The "Christian nationalism" movement is coming and should "terrify" Americans concerned about democracy, according to a Tuesday guest essay in the New York Times. 

Writer and author Katherine Stewart argued the fall of Roe v. Wade was just the beginning of a "more brutal phase of [Christian nationalist's] assault" on Americans' rights.

"Breaking American democracy isn’t an unintended side effect of Christian nationalism. It is the point of the project," she warned.

Supreme Court Roe v Wade

Faith Adams from Bangor, Maine, protests about abortion, Friday, June 24, 2022, outside the Supreme Court in Washington. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

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To back up her argument, Stewart claimed that she witnessed Christians using increasingly violent rhetoric, and embracing "dominion theology" at the recent Faith & Freedom Coalition Road to Majority Conference. She cited speakers describing Democrats as "evil," "tyrannical" "the enemy within," and engaged in "a war against the truth" as her examples.

But Stewart was most concerned about pro-life conservative activists using what she deemed a "legal arsenal" of "weaponry" to outlaw abortion and defend Christian values, after the Supreme Court overturned Roe.

For siding with a public school football coach who was fired for praying after games on the football field, the journalist feared the Court had "licensed religious proselytizing by public school officials" to "prosecute a war on individual rights" across the nation.

Joe Kennedy

Former Bremerton, Washington high school football coach Joe Kennedy. (First Liberty Institute)

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Stewart's anxious piece ended telling Americans to not "underestimate" the movement's "radicalism," because if they got their way, there would be nothing left of democracy.

"Christian nationalism isn’t a route to the future. Its purpose is to hollow out democracy until nothing is left but a thin cover for rule by a supposedly right-thinking elite, bubble-wrapped in sanctimony and insulated from any real democratic check on its power," she wrote.

Priest holding cross

This Dec. 1, 2012 file photo shows a silhouette of a crucifix and a stained glass window inside a Catholic Church in New Orleans. The FBI has opened a widening investigation into sex abuse in the Roman Catholic Church in New Orleans going back decades, a rare federal foray into such cases looking specifically at whether priests took children across state lines to molest them, officials and others familiar with the inquiry told The Associated Press. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)

Other media outlets have also sounded the alarm about alleged Christian extremism after the Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization.

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A columnist in the Washington Post encouraged readers to fight back against the "Christian right," while a MSNBC legal analyst claimed the Court would go after desegregation next.

Churches, crisis pregnancy centers and pro-life organizations have faced increasing attacks by left-wing abortion groups in recent months.

"The FBI has opened almost 200 threat assessments since Roe v. Wade decision was leaked in May," Fox News reported.