In guns we trust The unholy trinity of white Evangelicals, politics, and firearms

William J. Kole

Book - 2025

In Guns We Trust investigates the surprising and often troubling connection between white evangelical Christianity and firearms in the United States. Veteran journalist William J. Kole explores why many evangelicals embrace guns as a sacred right, blending personal reflection with immersive reporting. From sanctuaries where worshippers openly carry weapons to churches that teach target practice as outreach, Kole examines how faith, politics, and the gun industry intersect. Highlighting activists and dissenting Christians working for change, the book offers a deeply researched, humanized, and urgent look at how this "locked-and-loaded" Christianity shapes American society-- and how conversation, courage, and resistance might foster... peace --

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2nd Floor New Shelf 261.7/Kole (NEW SHELF) Due Mar 13, 2026
Subjects
Published
Minneapolis, MN : Broadleaf Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
William J. Kole (author)
Physical Description
ix, 288 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-288).
ISBN
9798889835639
  • Preface
  • Chapter 1. The Gospel Of Guns
  • Chapter 2. How Guns Became Good
  • Chapter 3. A Well-Regulated Militia
  • Chapter 4. Home On The Range
  • Chapter 5. The Fear Factor
  • Chapter 6. Gunmakers for god
  • Chapter 7. Pistols And Politics
  • Chapter 8. Gunsandtheglobalchurch
  • Chapter 9. Swords Into Plowshares
  • Chapter 10. No Guns in Heaven
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Axios editor Kole (The Big 100) unpacks in this impassioned treatise how the links between "guns, religion, and politics" have tightened in evangelical communities over the past 50 years. The author finds an inflection point in the late 1960s and early '70s, as increasing support for the Vietnam War and skepticism of the civil rights movement pushed evangelicals away from the relative pacifism of mainline Protestantism and toward a militaristic Christianity epitomized by a "tough-guy ethos" and an "increasingly masculine, almost warrior-like view of Jesus." That philosophy, Kole argues, set the stage for evangelicals' increased affinity for firearms, which was fueled by notions of America as a Christian nation (and thus the Second Amendment as divinely inspired) and a perceived need to defend their beliefs and their embattled "standing in American life." Noting that an embrace of violence repudiates Christian ethics of love and forgiveness, the author calls on readers to demand commonsense gun control reforms and on pastors to frame gun control as an extension of Jesus's pacifist teachings. While Kole's definition of evangelicalism can feel overly broad, he makes trenchant points about how fear, change, and social instability have altered the role of faith and identity in America. It's a revealing window into the evolution of one of today's most divisive social issues. (Oct.)

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