By Paul D. Miller
Sunday, October 12, 2025
“Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter
the kingdom of heaven, but the one who does the will of my Father who is in
heaven.” These words, from Matthew
7:21, are among the more frightening words that Jesus spoke
It was clear to many observers that Charlie Kirk’s
funeral last month put on display two
versions of Christianity: the first, rooted in the gospel, in forgiveness
and love; the second, rooted in justice, vengeance, and anger. Erika Kirk’s
gospel versus Donald Trump’s, in a nutshell—but also Marco Rubio’s against
Tucker Carlson’s, or Rob McCoy’s against Jack Posobiec’s. The contrast was shot
throughout the service.
How stark is the contrast? Is MAGA Christianity–the kind
exemplified by Posobiec’s call to arms, or Trump’s comment that he hates his
enemies–so different as to be a false religion? Are MAGA Christians who cheer
on such comments akin to those who say, “‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in
your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your
name?’” to whom Jesus will reply, “I never knew you; depart from me, you
workers of lawlessness” (Matthew
7:22-23)?
Even to ask the question is provocative and could anger
some readers. How dare I presume to judge someone’s eternal salvation by their
political choices? How dare I make party affiliation a matter of primary
importance? How dare I confuse the political application of the gospel with the
gospel itself?
The thing is, conservative Christians make those kinds of
judgments all the time—every time they call left-wing churches false churches.
And they’re not necessarily wrong to do so. In fact, all Christians make such
judgments whenever we decide with whom we would share fellowship, which
churches to go to, what creeds to profess.
In fact, Jesus commands us to carefully discern
who is, and who is not, truly among his followers. How dare I not scrutinize
closely those who publicly use the name of Jesus while lying, calling evil
good, and perpetrating injustice? All Christians are called to exercise
discernment, to seek wisdom, to beware false teachers. When MAGA Christianity
so clearly and so publicly parades its religion, when it waves a Jesus flag in
our faces, it invites—demands, even—a response from other Christians.
Judging others.
Politically conservative American Christians regularly
make judgments about who is, and who is not, a true Christian. For example,
Charlie Kirk repeatedly
and publicly claimed that you cannot be a Christian and vote for a
Democrat. By doing so, he conceded that some political choices (abortion, in
his view) are ethical choices of the first rank and that one cannot affirm the
gospel while contradicting its clear and direct political implications.
To be clear, I think Kirk was right: Some political
choices are intrinsically anti-Christian. I hope every church in America would
publicly condemn, say, fascism as definitionally opposed to true Christianity.
I hope they would excommunicate any unrepentant fascist from their membership.
I use the fascist example to demonstrate the principle that, yes, we can and
should judge some political choices as being anti-Christian. Put another
way, we can and should judge some of those who say “Lord, Lord,” to be
insincere because of the fruit of their actions, including their political
actions.
If theological conservatives grant that we cannot take
everyone who says “Lord, Lord,” at face value, we should apply the same caution
and scrutiny to those who invoke Jesus’ name from all political camps. So,
politically conservative American Christians today need to be extremely careful
about the company they keep. But I fear too many automatically trust anyone who
waves a Jesus flag or invokes biblical rhetoric.
Rainbow Christianity.
How do we judge? We might start by using the yardstick
that conservative Christians use to condemn left-wing Christians. They look at
two things: theology and practice.
A century ago, mainline churches closely allied with the
American ruling establishment began drifting leftward. These churches
jettisoned their theological seriousness in service of left-wing social and
political activism. The respectable elite in the mainline churches accommodated
to “modernism,” and deemphasized supernaturalism, sin, and judgment to protect
their intellectual credibility with an increasingly secular elite. They threw
out their historical theological commitments and prioritized the social and
political agenda of the establishment.
