To Understand JD Vance, You Need to Meet the “Theo-Bros”
These extremely online young Christian men want to end the 19th Amendment, restore public flogging, and make America white again.
On July 15, when former President Donald Trump first appeared at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, he brought along two new accessories.
One was a large bandage covering his ear, which had been nicked by a would-be assassin’s bullet.
The other was Ohio’s first-term senator and Hillbilly Elegyauthor JD Vance, who was about to debut as the GOP vice presidential hopeful.
Two days later, after paying tribute to his wife, Usha—the child of immigrants from India—and their three biracial kids, Vance portrayed a vision of America that resonated deeply with Trump voters.
“America is not just an idea,” he said solemnly. “It is a group of people with a shared history and a common future. It is, in short, a nation.”
To many viewers at home, this seemed like the stuff of a boilerplate, patriotic stump speech.
But the words “#shared #history” lit up a far-right evangelical corner of social media.
“America is a particular place with a particular people,” Joel Webbon, a Texas pastor and podcaster, wrote on X.
“This is one of the most important political questions facing America right now,” posted former Trump administration official William Wolfe.
“Answer it wrong, we will go the way of Europe, where the native-born populations are being utterly displaced by third world migrants and Muslims.
Answer it right, and we can renew America once more.”
Vance was embracing one of their most cherished beliefs:
America should belong to Christians, and, more specifically, white ones.
“The American nation is an actual historical people,” says Stephen Wolfe (no relation to William), the author of the 2022 book "The Case for Christian Nationalism",
-- “not just a hodgepodge of various ethnicities, but actually a place of settlement and rootedness.”
For this group of evangelical leaders, Vance, a 40-year-old former Marine who waxes rapturous about masculinity and women’s revered role as mothers, was the perfect tribune to spread their gospel of #patriarchal #Christian #nationalism.
For years, graying, khaki-clad evangelists have faithfully made the rounds at conservative events.
However, as Wolfe, a 41-year-old former Princeton postdoc, writes in his book,
these “men in wrinkled, short-sleeve golf shirts, sitting plump in their seats” are yesterday’s Christians.
Among younger activists, they inspire the rolling of eyes
—they are the embodiment of an
ineffective boomer approach to taking over the United States for Jesus.
In their place, a group of #young #pastors hope to spearhead a Christian nationalist glow-up as they eagerly await a “#Christian #prince” to rule America.
These often bearded thirty- and fortysomethings have suits that actually fit.
They are extremely online, constantly posting on myriad platforms, broadcasting their YouTube shows from mancaves,
and convening an endless stream of conferences for likeminded followers.
Let’s call them, as one scholar I spoke with did, the
Theo-Bros.
For all their youthful modishness, this group is actually more conservative than their older counterparts.
Many TheoBros, for example, don’t think #women belong in the pulpit or the voting booth
—and even want to
repeal the 19th Amendment.
For some, prison reform would involve replacing incarceration with public #flogging.
Unlike more mainstream Christian nationalists, like House Speaker Mike Johnson, who are obsessed with the US Constitution,
many TheoBros believe that the Constitution is dead and that
we should be governed by the Ten Commandments.
In "American Reformer", their unofficial magazine, hagiographies of Spanish dictator Francisco #Franco appear alongside full-throated defenses of countries that
execute gay people.
On podcasts, the TheoBros unpack “the perils of #multiculturalism,” expose “Burning Man’s wicked agenda,” and peel back the nefarious feminist plot of #Taylor #Swift.
In Wolfe’s "The Case for Christian Nationalism", one of their seminal texts, he writes that in an ideal Christian nation,
️heretics could be executed.
️
The rise of the TheoBros worries more mainstream religious conservatives.
Janet Mefferd, a former Christian radio host and journalist who tracks their ascendancy, says her community is alarmed to see an extremist movement gaining traction.
“I’m not sure what the endgame is, other than they want to advance Christian nationalism,” she says.
“But a lot of us find that terrifying.”
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2024/09/theobros-jd-vance-christian-nationalism/