
Bisogna fare attenzione che il “tranquillo risveglio” non venga “rubato” da una forma di nazionalismo cristiano, hanno detto le chiese
https://www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2025/28-november/news/uk/take-care-that-quiet-revival-is-not-stolen-by-a-form-of-christian-nationalism-churches-told
di StGuthlac2025
10 commenti
There is no ‘quiet revival’, the increase in people describing themselves as Christian is due to foreign nationals from Africa (this is an observation not a criticism, we would be absolutely fucked if it wasn’t for foreign nationals propping up our economy and NHS). British people are becoming less religious over time.
Great Article as young Christian one of the things I’ve noticed is people associating Christianity with far right but the truth is no one that hears the gospel can be a far right. I don’t see how you can hear Jesus teachings and think let me be a far right.
The same church that is actively involved in immigration fraud is worried about “the far right”
[https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1876534/Lee-Anderson-Archbishop-Canterbury-migrant-baptism](https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1876534/Lee-Anderson-Archbishop-Canterbury-migrant-baptism)
There’s no such thing as Christian Nationalism. It’s just plain old nationalism cosplaying as crusaders.
The churches are doing nothing to combat it in my town. The christian nationalists practically sit nearby screaming their stuff all day everyday. The only people that are trying to combat it is the college kids on break who go up to them to ask really silly questions so they’re no longer screaming on their microphone.
While I admire their attempt to combat the far right by spreading a message of peace and love, it will not counteract the hate those people read when they are not in church, nor will it change why they are going to church in the first place. It is like how you schools cannot realistically turn around the behaviour of some kids: they spend most of their time and are influenced much more by what happens out of it. These people might turn up to church for an hour a week but then spend the rest of the day in a right wing echo chamber; vicars cannot beat that.
I suspect the likes of CoE, Catholics, Greek Orthodox… (churches with a strong heirarchy) are probably OK, it’s the non-conformist, prosperity gospel, run out of a warehouse etc. type churches that are really at risk.
A Baptist friend of mine told me their pastor got the boot because he’d started to become problematic. Whereas something like ‘The Church of give me your damned money and you’ll go to heaven’ run out of former car showroom won’t give a toss if brings in more money.
To be honest it’s always a bit uncomfortable to see people co-opting Christianity for a political ideology.
Equally, these people are welcome to come and join us, and I hope that as they do they might come and see who Jesus is and what He’s about, and change their minds.
Also in most churches they are likely to be surprised at the diversity in congregations. Our evangelical church in a small town is significantly more diverse than the town itself proportionately.
Christian Nationalim is inevitable given a rising Islamic presence. People band together under a flag and a belief system traditionally opposed to cultural destruction.
Iam not personally in favour of this, but history proves the point.
We’ve got a state church, ffs. That boat sailed a long time ago.