Posts Tagged ‘Evangelicalism’
January 17th, 2013
posted by
John Ashmen
Baptist minister and sociologist Tony Campolo was arguably the first to send shock waves through the ranks of the religious right two decades ago when he responded to a question about his political leaning—Democrat or Republican? His reply: “It depends on the issue.”
Fundamentalists scorned him, calling him an apostate, but his assertion gave a new generation of evangelicals permission to scrutinize political platforms and move to the middle. The middle seemed to make more sense to younger followers of Jesus who were hearing and heeding calls to humanitarian causes at home and abroad.
Tags: American politics, Evangelicalism, evangelicals, religion and politics
Posted in The new evangelicals | No Comments »
January 16th, 2013
posted by
Joel Hunter
I am one of those evangelicals who, in Professor Marcia Pally’s words, have “left the right.” As a former President-elect of the Christian Coalition of America, I resigned that position and all other positions that would box me into ideologies that were becoming insidiously narrow and negative. As a 64-year-old pastor, I may not yet be representative of my generation or profession in my political openness, but I am one of a growing number of white evangelicals who are making biblically-based decisions on an issue-by-issue basis, in a wider circle of conversations than ever. We are put off by the “hardening of the categories” that is stifling not only intellectually, but also spiritually.
Tags: American politics, Christian Coalition, Evangelicalism, evangelicals, Jesus, religion and politics, spirituality, values
Posted in The new evangelicals | 2 Comments »
January 16th, 2013
posted by
David P. Gushee
Professor Marcia Pally aptly describes the evangelical polyphony of our time. Despite the dreadful habit of newspapers of using the term “evangelical” to mean “white social conservative bloc of the GOP,” contemporary evangelical political views are much more diverse than that.
As Pally notes here and in her book, The New Evangelicals, it is not accurate to say that the diversity of evangelical politics and public engagement is some kind of new trend. What is actually the historical aberration is the way a distinguished global movement within Protestant Christianity that has always had diverse politics got swept into the Republican Southern Strategy of the Nixon years and beyond. It is a terrible historical accident that the movement that gave us the abolitionist William Wilberforce and the firebrands of the early Social Gospel movement became identified, after 1972, with reactionary white right-wing politics in the American South.
Tags: American politics, Christian Right, Evangelicalism, evangelicals, International development, religion and politics, world affairs
Posted in The new evangelicals | No Comments »
January 15th, 2013
posted by
Marcia Pally
Post-election reporting that 79 percent of white evangelicals voted for Mitt Romney got little attention in the news because most journalists thought it wasn’t news. Evangelical support for the GOP has been consistent; even Romney’s Mormonism didn’t put them off. So election analysis approached white evangelicals as it usually has: as religio-political lemmings, all voting Republican for all the same reasons.
Yet where there was once the appearance of a monovocal evangelicalism there is now robust polyphony—what theologian Scot McKnight calls “the biggest change in the evangelical movement at the end of the twentieth century, a new kind of Christian social conscience.” This deserves our attention because most politics does not happen at elections but in between, when policy is negotiated and implemented. Current shifts in evangelical activism have re-routed the flow of evangelical money, time, and energy, and are changing the demands on the US political system. This essay investigating the shift is based on seven years of field research in evangelical books, articles, newsletters, sermons, and blogs, and on interviews with evangelicals, ages 19 to 74, across geographic and demographic groups—from students in Illinois to retired firemen from Mississippi, from former bikers to professors and political consultants.
Tags: American politics, church and state, electoral politics, Evangelicalism, evangelicals, International development, Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, religion and politics, religious right, world affairs
Posted in The new evangelicals | 13 Comments »
December 4th, 2012
posted by
Ruth Braunstein
New Directions in the Study of Prayer Grantee Tanya Luhrmann’s book, When God Talks Back: Understanding the American Evangelical Relationship With God, was named one of the New York Times’ 100 Notable Books of 2012. As Molly Worthen wrote in an early 2012 review of the book: After more than four years of observing and interviewing [...]
Tags: Evangelicalism, New Directions in the Study of Prayer
Posted in books, here & there | No Comments »
March 27th, 2012
posted by
Samuel Moyn
In the last issue of First Things, a self-described coalition of “Catholics and Evangelicals together” defends religious freedom. The coalition includes a number of notable Americans, like Charles Colson and George Weigel, with endorsements from the archbishops of Chicago, New York, and Philadelphia, along with many others. According to the statement, the situation is unexpectedly urgent. After the fall of the Soviet Union, “throughout the world, a new era of religious freedom seemed at hand.” But, now it is blatantly clear that the scourge of intolerance—especially secularist intolerance—persists.
Tags: Alexis de Tocqueville, American politics, Catholicism, Evangelicalism, public sphere, religion in the U.S., religious freedom, Richard John Neuhaus, the Vatican, Vatican II
Posted in The politics of religious freedom | No Comments »
March 7th, 2012
posted by
Jessica Polebaum
Molly Worthen, in the New York Times‘ Campaign Stops blog, considers the undertones of recent conservative claims regarding the Obama administration’s purported disregard of religious freedom.
Tags: American politics, Barack Obama, Christian Right, Christianity, electoral politics, Evangelicalism, presidential politics, religious freedom
Posted in here & there | 1 Comment »
March 2nd, 2012
posted by
The Editors
In light of Rick Santorum’s recent comments on religion and the public sphere, we asked a small handful of scholars about the status of such claims regarding religion in American political life. Just how “naked” is the American public square? What is the appropriate place of religion in the public sphere?
Read responses by Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na’im, Michele Dillon, John L. Esposito, John H. Evans, Philip S. Gorski, R. Marie Griffith, Cristina Lafont, Nancy Levene, Nadia Marzouki, Ebrahim Moosa, Justin Neuman, and John Schmalzbauer.
Tags: American politics, Anti-Catholicism, Catholicism, church and state, electoral politics, Evangelicalism, Islam, Mormonism, Protestantism, public sphere, religion in the U.S., religious right, Rick Santorum
Posted in off the cuff | No Comments »