Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Is Christian Nationalism Inherently Violent? [Eschatology Matters]
Description
Is Christian nationalism inherently violent?
Does Christendom inevitably lead to coercion, persecution, and the abuse of power? Or have modern secular states simply hidden their own forms of coercion behind the language of neutrality and liberty?
In this episode of The Magistrate, Josh Howard and James Baird respond to Gordon-Conwell Seminary president Dr. Scott Sunquist’s article “Nation or Kingdom” and examine some of the biggest assumptions surrounding Christian nationalism, pluralism, church and state, religious liberty, and political theology.
Can governments ever be morally neutral?
Is every legal system rooted in a religious vision of reality?
What are the biblical limits of civil authority?
And what does Christ’s kingship over the nations actually require?
This conversation explores:
Christian nationalism and coercion
The history of Christendom
Religious liberty and pluralism
Protestant political theology
Church and state relations
The role of the civil magistrate
Whether secularism is truly neutral
Christ’s authority over nations
If you’re tired of shallow debates and talking points surrounding Christian nationalism, this episode offers a deeper historical and theological framework for understanding the issue.