cover image Star-Spangled Jesus: Leaving Christian Nationalism and Finding True Faith

Star-Spangled Jesus: Leaving Christian Nationalism and Finding True Faith

April Ajoy. Worthy, $27.99 (256p) ISBN 978-1-5460-0668-8

TikTokker Ajoy debuts with a witty account of her departure from the toxic Christian nationalism in which she was raised. The daughter of an evangelical pastor, she’d been indoctrinated since childhood in the importance of “keeping America a Christian nation.” Her views began to shift during the Trump presidency and were forever changed after she saw footage of members of her church at the January 6 Capitol insurrection (this was “not some extremist sect I had never interacted with before,” Ajoy recalls thinking. “These were my people”). During the painful spiritual “deconstruction” that followed, the author agonized over “researching topics and finding answers that could destroy meaningful relationships in my life.” Ultimately, she was able to detangle her Christianity from Christian nationalist beliefs and find a more inclusive faith rooted in love. Throughout, she pairs impassioned calls for readers to recognize how Christian nationalism “exploits our faith for power” with flashes of tongue-in-cheek humor. For example, on the quiz she provides to determine where one falls on the Christian Nationalist spectrum, a score of 30–40 points is “Marjorie Taylor Greene Level”: “If you keep reading this book, you probably won’t be triggered too much, because you can just write off what I say by believing that George Soros is paying me with eternal youth from his space lasers.” It’s an approachable insider’s look at a controversial movement. (Oct.)