Confronting Christofascism: Healing the Evangelical Wound
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"“In 'Christofascism,' Carolyn Baker has offered a way out of the looming wars of religion through 1) writing a true history of the USA’s fundamentalist/evangelical movement and 2) offering the first steps on a path to freedom for those wishing to reconsider fascist religion and escape. This is an important book.” -- from the Foreword written by Frank Schaeffer.
Carolyn Baker
Carolyn Baker, Ph.D., is a former psychotherapist and professor of psychology and history. The author of several books, she offers life and leadership coaching as well as spiritual counseling and works closely with the Institute for Sacred Activism. She lives in Boulder, Colorado.
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Reviews for Confronting Christofascism
3 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Over the past half century evangelical Christianity has morphed from a spiritual tradition into a political movement. Christofascism, a term new to most Americans, has become an existential threat to democracy in America. Baker's introduction to the movement is timely and helpful. She also gives much useful advice for those trying to disengage from evangelical fundamentalism and those suffering from the trauma its proponents perpetrate on believers.
Book preview
Confronting Christofascism - Carolyn Baker
INTRODUCTION
At this moment American constitutional democracy is sitting on a knife’s edge between maintaining a democratic republic or succumbing to the tidal wave of authoritarianism that appears to be engulfing numerous nations globally. Enabling this terrifying trend is the Religious Right in America whose members identify as evangelical or fundamentalist Christians. This movement not only threatens the American republic but has served to traumatize countless numbers of its followers who have joined its ranks in order to make sense of the dizzying changes and daunting challenges of our time. A path to healing and sanity for individuals and the culture is offered in this book.
As investigative reporter Sarah Posner wrote in Unholy: Why White Evangelicals Worship At The Altar of Donald Trump, in Trump, the Christian right sees more than a politician who delivers on promises; they see a savior from the excesses of liberalism.
¹ As it was in the earliest days of fundamentalist Christianity in America, no compromise with what it identifies as righteous, no betrayal of its own values , no assault on objective, verifiable reality is too much to ask in order to buttress itself from having to abide with the assumptions and behaviors that it deems threatening to its worldview.
At this writing in 2021, I believe that there is no greater threat to democracy than the burgeoning tide of authoritarianism in the United States and throughout the world. In the wake of climate chaos, massive global economic inequality, systemic racism and ethnocentrism, and the potential collapse of systems and institutions swirling within unprecedented political divergence, democracy is now in critical condition, in fact, almost on life-support.
On January 6, 2021, with the collusion of specific members of the Republican Party, a violent attack was launched on the United States Capitol by supporters of Donald Trump in response to his request to contest and violently overthrow the election of Joe Biden to the Presidency. Apparently, the insurrectionists intended not only to stop the certification of the election by the Electoral College, but to intimidate or even kill the Vice-President and Speaker of the House. In the process five people died, and 140 were severely injured. Whereas the rioting ceased within a few hours, the insurrection did not.
In fact, some leaders of the Republican Party have launched a massive campaign to suppress voting in numerous states and to conduct new election audits
of votes in the 2020 Presidential election. These efforts constitute an ongoing insurgency movement to undermine the democratic process and the 2024 Presidential election. What is more, the Republican Party has rejected a Congressional vote to investigate the January 6 insurrection, forcing the Speaker of the House to ultimately create a select committee of investigators with subpoena power.
Now, in mid-2021, 53% of Republicans do not believe that Joe Biden is the legitimate President of The United States. Of those, three out of five white evangelicals contest the reality of Biden’s victory. ²
Alongside their doubt of Biden as President, many evangelicals are embracing the conspiracy cult of QAnon, according to a May, 2021 New York Times report, QAnon Now as Popular in U.S. as Some Major Religions, Poll Suggests.
³ Additionally, the UK Independent reports that QAnon has merged with white Christian evangelicals, experts say—and the results could be lethal.
⁴
In How Democracies Die, Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt argue that, This is how democracies now die. Blatant dictatorship—in the form of fascism, communism, or military rule—has disappeared across much of the world. Military coups and other violent seizures of power are rare. Most countries hold regular elections. Democracies still die, but by different means. Since the end of the Cold War, most democratic breakdowns have been caused not by generals and soldiers but by elected governments themselves. Like Chávez in Venezuela, elected leaders have subverted democratic institutions in Georgia, Hungary, Nicaragua, Peru, the Philippines, Poland, Russia, Sri Lanka, Turkey, and Ukraine. Democratic backsliding today begins at the ballot box.
⁵
Religious fundamentalism in any form is antithetical to our deepest humanity regardless of the creed by which it is driven.
