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On Eve of GOP Convention, Faith Leaders Warn Against White Christian Nationalism
It was nearly two hours into a long afternoon rally Sunday when Rev. Dr. Kevin Shaw took the podium in a packed auditorium on Milwaukee’s Northeast Side.It was not, he reminded the audience, a church service, but from his cadences, the message might have been from a pulpit.
“We must understand that democracy is in danger,” Shaw said, his voice rising. “That’s why we’re here tonight — to protect our democracy, to reject white Christian nationalism and to build the beloved community.”
He spoke of people targeted by racism, because of their sexual orientation, or because they are not Christian — all of whom “constantly have to prove that they belong here in America.”
There were murmurs of agreement from the crowd.
“But the God that I believe in, the Jesus in the text that I’m familiar with, took time for those who were outcasts, took time with those who were considered to not be worthy of God’s grace.”
Sunday’s rally came on the eve of the Republican National Convention set to nominate former President Donald Trump as, once again, the GOP candidate for that office.
In response, the cross-section of faith leaders who gathered on the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee campus Sunday disavowed the strain of religion that, they charged, animates Trump’s candidacy. The policies he pursued in his previous term and the agenda he has embraced on the stump, speakers said, are anchored in white Christian nationalism.
Sunday’s rally was sponsored by the Milwaukee Inner-City Congregations Allied for Hope — MICAH, an interfaith social activism organization founded 36 years ago. Shaw is MICAH’s president. He is also the pastor of St. Matthew C.M.E. Church in Milwaukee.
The group’s campaign against white Christian nationalism, launched in August 2023, is called “We All Belong.”
In an interview a few days before Sunday’s rally, Shaw said white Christian nationalism has been at the root of political trends ranging from making voting more difficult to pushing to remove books that report frankly about U.S. history and the treatment of Black enslaved people or the harm done to Native Americans.
“White Christian nationalism teaches exclusion and control,” Shaw said. “Regardless of race, gender, ethnicity, or sexuality, we all belong. We are all part of democracy.”
White Christian nationalist thinking also underlies Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation document outlining an agenda for the next Republican president, Shaw said. The proposals include attacks on federal agencies and on the education system, he added.
“It gives one individual too much power,” Shaw said. “That’s not what makes America America, and it’s not Christian.”
Although Trump has claimed no connection with the project, its authors include a number of past and present Trump advisers.
Jim Wallis, a writer and longtime social justice activist driven by his Christian faith, came to Milwaukee for Sunday’s rally. Wallis has written a book, “The False White Gospel: Rejecting Christian Nationalism, Reclaiming True Faith, and Refounding Democracy.”
During a press conference before the rally, Wallis noted that there will be people proclaiming their faith on the podium at the Republican convention.
“The use of religion to promote fear and hate and violence is blasphemy,” Wallis said. “It’s time to name it and say it, and time to debate it.”

On eve of GOP convention, faith leaders warn against white Christian nationalism • Florida Phoenix
It was nearly two hours into a long afternoon rally Sunday when Rev. Dr. Kevin Shaw took the podium in a packed auditorium on Milwaukee’s Northeast Side. It was not, he reminded the audience, a church service, but from his cadences, the message might have been from a pulpit. “We must understand...
