked to a lot of people at the conference. They didn't pull any punches about who would be in charge in a Christian America.
Christians, of course.
When you talk to them, though, they're often polite, funny, and lighthearted about some
heavy subjects.
Gabe has a pithy term for this approach that he emphasizes in his speeches.
We have to be joyful, jolly, waters.
Joy is contagious.. Joy is contagious.
Being thankful is contagious.
Jolly as they may be, warriors are at war.
And in a war, there is always an enemy.
What I started to realize was to them, that enemy was me.
Here's Gabe. You know, the Bible says that if your enemy needs a drink, give him something to drink.
Are we your enemy, though?
Well, I'd say you're God's enemy. If you don't believe in Jesus, then you're at war with God.
Statistically speaking, there's a good chance they think of you as the enemy, too.
Basically speaking, there's a good chance they'd think of you as the enemy too. If you're Muslim, atheist, agnostic, Hindu, Mormon, Catholic, Buddhist, you'd be out.
Christian nationalist strategy isn't just ideological though.
It's practical.
Remember, America is rapidly becoming less Christian.
Demographics are death for Christian nationalists right now.
And finding support from people they want to disenfranchise
seems unlikely.
And so I think opposition to democracy comes
when they realize, or when it becomes more clear,
that democracy may not return results
that they have historically desired.
That's Indiana University professor Andrew Whitehead. Andrew studies Christian
nationalism and has written two books on the subject. But there's a workaround
for not getting support in a democracy. If Christian nationalists get rid of
entire voting blocks that might oppose their theocracy. Voting blocs like women, non-Christians, anyone in the LGBTQ plus community, that starts to
solve the problem.
Being in the minority isn't as much of an issue if the majority can't vote.
Because ultimately, Christian nationalism is focused on gaining and maintaining access
to self-interested power.
And I think that that ultimately draws Christians away from the example and words of Jesus
in trying to break down dividing walls of hostility and to actually loving our neighbor.
And one thing we noticed at Fight Laugh Feast, Christian nationalists are trying to create
a parallel society where as many goods and services as possible are provided by Christians.
Leaders of Christian companies hawk their services on stage in between speakers.
There's Christian crowdfunding and email, Christian Netflix, and a publisher putting
out Christian children's books.
With that, we created an entire universe where our characters are meeting these same ideologies
that they're facing nowadays with peer pressure, fake news, cancel culture, gender identity,
but we talk about it from a Christian point of view.
This parallel structure, parallel society, is trying to pave the way for a Christian America.
And these guys are patient.
You're listening to The Sunday Story. After the break,
Heath Drusen and I sit down to talk about the road ahead as we enter the next Trump term.
We'll be right back.
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We're back with Heath Druzen talking about his podcast Extremely American, which takes this
deep dive into Christian nationalism and talks to the practitioners of it who are very open about it.
One thing that I was struck by in the excerpt that we just heard is that they want the nation to be run under this idea of Christianity or Christ.
That's where I get a little confused because I'm a Christian. I grew up in a very conservative church,
but I guess I want to get some clarity on what
these specific Christian nationalists,
when they're talking about a Christian government,
like what does that actually look like to them?
Yeah, in the view of the Christian nationalists I talked to,
it's an extremely narrow view
of what Christianity can be.
It's a Protestant view of it, and even more than that, really, if you're outside of the
sort of Calvinist, Baptist umbrella, then they don't really consider you Christian.
So if you're Catholic, if you're Mormon, you're still in the out group in their very narrow
view of what a Christian America would look like. you're still in the out group in their very narrow view
of what a Christian America would look like.
The other part of this that I think is very interesting
is that there was like another very pro US
and Protestant movement in the 1920s
and that was like the Ku Klux Klan, right?
Where to be American was to be white
and to be Protestant, right?
Like that was a part of this, right?
Like that was a part of what it meant.
And obviously now the Klan was a terrorist organization,
but I just wonder how does whiteness
interact with this movement?
Yeah, it's a pretty white movement.
And Doug Wilson, who leads Christchurch, he co-wrote a pamphlet called Southern Slavery
as it was, which very much whitewashed the evils of slavery and painted the Confederacy
as the victims.
So there's some serious baggage there.