It is now painfully obvious that democracy in the United States is experiencing death by a thousand cuts, and white evangelicals are massively enabling its demise. I believe that it is essential to trace the historical context in which Christian fundamentalism arose in the nineteenth century in order to understand how this could happen. Even more urgent is the need to examine how fundamentalist Christianity has severely traumatized its followers and explore specific tools for recovering from it, as well as pondering what actions might be taken to prevent the further decimation of American democracy, enabled as it is by evangelical elements of the Republican Party.
I am offering an exploration of these as someone who was born and raised in fundamentalist Christianity and made a dangerous and daunting escape from its isolating and other-worldly existence to join life in the human race.
While technical differences between fundamentalist
and evangelical
may be important for some readers, I consider them hairsplitting, and I will be using them interchangeably in this book.
To those who seek to heal the wounds that their engagement with Christian fundamentalism may have created, I offer support and encouragement, noting that within the latter word is the word courage.
The journey of healing from religious trauma requires nothing if not courage, and countless people every day are finding it as they leave the evangelical movement in droves.
Although this book is not primarily a political missive, the political landscape cannot be separated from the religious one, because, since the end of World War II, evangelicals have sought, at the very least, to markedly influence American politics, and at the very worst, to collude with politicians to create a theocracy, or government by God.
I have written this book from a sense of profound urgency in the context of the mindboggling deterioration of democracy in the United States. The future of the American experiment is more uncertain than it has ever been. Journalist Chauncey DeVega recently interviewed a historian who believes that Joe Biden may be a speed bump on the fascists’ march to power.
⁶ In other words, we may have a reprieve from the fast-track fascism of the Trump Administration, but from my perspective, awake Americans must actively oppose the anti-democratic policies of the Republican Party and its theocratic enablers of the Religious Right so that we will not succumb, as so many previously democratic nations have, to autocracy. The end product of the collusion between the Religious Right and Trumpian Republicans is what I and others have called Christofascism.
The first section of this book will document how this happened, tracing the development of evangelicalism in America from the nineteenth century to the present moment. The evangelical movement and its political involvement cannot be fully understood without a historical context.
The second section begins with my own story of growing up in a fundamentalist Christian home and traces the process of extricating myself from the fundamentalist worldview. In that section I offer to those who are recovering from their fundamentalist experience, or may be struggling with it, options for personal healing and an appreciation of their humanity in an indisputably challenging world. The book concludes with a rigorously honest assessment of what is becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish: the boundaries between evangelical Christianity and the politics of the Republican Party. Finally, I endeavor to inspire the reader to utilize their engagement with fundamentalism in whatever form, to actively move beyond the wounds of that culture toward informed civic responsibility during a global epidemic of authoritarianism.
Climate catastrophe is an existential threat to our species, as is the accompanying collapse of systems resulting from climate change and economic implosion. Yet although these crises are imminent, I believe that a world (including a nation called America) governed largely by authoritarians is a problem requiring immediate attention. No matter how involved with or removed from Christian fundamentalism you are, I urge you to read this book and allow your conscience to compel you to informed, audacious action.
PART I
THE HISTORICAL & CULTURAL CONTEXT
1. UNDERSTANDING CRISTOFASCISM
If the alliance between these zealots and the government succeeds, it will snuff out the last vestiges of American democracy.
—Chris Hedges ¹
Post-Truth is Pre-Fascism.
—Timothy Snyder
How is it that anyone can accurately use the term Christofascism
to describe the marriage of evangelical Christianity and fascist ideology in the twenty-first century? Christo
is an adjective meaning Christian, and combining it with the word fascism may feel sacrilegious for those who consider the two concepts to be antithetical to one another. Indeed, if Christianity is defined as the summation of the teachings of Christ, the two words cannot be reconciled. If, however, the Christianity in question minimizes the teachings of Christ and maximizes the writings of Christ’s apostles, glorifies the fathers of the early Christian church, and interprets all of the Bible literally for the purpose of declaring that humans are inherently sinful, and that accepting Jesus Christ as their personal savior is the only way their sinful condition can be forgiven, whereas not accepting Jesus as their personal savior consigns them to eternity in hell—in that case, we are dealing with something far beyond the contents of the Christian gospels.
And what specifically is fascism?
Yale historian Jason Stanley writes that Fascism is not a new threat, but rather a permanent temptation.
² Stanley argues that fascism generally follows a specific formula:
1. Conjuring a mythic past
that has supposedly been destroyed (by liberals, feminists, and immigrants
). These myths rely on an overwhelming sense of nostalgia for a past that is racially pure, traditional, and patriarchal.
Fascist leaders position themselves as father figures and strongmen
who alone can restore lost greatness. And yes, the fascist leader is always a ‘he.’
2. Fascist leaders sow division; they succeed by turning groups against each other,
inflaming historical antagonisms and ancient hatreds for their own advantage. Social divisions in themselves—between classes, religions, ethnic groups and so on—are what we might call pre-existing conditions. Fascists may not invent the hate, but they cynically instrumentalize it: demonizing outgroups, normalizing and naturalizing bigotry, stoking violence to justify repressive law and order
policies, the curtailing of civil rights and due process, and the mass imprisonment and killing of manufactured enemies.
