Christian nationalism, in this source set, refers to rhetoric and organizing that treats the United States as a distinctly Christian nation and argues that Christian identity should be asserted directly in politics, governance, and public life.
Across these sources, Christian nationalism is not presented only as a private religious identity. It appears as a public program of political mobilization, national restoration, social hierarchy, and institutional strategy. In the Colorado school-law material it overlaps with legal efforts to expand religious education within publicly funded school structures, and newer Colorado webinar, Pueblo, dark-money, and D20 material shows how public-school governance fights can become one of its operating arenas. The TPUSA cluster adds a different operating layer: a youth-activist organization and church-facing sub-brand that link campus conservatism to Seven Mountains rhetoric, Biblical Citizenship programming, and broader Christian-right networks without making every TPUSA activity reducible to the label. In the Ziklag and Seven Mountains material it overlaps with donor coordination, dominion language, and election-focused operations aimed at reshaping multiple sectors of public life. The newer Wallnau / FlashPoint / Courage Tour cluster adds a media-and-revival lane in which prophecy, worship-style events, sponsor relationships, and voter-action training are fused into one repeatable mobilization apparatus. The newer Christian-nationalist network cluster adds two more mechanisms: first, a governing-program lane where William Wolfe-style manifesto politics are linked to Project 2025-adjacent infrastructure; second, a provocation lane where actors such as Sean Feucht use high-conflict public events, persecution framing, and public prayer spectacle to build audience, attention, and movement legitimacy. The Texas and anti-Muslim reporting adds another pattern: Christian-nationalist rhetoric can also operate through exclusionary immigration politics, school-curriculum fights, Sharia-law panic, and selective religious-liberty claims that narrow pluralism while presenting Christian majoritarianism as constitutional self-defense. The new Doug Wilson / Michael Knowles source adds a coalition mechanism inside the broader right: sectarian disputes can be temporarily bracketed when Protestant Christian nationalists and Catholic media figures define secular progressivism as a shared rival religion. The D20 cluster adds a more local mechanism: panic over "porn," trans athletes, and public-school decline can function as a reusable organizing strategy when paired with church-linked candidate pipelines and movement training infrastructure.
wiki/summaries/media-rhetoric/cpac-faith-summit-calls-for-unapologetic-christian-nationalism.mdwiki/summaries/religious-politics/christian-nationalist-network-and-provocation-cluster.mdwiki/summaries/education/christian-law-firm-search-for-test-case-led-to-religious-public-school-in-colorado.mdwiki/summaries/media-rhetoric/doug-wilson-and-michael-knowles-common-enemy-framing-2026.mdwiki/summaries/religious-politics/inside-ziklag-secret-organization-of-wealthy-christians-trying-to-sway-the-election-and-change-the-country.mdwiki/summaries/religious-politics/lance-wallnau-flashpoint-and-courage-tour-political-mobilization-cluster.mdwiki/summaries/religious-politics/turning-point-usa-origins-leadership-and-network-source-cluster.mdwiki/summaries/media-rhetoric/rick-green-working-to-ensure-operation-wetback-is-taught-in-texas-schools.mdwiki/summaries/media-rhetoric/maga-christian-nationalists-warn-of-islams-increasing-dominance-in-us.mdwiki/summaries/education/colorado-public-education-privatization-and-christian-nationalist-webinar-cluster.mdwiki/summaries/religious-politics/pueblo-conservative-christian-organizing-and-quin-friberg.mdwiki/summaries/elections-finance/academy-district-20-manufactured-outrage-and-candidate-network.md