The Case for Christian Nationalism Quotes

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The Case for Christian Nationalism The Case for Christian Nationalism by Stephen Wolfe
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“Christian nationalism is a totality of national action, consisting of civil laws and social customs, conducted by a Christian nation as a Christian nation, in order to procure for itself both earthly and heavenly good in Christ.”
Stephen Wolfe, The Case for Christian Nationalism
“Choosing similar people over dissimilar people is not a result of fallenness, but is natural to man as man. Why? Because we are drawn by deep instinct to our good. Indeed, one ought to prefer and to love more those who are more similar to him, and much good would result in the world if we all preferred our own and minded our own business. Furthermore, since shared culture is necessary for living well, nations have a right of exclusion in the interest of cultural preservation.”
Stephen Wolfe, The Case for Christian Nationalism
“the whole life of man is essentially religious; and politics, the sphere of just relations between men, especially become religious when conducted in a Christian spirit. Nothing can be more fatal to mankind or to religion itself than to call one set of things or persons religious and another secular, when Christ has redeemed the whole.”
Stephen Wolfe, The Case for Christian Nationalism
“A tyrant is one whose habit of tyrannical actions strikes at a fundamental good of human society; his actions are akin to an unprovoked war against the people. Thus, he is a man warring against the nation, and since any nation can defend itself against national threats, the nation can conduct war against him. A just, violent revolution is a type of defensive war.”
Stephen Wolfe, The Case for Christian Nationalism
“Nations ought to be hospitable, but they are not obligated to be hospitable to their detriment.”
Stephen Wolfe, The Case for Christian Nationalism
“Dante was right when he said in De Monarchia that “[a]ll men on whom the Higher Nature has stamped the love of truth should especially concern themselves in laboring for posterity, in order that future generations may be enriched by their efforts, as they themselves were made rich by the efforts of generations past.”
Stephen Wolfe, The Case for Christian Nationalism