That split—the fundamentalist-modernist controversy of
the early 20th century—is still with us today. The modernist
churches drifted into the watered-down, anemic mainline churches of today, hollowed
out and dwindling in number. J. Gresham Machen famously denounced their
drift in his 1923 work, Christianity
and Liberalism, accusing liberal theology of becoming a wholly
different religion. Liberal theology denied supernaturalism and biblical
authority, looked to Jesus as a moral example but not an atoning sacrifice, and
turned salvation into social improvement and the church into a club. It was the
club of the American ruling class.
Machen would be unsurprised to see the liberal mainline
of today deny the traditional teachings of Christianity on sexual ethics, for
example by proudly flying the rainbow flag out front of their historic
buildings, which offends the sensibility of conservative Christians today. The
“Rainbow Churches” are the latest example of exchanging biblical teaching for
social respectability. In some ways, these churches can look and sound almost
identical to conservative churches. They both recite the Apostle’s
Creed and could probably answer each other’s catechisms. But conservatives
look deeper and find a different gospel, and thus a different religion.
Conservatives judge liberal churches to be a false religion because liberal theology
denies basic tenets of the gospel (like Jesus’ atoning sacrifice) and liberal practice
denies longstanding Christian ethical teaching.
And the mainline drift leftward seemed to leave
theologically conservative Christians nowhere to go but rightward. We saw the
dynamic play out over the course of the 20th century: The rise of
MAGA Christianity on the right is, in part, a reaction to the rise of Rainbow
Christianity on the left.
Magisterial vs. radical reformations.
It is more than that, of course, and that story does not
excuse MAGA Christianity’s own problems and excesses. So what about MAGA
Christianity’s own theology and its own practice? It’s tempting to answer with
a short synopsis of views held by white evangelicals today, drawn from public
opinion polling, to paint a picture of MAGA theology. But I want to start
further back and tell a story of where MAGA Christianity comes from in hopes of
showing what authentic gospel impulses may lie within that we can affirm, even
as we try to root out any error.
Where does MAGA Christianity come from? The landscape of
American Christianity today lies downstream of the Reformation-era
split between the Magisterial Reformation (high church) and the Radical
Reformation (low church). The Magisterial Reformation was elite, top-down,
intellectual, and close to state power; the Radical Reformation was populist,
bottom-up, emotional, and disempowered.
The Magisterial Reformation was the Reformation of Martin
Luther and John Calvin. It led to the institutions and denominations we still
have today: the Lutheran, Presbyterian, Anglican (and later Episcopal)
churches, the Reformed theological tradition, and more. It became the
quasi-established religion of the United States. Until the 1960s, upper-crust,
East Coast Protestantism was the reigning orthodoxy in America. Nearly
half of American presidents have been either Episcopalian or Presbyterian.
The Radical Reformation was the Reformation of the
Anabaptists and Mennonites; later, the Quakers, Puritans, and Baptists. Their
Reformation took them further afield, theologically and politically. They were
anti-establishment and lacked the power to build as many lasting institutions,
but had an enduring populist power. The spirit of the Radical Reformation
resurged in the Second
Great Awakening and became the religion of the American frontier in the 19th
century and the fundamentalist movement in the 20th. It also flared up with the
Azusa Street Revival and the birth of Pentecostalism and the charismatic
movements.
More recently, it gave birth to the Christian Right and
the Moral Majority in the 1970s and 1980s. Baptist, charismatic, and
nondenominational churches—most of red-state America—are heirs to the Radical
Reformation. MAGA Christianity is merely the latest example: You hear the
Radical Reformation every time a MAGA figure rails against “elites” and “the
establishment.” The Radical Reformation and its offshoots are, by definition,
cut off from tradition, determined to go it alone and reinvent everything from
scratch. That makes it dynamic, energetic, volatile, and prone to bursts of
both creativity and avoidable mistakes.
Mutual embrace or mutual enmity?
