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‘Christianism: A crude political ideology and the triumph of empty symbolism.’ (Ben Ryan)
The UK has spent decades sleepwalking toward secularism, where faith has been driven relentlessly into the personal-private sphere. Now we're waking up to something very different. A muscular version of Christianity is re-emerging, not as a spiritual faith but as a political identity. It’s a re‑branding of national belonging where being 'British' feels increasingly identified with being ‘Christian’. I'm not talking about the gospel of Jesus Christ or about spiritual renewal here. I am talking about identity politics. It’s about casting Christianity as a default badge of belonging and using that badge to redraw the boundaries of who counts as ‘us’ vs ‘them’. Anxiety and frustration are fuelling that shift in the face of mass migration, cultural disruption and a fear that who ‘we’ are is slipping away. ‘Christian’ is being used increasingly as a political brand. Once any religion becomes a marker of national or cultural identity, it becomes a de facto test of belonging. Tests always leave people, the ‘others’, outside. It chips away at the humility and compassion that are, for followers of Jesus, core to their lives. Religion becomes less about conscience or community and more about raw power. For Christians who believe authentic faith should question power, who see gospel values as both universal and counter‑cultural, the appropriation of Christianity into nationalism feels like a dangerous distortion. Jesus said, ‘Love your enemies’ (which suggests there are those we may rightly regard as enemies). True faith lays in reaching out in love – not in alienation or conquest.
21 Comments
Sarah Donnelly
11/12/2025 09:26:13 am
Hi Nick. I think you’re spot-on about the way “Christian” is being used as a cultural badge rather than a faith commitment. You only have to look at how certain UK commentators now talk about “protecting our Christian heritage” while showing no interest whatsoever in, say, the Sermon on the Mount. It’s the same paradox we’ve seen in the US for years, people waving the Christian flag at political rallies but ignoring the actual teachings of Christ. Your post is a necessary wake-up call.
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Tom Ellery
11/12/2025 09:28:02 am
Feels a bit alarmist to me. Most Brits can’t even name the four Gospels. The idea that we’re sliding into some theocratic nationalism seems wildly overblown.
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Miriam Calder
11/12/2025 09:29:41 am
There’s good data supporting your concerns. Surveys from the last few years show a growing group in Britain who identify as 'culturally Christian' while holding little or no religious belief and that group correlates with stronger anti-immigration sentiment.
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Kevin Mears
11/12/2025 09:30:17 am
Isn’t this just another way of telling ordinary people they’re bigots for liking the traditions they grew up with? Not everything is a “nationalist project.”
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Leonie Ward
11/12/2025 09:32:40 am
Hi Nick. The empty symbolism point is what speaks most to me in your blog. Political Christianity in 2025 is mostly aesthetic with crosses on banners, appeals to Judeo-Christian civilisation, church-photo ops. It’s branding. But it leaves no space for repentance, justice or solidarity with the vulnerable which are exactly the things Jesus actually preached. When Christianity becomes a vibe rather than a vocation, it’s ripe for distortion.
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Michael Amberton, PhD
11/12/2025 09:34:58 am
Hi Nick. Your argument aligns with current academic research.
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Rachel McTavish
11/12/2025 09:36:24 am
I agree with your overall point Nick, but I think you overlook the reasons some people are turning to Christian identity politics.
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Jonathan Pike
11/12/2025 09:37:03 am
Short take: Christian nationalism is just nationalism with a cross taped on. You nailed it Nick.
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Claire Henshaw
11/12/2025 09:38:11 am
Honestly, this is the clearest description I’ve read of what’s happening. 'Christianism' is exactly right. People want the comfort of Christian identity without the inconvenience of Christian ethics.
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Aaron K. Thorne
11/12/2025 09:39:38 am
Nick, I think there’s a category confusion going on. In the US, Christian nationalism is a mobilised political force, with think-tanks, PACs and clear messaging. something that intensified after 2020 and now shapes parts of the Republican platform. The UK simply doesn’t have that infrastructure.
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Caleb Foster
11/12/2025 09:40:35 am
Honestly, this feels like another attempt to shame people for caring about their national heritage. If Britain has Christian roots, why shouldn’t that be acknowledged politically? It doesn’t automatically mean exclusion or extremism. In the US, 'Christian nationalism' has become a catch-all insult used to delegitimise ordinary believers who just want their values represented.
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Heather Somerville
11/12/2025 09:42:21 am
Hey Nick. What I like is the hollowness you describe. I live in the American Midwest and a lot of the “Christian patriot” messaging here carries no theological substance at all, just vibes of nostalgia and grievance. It’s incredibly influential though, especially among people who feel culturally displaced. When UK commentators start adopting similar language, even in softer form, it’s wise to pay attention. Identity politics rooted in religion is volatile because it feels morally justified even when it excludes.
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Lydia Marsh
11/12/2025 09:43:47 am
As a parish priest, I see both sides. People genuinely feel unmoored economically, socially, even spiritually and some latch onto a vague ‘Christian Britain’ narrative because it offers stability.
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Ella Merton
11/12/2025 09:44:48 am
Christianism is exactly the right word. People want a Christian brand not the burden of Christlike behaviour. UK starting to copy the US playbook. Worrying.
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J. Rawlings
11/12/2025 09:45:24 am
Another hand-wringing lecture about ‘dangerous nationalism’. Maybe people are tired of being told their own culture is toxic. Christian heritage is part of the UK. Get over it.
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Malik Desai
11/12/2025 09:46:36 am
Yeah, this tracks. I’m not Christian, but I’ve noticed more Christian identity rhetoric popping up, especially around immigration. It’s subtle but it’s there. Also agree it’s not about faith. Half the people shouting about Christian civilisation wouldn’t recognise the Beatitudes if you tattooed them on their foreheads.
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Angela Hornby
11/12/2025 09:47:26 am
I think this framing is backwards. The real problem isn’t Christian nationalism. It’s the aggressive secularism that’s been pushed for decades. You can’t hollow out public life and then complain when people want to reclaim their traditions. In the US, Christian nationalism only grew because Christians felt under sustained cultural attack. Blaming people for defending their identity is absurd Nick.
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Pete Chapman
11/12/2025 10:11:35 am
Great article - There has always been a large body of people who would declare themselves as Christian on forms and for the national census but who would not particularly own the phrase follower of Jesus at a personal level. But this is now being taken over in the way you describe, along with the Union Jack!
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Alex
14/12/2025 10:22:24 pm
Thanks for the article, which I found interesting and makes good sense. Other research (E.g. Christian religiosity and nativism: populist
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Rudi Weinzierl
13/1/2026 07:17:22 pm
Ja es scheint im Menschen inhärent vorhanden zu sei: Wenn Macht und Geld durch christlich verbrämte Werte zusätzliche Absicherung verspricht, wird religiöse Ideologie schamlos für diese Zwecke herangezogen.
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Nick WrightI'm a psychological coach, trainer and OD consultant. Curious to discover how can I help you? Get in touch! Like what you read? Simply enter your email address below to receive regular blog updates!
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