Oh boy. This Sunday, CNN is rolling out a full hour-long documentary hosted by Pamela Brown on what it calls the rise of “Christian nationalism.” The framing? A warning. The implication? A threat.
According to previews, Brown zeroes in on the memorial service for conservative activist Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated, as a defining example of what one Georgetown professor describes as a troubling cultural shift. Matthew Taylor of the Georgetown University Center of Faith and Justice argues that a “large segment of American Christians” are being “activated” and even “radicalized” by the belief that they are under threat.
Let’s pause there.
Kirk was assassinated. Not criticized. Not deplatformed. Assassinated. Yet the focus in this documentary appears to center not on the violence itself, but on the reaction of Christians who say they feel targeted and increasingly concerned about hostility toward their faith.
In a clip circulating online, Brown frames the memorial as a rallying cry — a moment that galvanized people who share Kirk’s views. Taylor describes it as a potent symbol of a cultural shift, claiming Christians are embracing a narrative that they are persecuted and must defend their rights.
For many viewers, that framing is raising eyebrows.
The documentary reportedly attempts to draw broader parallels, including highlighting former President Donald Trump’s statement that he believes God spared his life during an assassination attempt so he could continue leading the country. Brown notes that Trump has not explicitly declared America a Christian nation, but suggests alignment with Christian nationalist supporters.
CNN’s Pamela Brown announces she’s been working on a “special project” warn against “Christian nationalism” and portrays them as a radicalized threat to the country.
She then launches into a report where she fears the assassination of Charlie Kirk uniting Christians and scoffs… pic.twitter.com/1J63ta6EIO
Should CNN's documentary on Christian nationalism highlight the concerns of practicing Christians?— Nicholas Fondacaro (@NickFondacaro) February 17, 2026
Critics argue the label itself is doing most of the work. “Christian nationalism,” they say, has become a catch-all term — vague, elastic, and politically charged. To some, it’s simply shorthand for Americans who believe the nation was historically influenced by Judeo-Christian values. To others, it signals an authoritarian religious movement.
That tension is at the heart of the debate.
Online reaction to the documentary preview has been swift and skeptical. Commentators are questioning whether CNN will feature practicing Christians who can articulate their own beliefs, or whether the narrative will lean primarily on academic critics. Some are drawing comparisons to other politically loaded terms that dominated headlines in recent years, arguing that new labels emerge as old ones lose their impact.
The broader cultural fight over faith, identity, and national heritage isn’t going away. Whether viewers see CNN’s special as necessary scrutiny or ideological spin will likely depend on where they already stand.
But one thing is certain: when major media outlets dedicate an hour to warning about a movement tied to millions of Americans’ religious identity, the reaction is guaranteed to be intense.
Sunday’s broadcast won’t just be a documentary. It will be another flashpoint in an already combustible national conversation.














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