Historians of Christian Nationalism see disturbing parallels to today’s tax cut battle

The following article by Jack Jenkins was posted on the ThinkProgress website December 8, 2017:

The legacy of Christian libertarianism.

This is the fourth in a series on Christian nationalism and the religious groups supporting Donald Trump. You can read the first one here, the second one here, and the third one here.

CREDIT: DIANA OFOSU/THINKPROGRESS

As Republicans celebrated the passage of their sweeping tax reform bill last week, religious liberals were equally quick to vent their frustration. Thousands of faith leaders signed letters decrying how the bill will increase the number of Americans without health insurance by 13 million over the next eight years, and others were arrested while protesting the bill that stands to disproportionately benefit the rich.

But their outcry was dismissed by conservative voices such as blogger Erick Erickson, who insisted the bill’s critics were trying to “pass off” their “individual” Christian responsibility to the poor to the “government.”

“There is no tax rate that is or is not sinful,” Erickson wrote. “The fact is by letting people keep more of their of their money, people are able to do more to help the poor themselves.”

Meanwhile, President Donald Trump celebrated the tax plan by conflating it with his promise to make Americans say “Merry Christmas” again—a message that is increasingly perceived to be evocative of his penchant for Christian nationalism, a complex but powerful conflation of faith and ardent patriotism.

“When I was here last time, I said, we’re going to have Christmas again,” he said. “With Trump as your President, we are going to be celebrating Merry Christmas again, and it’s going to be done with a big, beautiful tax cut.”

These various faith statements about tax policy may seem somewhat disconnected. But history suggests they’re tied together in more ways than one, and represent the latest salvo in a nearly century-long debate between “Social Gospel” Christians (who championed government programs that helped the poor) and “Christian Libertarians” (who largely did not). This theological dispute is what helped create the Religious Right in the first place, as well as the resurgence of Christian nationalism we see today.

In fact, according to Princeton historian Kevin Kruse’s 2015 book, One Nation Under God: How Corporate American Invented Christian America, the fervent declaration that citizens of the United States live in a “Christian America” is a relatively new concept, emerging out of an alliance between fundamentalist Christians and corporate tycoons who wanted to preach a pro-capitalist message—a message that continues to resonate with contemporary Republicans, conservative Christians, and Trump himself.

The invention of ‘Christian libertarianism’

In the early 20th century, the dominant religious force in American politics wasn’t conservative faithful, but liberal Protestant Christians—especially those inspired by the “Social Gospel” movement. Spurred in part by the negative aspects of the Industrial Revolution, Social Gospel Christians focused on the ills of “social” sin and sought to create the “Kingdom of God” on earth by bettering the lives of everyday people. Clergy such as Walter Rauschenbusch preached about the plights of working people, calling on churchgoers to fight societal woes such as poverty and labor issues.

The theology formed the spiritual foundation for what is now called the Progressive Movement, and won over several prominent public figures by the 1930s. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Secretary of Labor, Frances Perkins, was a passionate Social Gospel devotee. Many leaders of the left-leaning movement were also adamant supporters of the New Deal, the landmark series of regulations, public works projects, and financial reforms instituted by FDR throughout the 30s.

Kruse argues FDR and his allies were known for using Social Gospel religious rhetoric to chastise champions of capitalism, once delivering a speech criticizing a Republican plan to privatize public utilities that began, “This is a history and a sermon on the subject of water power, and I preach from the Old Testament. The text is ‘Thou shall not steal.’”