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New book ‘Chosen Land’ examines Christianity’s deep influence on American identity

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New book ‘Chosen Land’ examines Christianity’s deep influence on American identity

Historian and WSU professor Matthew Avery Sutton argues Christianity has shaped American identity and politics for centuries in his new book, complicating myths about church and state.

Main Points

  • The book traces how competing Christian groups adapted faith and politics to gain influence in a nation without a state church.
  • Sutton argues Christianity has shaped American identity, politics and culture since colonization, not just in modern conservative movements.
  • Scholars say the book challenges myths about church-state separation while raising questions about nationalism and America’s pluralistic future.

By Cassy Benefield | FāVS News Associate Editor

America is largely a Christian nation but it’s complicated, argues Matthew Avery Sutton in his new book, “Chosen Land: How Christianity Made America and Americans Remade Christianity.”

The book claims to be a 500-year historic survey of Christianity in America just in time for the nation’s 250th anniversary, which marks the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

“I started off with the question … ‘Why are Americans more Christian than our peer nations?’” Sutton said, adding that his goal was to explain historically why that matters. “The book was my effort to go back into the archives, go back into the sources and try to figure out what it is that’s unique or distinctive about the United States and its history that has led us to today.”

With 20 years of professional work at the intersection of religion and politics, Sutton chairs Washington State University’s history department.

america
Matthew Avery Sutton (Contributed).

Prior to “The Chosen Land,” he has written five other history books that focus on specific areas of American Christianity, including “American Apocalypse: A History of Modern Evangelicalism.” 

To the source

As a historian, Sutton demonstrates his expertise. Each of the book’s 31 chapters includes a curated list of works alongside footnotes, so readers can trace the scholarship behind his arguments.

“To tackle a book like this, I was essentially doing two things. One was building on [an] entire generation of scholarship — folks who are much more specialized in certain eras to try to figure out how they understood the particular periods they were studying and then combine that with archival research,” Sutton said.

Fellow historian Seth Dowland, who is a professor of religion at Pacific Lutheran University in Parkland, Washington, identifies Sutton’s book as an “incredibly ambitious” and “massive survey” of generations of American religious historians.

“What I think Sutton is attempting to do is … to try to synthesize it into an accessible narrative of American Christianity and using Christian activism as the sort of throughline,” Dowland said. 

That thread challenges familiar narratives — about the Constitution’s secular and nonsecular roots, the First Amendment’s intent and the role marginalized communities have played in reshaping American Christianity from within.

American Christianity’s origins up to the present

Beginning with Native Americans and how they viewed religion as part of their culture, Sutton exposes the “vibrant and diverse” place 15th-century America was before “the Christian invasion began.”

From there, he moves on through early Spanish conquests and missions work and writes about how Christopher Columbus believed God had chosen him as part of fulfilling the Bible’s prophecies of the last days.

He explains how Spanish soldiers often justified beating and killing Indigenous men and raping Indigenous women, while at the same time some Franciscan monks complained these acts “‘brought discredit on our teaching.’”

The book concludes with President Donald Trump’s second presidency and how he began “not just as a politician, but a self-anointed messiah.” 

Sutton noted Trump’s choice of words during his 2025 inaugural address regarding the assassination attempt against him months earlier: The president used Christian language to suggest that his survival was divine intervention. 

“‘Just a few months ago … an assassin’s bullet ripped through my ear. But I felt then, and believe even more now … I was saved by God to make America great again,’” Sutton quotes Trump saying.

Rebranding American Christianity

In between these two historical worlds of past and present, Sutton shows how Christians in America rebranded and redefined Christianity to gain followers and influence over the centuries, since America’s founding documents prohibited federally-sponsored churches. 

Each Protestant denomination competed for followers like companies would compete for buyers in the free market.

He also asserts that the First Amendment has been rebranded into a mythos of coming from high-minded secularism, instead of what he defines as the “crass pragmatism” of the founders.

“The goal was to ensure that the major competing Protestant denominations (Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, etc.) could get along to ensure the survival of the American experiment, rather than to keep religion out of government entirely,” he said.

Christian nationalism is as old as America itself

Sutton also spends some time in his book on defining Christian nationalism and pointing out that it has shaped the whole of American history. Rather than defining it as “good” or “bad,” he identifies it as “productive” versus “problematic.”

