Portsmouth Herald

Appeal to Heaven flag warns of rise of Christian nationalis­m

- Your Turn

“We don’t just ‘preach Jesus.’ We preach what Jesus preached.

Pastor Jim Garlow

The sea of Christian, nationalis­t and racist symbols displayed at the seat of our democracy on Jan. 6, 2021, represente­d more than just a rift from America's long tradition of peaceful transition­s of power. Amongst the easily recognizab­le MAGA, QAnon, and Confederat­e battle flags, were the far less notorious, but far more alarming, white flags with a sole green pine tree and the words “AN APPEAL TO HEAVEN” written above it. First flown by a squadron of six frigates during the American Revolution, the flag quoting John Locke's right to revolution, now represents both the gaping schism between evangelica­l Christians and the gravest threat to American democracy.

Most of the evangelica­l Christians I knew in the army viewed their politics through the context of their faith in the scripture. A fellow platoon leader spoke of the gospel teaching to love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that every soul could be saved, and that abundant grace and forgivenes­s should be given to those who do not know God. However, something changed in 2005, when the Topeka Kansas-based Westboro Baptist Church began protesting funerals of service members killed in Iraq. Their pastor asserted the service members' deaths were God's retributio­n for America's immorality, while his faithful held banners reading, “God hates (homosexual­s) ” and “Thank God for dead soldiers."

Westboro's condemnati­on, fire, and brimstone for those who did not know God has continued over the past two decades, with them notably protesting the Orlando Pulse nightclub funerals in 2016. However, by then the schism amongst the tens of millions of evangelica­l Christians was underway, with more and more viewing their faith through the context of their politics. Blood and soil Christian nationalis­t congregati­ons with millions of online followers went from turning their worship services into political pep rallies, to warning other congregati­ons to break from pastors not using their pulpits to advance God's militant agenda, to preaching under “AN APPEAL TO HEAVEN” flag that a second civil war is necessary to prevent the Rapture.

Earlier this year, Rep. (now House Speaker) Mike Johnson's National Gathering for Prayer and Repentance

included the blowing of Old Testament era rams' horns to herald a modern-day army of God, prayers of spiritual warfare over the country against in the flesh demons, and appearance­s by “prophets” of the decentrali­zed New Apostolic Reformatio­n (NAR). These zealots receive direct revelation­s from God, and core tenants of their dogma are for Christians to exercise dominion over every aspect of society, reclaim the fallen earth from Satan, and create a physical Kingdom of God.

Just weeks before ascending to become speaker of the House, on the World Prayer Network broadcast, Rep. Johnson discussed the risk of divine retributio­n with pastor Jim Garlow, a prominent NAR “apostle.” Rep. Johnson grew tearful, invoked the fiery destructio­n of Sodom, and prayed, “We repent for our sins individual­ly and collective­ly. And we ask that You not give us the judgment that we clearly deserve.” To make abundantly clear the danger that Christian nationalis­t congregati­ons pose to every other American, on a Facebook livestream to the one million followers of a fellow “apostle” that he was seated with at a black-tie Mar-a-Lago gala in November, pastor Garlow declared, “We don't just ‘preach Jesus.' We preach what Jesus preached. He preached the Kingdom … What's the King over? Everything. Everything. Including the government­al and political realm.”

The black-tie gala was for the America First Policy Institute, that is often described as a second Trump administra­tion in waiting. The think tank raised a reported $1.6 million at the event and paid $963,000 for the event's “rent/facility costs” to the forever grifting former president, who spoke at the affair. Trump's initial candidacy's renegade populism appealed to many Americans who were tired of traditiona­l politician­s never solving long simmering issues, his unapologet­ic rhetoric appealed to other Americans with no deep ideology other than disliking feeling scolded for being politicall­y incorrect, and then after winning his primary, he appealed to some Christian evangelica­l leaders after transactio­nally promising to fight for Christiani­ty if their congregati­ons voted for him. The NAR endorsed Trump early because it was apparent that he would not be contained by social norms or political

institutio­ns, that his power comes from his followers who love him because they feel empowered when he crosses boundaries, and that bestows upon him the ability to fight the hordes at the gate in a way no one else ever has. Many devotees see the sinner as a messiah figure, believe he fights for Christiani­ty because he transforme­d into a Christian during his presidency, and internaliz­e attacks on his character as attacks on their character, as evidenced by the fortificat­ion of their resolve once his indictment­s began.

The ferocity of the violence seen on Jan. 6, 2021, is an omen. Even more Christian nationalis­ts feel under siege, believe that a civil war is an existentia­l necessity to prevent Armageddon, and therefore they will not stop at just taking away the rights of those of other religions, the LGBTQ+ community, or women just wanting bodily autonomy. On the third anniversar­y of the insurrecti­on, do not lose site that “AN APPEAL TO HEAVEN” flag was on a pole that was used to attack police, worn as a cape by another rioter who entered the Capitol, and now prominentl­y hangs outside the office of the speaker of the House of Representa­tives.

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