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The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory: American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism: A Book Review


“One man questioned whether I was truly a Christian. Another asked if I was still on ‘the right side.’ All while Dad was in a box a hundred feet away.”

 

Tim Alberta was standing in his home church at the funeral of his father, the longtime pastor.  In 2020, Alberta had written American Carnage: On the Front Lines of the Republican Civil War and the Rise of President Trump.  In that book he reported on the conversion of the Republican Party to the Party of Trump.  Now he was reaping the consequences—comments and criticism from people he had known for years who questioned not only his integrity but his Christian faith.

 

In The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory: American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism, Alberta shares not only his personal journey but the path that has led many Christians from a simple fundamentalism to an extreme Christian nationalism. Written in between the two Trump terms, Alberta records the extremes to which Christian nationalists were willing to go to return Trump to office.  He uncovers the motivations, maneuvers, and moral failings required for them to get on the bandwagon.

 

Alberta is a tenacious reporter.  In this book, he shares interviews with all the usual suspects. He talks with all the big names of Christian nationalism who seek to use the church, evangelicalism, and the Christian faith to pursue their own “kingdom, power and glory.  They are all there—Robert Jeffress, Charlie Kirk, Jerry Falwell, Jr., David Barton, Ralph Reed.  But he also identifies those lesser-known believers who have had the courage to question and prosecute the case against Christian nationalism and moral abuse.

 

Despite his revulsion over Christian nationalism, Alberta is a conservative, evangelical Christian.  His use of scripture to refute the nationalist agenda is not ironic but part of his faith.  He writes as one who grew up with a belief in Christ and commitment to His church.  He writes with a sense of hope for something better.

 

This is not a happy story and certainly one that has not come to conclusion.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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