We need to talk about extremism and its links to Christian fundamentalism | Josh Roose

1 year ago 76

The announcement yesterday that Queensland police now consider the Wieambilla attacks to be a “religiously motivated terror attack” connected to a Christian extremist ideology should constitute a seismic shift in our understanding of the terror threat in Australia.

Middle-aged, middle-class Christian Australians, two of them teachers, ambushed and killed two police officers and a neighbour. This should and must and trigger debate about new directions in extremism in Australia and equally, should stimulate a wider introspection about the increase in polarisation and extremism in Australia.

Christian extremist ideology

It is important to try to unpack, even with the still limited information available, what we do know about “Christian extremist ideology”. The deputy commissioner of Queensland police, Tracey Linford, indicated that evidence pointed towards the attackers subscribing “to what we would call a broad Christian fundamentalist belief system, known as premillennialism”, which drove a direct attack upon police.

Premillennialism may be understood as a form of evangelical Christian belief centred on the second coming of Christ. It has a number of offshoots grounded in different interpretations of text, primarily, but not limited to the Book of Revelation. A period of immense tribulation, defined by corruption and great evil (which some adherents believe is currently taking place) will precede the “rapture”, for many evangelicals, a terrifying event whereby the good will ascend into heaven and the evil be brutally punished. This will be followed, based on their belief, by a 1,000-year reign of Christ defined by peace and salvation.

The deputy commissioner of Queensland police, Tracey Linford, speaks to the media in Brisbane on Thursday.
The deputy commissioner of Queensland police, Tracey Linford, speaks to the media in Brisbane on Thursday. Photograph: Darren England/AAP

While some evangelical Christians view the end times as a metaphor for personal salvation, others believe it’s a literal, physical event for which they must prepare.

In this context, for those who believe the end of days is imminent and who have become radicalised, those deemed evil are considered legitimate targets for extreme violence and terror. Perversely, as with terrorists of other religious backgrounds, they believe this is justified in the name of God. In this particular case, Linford said the attackers saw police as “monsters and demons”.

Moving beyond the ‘other’

New formations of violent extremism are brewing away in the post-Covid context. Rapidly increasing economic inequalities, catastrophic natural disasters, vaccination mandates are some key contributing factors and the rise of social media and encrypted messaging enable the free flow of extremist content.

The Australian far right, which inspired the white Australian Christchurch terrorist Brenton Tarrant, continue to be active in efforts to recruit. Sovereign citizens, anti-vaxxers and conspiracy theorists are also highly active, while misogynists such as Andrew Tate continue to spread their messaging through social media.

These are internationally linked movements that are tied in to racist, antisemitic, anti-democratic and anti-women worldviews. Militant forms of Christianity such as those that have emerged in the United States (for example Christian nationalism) will also be taking hold among some Australians. Notwithstanding the diversity of these movements, many adherents are white, middle-aged Australian men and women.

This requires a deep reflection by both intelligence communities and society in general. The focus on the “other” as the primary source of violent extremism and terror threats is not only outdated, but dangerous. The US is already abundantly aware of this. Queensland police on Thursday referred explicitly to the Waco massacre in Texas in 1993, but we can look at the Unabomber, Timothy McVeigh, Ku Klux Klan and many other terror attacks carried out by white Americans. In 2019, at the height of the Trump years, Congress found that “white supremacists and other far-right extremists are the most significant domestic terrorism threat facing the United States”. We saw the result of this at the insurrection at the Capital building on 6 January 2021.

Implicit biases and the need for condemnation

From an investigative standpoint, implicit bias can cloud judgment when examining data. Two of the three Wieambilla attackers were accomplished teachers and educational leaders and all of them identified as Christian. Yet it is known that they had at the very least attempted to accumulate firearms. One of the attackers is reported to have posted direct threats to police and in one video, made posts online referring to himself as a “barbarian”, “savage” and “extremist”. In a similar vein, reports of concerns to police about the Christchurch terrorist’s statements and actions were overlooked by authorities in both Australia and New Zealand.

The even bigger problem, however, is the complete failure to have any sort of reflection or introspection about these attacks from within the community to which they belong. For two decades, Australian Muslims have been required to answer for the actions of an extremist fringe. Yet in the aftermath of the horrific Christchurch attack in which the attacker made reference to the Crusades and historic battles between Christians and Muslims, and now a double police murder, there has been very little, if any, introspection by the wider Australian community, including politicians and Christian leaders alike. There must be a collective acknowledgement and condemnation of the violent potential of intolerance, racism, hate and extremism in all its forms, including that which has become pervasive in our political discourse, media, religious institutions and wider society.

  • Dr Josh Roose is a political sociologist and associate professor at the Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation at Deakin University

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