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America’s Identity Crisis, Religion and Politics, The Christian Doctrine of Discovery 1493, The Hidden Roots of White Supremacy and the Path to a Shared American Future by Robert P Jones (USA 2023), White Christian Nationalism, White supremacy

Photo Credit: Simon & Schuster
Every US state contains similar legacies of white racial violence because every US state was built on the same foundation, anchored by the Doctrine of Discovery: the conviction that America was divinely ordained to be a new promised land for European Christians. In each of the thirteen original colonies and in eight additional slave states, this deep founding myth justified the enslavement and exploitation of Africans in pursuit of white flourishing. In all, it justified the killing and dispossession of Native Americans and the claiming of their lands by good white Christian people, who alone possessed the virtues necessary for sustaining “civilization.”
[…]
The Christian Doctrine of Discovery continues to cast a long shadow across America. After more than five centuries, we collectively continue to refuse to answer, once and for all, the fundamental question: Is America a divinely ordained promised land for European Christians, or is America a pluralistic democracy? The coexistence of these contradictory traditions has created fractures in our nation’s foundation that weaken the integrity of our laws, our culture, and our politics…
Excerpts from The Hidden Roots of White Supremacy and the Path to a Shared American Future by Robert P. Jones, published by Simon & Schuster, New York, USA, 2023, pp. 258 & 311.
The Doctrine of Discovery, 1493
The Papal Bull “Inter Caetera,” issued by Pope Alexander VI on May 4, 1493, played a central role in the Spanish conquest of the New World. The document supported Spain’s strategy to ensure its exclusive right to the lands discovered by Columbus the previous year. It established a demarcation line one hundred leagues west of the Azores and Cape Verde Islands and assigned Spain the exclusive right to acquire territorial possessions and to trade in all lands west of that line. All others were forbidden to approach the lands west of the line without special license from the rulers of Spain. This effectively gave Spain a monopoly on the lands in the New World.
The Bull stated that any land not inhabited by Christians was available to be “discovered,” claimed, and exploited by Christian rulers and declared that “the Catholic faith and the Christian religion be exalted and be everywhere increased and spread, that the health of souls be cared for and that barbarous nations be overthrown and brought to the faith itself.” This “Doctrine of Discovery” became the basis of all European claims in the Americas as well as the foundation for the United States’ western expansion. In the US Supreme Court in the 1823 case Johnson v. McIntosh, Chief Justice John Marshall’s opinion in the unanimous decision held “that the principle of discovery gave European nations an absolute right to New World lands.” In essence, American Indians had only a right of occupancy, which could be abolished.
Read an excerpt of the English translation of the 1493 Papal Bull at The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History.
Robert P. Jones, PhD is the president and founder of the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) and a leading scholar and commentator on religion and politics. He is the author of the New York Times bestseller The Hidden Roots of White Supremacy and the Path to a Shared American Future (USA, 2023), as well as White Too Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity, which won a 2021 American Book Award. He is also the author of The End of White Christian America, which won the 2019 Grawemeyer Award in Religion.
Jones writes a column on politics, culture, and religion for The Atlantic, Time, Religion News Service, and other media outlets. He is frequently featured in major national media, such as CNN, MSNBC, NPR, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and others. He holds a PhD in religion from Emory University and an MDiv from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.
This looks very credible – what people have done to people in the name of religion is devastating
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It truly is devastating, Derrick. And, it’s still ongoing.
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Very important thoughts, Rosaliene. The United States is indeed an uneasy mix of multiculturalism (good) and white Christian nationalism (not good and obviously the doctrine of Trump and most of his associates and supporters).
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It sure is an uneasy mix, Dave. The anti-immigrant architect behind the 3000-a-day arrests is definitely against multiculturalism.
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The historic support by the Supreme Court of the Papal Bull provides insight into the dangerous possibilities present if a court tends to favor the government’s executive branch in a time of white Christian nationalism.
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A dangerous possibility, indeed, Dr. Stein. On the other hand, the Doctrine of Discovery is not limited to one political ideology. Jones noted that in the 2005 Sherrill v. Oneida US Supreme Court case, liberal justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg cited the “doctrine of discovery” in the majority 8-1 opinion rejecting the Oneida Nation’s attempt to reincorporate, for tax purposes, land that was historically lost and recently repurchased into their current reservation holdings (p. 295).
Jones concluded (p. 296): “Our current legal apparatus, which can only be justified by a Euro-Christian supremacy that most white Christian Americans would recoil from today, continues to diminish Native American rights and justify the violation of US treaty obligations to Native American nations.”
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Your knowledge is much appreciated, Rosaliene.
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Interesting reading Rosaline. Religion has done more damage to the world than good. And everyone thinks their religion is correct and the only one. That is very evident now in the US. Maggie
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Sadly true, Maggie. Should Jesus be born again among us today in any poor American neighborhood, He would not recognize the ways in which alt-right conservative Christians have corrupted His message of love of neighbor.
