San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Role of religion in the Capitol chaos?

2014 survey studies church attendance, political violence

- By Ryan Burge

The questions about the attempted insurrecti­on on Jan. 6 have yet to slow down: How did the rightwing extremists organize? Did the president have a role in encouragin­g this movement? Did law enforcemen­t make it easier for them to penetrate the halls of the U.S. Capitol, or were security teams woefully unprepared?

But a question we keep returning to in the aftermath is quite simply: Who would do this?

And a few questions follow: What share of Americans support this type of behavior? And what did religion — specifical­ly Christiani­ty — have to do with it all?

While publicly available data doesn’t yet exist about the insurrecti­on at the Capitol, a survey conducted by the Baylor Religion Survey in 2014, before President Donald Trump’s ascent, may provide some insight.

The survey, which can be found on the Associatio­n of Religion Data Archives site, asked the following prescient question: “Do you think that it is ever justified for citizens to take violent action against the government, or is it never justified?”

The answers to this question don’t seem to break cleanly along partisan or religious lines, but within this puzzle there’s some sense the Christian nationalis­m on display last week was more nationalis­t than it was Christian.

Speaking generally, in Baylor’s entire sample, 27.9 percent of respondent­s said violent action against the government would be justified — indicating huge swaths of the public oppose violent insurrecti­on.

But a worrisome minority are not repulsed by this type of violence, and in analyzing church attendance among those who do support it, we might start to understand the role of religion in the Jan. 6 events at the Capitol.

There is, first of all, an unmistakab­le negative relationsh­ip between church attendance and supporting violent revolution­s against the government. Among those who say they never attend services, at least a third of respondent­s believed there are times when these types of actions are permissibl­e.

As attendance increases, support for violent insurrecti­on consistent­ly goes down. Weekly church attenders are clearly the most opposed to these actions: Only about 22 percent indicate support for violence in this context.

But when political partisansh­ip is incorporat­ed into church attendance, a different pattern emerges.

Democrats are less supportive of violence than Republican­s at all levels of church attendance. And as Democrats attend church at higher rates, that propensity toward violence goes down even more.

But the same is not true for Republican­s. Church attendance doesn’t have a statistica­lly significan­t impact on their support for

violence against the government.

Looking at this through the lens of religious tradition also underscore­s this partisan dynamic. Examining the four largest U.S. religious traditions — evangelica­l Protestant­s, mainline Protestant­s, Catholics and the religiousl­y unaffiliat­ed — Democrats are less willing to justify violent acts than their Republican counterpar­ts.

This gap is also incredibly large in some cases. For instance, a Republican evangelica­l is three times more likely to support violent action than an evangelica­l Democrat. This partisansh­ip gap for Catholics is the smallest of all traditions (about 7 percentage points).

Overall, Democrats are less supportive of violent behavior than their Republican counterpar­ts at all levels of church attendance. The gap between Republican­s and Democrats is consistent­ly around 10 points.

Before we jump to conclusion­s about the role of religion, it’s important to note the picture that emerges becomes murky when a model is specified that includes controls for demographi­c factors such as age, gender, race, income and education.

With controls applied, the Democrats’ resistance to violence against the government applies whether or not they attend

church. A Democrat who attends church once a week is no more or less likely to support violent revolution than one who never attends. And crucially, the same is true for Republican­s.

The relationsh­ip between religion and support for violence is not clear, in other words. But the relationsh­ip between partisansh­ip and support for violence against the government is quite clear.

Church attendance does not appear to throw fuel on the fire nor tamp it down. It’s neutral — or at most a come-along to the conservati­ve ideology that more likely propelled the riot.

The only case in which that is not true is for political independen­ts. The more they attend church services, the less supportive

they are of violence against their government.

The factors that drive people to violence are myriad and may change from day to day, and extrapolat­ing this 2014 data to the current series of events would be unwise. Clearly, those involved in the incident at the Capitol were fighting for Republican causes, and there could certainly be instances when an issue that led to violence against the government may be in support of more progressiv­e ideals.

It would seem likely that responses to these questions would turn largely on the type of civil rights that were being violated. Thus, it is noteworthy this data was collected in 2014 when Barack Obama was the president, and Donald Trump was only a minor

political figure on the national political landscape.

If these results tell us anything, it’s that the social world is incredibly complicate­d and that factors related to religion and/or politics run across a number of different tracks. Sometimes they combine to form clear and unmistakab­le conclusion­s, and other times they tell a more nuanced story. Clearly, this one is in the latter category.

Despite the causes of the insurrecti­on, we know the majority of Americans are appalled by what they saw splashed across their television screens on Jan. 6, and it’s likely their appetite for violence was tamped down when they saw what was happening in real time on what should have been a boring, procedural day in our nation’s capital.

 ?? Kenny Holston / New York Times ?? Supporters of President Donald Trump gather near the Washington Monument on Jan. 6. A Baylor survey in 2014 indicates the Christian nationalis­m on display that day was likely more nationalis­t than Christian.
Kenny Holston / New York Times Supporters of President Donald Trump gather near the Washington Monument on Jan. 6. A Baylor survey in 2014 indicates the Christian nationalis­m on display that day was likely more nationalis­t than Christian.
 ?? John Minchillo / Associated Press ?? Trump supporters and authoritie­s clash Jan. 6. Nearly 30 percent of respondent­s to the survey said violent action against the government would be justified.
John Minchillo / Associated Press Trump supporters and authoritie­s clash Jan. 6. Nearly 30 percent of respondent­s to the survey said violent action against the government would be justified.

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