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The Nature of eXile

"Counterrevolution and conservatism have little in common. In the struggle against Communism the conservative is all but helpless. For that struggle cannot be fought, much less won, or even understood, except in terms of total sacrifice. And the conservative is suspicious of sacrifice; he wishes first to conserve, above all what he is and what he has. You cannot fight against revolutions so."
Whittaker Chambers
Witness [1]

Unlike "conservative" initiatives, eXile does not merely oppose the enemy's advancing of his agenda. eXile creates a counterrevolutionary agenda that will preserve the good and facilitate the enemy's self-destruction.

The concept of eXile has the following qualities:

  • It can be accomplished by a minority;
  • It is legal and non-violent;
  • Through separatism, it creates the possibility of Christian Community and a better way to live;
  • It takes a long term, generational view rather than a short term, individualistic view;
  • It is a demographic response to a demographic attack.

Right now, Christian Americans are few and weak. We do well to recognize this truth and avoid confrontation. We need time to re-establish ourselves. eXile is, at minimum, a twenty-five year strategy. The enemy's demographic attack started in the 1930's, and needed forty years to succeed. We require a similar time frame in which to defeat the enemy. We are intent on raising a new generation of American Christians, strong, militant and numerous.

Theologically, Christ replaces Adam, and the Christian Exile will replace the deportation of the Israelites to Babylon.

Circa 64 AD, Christians were already said to be "in Exile" from the Roman Empire. In 1 Peter, the author addresses the "exiles of the Dispersion" - European Christian converts in Asia Minor who were the targets of Nero's persecution. [2] Indeed, in accordance with the teachings of Christian Identity, Christians in Dispersion were equated with the Twelve Tribes of Israel. [3] And Christian Exiles persecuted during the Roman Empire were deemed to be the heirs of Israel. [4]

Like the Israelites and the early Christians, modern Christians find themselves temporarily displaced by a pagan empire. Like them, we have lost our homeland and our birthright. Like them, in time, we shall take our homeland and birthright back.


Footnotes:
[1] Random House, 1952, p.462.

[2] The New Oxford Annotated Bible, Revised Standard Version, 1 Peter 1:1, Preface and note 1, p.1474.

[3] Id. James 1:1.

[4] Id. I James 1:1, n.1.


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