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I think he would be horrified. And they’re doing the acts in his name, which is exactly the opposite of his message.
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Every nation has to come to grips in what they have done in the name of exploration. Canada is slowly getting there with its First Nations, but many do not believe in White Privilege or in making it right. They would rather remake history so they never have to feel ashamed or embarrassed. Whites are not alone in this practice, but they are in the majority. We all think we have the divine right to conquer peoples who not not think like us, look like us or worship like us. Organized religions were often used to justify or assist in the practice. Many wars have been fought in the name of God, by godless people. Have a great Sunday Rosaliene. Allan
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Allan, you’re spot on when you speak of remaking history to avoid feeling ashamed or embarrassed. It’s been an ongoing process by the framers of Project 2025.
Jones commented on Canada’s First Nations in his segment on Pope Francis’ 2022 five-day “penitential pilgrimage” of Indigenous sites in Canada (pp. 272-278). He noted that, while it was an unprecedented move by the head of the Roman Catholic Church in the Americas, the pope retained the Church’s unblemished character by placing the blame on “many members of the Church and of religious communities.” The pope made no mention of the Doctrine of Discovery and appeared confused when an Indigenous reporter for Canada Broadcasting Commission asked him about this during a press briefing on the plane home to Rome at the end of the tour.
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Pope Francis’ visit went a long way toward starting the healing process, but you are right, as pope he should have taken personal responsibility (The Euro stops here) as he is the current pope in a long line of popes. The Doctrine of Discovery should also have been decried. Its a reason, not an excuse. Our first Prime Minister played a big part in setting up Canada’s residential schools, but rather than cancelling him or tearing down his statues, I would prefer to see signs put up listing his good and bad deeds and learn from the mistakes he made. We are all only human after all and should learn from our mistakes and those of others. Sadly, the current narcissist in power in your country thinks he has made no mistakes, so he prefers to deny and hide all the bad stuff. Thanks for bringing this topic forward Rosaliene. Allan
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Thanks for sharing, Allan. As I see it, the arrogance of the one of whom you speak will be his undoing. In these dark and uncertain times, we have to hold onto what is precious and essential in our lives ❤
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Human behavior, past and present, is in many ways shameful.
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Very true, Neil. What makes a difference is whether we own up to the shameful mistakes of the past and work towards reconciliation, reparations, and restitution.
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I identify as both a Christian and as an intertribal chicana and I absolutely hate Christian nationalism and Manifest Destiny. It makes me furious how greed is masquerading as religion.
This was a good post. Informative. I learned more. Thank you.
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Kimberly, thanks very much for dropping by and sharing your thoughts. The stories that Jones shares in this book are revelatory for me, too, but very painful to read.
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Thank you for sharing this, Ros. Jones’ work is a powerful scholarly resource.
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You’re welcome, Carol. In Part Two: Duluth (Minnesota), Jones takes readers back in time to the “Three Hundred Eighty-Six Years Before the Lynchings in Duluth” (pp. 117-122), an area historically occupied first by Dakota and then by [your] Ojibwe people on the tip of Lake Superior. He records events leading up to “The Largest Mass Execution in US History” (pp. 132-136) of thirty-eight Dakota men on December 26, 1862. [I know that you know all this. This information is for non-Indigenous readers.]
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And so it continues. Our peers in the pews continue to have a mix of beliefs as to rights, ownership, and supremacy. Our new/used regime in the US continue to push the poor and non-white population to the sidelines. Thank you for highlighting a book that clearly states the truth, Rosaliene.
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You’re welcome, Mary. Given the punishing policies of our current administration, I can only see more suffering for our marginalized poor and non-white immigrant populations.
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Thank you, Rosaliene. Despite our many differences, our countries’ origin tories are very similar in the way settlers have treated Indigenous Peoples poorly, and continue to.
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So true, Steve. Check out my comments to Allan who also lives in Canada. The history of European conquest and colonization has affected all peoples across the Americas as well as the Caribbean.
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Thank you, Rosaliene, for your, as always, excellent article. What I find particularly fascinating is how we are using the same principle of the “chosen people” again today to justify ethnic cleansing in Gaza. For me, this issue represents a potential breaking point for our civilization as we know it. The fact that the new Pope no longer wants to play along is a sign of hope.
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You’re welcome, Friedrich. As I see it, the “chosen people” have turned their faces away from their god. What’s more, they have silenced the voices of the prophets among them.
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Thank you for this reading recommendation, Rosaliene. Far too many of us avert our gaze in order to not only deny the white supremacy and colonialism baked into this country, but also deny how we’ve never broken free of that foundation. I recently bought Talia Lavin’s “Wild Faith: How the Christian Right is Taking Over America” and anticipate learning all sorts of other horrifying information about what’s happening right now.