MAGA theology and practice are anti-establishment, low
church, bottom-up, and populist. That doesn’t by itself make MAGA Christianity
either good or bad. Both the Radical and Magisterial Reformations were
important and authentic embodiments of the gospel. I’m not telling a story in
which one side is easily identified as the good guy. Rather, both sides
emphasized different aspects of the gospel, but they tended to go awry when
divorced from each other.
The Radical spirit without a Magisterial anchoring could
become anarchic, as in the German Peasant’s War (1524). It could become wholly
concerned with inner spirituality to the exclusion of social concerns, as in
the Pietist and Anabaptist traditions. It could become anti-intellectual, as
with 20th century American fundamentalism. It could turn legitimate
political causes, like anti-communism, into religious crusades that tolerated
no dissent. And it could devolve into political tribalism, as with today’s MAGA
Christianity.
But the Magisterial tradition without a Radical emphasis
on personal zeal and biblical fidelity could become theologically rootless and
devolve into a political weathervane. While the Radical spirit rightly led some
American evangelicals to abolitionism when that stance was risky and unpopular,
most elite, mainline churches made their peace with slavery because they feared
abolitionism was destabilizing and extreme. They prioritized respectability and
social order over the revolutionary and liberationist implications of the
gospel.
In the early 20th century, the Radicals
stubbornly, and rightly, clung to their Bibles and their belief in miracles,
becoming fundamentalists, while the respectable elite churches accommodated to
“modernism” and became the liberal mainline. The mainline substituted the Social Gospel for
theology and gave itself over to whichever cause was fashionable with the elite
of the day.
Neither the Magisterial nor the Radical does well without
the other. Neither the Radicals nor the Magisterium are necessarily
heretics—but a heretical impulse lies within each. But a key difference today
is that, for possibly the first time in history, the Radical version has become
the establishment. I’m not aware of another instance, in 500 years of
Protestantism, when the spirit of the Radical Reformation had so clearly become
the political establishment of a great power. (Perhaps the parliamentary
victory in the English Civil War, but I leave it to a better historian than I
to say. I also note that victory was short-lived and immediately supplanted by
a revival of the Anglican establishment.)
It is hard to overstate how unusual it is that Charlie
Kirk’s memorial service was both an evangelical-charismatic worship service and
simultaneously a state funeral with speeches by the president, vice president,
secretaries of state and defense, and the director of national intelligence. As
Peggy Noonan observed,
the memorial service was “the biggest Christian evangelical event” in the
United States since 1979, and “the GOP is becoming a more explicitly Christian
party than it ever has been.” The Radicals may feel no need of Magisterial
roots or anchoring, because they have become their own anchor. If so, the
heretical impulse has no check.
Charlie Kirk’s memorial.
Charlie Kirk’s memorial included some beautiful and
moving tributes to Kirk anchored in a genuine Christian message of love and
forgiveness. And it also featured the dark, anarchic spirit of unmoored,
unhinged Radicals. Indeed, some were not recognizably Christian: It was angry,
vengeful, deceitful, and manipulative. Shortly after Erika Kirk expressed
forgiveness in Jesus’ name, President Donald Trump, who claims to be a
Christian, took the stage and said, “I hate my opponent. And I don’t want the
best for them.” It was a stark reminder of who MAGA Christians have bound
themselves to in the Republican Party.
But Trump was only the final act. He was preceded by
other speakers who called for vengeance, coupled with a manipulative use of
Christian rhetoric. Jack Posobiec, a conspiracy-mongering agitator with a
record of fabrication,
lies, and ties
to white nationalists, came onstage holding aloft a rosary and a crucifix.
Posobiec seems to care about Christianity chiefly because
it is the religion of Western Civilization, his true passion. Nonetheless,
Posobiec compared Charlie
Kirk to Moses and Jesus. Just as Moses brought his people to the promised land,
“Charlie Kirk brought us to the promised land.” Just as Jesus died for your
sins, “Charlie Kirk died for all of you.” Jesus rose from the dead, and
“Charlie Kirk’s gift of his sacrifice means that Charlie Kirk will live
forever.” Posobiec promised that, when we look back on how Western Civilization
was saved, we will see that it “was saved through Charlie’s sacrifice in the
only way possible: by returning the people to Almighty God.”
