Eric Metaxas
Christian author and radio host whose 2010 biography 'Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy' systematically distorted Dietrich Bonhoeffer's theology to portray him as a culture-war conservative — providing evangelical audiences an intellectual framework in which supporting right-wing political power constitutes Christian 'resistance,' inverting the actual historical meaning of Bonhoeffer's anti-Nazi witness.
View in the interactive map →Eric Metaxas (b. 1963) is a Yale-educated author whose 2010 biography 'Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy' (Thomas Nelson) became a bestseller in evangelical circles and a widely-cited intellectual touchstone for justifying evangelical political activism. It sold over one million copies. The book's central distortion — documented extensively by Bonhoeffer scholars including Clifford Green, Victoria Barnett, and others — was representing Bonhoeffer as an evangelical culture-war conservative: pro-life, orthodox in the sense that American evangelicals use the term, and resistant to liberal theology in ways that mapped onto American evangelical battles against progressive Christianity. Bonhoeffer was in fact a German Lutheran pastor whose theology was deeply ecumenical, who engaged critically with American evangelical fundamentalism when he visited in the 1930s (finding it shallow and politically disengaged), and whose opposition to Nazism was rooted in a theology of Christian responsibility to the state quite different from the Constantinian framework Metaxas's career advances. The distortion's political function was precise: by casting Bonhoeffer as the patron saint of evangelical resistance to liberal cultural power, Metaxas gave evangelical audiences a historical narrative in which they were the heroic resisters and secular liberalism was the Nazi threat. This inversion — in which the heirs of state church power frame themselves as an oppressed resistance movement — became a central theme of evangelical political theology in the Trump era. Metaxas delivered the National Prayer Breakfast address in 2012, in the presence of President Obama — using the occasion to deliver a pointed anti-abortion message. He has been a fellow at the King's College (New York), a prominent evangelical institution. His Trump support was explicit and escalating: he endorsed Trump enthusiastically in 2016, dismissed the Access Hollywood tape as irrelevant, and by 2020 was publicly declaring that Trump had won the election and urging Christian resistance to the 'steal,' including the statement 'we need to fight to the death, to the last drop of blood' to prevent Biden's inauguration. He stated that an angel had appeared to him in a dream confirming Trump's victory. Metaxas represents the intellectual infrastructure of Christian nationalism: providing pseudo-historical and pseudo-theological frameworks that make authoritarian political loyalty legible as Christian discipleship.
Documented themes
Connections from Eric Metaxas
- influenced → Trump Evangelical Advisory Board (2016) (2016) — Eric Metaxas was among the evangelical intellectuals and media figures who provided public legitimacy to Donald Trump's 2016 campaign and presidency. He endorsed Trump explicitly, dismissed the Access Hollywood tape as irrelevant, and delivered cultural-war framing that positioned Trump support as Christian duty. By 2020 he was declaring Trump the rightful winner of the election and urging Christians to 'fight to the last drop of blood.' Metaxas's function was to supply the intellectual and pseudo-historical scaffolding — via his distorted Bonhoeffer biography — that made authoritarian political loyalty legible as Christian resistance. Du Mez documents his role as part of the evangelical intellectual infrastructure that produced and sustained Trump-era Christian nationalism.
Connections to Eric Metaxas
- Franklin Graham influenced (2016) — Franklin Graham and Eric Metaxas occupied the same lane of the Trump-era evangelical media ecosystem: both provided Christian nationalist legitimation for Trump, both framed evangelical political loyalty as spiritual warfare, and both amplified each other's messaging through shared platforms and mutual appearances. Graham's 'Decision America' tour and Metaxas's radio program and public statements reinforced the same narrative — that Christian America was under existential threat and Trump was the necessary vessel of providential rescue. Du Mez documents this evangelical media infrastructure as a coordinated (if not formally organized) ecosystem of mutually reinforcing voices.
Sources
- Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation — Kristin Kobes Du Mez (2020), pp. 250–265
- Bonhoeffer Banalized: A Review of Eric Metaxas's Bonhoeffer Biography — Clifford Green and Victoria Barnett (2010)
- Eric Metaxas Is Warping Bonhoeffer's Legacy — The Atlantic (2020)