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You’re welcome, Tracy. It’s not an easy book to read: Lots of painful injustices. Based on what you’re reading, we share similar concerns. Let me know what you think of Lavin’s book.
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Sounds like an interesting book, Rosaliene. I guess some white christians have a very mixed up view of the world and their place in it. Religion can be good or a tool for evil.
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Mara, I found it very informative. Jones demonstrates that the enslavement of Africans was the continuation of a pattern of genocide and dispossession that began with the first European contact with Native Americans. It survives today in the form of white Christian nationalism.
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The underpinnings of the European invasion of the Americas are so full of prejudice; religion, race, ownership of land, and who is human. How can we heal and change if the foundation is rotten?
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A great question, Rebecca. In his closing chapter, the author phrases the question in a different way (p. 308): How can we meaningfully respond to being beneficiaries of a crime so plain it cannot be denied and so large it can never be fully righted?
Jones agrees that the challenge before us is formidable. He sees the following actions as the way forward (pp. 308-310):
1. Relinquish the ethno-religious hierarchies embedded in the Doctrine of Discovery and embrace “the sacred humanity of each person.”
2. Remember the systemic injustices heaped upon Indigenous and Black peoples and their forebears.
3. Expand our vocabulary: Reparations describes justice for the descendants of enslaved African Americans. Restitution is a more apt response for Native Americans.
4. Cease pretending that democracy and the Doctrine of Discovery are compatible.
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Thanks, Rosaliene. Jones is a very deep thinker, I can see why you are drawn to his work. His four points are excellent to ponder and enact in our lives.
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I remember learning the phrase, “manifest destiny” in middle/jr high school, but I don’t remember discussion about its meaning and implications. Then in high school, we were assigned to read the book, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee which gave a very different view I found shocking and horrible. The Papal Bull shows how deep this extreme arrogance runs. It’s a history of shame. I’m thankful Robert Jones includes a path to a shared future in this book.
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As I understand it, JoAnna, “manifest destiny” is an American expression of the Doctrine of Discovery. The Roman Catholic Church has much to answer for before the Prince of Peace.
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Well said about the RCC and the Prince of Peace.
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My simple mind has always struggled with the notion of ownership of land and sea and airspace and such – unless someone paid somebody else for the thing that was rightfully their own and they wished to sell – then is it not stealing? And the whole ‘I got here first’ rule is equally confusing and contentious.
Does it not all belong to the Creator and we borrow the space?
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So true, Dawn. Mother Earth was a gift to us all, human and non-human. The moment Homo sapiens began behaving like gods, we lost our way.
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dare I ask – do you think there is a gender difference in this attitude?
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I do believe there is, Dawn. It’s a patriarchal world.
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but attitude – wise. I find the woman more cooperative and community focused in general outlook and way of working.
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That’s also true, Dawn.
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Explosively powerful review and exposure Rosaliene to what so many are trying to cover up or act like it never happened. I appreciate Mr. Jones’ bravery for exposing these truths and thank you for sharing them with us my sister. 🙏🏼
Mind blowing and mindboggling if you aren’t walking around with your ears plugged up, a closed sign on your mind, and your eyes wide shut! 🤷🏻♀️
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Kym, Jones’ book was an eye-opener for me. The Roman Catholic and other Christian Churches were not merely complicit in the European endeavor to conquer the then unknown world. They sanctioned the mindset for the brutal takeover.
Have you been following the new directives for the whitewashing of our nation’s history as depicted in our national museums?
https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/restoring-truth-and-sanity-to-american-history/
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Girl WHITE-WASHING non-stop. The folks who are allowing this to happen and can do something about it, have blood on their hands as much as the occupant of the WH! I am disgusted beyond imagining sis. 🤬
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Kym, I’ve learned that change is the constant in our lives. While the changes we need may not occur in our lifetimes, change will come.
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Oh gosh yes Rosaliene, I agree with you sistah. 🙏🏼 Yet for now, we will continue to do what we can do, with the resources we have. We still have a lot more fight left in us for sure! 🥊🥊🥊
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I find it ironic how many evangelicals today tout how our Founding Fathers did or didn’t do certain things, yet now see that their particular brand of religious beliefs weren’t in existence then, they came much later. If they really wanted to follow how the Founding Fathers lived, would it not make sense to follow their religious beliefs? As someone whose lineages have been deemed inferior or undesirable to those of surrounding lineages, I always questioned why only a few were “chosen” to be the desirable ones.
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Tamara, as we both now know, inferior or undesirable lineages are all a social construct. Those who consider themselves superior want the status quo to stay that way.
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Yes, the social construct has created many wars, deaths, injustices and horrors. Right now, I feel it’s important to mentor those in the younger generation, so they can continue to do the work to undo that construct.
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I agree.
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