Meet the Jewish woman leading the fight against American Christian nationalism [View all]
For decades, Americans United for Separation of Church and State called its adversaries religious extremists. Today, the group has a more specific target: fighting Christian nationalism.
The decision to sharpen the language was made by Rachel Laser, the groups president for the last six years. A Jew and the first member of a religious minority to lead Americans United since its founding in 1947, Laser wanted the group to be more clear-eyed about what she sees as a growing threat to religious pluralism in the United States: the belief that American laws should favor Christian values over those of other religions.
But it was not an easy decision for her to make.
On some deep level, I worry about alienating Christians, as many Jews do, Laser wrote last year in the groups magazine. When you are part of a mere 2% of the population, it can feel perilous to risk fostering adversity with 65% of the population. That anxiety about the optics of her leadership surfaced even before she took the job. During her interview, Laser recounted to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, she asked the board outright: Why arent you hiring Christian clergy?
Americans United had always been led by pastors, but Barry Lynn, who served as the organizations previous leader, from 1992 to 2018, said he welcomes a departure. If there were any concerns about having a Jew lead a fight against Christian nationalism, Laser has proven its possible to do so, he said.
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Then came the January 6, 2021, assault on the US Capitol.
Laser saw the insurrection as a wake-up call. In the rioters biblical rhetoric and religious rituals, she recognized Christian nationalism as a potent and underappreciated threat. She soon hired Andrew Seidel, a prominent critic of Christian nationalism. On his first day as the new vice president of strategic communications at Americans United, Seidel testified before Congress about the role of Christian nationalism in the Capitol insurrection. Americans United began using the term regularly, aiming to educate the public while highlighting church-state separation as a critical countermeasure.
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Under Lasers leadership, Americans United has taken high-profile legal actions, such as suing Oklahoma over its proposed religious charter school and representing a Tennessee Jewish couple rejected by an adoption agency due to their faith. The group also helped raise awareness earlier this year about Project 2025, a detailed conservative proposal for Trumps second term from the Heritage Foundation.
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https://www.timesofisrael.com/meet-the-jewish-woman-leading-the-fight-against-american-christian-nationalism/