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Preparing for War

The Extremist History of White Christian Nationalism—and What Comes Next

Audiobook
78 of 78 copies available
78 of 78 copies available
The insurrection at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, was not a blip or an aberration. It was the logical outcome of years of a White evangelical subculture's preparation for war. Religion scholar and former insider Bradley Onishi maps the origins of White Christian nationalism and traces its offshoots in Preparing for War. Combining his own experiences in the youth groups and prayer meetings of the 1990s with an immersive look at the steady blending of White grievance politics with evangelicalism, Onishi crafts an engrossing account of the years-long campaign of White Christian nationalism that led to January 6. How did the rise of what Onishi calls the New Religious Right, between 1960 and 2015, give birth to violent White Christian nationalism during the Trump presidency and beyond? What propelled some of the most conservative religious communities in the country-communities of which Onishi was once a part-to ignite a cold civil war? Through chapters on White supremacy and segregationist theologies, conspiracy theories, the Christian-school movement, purity culture, and the right-wing media ecosystem, Onishi pulls back the curtain on a subculture that birthed a movement and has taken a dangerous turn.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 7, 2022
      The January 6 Capitol riot should make evangelical Christians take a hard look in the mirror, according to this anguished history of the movement’s entanglement with political extremism. University of San Francisco religion scholar Onishi (The Birth of the World), who left evangelicalism after studying philosophy and theology at Oxford University, traces the roots of the problem to the founding of the John Birch Society in 1958 and details how vehement opposition to abortion, the “gay agenda,” the women’s rights movement, and other social justice movements—driven by belief that “the Bible is the errorless Word of God”—helped push that organization and others into “the dangerous territory of conspiracy theories.” Conservative politicians including Barry Goldwater, Richard Nixon, and Ronald Reagan leveraged evangelicals’ religious fervor into electoral power, paving the way for white Christian nationalism to become “an integrating force for Trump’s coup attempt.” Onishi provides plenty of evidence that “Christian extremists” have long been willing to “sacrifice the republic in order to save the America they wanted—a nation where White, straight Christians maintain power,” but his assertion that January 6 was the next “logical step” for the movement underplays many other factors in that event. Still, this is a rigorous and earnest grappling with the intersection between religion and politics.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Bradley Onishi, speaker, scholar, and cofounder of the religion and politics podcast "Straight White American Jesus," wonders if he might have engaged in the violent attempt to overturn the presidential election on January 6, 2021, had he not left behind his evangelical Christian faith. With sincerity and a tone reflecting his deep concern for the welfare of our republic, Onishi lays bare the rise of white Christian Nationalism and its alignment with the Republican Party in what he sees as a relentless grab for power. Sadly, Onishi's ability as a podcaster does not translate to his performance as a narrator. Too many pauses in inappropriate places make his account choppy. This is an important book--but one that might be more effective in print. S.G. © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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