3. Fascists attack the truth
with propaganda, in particular a kind of anti-intellectualism
that creates a petri dish for conspiracy theories.
Hannah Arendt, who was a German political theorist living in exile during Hitler’s reign, wrote that fascism relies on a consistent and total substitution of lies for factual truth.
She described the phenomenon as destroying the sense by which we take our bearings in the real world…. [T]he category of truth verses falsehood [being] among the mental means to this end.
In such an atmosphere, anything is possible, no matter how previously unthinkable. ³
In 1939, 20,000 Americans rallied in New York’s Madison Square Garden to celebrate the rise of Nazism – an event largely forgotten from American history. American Nazis marched into the hall in the party’s brown uniforms, reciting the pledge of allegiance and listening to the national anthem before giving Nazi salutes. Fritz Kuhn, the leader of the German-American Bund (the American wing of the Nazi party), railed against the Jewish-controlled media
and said it was time to return the United States to the white Christians who he said founded the nation. At one point during the speech a 26-year-old plumber’s helper from Brooklyn named Isadore Greenbaum charged the stage and yelled, Down with Hitler.
He was beaten up by Bund guards and his clothing ripped off in the attack before New York police officers arrested him for disorderly conduct. Over the whole scene loomed a giant multistory image of George Washington with Nazi emblems on either side. ⁴
In 1939, Kuhn was charged with embezzlement, imprisoned, and stripped of his citizenship. Many of the Bund’s assets were seized. Without leadership, the Bund fell apart. Once Nazi Germany began invading other European nations that same year, support for Nazism in the United States diminished even more, and by the time American soldiers were deployed, support for Nazi ideology was taboo. But that doesn’t mean support for the type of racism and nationalism supported by the Nazis ever went away, even in the years immediately after World War II. ⁵ In fact, fascism in the United States had been growing in popularity in the 1920s and ‘30s, and it may be that its success was drastically tempered only by the Presidency of Franklin Roosevelt.
One of the frustrating realities of our time is that terms like fascism and socialism are used interchangeably with little understanding of their authentic meaning. Confusion of the terms often results from a general resistance to authoritarianism. But although authoritarianism under fascism and under socialism may look the same, in most cases the motivations are different. Authoritarian socialism as we witnessed under Stalin looked quite different from democratic socialism such as that of Salvador Allende of Chile or Bernie Sanders in the United States. However, in the current political milieu in the United States, many people who do not understand the political motivations behind different forms of authoritarianism accuse the political left of being socialist,
which for them is synonymous with authoritarianism. At the same time, they do not grasp that the freedom
promised to them by the Trump Administration is, in fact, a twenty-first-century version of fascism.
CHARACTERISTICS OF FASCISM
In 1995, Umberto Eco, the late Italian intellectual giant and novelist most famous for The Name of the Rose, wrote a guide describing the primary features of fascism. As a child, Eco was a loyalist of Mussolini, an experience that made him quick to detect the markers of fascism later in life, when he became a revered public intellectual and political voice. Eco made the essential point, which we need to remember, that fascism looks different in each incarnation, morphing with time and leadership, as it would be difficult for [it] to reappear in the same form in different historical circumstances.
⁶
In her 2016 Alternet article, Trump Is an Eerily Perfect Match with a Famous 14-Point Guide to Identify Fascist Leaders,
Kali Holloway summarizes the ways in which Donald Trump conforms to Eco’s 14-point guide:
The Cult of Tradition:Let’s make America great again. Holloway asks, Remind me when America was great, again? Was it during the eras of native people genocide, slavery, black lynchings as white entertainment, Japanese-American internment, or Jim Crow?
Rejection of Modernism:Trump denies climate change and supports fracking and opposes environmental regulations that protect the land and people from its devastations. He favors cuts to NASA and critical biomedical research. Likewise, evangelical former Vice President, Mike Pence, is a fervent denier of science and is a religious zealot. Pence has written that global warming is a myth,
that the earth is cooling, and that there is growing skepticism
among scientists about climate change—all literally the opposite of the truth.
The Cult of Action for Action’s Sake:For example, as Holloway notes, "Anti-intellectualism and pride in idiocy—and disdain for complexity—are trademarks of today’s Republican ideology. In this light, educated elites are the enemies of salt-of-the-earth, hard-working (white) Americans. Their hatred of Obama was paired with disdain for what they view as his ‘effete snob[bery]’ and proclivity for lattes and arugula. In addition,
He [Trump] told the Washington Post he has ‘never’ read much because he makes decisions based on ‘very little knowledge . . . because I have a lot of common sense.’ After winning the election, Trump waived the daily intelligence briefings that far better-prepared and knowledgeable predecessors made