This outstanding sermon needs to be listened to by every modern Christian in 2025. A link to the complete video can be found at the end of this transcript, but if you can’t watch, below is a verbatim transcript which omits a brief introduction. The message and sermon is a slam dunk, home run, and touchdown all at once. Christian nationalism is a cancer on this nation that needs to be cured immediately. It divides instead of unifying, all under the guise of Christianity. The author of this sermon is a guy who gets it; our oneness as humanity and with God. There are aspects of his sermon that will disrupt the status quo of Christianity but just like Jesus, sometimes you need to shake things up to return things to normal. Mainstream Christianity needs to be challenged to undo the damage that has been inflicted onto it for 2000 years. Enjoy:
My Granddad was a Baptist preacher. I’ve been a member of this church since I was two years old and now I’m in seminary studying to become a minister myself.
My faith means more to me than anything, but if I’m being very honest, sometimes I hesitate for telling someone I’m a Christian
There is a cancer on our religion. Until we confess the sin that is Christian nationalism and exercise it from our churches, our religion can do a lot more damage than a six pack of Lonestar. There is nothing Christian about Christian nationalism. It is the worship of power, social power, economic power, political power in the name of Christ, and it is a betrayal of Jesus of Nazareth
He told us we would know them by their fruits.
Jesus includes.
Christian nationalism excludes.
Jesus liberates
Christian nationalism controls.
Jesus Saves
Christian nationalism kills.
Jesus started a universal movement based on mutual love
Christian nationalism is a sectarian movement based on mutual hate
Jesus came to transform the world.
Christian nationalism is here to maintain the status quo.
They have co-opted the son of God. They’ve turned this humble rabbi into a gun toting, gay bashing, science denying, money loving, fear mongering fascist and it is incumbent upon all Christians to confront it and denounce it.
Christian nationalism is on the rise.
Two years ago, Christian nationalists stormed the US Capitol, killing police officers while carrying crosses and signs reading “Jesus saves!”
Last year Christian nationalists on the US Supreme Court overturned Roe versus Wade, allowing states like ours to outlaw abortion, even in cases of rape and incest.
And as we speak, two Christian nationalist billionaires are trying to replace public schools in Texas with private Christian schools.
We are closer than we think to a Christian theocracy.
How did this happen? The first followers of Jesus didn’t call themselves Christians, they called themselves “the way”
Their crucified teacher taught them a different way of being human and they intended to follow it. The early church was a revolutionary community built on radical love. A peculiar people who shared all possessions and refused to participate in the economy, the military or the culture.
The book of Acts tells us that the first Christians were persecuted for turning the world upside down, but 300 years after Jesus was executed by the Roman Empire.
Emperor Constantine made Christianity the official state religion of that very same empire. Constantine was the first Christian nationalist, and ever since the ‘powers that be’ have been taming Christianity, domesticating it, diluting it into something more palatable;
pro war, pro wealth, pro white supremacy
That original counter cultural movement became a tranquilized, privatized weaponized religion. The official sponsor of western civilization.
A religion of sharing became a religion of greed.
A religion of peace became a religion of violence.
A religion of forgiveness became a religion of judgment.
A religion of ego transformation became a religion of ego affirmation.
Today Christian nationalists obsess over people’s private parts, while the planet burns.
Eight men own as much wealth as 3.6 billion people and Christian nationalists are boycotting Barbie. The Bible doesn’t mention abortion or gay marriage, but it goes on and on about forgiving debt, liberating the poor and healing the sick. Christian nationalists like to say this is a Christian nation, not only is that historically inaccurate, not only is that theologically blasphemous, but it’s also just not true.
Look around us.
If this was truly a Christian nation, we would forgive student debt.
If this was truly a Christian nation, we would guarantee healthcare to every single person.
If this was truly a Christian nation, we would love all of our LGBTQ neighbors.
If this was truly a Christian nation, we would make sure every child in the state and in this country was housed, fed, closed, educated, and insured.
If this was truly a Christian nation, we would never make it a Christian nation, because we know the table of fellowship is open to everybody. Including our Buddhist, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim, Sheikh and atheist neighbors.
Jesus could’ve started a Christian theocracy, but love would never do that. The closest thing we have to the kingdom of heaven is a multiracial, multicultural, democracy. Where power is truly shared among all people. Something that’s yet to exist in human history. Christian nationalism is not only a threat to the American experiment in democracy. It’s also a threat to the gospel of Jesus Christ. When someone asked Jesus to name his most important commandment, he cheats and gives two. Two that he says are related. The first is to love God, the second he said is like it; “love thy neighbor as self”. It’s like it because when I recognize the divine image in myself, I can’t help or recognize it in my neighbor. Whether they’re Christian or not, whether they’re religious or not.
In the parable of the good Samaritan, Jesus specifically defines neighbor as someone different from us; racially, economically, politically, religiously.
God loves diversity.
God loves variety, just look around this big, beautiful planet of ours. Do we really think God would make all these beautiful people with all their beautiful traditions for no reason at all? There are so many pathways to the sacred. The Islamic mystic Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi said; “Every religion has love but love has no religion”
God is so much bigger than our human categories.
God is not a Presbyterian.
God is not a Christian.
God is not a noun at all.
God is a verb.
God is not “a being”, God is “being” itself.
