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Erecting the Pulpit
Muscular Christianity from Teddy Roosevelt to Donald Trump
Erecting the Pulpit
Muscular Christianity from Teddy Roosevelt to Donald Trump
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Description
Erecting the Pulpit examines a powerful yet overlooked form of Christian Nationalism-one that fuses faith, masculinity, capitalism, and political power under the guise of moral leadership. Beginning with Theodore Roosevelt's “Muscular Christianity” and tracing the conceit of faithful and fit male leadership through figures like Billy Graham and cultural institutions like National Prayer Breakfasts and modern mega-churches, and flourishing under the administration of Donald Trump, Erecting the Pulpit reveals how religious rhetoric has been wielded to sanctify power and divide communities.
Drawing on her firsthand experiences and years of conversations with participants-from Cowboy Churches to NASCAR chaplaincies and storefront churches with folding chairs to meetings with the parachurch group Young Life-theologian Amy Laura Hall examines the cultural and political forces that have made evangelicalism “ambient” while consolidating wealth and influence. At a time when politicians are expected to pray in public and religious themes shape public policy, Erecting the Pulpit offers a vivid, incisive exploration of how religious expressions of faith in the United States have been strategically repackaged to sustain political and economic hierarchies and keep women subservient to men.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
What Is Muscular Christianity?
Why a Pulpit?
What Is Mainstream Evangelicalism?
Deciders
“Dynamite or Gospel”
Where Am I?
Fathers Know Best?
1. Fitness
“It Is the BRITISH WAY!”
“Keeping Fit”
Holy Husbandry
“Westward Ho!”
“Chaos in the Family, Chaos in the State”
“Fit for Ministry?”
2. Brotherhoods
Rewiring “the West”
Memorials Matter
“The Farmer and the Cowman”
Poaching
Vouching
Oil Rich
3. Sovereignty and Submission
Submit
Supermarkets
Measuring “Real”
The Crotch Shot
Entertain Us!
News Matters
Office Space
4. Mill Town Cathedrals
Monuments
Social Memory
“Modern Times”
“The Only Road to Salvation” Legacies
5. Leadership
Vikings
Agape
An Infomercial from Yale
Rulers Make Bad Lovers
“Marketplace Men”
On Your Knees
No Hero
Conclusion
“The 4/14 Window”
Product details
| Published | 14 May 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Audiobook |
| Duration | 9 hours and 30 minutes |
| ISBN | 9798216477259 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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In this pugnacious exposé, Hall incisively explores the evolution and influence of a form of Christian nationalism ... [and] persuasively reveals how muscular Christianity has remade the American religious landscape in ways both overt and subtle. Readers will find much to chew on.
Publishers Weekly
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Erecting the Pulpit is a powerful account of how faith, masculinity, and political power became intertwined in modern America. With clarity and insight, Amy Laura Hall traces the rise of 'muscular Christianity' and shows how its values of leadership and moral authority continue to shape public life today. This is an eye-opening and deeply relevant book.
Erica Edwards, Lillian Chavenson Saden Professor of English and Black Studies, Yale University
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This book is an irreverent and deeply satisfying book, filled with incisive reporting, unexpected insight and dry wit. It is rare to find an academic book that is this much fun.
Carl Elliott, Professor of Philosophy, University of Minnesota, author of The Occasional Human Sacrifice: Medical Experimentation and the Price of Saying No
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We have excellent accounts of authoritarian strongman politics-Ruth Ben-Ghiat, the top voice among them, has mapped its seductions with precision-but the dominant literature on authoritarianism has a conspicuous blind spot: it largely fails to reckon with the religious machinery that makes the strongman not only legible but holy, indeed, messianic. Writing with the acuity of a scholar and the verve of a journalist, Amy Laura Hall, one of today's leading voices in religious ethics, fills that gap with surgical force. Drawing on W. E. B. Du Bois's concept of "the religion of whiteness," we might say Hall has mapped, with unprecedented precision, the religion of white masculinity-its Victorian origins, its anti-labor reflexes, its prayer breakfasts and jumbo screens, its global authoritarian networks. This is the book that explains Trump 2.0 not as a grotesque interruption of American Christianity but as its most candid expression-the harvest of a very long and very deliberate planting. The dominant accounts of authoritarianism have left the pulpit out of the picture. Hall puts it back-and erects it, so to speak, in our faces. Indispensable.
J. Kameron Carter, University of California, Irvine, author of Race: A Theological Account
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In Erecting the Pulpit, Hall offers a courageous and impressively researched account of how faith, masculinity, and political power have been braided together across American history. Drawing on a lifetime of experience - from Cowboy Churches to elite divinity schools - Hall shines a light on evangelicalism with precision and moral seriousness. This is the book our moment demands: rigorously documented, theologically literate, and written with the clear-eyed passion of someone raised in a world where power masquerades as prayer.
Greg Grandin, Peter V. and C. Vann Woodward Professor of History, Yale University, author of America, América

























