OVERVIEW OF CHRISTIAN NATIONALISM DOCTRINES AND IDEOLOGY
Christian Nationalism, and its companion ideology Dominionism, together comprise a religious/political movement that threatens democratic institutions, religions and civil rights around the world. For convenience in this website, both ideologies are referenced under the one term Christian Nationalism. Here is the shortest, most accurate way to describe Christian Nationalism:

It is a radical political movement of individuals disguised as Christian American patriots who want to take over all religions, cultures and governments in the world .

Christian Nationalism is a very real and present threat to everyone — to those who are religious and those who are not religious — because its goal is to dominate seven mountains of culture as we read in this brief history excerpted from The Seven Mountain Prophecy by Jamie Seidel in a News Corp Australia Network publication December 20, 2018.

There’s a plan to seize control of every aspect of the US government, law and media. And it’s based on the bible’s Book of Revelation.

The Dark Ages have a certain appeal to some. It was a time when good and evil was white and black. Church overruled state. And the word of priests was as law. 

It was when the Roman Catholic church effectively ruled the whole of the Western world. Under idealized eyes, it controlled every aspect of civil life. Parish priests held sway over small towns and communities. Cardinals and Popes could bend kings and nobles to their will. In reality, things rarely worked out that way. But it was the accepted doctrine of the times.

Now, some evangelical groups want that all-encompassing power back. They call themselves Dominionists. Their declared goal is to take control of society. And the US government is in its sights. It wants ‘One nation, under God’ … their god.

Only once this is achieved, followers believe, will Jesus return in the Second Coming, initiating the End of Days and the prophecies of the Book of Revelation. It’s a cross-denominational movement which appears to have been born among television and radio evangelists in the 1970s. They cite one passage, Genesis 1:28, as justification:

And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.

It is interpreted as being God’s mandate for his followers to control every aspect of life.

Now new apostles are preaching a message which puts church above state, and their interpretation of Christian lore above secular law. And they have a plan to have this enforced.

The argument goes something like this: The long-awaited Second Coming has not yet happened as the criteria outlined in the Bible have yet to be met. Christians have not been taking part in their communities. Instead, they’ve been huddled in their own churches. This has exposed the very pillars of society susceptible to the influence of the devil.

It’s up to believers to change this, they argue, by seizing control of key institutions.

Some evangelical movements believe this is demanded by prophecy. They argue the Bible verses of Isiah 2:2-3 instruct their followers to take control:

And it shall come to pass in the last days, that the mountain of the Lord’s house shall be established in the top of the mountains, and shall be exalted above the hills; and all nations shall flow unto it. Many people shall come and say, “Come, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, To the house of the God of Jacob; He will teach us His ways, And we shall walk in His paths.”

It argues there are seven such ‘mountains of the Lord’. The key to this thinking is Revelation 17:1-18, which hinges on verse 9:

And here is the mind which hath wisdom. The seven heads are seven mountains.

The prophetic passage talks of an evil woman ‘drunken with the blood of the saints’ who rides a beast of ‘seven heads and 10 horns’. It ends telling how this beast will be turned against the woman, destroying her. Most theologians see the reference to ‘seven’ as being Rome — famously built upon seven hills.

But some evangelicals argue this beast — and its seven heads that are mountains — represents the structure of society itself. “So this is now called the Seven Mountain Prophecy,says advocate David Barton. “If you’re going to establish God’s kingdom, you’ve got to have these seven mountains, and again that’s family, religion, education, media, entertainment, business and government.”