
Tim Alberta's explosive expose reveals how evangelical Christianity surrendered to political power. A pastor's son himself, Alberta chronicles a movement that traded gospel for glory, sparking controversy and earning a Goodreads nomination. What happens when faith becomes a weapon?
Tim Alberta, bestselling author of The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory: American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism, is an award-winning journalist and staff writer for The Atlantic. Born in Brighton, Michigan, Alberta combines his background as the son of an evangelical pastor with decades of political reporting to critique the fusion of faith and partisan power. His work, including the New York Times bestseller American Carnage (2019), dissects cultural and ideological shifts in American institutions, from the Republican Party to megachurches.
A former chief political correspondent for POLITICO and contributor to outlets like The Wall Street Journal and Sports Illustrated, Alberta has moderated presidential debates and earned a 2024 National Magazine Award for his profile of CNN’s chairman.
His reporting blends grassroots storytelling with incisive analysis of national trends. The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory—hailed by The Washington Post as “searingly perceptive”—debuted as a national bestseller, cementing Alberta’s reputation for untangling America’s most polarizing forces.
The Kingdom, The Power, and The Glory examines the fragmentation of American evangelical Christianity, exploring its entanglement with partisan politics, cultural fears, and institutional scandals. Author Tim Alberta, a practicing Christian and pastor’s son, documents empty churches, hyper-politicized congregations, and leaders prioritizing power over spiritual integrity. The book argues that evangelicalism has strayed from biblical principles to embrace grievance-driven extremism.
This book appeals to readers interested in religion’s role in politics, journalists analyzing cultural shifts, and Christians grappling with modern faith crises. It’s particularly relevant for those seeking to understand evangelicalism’s influence on U.S. elections, societal polarization, and the erosion of institutional trust.
Yes: It’s a New York Times bestseller, named one of Barack Obama’s favorite books (2023), and praised for its brave reporting on evangelical extremism. Critics highlight Alberta’s access to influential religious figures and his balanced critique of a movement he personally understands.
As the son of an evangelical pastor and a veteran political reporter (The Atlantic, Politico), Alberta combines theological literacy with sharp political analysis. His Midwest roots and firsthand experience reporting from churches nationwide lend authenticity to stories of congregants disillusioned by extremist rhetoric.
Alberta argues many evangelicals have abandoned Jesus’s teachings on humility and love, instead embracing “owning the libs” as a spiritual mandate. He documents how fear-mongering replaces gospel messages and how leaders monetize outrage through media empires.
Yes: Alberta interviews celebrity pastors, small-town preachers, and influential figures like Russell Moore and Beth Moore. These conversations reveal tensions between doctrinal traditionalists and those conflating Christianity with far-right ideology.
While American Carnage analyzed GOP fractures during Trump’s rise, this book examines parallel upheavals in evangelicalism. Both works critique institutions sacrificing core values for power, but The Kingdom adds personal reflection from Alberta’s faith journey.
With ongoing debates about church-state separation and evangelical influence in the 2024 election, the book provides frameworks to understand current conflicts. Its analysis of conspiracy theories infiltrating churches remains urgent amid new cultural crises.
Non-religious readers gain insights into how 28% of Americans drive national policy, while progressive Christians find strategies to reclaim faith from extremism. Alberta shows how partisan capture of institutions affects all citizens, regardless of belief.
Alberta delivers talks nationwide, including a 2025 lecture at Hope College analyzing evangelicalism’s political future. His podcast appearances and Atlantic articles provide ongoing commentary on religion’s cultural role.
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Politics had become their religion.
too many American evangelicals "worship America."
America an idol.
"the enemies aren't those outside of the Church; it's people in your church who don't think exactly the way you do."
"Why do we want to be a part of this?"
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Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско
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The church was dying. Not metaphorically, but literally-Cornerstone Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Brighton, Michigan was hemorrhaging members. After the death of beloved pastor Richard Alberta in 2019, his successor Chris Winans faced an exodus of congregants who viewed his compliance with COVID restrictions as capitulation to godless government. The situation worsened during racial justice protests and throughout Trump's 2020 campaign, with members demanding political statements from the pulpit. By early 2021, Winans had developed an anxiety disorder, confiding to journalist Tim Alberta (Richard's son) that too many American evangelicals "worship America." This crisis in a single Michigan church would prove to be a microcosm of a much larger fracture running through American evangelicalism-one that would prompt Alberta to spend four years embedded in churches nationwide to understand how a faith centered on Jesus Christ had become so entangled with partisan politics and nationalism.