Faith and Heritage:
A Christian Nationalist Anthology
Faith and Heritage
A Christian Nationalist Anthology
Antelope Hill Publishing
Copyright 2021 Faith and Heritage
First printing 2021
The separate works of this anthology, which are owned by their authors, were originally published electronically at faithandheritage.com. Permission has been granted to Antelope Hill Publishing by both the original authors and Faith and Heritage to assemble and publish this anthology in the interest of preserving their words in physical format.
Cover art by sswifty
Edited by Margaret Bauer
The publisher can be contacted at
Antelopehillpublishing.com
ISBN-13: 978-1-953730-23-7 Paperback
ISBN-13: 978-1-953730-31-2 EPUB
From one man he made all the nations, that they should inhabit
the whole earth; and he marked out their appointed times
in history and the boundaries of their lands. God did
this so that they would seek him and perhaps
reach out for him and find him, though
he is not far from any one of us.
Acts 17:26-27
Contents
Foreword by Myles Poland ix
Davis Carlton
Nil Desperandum
Adam Grey
Thorin Reynolds
Gic Serry
Ehud Would
Foreword
Faith and Heritage. If you're White in the 2020's, you're told that those two concepts are irreconcilable. We're told over and over that in order to be a good Christian we must allow our nations to be overrun with foreigners who want little more than to destroy White civilization and loot the corpse, returning to their squalor once their grisly work is done. We're told that if you don't fling open the doors to your nations, pour out the contents of your wallet, and sacrifice your children on the altar of multiculturalism, then you're surely inviting God's wrath. Nothing could be further from the truth.
God doesn't care about your politics. That ideaill-formed at the timeled to the creation of the Godcast. At the time of writing, myself and my co-host, SuperLutheran, comprise the only active ministry that seeks to bring the Gospel to White Nationalists. When the publishers of this impressive volume asked me to write the foreword, I was profoundly grateful for both the opportunity and to have an easily accessible resource for harmonizing seemingly contradictory ideas as ethno-nationalism and Christ's work on the cross.
I must confess, my expectations weren't high when I was told that the book would be a collection of essays by several authors. I went in expecting a series of short blog posts, authors giving their observations on the state of the Christian Church, lamenting the sorry state of mainline denominations, and giving their thoughts on what might be done to turn things around. Instead I was treated to an intellectual tour de force. Long-form essaysand series of essayspowerfully argue that the concept of an ethno-nation is well established in Holy Scripture and is embraced by God.
The anthology starts with a series of essays by Davis Carlton with a rather on-the-nose piece called A Biblical Defense of Ethno-Nationalism. If you've picked up this book right before getting a call from your doctor informing you that you've only got an hour left to live, then this is the essay for you. Several of his essays attack the cancer plaguing Western churches: Christian Zionism, or uncritical support among Christians for both Jews and the nation of Israel. Carlton addresses the most common myths that pastors and other corrupted churchmen use to push support for a country and people that hate our guts and immolates them.
We're then treated to another hefty series by Nil Desperandum where he lays out that the moral, cultural, and logical cornerstone of White Nationalism is Christianity. The case is made in no uncertain terms, and I have trouble thinking of anything approaching a valid counter-argument. He spends much of his writing correcting myriad misconceptions regarding sin. Always a helpful endeavor for Christians.
Several essays deal with ethno-nationalism in historical context and how it relates to our faith, demonstrating that much of the world has gone mad with multiculturalism, and those of us who recognize the obvious have been right all along. Ehud Would takes to task the multicult's fascination with casting every historical figure as a black African, lambasting the notion that salvation comes from blackness. Though my favorite essay by far is Our Familial and Racial Existence in Heaven, by Nil Desperandum. In it he lays out the critical role our ethnic heritage plays in God's plan of salvation. It is something so important to our existence as human beings that our genetic heritage will be preserved even in the new Heaven and new Earth to come.
I can't say I agree with every jot and tittle written in this book. For example, I personally find Nil Desperandum's case for postmillennialism unconvincing, and I think Ehud Would gets a few points wrong in his Commentary on the Ten Commandments. These differences, however, amount to polite disagreements between Brothers in Christ. As someone who leads the sole active ministry tending to the spiritual hunger within the Dissident Right, I can give this volume my ringing endorsement. Our beliefs are built upon the bedrock of logic and history, and I am pleased to find that I've been standing on the shoulders of these giants all along.
I don't know about you, dear reader, but I'm not ready to roll over and die just yet. Unlike the Amalekites, I haven't received a single message from God about our people's impending destruction. The cause of White Nationalism is righteousat least when the people championing the cause choose to be.
Myles Poland
D AVIS C ARLTON
Davis is a descendant of Swiss-German farmers. He enjoys history, historical fiction, and theology. Davis appreciates traditional European culture as well as classical Christian liturgy and ecclesiology, and he desires to instill these values in the minds of fellow Christians of European descent. Davis considers it his task to do "the exact opposite of the work which the Radicals had to do...to cling to every scrap of the past that he can find, if he feels that the ground is giving way beneath him and sinking into mere savagery and forgetfulness of all human culture."
A Biblical Defense of Ethno-Nationalism
January 19, 2011
Ethno-nationalism is a belief system that affirms a traditional Christian understanding of families, tribes, and nations. Ethno-nationalism holds that nations are defined and rooted in common heredity, and that the foundations of a nation are based on common ancestry, language, culture, religion, and social customs.
What are the primary factors that bind a nation together? Is it common ancestry or common ideas? In a sense, ethno-nationalism is redundant. It is evident that the English word nation has been traditionally defined by birth, not merely geographic or political boundaries. The word nation in the English language is related to natal, which means birth, as in a neo-natal ward. On Christmas we celebrate Christs nativity. You are a native of the land of your birth. But if this is true, why even speak of ethno-nationalism since it is redundant? Why not simply defend the concept of nationalism? The reason is that in recent history we have seen the ascendancy of the concept of the proposition nation. A proposition nation is supposed to be a group of people who are united by a common ideology rather than by common heredity, but as we shall see, a proposition nation is a contradiction in terms.
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