Because apparently, believing in the Bible and the Constitution makes you a domestic terrorist now.
, Somewhere along the way, flying an American flag in your yard, saying a prayer at dinner, and quoting the Founding Fathers became radical acts. According to the left, if you love Jesus and your country, congratulations… you’re now a “Christian Nationalist.”
The term gets lobbed like a grenade on social media, in the news, even from pulpits (sadly), meant to smear believers as racist, fascist, and dangerous.
But what does it actually mean? Do they even know? Or have we entered another Orwellian phase of culture where words mean whatever the outrage mob feels they mean today?
Let’s dissect what the left thinks they mean by “Christian Nationalist,” what the phrase actually represents, and then deliver the righteous rebuttal it deserves.
What the Left Thinks “Christian Nationalist” Means
To the progressive crowd, “Christian Nationalist” is a catch-all insult for:
White people who still believe in absolute truth (gasp).
Christians who quote scripture without apologizing for it.
Patriots who don’t think America is inherently evil.
Conservatives who reject drag queen story hour and porn in elementary libraries.
They imagine a “Christian Nationalist” as some crazed, gun-toting, Bible-thumping, racist theocrat trying to install a theocracy à la The Handmaid’s Tale. (Which, by the way, is fiction, not prophecy.)
To them, it’s all about control, oppression, and “Christian supremacy” because apparently, believing that biblical principles lead to human flourishing is now hate speech.
What It Actually Means (And Doesn’t)
Let’s be real. “Christian Nationalism,” in its true form, simply reflects this:
A worldview that acknowledges God’s authority over nations, seeks to preserve moral order, and honors the foundational role of biblical values in shaping a free and just society.
That’s it.
It’s not calling for a Christian-only government. It’s not saying only Christians can be Americans. It’s not about forcing people to convert.
It’s about recognizing that faith and freedom are not mutually exclusive, and that this nation was, indeed, built with the Judeo-Christian worldview at its core.
Holy Fire Incoming
Let me get this straight…
The same crowd that can’t define a woman…
Wants to lecture Christians on the “danger” of moral clarity?
The same people who applaud abortion-on-demand, celebrate gender confusion in toddlers, and demand censorship of dissenting opinions…
Are worried we’re trying to control the country?
No, my friends. What they fear isn’t tyranny. It’s truth.
They’re not scared of Christian Nationalism… they’re scared of conviction.
They’re scared of Christians who won’t bend the knee to woke ideologies.
They’re terrified of people who live by a higher authority than their ever-shifting feelings.
Because we remind them that right and wrong still exist—and that every knee will bow—whether they like it or not.
So if being labeled a “Christian Nationalist” means I’m a Jesus-loving, truth-speaking, freedom-defending, Bible-believing American…
Then guilty as charged.
Because I’d rather be slandered by the world than celebrated by it.
And no matter what they call us, we already know what God calls us:
Chosen. Set apart. Light in the darkness.
What Can We Do?
1. Define the narrative before they do.
Stop letting the left define terms. When someone calls you a “Christian Nationalist,” ask them to explain what they mean. Watch them squirm in confusion or parrot MSNBC.
2. Unapologetically live your faith in the public square.
Don’t hide your patriotism. Don’t shrink back from truth. Display your Bible and your flag. They’re not mutually exclusive, they’re complementary.
3. Teach your kids the real history.
America wasn’t perfect, but it was exceptional—because it was built on biblical principles. If we forget that, we lose it all.
4. Pray for revival, not rebranding.
This isn’t about salvaging our reputation with the media. It’s about reclaiming territory the Church surrendered to cultural cowardice.