And there's some real infighting and
a bit of a civil war going on within the Christian Nationalist movement. I've gone kind of down
the rabbit hole and seen some people go to some dark places, mostly on the platform X,
where there are elements of Christian nationalism who have really embraced anti-Semitism and
racism. They've basically just embraced alternative theories
about the Holocaust and slavery.
And then there's people,
it's a weird thing to say,
but the moderate Christian nationalists.
They're a little more moderate, okay, yeah.
Right, right.
And they're pushing back,
whoa, whoa, whoa, we don't like being quote unquote woke,
but you guys are going too far
and you're putting a stain on the movement.
There is a big battle going on inside the movement between the folks who see not being
woke as actually being racist and the other people who are like, no, that's not what we're
about.
You guys need to get your head straight.
That is an interesting dichotomy there.
So Heath, this is a church in a town in Idaho.
You know, they may have created
this kind of Christian industrial complex,
but like how far can their reach really be?
How far can they reach?
The limitation they have is that their ideas are broadly unpopular in America, but they're
gaining influence and they're gaining influence at the top of power.
To many, it seems as though the theocrats are now on the doorstep of power.
You've got the architect of Project 2025, Russ Vogt, who's been tapped to lead the
White House Budget Office again.
So Vogt was actually caught on a secret recording saying he wants to quote, rehabilitate Christian
nationalism.
And in the speech last year for a series called The Theology of American Statecraft, he said
he wants to use biblical principles to instruct government.
So he's been pretty explicit about his plans.
Doug Wilson, who leads Christchurch, also spoke at that event.
You've got Fox News personality Pete Hegseth, who's been nominated to be Secretary of Defense.
Well, he's a member of a church connected to Doug Wilson's Christian Nationalist group,
and he sends his kids to one of Doug Wilson's schools.
And he's talked about his writings, too.
So I think we're seeing it right there in that what's sort of ingenious about the influence
campaign that Doug Wilson, sitting in Moscow, Idaho, has orchestrated is it's this kind of intangible
influence, right? What he's created is an entire ecosystem from school to church to entertainment.
So if you get sucked in, all you're hearing is that ideology. And I think that's really powerful.
So, I mean, the influence that Christian nationalism has is not theoretical.
Trump and his advisors have not called for some of the most extreme things that the Christian
nationalists that you talk to that they're pushing for, for an actual theocracy and things
of that nature.
But in this next Trump administration, are there any things that you are going to be paying attention to
or looking out for just along these lines?
My home state of Idaho has been sort of a lab for extremism
in the last few years.
So I think it actually can be kind of instructive
as to what might be coming nationally.
There's some examples where the legislature has passed laws that have really become blueprints
for the rest of the country.
Idaho had an early anti-trans bill that was used as a blueprint for later anti-trans bills
that passed in other states.
They also recently passed a really restrictive library bill that basically leaves libraries
open to lawsuits if they are found to have harmful materials available to minors.
Now, the definition of harmful materials is very much in the eye of the beholder and some
possibilities there when it comes to books about people of color, about LGBTQ themes,
things like that.
And so I think what we're seeing in Idaho, it might be indicative of the kinds of pushes
we're going to be seeing in this next administration.
As far as what Doug Wilson and his allies can achieve in the next four years, that remains
to be seen.
But they've said they're in a stronger position now after Trump's win.
Heath, thank you so much for bringing this reporting to us.
It's very illuminating. So thank you so much.
Thanks for having me. Heath Drusen is the host and creator of the Extremely American podcast
series from Boise State Public Radio.
You can hear both seasons of the show at NPR.org or wherever you listen to podcasts.
This episode of The Sunday Story was produced by Justine Yan.
It was edited by Jenny Schmidt.
Poissy Lee mastered the episode.
Special thanks to Boissy State Public Radio,
who partnered with Heath on Extremely American,
James Dawson, Heath's co-reporter and sound designer on the season, and Extremely American editor Morgan Springer. The Sunday story team
includes Andrew Mambo and our senior supervising producer Leona Simstrom.
Irene Noguchi is our executive producer. I'm Ayesha Roscoe. Up first is back
tomorrow with all the news you need to start your week until then have a great rest of your weekend