San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Rioters try to restore white Christian rule

- By Robert P. Jones Robert P. Jones is the CEO and founder of Public Religion Research Institute and author of “The End of White Christian America.” He writes for Religion News Service.

If there was one thing of value to come out of the shameful chaos of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, it’s that the horrific events made plain the powerful ideologica­l and theologica­l currents of American politics that often stay just under the surface. The emblems carried by the rioters — particular­ly the comfortabl­e juxtaposit­ion of Christian and white supremacis­t symbols — bear witness to these forces.

There were crosses, “Jesus Saves” signs and “Jesus 2020” flags that mimicked the design of the Trump flags.

Some of the participan­ts, organized as part of a “Jericho March,” blew shofars — Jewish ritual horns — as they circled the Capitol, re-enacting the siege of the city of Jericho by the Israelites described in the Book of Joshua in the Hebrew Bible. And one video showed the Christian flag — white, with a blue canton containing a red cross, used by many white evangelica­l churches — being paraded into an empty congressio­nal chamber after the doors had been breached and members of Congress evacuated.

I recall that same flag standing behind the pulpit of my Mississipp­i Southern Baptist church, where as a child I was led in a pledge of allegiance to both the American and Christian flags.

The Atlantic’s Jeffrey

Goldberg wrote that “the conflation of Trump and Jesus was a common theme at the rally” among people he interviewe­d. “It’s all in the Bible. Everything is predicted. Donald Trump is in the Bible. Get yourself ready,” one told him. “Give it up if you believe in Jesus!” said another, then “Give it up if you believe in Donald Trump!” — which elicited loud cheers from nearby rioters.

Comfortabl­y intermingl­ed with Christian rhetoric and these Christian icons were explicit symbols of white supremacy. Outside the Capitol, Trump supporters erected a large wooden gallows with a bright orange noose ominously dangling from the center. These Trump supporters managed to do something the Confederat­e army was never able to accomplish — fly the Confederat­e battle flag inside the U.S. Capitol.

At least one protester sported a “Camp Auschwitz” hoodie, a reference to a concentrat­ion camp where over 1 million Jews were killed by the Nazis, even as others made outlandish comparison­s between Christians as victims of American society and European Jews in the Third Reich.

If we are to understand the events of Jan. 6, and the challenges ahead for us as a nation, we must take these symbols and this rhetoric seriously, not in isolation, but in combinatio­n and conversati­on with each other.

This seditious mob was motivated not just by loyalty to Trump, but by an unholy amalgamati­on of white supremacy and Christiani­ty that has plagued our nation since its inception and is still with us today. As I show in my book “White Too

Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christiani­ty,” there remains a disturbing­ly strong link between holding racist attitudes and identifyin­g as a white Christian.

We should remember that this moment, and the divisions of the last four years, are set against the upheaval of religious and demographi­c change.

Since 2008, the country has moved from being a majority Christian nation to one that is no longer a majority Christian nation (from 54 percent white and Christian to 44 percent white and Christian). This change took place during the tenure of our first African American president. The dysfunctio­n and violence we are seeing is in large part an attempt to preserve a vision of white Christian America that is passing from the scene.

 ?? John Minchillo / Associated Press ?? Trump supporters mix symbols of Christiani­ty and right-wing white supremacis­t politics outside the Capitol on Jan. 6 in Washington.
John Minchillo / Associated Press Trump supporters mix symbols of Christiani­ty and right-wing white supremacis­t politics outside the Capitol on Jan. 6 in Washington.

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