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Evangelicals and Politics: A Rethinking*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 April 2015

Extract

I understand my primary task in this essay to be to take you inside the world of evangelical political reflection and engagement. Though I actually grew up Roman Catholic and attended the liberal Union Theological Seminary in New York, I am by now an evangelical insider, rooted deeply in red state mid-South America, a member of a Southern Baptist church (actually, an ordained minister), a teacher at a Tennessee Baptist university, and a columnist for the flagship Christianity Today magazine. Due to the blue state/red state, liberal/conservative boundary-crossing that has characterized my background, I am often called upon to interpret our divided internal “cultures” one to another. Trained to be fair-minded and judicious in my analysis and judgments (though not always successful in meeting the standards of my training), I seek to help bridge the culture wars divide that is tearing our nation apart.

As one deeply invested in American evangelicalism, most of my attention these days now goes to the internal conversation within evangelical life about our identity and mission, especially our social ethics and political engagement. In this essay I will focus extensively on problems I currently see with evangelical political engagement, addressing those from within the theological framework of evangelical Christianity and inviting others to listen in to what I am now saying to my fellow evangelicals.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University 2007

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Footnotes

*

This speech, entitled “Religious Americans and Political Choices,” was delivered at Hamline University Symposium on Law, Religion & Ethics (Hamline University School of Law., St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 6, 2006).

References

1. Sider, Ronald J., Rich Christians in Age of Hunger (20th anniversary ed., Thomas Nelson 1990)Google Scholar.

2. 2 Cor 5:19 (all Biblical citations are taken from the New Intl. Version).

3. Matt 10:38-39.

4. Phil 2:9-11.

5. Matt 6:24.

6. Exod 20:3.

7. Luke 16:8.

8. Jer 29:7.

9. Ps 85:10.

10. John 10:10.

11. Matt 7:21-27.

12. John 13:34-35.

13. Ian Urbina, New Registration Rules Stir Voter Debate in Ohio, N.Y. Times (Aug. 6, 2006) (available at http://select.nytimes.com/search/restricted/article?res=F00C17FE355B0C758CDDA10894DE404482).

14. Russell Johnson, quoted in Ian Urbina, New Registration Rules Stir Voter Debate in Ohio, N.Y. Times (Aug. 6, 2006) (available at http://select.nytimes.com/search/restricted/article?res=F00C17FE355B0C758CDDA10894DE404482).

15. Gal 5:22-23, one of our cherished memory verses.

16. Natl. Assn. of Evangelicals, For the Health of the Nation: An Evangelical Call to Civic Responsibility (available at http://www.nae.net/images/civic_responsibility.pdf); also in Toward an Evangelical Public Policy 363375 (Sider, Ronald J. & Knippers, Diane eds., Baker 2005)Google Scholar.

17. Id. at 6.

18. Id. at 7.

19. Id. at 7-8.

20. Id. at 7.

21. Id. at 8-9.

22. Id. at 9.

23. Id.

24. Id. at 10.

25. Id. at 11.

26. Id.

27. Id. at 12.