The Oklahoman

White nationalis­ts use Christian symbols to send messages to racists

- By Trevor Hughes

WASHINGTON—A screaming man with his fist raised, a Byzantine cross emblazoned in red on his T-shirt. A white flag with a lone green pine tree and the words “An Appeal to Heaven” fluttering over the angry crowd. The Christian flag whipping in the wind from a parked pickup.

Those images on display at the Jan. 5-6 rally and riot in Washington, D. C ., have raised concerns that some of former President Donald Trump' s most ar dent and dangerous supporters, including groups such as the Proud Boys, Oathkeeper­s, QAnon, 3 Per centers and America Firsters, are cloaking themselves in Biblical language to justify their actions.

The flags and other displays are the latest examples of how white terrorists throughout history, including the KKK, have cited Christiani­ty to justify what they claim is their god-given right to control races and ethnic groups, experts said.

The displays — including a prayer from the Senate rostrum by a QAnon shaman who broke into the Capitol — have so alarmed some faith leaders that they published an open letter Friday signed by more than 1,400 pastors and church leaders condemning the “perversion” of their faith.

“The use of Christian symbols, iconograph­y, scripture in efforts to dominate and exclude are as old the republic itself,” said the Rev. Fred Davie, executive vice president of Union Theologica­l Seminary in New York City. “It's deeply baked into our nation. It's deep, but it's also been proven time and time again to be wrong.”

Davie, who served as a faith liaison in the Obama White House, said evange li cali sm, in particular, has become associated with American nationalis­m, specifical­ly white nationalis­m. Online, some hard-right Christians find acceptance for their racist beliefs from white nationalis­ts, most of whom don't share their faith but are united in their hatred.

“We' re talking about a minority within a minority, but it is a powerful minority ,” Davies aid .“But they do not represent the essence of white Christians in America —or Christian sin America overall.”

Using Christiani­ty to justify hate

Some of t he people who display Christian symbols or invoke the Bible to justify their actions are doing it in a largely cynical way, several experts said: They're sending a signal to fellow racists.

“For them, it' s just short hand for id enti ty ,” said Edward Ahmed Mitchell, deputy executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations and a former prosecutor in Georgia. “There absolutely is a connection between far-right political extremism and farright religious extremism, but I doubt these people are showing up at church every Sunday and reading their Bibles.”

Matthew De Michele, a research sociologis­t who specialize­s in extremism at there search institute RTI Internatio­nal in Raleigh, North Carolina, said t here are cl early Christians who believe their religion justifies racism, and today's displays are an “intense redeployme­nt of old tactics.”

For centuries in the United States, many Christian pastors preached a “natural order” where whites were justified in enslaving Black men, women and children, citing everything from the writings of Paul the Apostle in the New Testament to the Curse of Ham in the Old Testament. Others argued that since the Bible refers to slavery as an institutio­n without specifical­ly condemning it, it must be divinely permitted. In 1861, Texas' leaders cited the “plainest revelation­s of Divine Law” to justify slavery and secession from the United States.

DeMichele said what we're seeing today is a tweaked reemergenc­e of the approach used by groups like the KKK, which cloaked themselves in Christian symbols and set crosses on fire as a terror tactic.

`Unthinkabl­e for Christians to support the Proud Boys'

The letter published this week by Christian leaders from across the political spectrum specifical­ly acknowledg­es that terror groups like the KKK have been tolerated and even accommodat­ed by white evangelica­ls.

“We choose to speak out now because we do not want to be quiet accomplice­s in this on-going sin,” the letter reads. “Just as it was tragically inconsiste­nt for Christians in the 20th Century to support t he Ku Klux Klan and Nazi ideology, it is unthinkabl­e for Christians to support the Proud Boys, Oathkeeper­s, QAnon, 3 Percenters, America Firsters, and similar groups.”

The letter urges pastors to counsel parishione­rs who align with or support racist and hate groups, and to emphasize the values of democracy, antiracism and equality.

“Instead of seeing any particular political leader or party as divinely appointed, we believe in the prophetic and pastoral ministry of the church to all political leaders and parties,” the letter reads. “Instead of power through violence, we believe in and seek to imitate the powerful, servant love practiced by our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.”

De Michele, who has interviewe­d dozens of white supremacis­ts, said the United States has deliberate­ly been reluctant to investigat­e why and how people become white supremacis­ts and white nationalis­ts. He said a better understand­ing of why white Americans become enamored with those ideals will help combat domestic terrorism and help the United States live up to its ideals.

“People don' t want to say that this is a country founded on white supremacy. But we know that to be true,” DeMichele said. “It's very important to understand that it' s not new for white supremacis­ts to have a Christian identity. But it is intriguing there has been the strengthen­ing overlap of the white nationalis­ts and those of Christian identity.”

White nationalis­ts generally claim the white race is superior and advocate for racial segregatio­n. White supremacis­ts go a step further by insisting that white people deserve to be in charge of everything because of their skin color. The two descriptio­ns are often used interchang­eably by the public, although scholars draw a distinctio­n between the two.

Davis noted Christian symbols have had a visible presence at other white nationalis­t rallies in recent years, including the Charlottes­ville “Unite the Right” march in August 2017, where a mishmash of hundreds of white nationalis­ts, Neo Nazis, the KKK and white militias protested the removal of a statue of Confederat­e general Robert E. Lee.

A similar hodgepodge of groups converged on the Capitol Jan .6, including white nationalis­ts, QAnon adherents, Oathkeeper­s and others brandishin­g Christian flags and blowing ram' s horns.

“The differing ideologies are all kind of blending together,” said Stephen Piggott, a researcher with the Western States Center, a Portland, Oregon-based nonprofit that supports inclusive democracy. “A year ago, if a Ne o-Nazi showed up at a Trump rally they'd likely get kicked out.”

 ??  ?? A man holds a Bible as Trump supporters gather outside the Capitol in Washington on Jan. 6. [JOHN MINCHILLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS VIA USA TODAY]
A man holds a Bible as Trump supporters gather outside the Capitol in Washington on Jan. 6. [JOHN MINCHILLO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS VIA USA TODAY]

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