As he concluded, Posobiec started shouting, drawing from
Ephesians 6: “Are you ready to fight back? Are you ready to put on the full
armor of God and face the evil in high places and the spiritual warfare before
us? Then put on the full armor of God. Do it now, now is the time. This is the
place. This is the turning point, for Charlie.”
But the Apostle Paul in Ephesians was exhorting his
readers to be spiritually ready to resist sin and the devil—not whipping up a
crowd to exact vengeance for a political murder.
“We are on the side of God!” yelled White House
Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, who, to my knowledge, does not claim to
be a Christian. “We will defeat the forces of darkness and evil!” Consciously
or unconsciously, Miller was echoing John 1 (“The light will defeat the dark”)
and Philippians 4 (“We stand for what is good, what is virtuous, what is
noble”) while heaping derision on unnamed enemies. “You have nothing. You are
nothing. You are wickedness. You are jealousy. You are envy. You are hatred.”
In the Old Testament, Joshua—leader of Israel after
Moses’ death—encountered an angel of the Lord. “Are you for us, or for our
adversaries?” he asked. “No,” the angel replied (Joshua
5:13-14). He simply refused to dignify Joshua’s question; God is not a
puppet or a mascot to place on one side or another in a merely human dispute.
Instead, the angel commanded Joshua to remove his sandals and show reverence to
God’s holiness.
MAGA Christianity unmoored.
If MAGA Christianity is the latest iteration of the
Radical Reformation, it is one shorn of all ties to any Magisterial anchor. It
has completely cut itself loose from all moorings in traditional Christianity
and is in danger of becoming as wholly alien to the gospel as the liberal,
mainline churches.
MAGA Christianity is populist, anti-elitist, bottom-up,
and fueled by emotion more than ideas. It is driven by charismatic movements
like the New
Apostolic Reformation, not the old, established denominations. (Southern
Baptists may vote for Trump, but, for the most part, they are not manning the
barricades and rarely go to his rallies). They use Christian language, cite
Bible verses, and sing along with Christian hymns. If you only look on the
surface, it can be hard to tell the difference between MAGA religion and
historic Christianity. But while MAGA Christianity looks and talks a lot like
historic Christianity, it departs from it in important ways.
That makes it all the more important to carefully sift
and weigh the movement, to discern if it is truly Christian. MAGA Christianity
is a political-religious movement with extraordinary power and appeal—yet it is
also a movement with a strong and rising chorus of critics from both within and
outside professing Christianity. Though some do, not all critics argue in bad
faith, from anti-religious bigotry, or from the progressive left. Some are
coming from sincere love for fellow believers, and “faithful are the wounds of
a friend,” (Proverbs
27:6).
If we are to judge them by their fruits, then it is fair
game to observe that MAGA Christianity is a movement that shouts, “We are on
the side of God!” while joking about hating your enemies. It is a movement that
couples the
Lord’s prayer with images of American military prowess. It is a movement that
storms the U.S. Capitol and violently beats up scores of police officers so
that they can pause to pray in Jesus’
name in the chamber of the U.S. Senate. It is a movement that invokes
biblical language about spiritual warfare to whip up partisan frenzy.
If you want a longer, more scholarly discussion, I have
already written
at great length about it. As a political scientist, I fear MAGA
Christianity is a movement that holds extraordinary danger for the American
republic. But more importantly, as a Christian, I fear that if you are in this
movement and feel no discomfort whatsoever, it is a movement that holds
extraordinary danger for your immortal soul. To many of those who say, “Lord,
Lord,” Jesus replies: “I never knew you; depart from me, you workers of
lawlessness.”
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