God is love, and that’s why Jesus is against anything that gets in the way of that love between neighbors, including religion.
That’s why he’s always breaking religious rules. That’s why he’s always getting in trouble with the religious authorities. That’s why he says sinners will see the kingdom of heaven before religious people do.
Sorry to everyone here, I know you came all this way.
Religious supremacy is antithetical to the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Jesus didn’t come to establish a Christian nation. He came to reveal ultimate reality; which he called the kingdom of God. But it’s not like any kingdom we’ve ever known.
Instead of a throne, Jesus sits at a table.
Instead of a war horse, Jesus rides a donkey.
Instead of a sword, Jesus picks up a cross.
The kingdom of God, inverts power dynamics of all the kingdoms in the world.
True strength is vulnerability.
True status is equality.
True wealth is sharing, and we as Christians are called to realize that kingdom on earth as it is in heaven, not by force, but by faith.
Jesus asked us to have the faith of a mustard seed, trusting that by living and dying for love, we give birth to a better world. That’s not easy to do in a world full of fear, Jesus knew we would put our trust in something other than God, something other than love. As a Jewish rabbi, he called those things idols. money, status, and the most dangerous idol of all: power
When Jesus was tempted by the devil in the wilderness, one of the things the devil offered was power; all the kingdoms of the world and Jesus rejected it
When his disciples asked “Who will be the most powerful in the kingdom of God?”
Jesus said “You know the Lords of the Earth push their people around, but among you it’ll be different. Whoever wants to be a leader among you, must be a servant” and when they still didn’t get it, and they asked who will be the greatest in the kingdom of God?
Jesus said “Little children. the least powerful, but most trusting members of any human community. That’s the kingdom of God.”
I think ‘Chance The Rapper’ said it best.
“Don’t believe in kings, believe in the kingdom”
Jesus knew in the words of Dorothy Sola. There is only one legitimization of power and that is to share it with others.
Power that is not shared, power that is not transformed into love is pure domination and depression. Christian nationalists are more committed to the love of power than to the power of love, and it exposes a lack of faith, because the opposite of faith is not doubt. Doubt is a healthy part of any faith.
The opposite of faith is control.
When we stop trusting God, when we stop trusting love. We start taking control ourselves.
Christian nationalists want to control what we read, who we marry, where we travel, when we have children. They want to control our minds and our bodies.
oh ye of little faith. Christian nationalists trust domination, because they think domination is what works, but Jesus revealed that the true power of the universe is not domination, but love.
In Daoism they teach that over time;
The soft overcomes the heart.
The water wears down the rock.
The wind takes out the mountain.
the grass upends the concrete,
the meek inherit the Earth
Violence may win in the short run, but in the end, love always wins.
Jesus said this kingdom of God is in our midst. it’s hiding in plain sight. Heaven is already here, inside of us, above us, all around us.
On my mom’s side, my granddad was a Baptist preacher, but on my dad’s side, my grandpa Tyler Rico never went to church.
But he was one of the most generous, compassionate moral people I’ve ever met. He was an immigrant from Italy, whose family saw firsthand the dangers of mixing church and state.
He settled in the Texas Hill country, and on Sunday mornings, he would take these long walks through the wildflowers and live Oaks, and he would take me with him. He said it was the best chance to see GOD, the ‘Great Out Doors’.
Biologists tell us that everything in nature is connected and evolving toward greater union. Anthropologists tell us that our ability to share and cooperate is humanity’s superpower and astrophysicists tell us that the universe is just gentle enough to make our existence possible. This universe of ours is nothing but gratuitous grace. Pierre Teilhard de Chardin wrote that the very physical universe is love. We see it in the harmonies of music, the principles of mathematics, the patterns of nature. We are all expressions of that creative power. We are the universe becoming aware of itself. As children of God, children of the cosmos, we are loved, unconditionally indiscriminately, infinitely. No achievement can add to it. No mistake can be taken from it. No amount of church going or church missing can change it. That’s that’s truly deserving of the title: “Good News”
We are made by love, with love, to love. I call that love “God”. You may use a different word and that’s OK. There are 1000 ways to kneel and kiss the ground. We can cure the disease of Christian nationalism. We can protect against the virus of religious extremism, with healthy religion. The great faith traditions of the world have so much to offer us in this time of global crisis. Hinduism’s “hemp sa” provides an alternative to the logic of violence. Buddhist meditation provides an alternative to the abuse of our attention. Judaism Sabbath provides an alternative to the demands of capitalism. In a world where everything can be bought and sold, including the Earth itself, Native American traditions provide an alternative to ecological extraction. It’s hard. It is so hard to protect your spirit in a world trying to kill it. That’s why we need faith communities like this. That’s why we need stories and traditions and practices that heal our soul and transform our mind.
Every time in the sanctuary that we say the prayers, sing the hymns, sprinkle the water, eat the bread, drink the wine, we are tuning our hearts. Our Buddhist friends tell us that compassion takes practice. Neuroscientists tell us that we can become kinder, more empathetic if we work at it. Things like love, peace, and hope. They require strength training. A gym for the Heart. And so every week, we gather here to sing our songs and tell our stories. Just for the opportunity to, in the words of Thich Nhat Hanh, to ‘dwell in the ultimate’.
Together just for a moment and that’s almost better than a cold glass of beer.
I invite you to your own reflection
– James Talarico [Source]
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