“Christian nationalism has influenced activists across the political and religious spectrum, Black and White, left and right, for centuries,” Sutton writes. “Americans have never really separated church from state, nor have they truly championed the free exercise of religion. Christian activists from Frederick Douglass to Jerry Falwell used the Bible to try to impose their values and beliefs on the nation.”

seth dowland headshot 2022 scaled 1
Seth Dowland (Contributed).

Dowland believes “The Chosen Land” is also more than a book on Christian nationalism. It’s about broadening that focus to see Christian nationalism in more contexts than the “MAGA-wing of evangelicalism.” 

“The [real] story is whose vision of Christianity is going to triumph in American life as opposed to Christian nationalism being a sort of descriptor of a bad variety of Christianity that wants to violate the separation of church and state,” Dowland said. 

But then the argument against Christian nationalism needs to not be “we shouldn’t have religion in our politics,” argues Sutton.

“I don’t think that’s fair to people of faith to ask them to put their faith on a shelf,” he said. 

However, he does think it’s fair to ask Christians, and by inference other people of faith, if applying their religion is “in the best service of the country” and all citizens in a pluralistic understanding.

Will Christianity shape America’s future?

Joan Braune, a Gonzaga University faculty member and researcher of fascist and Christian nationalist movements, agrees that Christians should advocate for their values on the basis of faith. 

However, she said, “It is important that this happens within the context of a secular state.”

Joan Braune
Joan Braune (Contributed).

“As long as this project is framed as a ‘Christian’ endeavor on the part of the state, it would remain one in which non-Christians have a secondary status, are seen as outside the norm of what it means to be American, are in some way suspect and have a worldview that is secondary in the formation of laws,” Braune said. 

This would include a state run by progressive Christians, too, she added.

Sutton concludes “The Chosen Land” by asking another question: “Does the recent rise of a new form of Christian nationalism mark the dawn of a new theocracy — or Christian nationalism’s last desperate grasp?”

He writes, “As we search for answers, one truth remains: the conviction that the United States is God’s chosen land — and Americans his chosen people — has shaped our nation from the beginning. It continues to shape it now. But will it shape our future?”


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Cassy Benefield
Cassy Benefield
Cassy (pronounced like Cassie but spelled with a 'y') Benefield is a wife and mother, a writer and photographer and a huge fan of non-fiction. She has traveled all her life, first as an Army brat. She is a returned Peace Corps volunteer (2004-2006) to Romania where she mainly taught Conversational English. She received her bachelor’s in journalism from Cal Poly Technical University in San Luis Obispo, California. She finds much comfort in her Savior, Jesus Christ, and considers herself a religion nerd who is prone to buy more books, on nearly any topic, than she is ever able to read. She is the associate editor of FāVS.News.

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Walter Hesford
Walter Hesford
16 days ago

Thanks, Cassy, for drawing attention to this important work, though in some ways its claims are hardly new. Long ago Perry Miller drew attention to the theocratic nature of early New England and the origins of the view of American as a chosen land in such works as “Errand into the Wilderness.”

Cassandra Benefield
Admin
16 days ago
Reply to  Walter Hesford

Thanks Walter! I don’t think he is claiming anything new of the sectarian nature of early America’s. If anything, and perhaps I could have spelled this out more, he is arguing for the most part the majority of American history even now is largely sectarian (in Christian ways) in nature. And for a brief time in American history, since the Civil Rights movement, the courts really began using the “separation of church and state” interpretations of the First Amendment as a higher wall, and that, too, is eroding now.
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Last edited 16 days ago by Cassandra Benefield
Paul Graves
Paul Graves
15 days ago

Hi Cassy,
Thank you for the thoughtful, and pretty thorough, review of Dr. Sutton’s new book about “The Chosen Land.” Beside good quotes from Sutton, I appreciated you bringing in insights from professors from PLU and Gonzaga. I particularly thought Professor Braune’s comment about the danger of restricting the conversation only to “Christian” influence in America was timely.
Does the book touch at all on the concept of America’s “manifest destiny” or “American exceptionalism”? I’m currently reading a thoughtful book called “Widening of God’s Mercy: Sexuality Within the Biblical Story”. Co-authored by father and son Richard and Christopher Hays. Chris is an OT professor, while Richard is a retired NT professor. Chris speaks clearly about the biblical Israel as not the only “chosen nation” God blessed (and held to account). A good read.
Thanks again,
Paul

Cassandra Benefield
Admin
15 days ago
Reply to  Paul Graves

Oh yes, he touches all that. It’s a 500-year survey of all the things Christianity defended and opposed and how the faith has been malleable and made into power grabs and as a tool to fight oppression over the years. The book your reading sounds amazing too!