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Kingdom of Rage

The Rise of Christian Extremism and the Path Back to Peace

Audiobook (Includes supplementary content)
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

A former counterterrorism official explores how modern evangelicalism and right-wing conservatism intermingled to form the combustible ideology that resulted in the January 6 attacks on the Capitol—and which threatens to destroy the American Church from within.

How did a Church that purports to follow the teachings of Jesus - the Prince of Peace - become a breeding ground for violent extremism?

When Elizabeth Neumann began her anti-terrorism career as part of President George W. Bush's Homeland Security Counsel in the wake of the September 11 attacks, she expected to spend her life protecting her country from the threat of global terrorism.

But as her career evolved, she began to perceive that the greatest threat to American security came not from religious fundamentalists in Afghanistan or Iraq but from white nationalists and radicalized religious fundamentalists within the very institution that was closest to her heart – the American evangelical church. And she began to sound the alarm, raising her concerns to anyone in government who would listen, including testifying before Congress in February of 2020. At that time, Neumann warned that anti-Semitic and white supremacist terrorism was a transnational threat that was building to the doorstep of another major attack. Shortly after her testimony, she resigned from her role as Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary for Counterterrorism and Threat Prevention in protest of what she believed was then-President Trump's failure of leadership and his stoking of the hatred, anger, and division from which she had dedicated her life to protecting her country.

Her worst fears came true when she witnessed the attack on the capital on January 6, 2021.

In Kingdom of Rage, Neumann explores the forces within American society that have encouraged the radicalization of white supremacist, anti-government and other far-right terrorists by co-opting Christian symbols and culture and perverting the faith's teachings. While Neumann offers decades of insights into the role government policies can play to prevent further bloodshed, she believes real change must come from the within the Christian church. She shines a bright light on the responsibility of ordinary Americans – and particularly American Christians – to work within their families and their communities to counteract the narrative of victimization and marginalization within American evangelicalism. Her goal for this book is not only to sound a warning about one of the greatest threats to our security but to rescue the Church from the forces that will, if left unchecked, destroy it – culturally, morally, and ultimately quite literally. This is a book for anyone who wants to understand the unholy marriage of right-wing politics and Christian exceptionalism in America and who wants to be a part of reversing the current path towards division, hatred, violence and the ultimate undermining of both evangelical Christianity and American democracy.
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    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2024
      What would Jesus do? Not submit to the poisonous MAGA agenda, for one, as this book of faith and fire argues. Former assistant secretary for counterterrorism and threat prevention at the Department of Homeland Security, Neumann was effectively frozen out during the last days of the Trump administration, when a key test for continued employment was "to gauge the depth of loyalty" to the president. Republican, conservative, and Christian, the author regarded Trump as a danger to national security and democracy--an assessment shared by far too few of her fellow Dallas churchgoers. Neumann's approach in this description of the various shades of Christian extremism seems to jump from audience to audience. Some of it exhorts Christians to "[walk] the Way of Jesus--loving and empathizing with those in pain and in the darkness--[which] can point to where true light and hope can be found"); some of it warns students of extremist politics, as when she cites statistics indicating that 8 million Americans believe that political violence is justified, to which she asks: "If tomorrow the director of the National Counterterrorism Center announced that there were 8 million ISIS or Al-Qaeda followers in the United States, how would the country respond?" Neumann charts the MAGA movement's enlistment of Christian churches, and especially megachurches, with conservative pastors impugned as moderates "and moderate pastors as Marxists." As to what to do with true believers, Neumann suggests, "if you are friends with someone who has a radicalized loved one, they need your support. Some people may experience deep shame from having a loved one go off the deep end to traffic in hate." As a guidebook for how to handle the deranged uncle at the Thanksgiving table, Neumann's book is useful. A Christian-to-Christian approach to defusing the rage of the far-right evangelical set.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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