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Why evangelicals must learn to think like a minority
The San Francisco Examiner ^ | 4/28/2009 | Logan Paul Gage

Posted on 05/01/2009 12:39:03 PM PDT by Alex Murphy

Newsflash: Evangelicals must face a new reality. No, not the advent of the Obama administration but the reality that they are a minority.

On one hand, this is not new at all. Misperceptions notwithstanding, evangelical values didn’t exactly dominate America’s culture or politics during “the last eight years.” Daily Kos prophesies of theocracy failed to materialize.

Yet a shift has occurred; like Earth’s rotation, barely noticeable.

According to the 2009 American Religious Identification Survey, the percentage of self-identifying Christians has steadily declined for almost two decades, dropping 10 percent. During the same period, the percentage of Americans claiming no religious affiliation nearly doubled, rising to 15 percent.

Newsweek’s Pulitzer Prize-winning editor Jon Meacham gave a thoughtful, if predictable, response, writing of “The End of Christian America.” Yet the philosophy he attacks, that of the old-guard Religious Right, as seen in The Moral Majority, vanished 15 years ago in most evangelical circles.

The news here is not that Evangelicals must recognize their Winthropian vision of “A City on a Hill” as a pipe dream. Ask your average evangelical if they want to see a Christian takeover of government and an implementation of “Christian laws” and you are likely to hear laughter.

No. The news stirring the collective evangelical consciousness is that they must assume a new mindset in the public square. Americans’ religious beliefs are becoming more polarized, and without “minority thinking” Evangelicals may lose many of the freedoms they cherish.

The history of Protestants in American public education reveals the imperative nature of this Gestalt shift.

Evangelicals’ advocacy for school vouchers has been rebuffed, often because vouchers run afoul of Blaine Amendments. Most states have one. They stipulate that no money “shall be appropriated to, or used by, or in aid of any sectarian, church, or denominational school.”

In the mid-19th century, tax-funded public schools took over Northern education. Most Protestants liked public education as long as that didn’t mean secularized education. They were pleased with a public system which taught the King James Bible and a milquetoast Protestantism.

To be fair, many Evangelicals, especially Calvinists, saw the public school movement as a Unitarian watering-down of Protestantism. But public schools won the day.

By the 1870s, many Protestants feared what the growing number of Catholic immigrants might mean for public, supposedly nonsectarian — read: Protestant — education.

Then-House Speaker James G. Blaine decided to exploit this angst. Attempting to invigorate Northern Protestant voters, Blaine pushed an amendment — followed by similar state amendments — prohibiting “sectarian” schools from receiving tax money. Protestants were in the majority and the state funded their “public” schools, while barring taxpayer funds from Catholic schools.

This was a dual error. First, it relied upon what Marvin Olasky and others dub “the myth of neutrality” — that neutral-worldview education can exist when teaching kids how to view the world.

Second, and here lies the lesson for Evangelicals today, the Blaine Amendment movement was myopic: It failed to see that one day even those wanting Protestant-infused public education may not be in power.

Today, parents wanting to educate children according to a Protestant worldview must overcome an obstacle their forbearers erected; redeeming a voucher at a religious school is likely against their state’s constitution.

Similarly, if the 2009 ARIS teaches Evangelicals anything, it is not that Christian America just died, whatever that means.

The real lesson, the big picture, is that America is rapidly losing a shared frame of reference, and Evangelicals must think ahead. They must see through the secular stereotype of Evangelicals behind all the levers of power and view themselves as a minority that they might ensure religious freedom for all.


TOPICS: Evangelical Christian; Ministry/Outreach; Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: evangelical; evangelicalchristian
The news here is not that Evangelicals must recognize their Winthropian vision of “A City on a Hill” as a pipe dream. Ask your average evangelical if they want to see a Christian takeover of government and an implementation of “Christian laws” and you are likely to hear laughter....

....In the mid-19th century, tax-funded public schools took over Northern education. Most Protestants liked public education as long as that didn’t mean secularized education. They were pleased with a public system which taught the King James Bible and a milquetoast Protestantism.

To be fair, many Evangelicals, especially Calvinists, saw the public school movement as a Unitarian watering-down of Protestantism. But public schools won the day.

1 posted on 05/01/2009 12:39:04 PM PDT by Alex Murphy
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To: Alex Murphy
Why evangelicals must learn to think like a minority

You mean form an alliance that makes absolutely no sense with groups you have nothing natural in common with and then make an air-tight voting bloc with them that nothing can crack?

Since the environmentalists, theabortionists, and the "gays" are already taken I suppose evangelicals should fish for bestialists, the Mafia, and crooked boxing promoters.

2 posted on 05/01/2009 12:46:30 PM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (Ve'et-zakhar lo' tishkav mishkevei 'ishah; to`evah hi'.)
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To: Alex Murphy

Christians are a definite minority in America. Especially REAL born again Christians (there is no other kind). Many claim to be Christian, but they simply are not. They may assent to the idea of God, they may say “sure, I believe in Jesus and all that stuff”, but that’s about the limit of their faith. They are people of the world.

Conservatives (and particularly Christians) need to realize that there, sadly, is no conservative majority. Not anymore, not in a long time. The rose colored glasses need to come off.


3 posted on 05/01/2009 12:49:25 PM PDT by SandWMan (Even if you can't legislate morality, you can legislate morally.)
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To: SandWMan
During the same period, the percentage of Americans claiming no religious affiliation nearly doubled, rising to 15 percent.

Some of us among that 15% are simply turned off by organized religion, especially snake oil salesman like Hucksterbee who hate Mormons and Catholics while preaching tolerance for Marxist illegal alien invaders, CINO's like the Kennedy family who try to dress up their socialist dogma in Faux Christianity and the very well organized state church who try to claim their ulta-intolerant dogmas are really not a religion at all.

4 posted on 05/01/2009 12:58:03 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Are there any men left in Washington? Or, are there only cowards? Ahmad Shah Massoud)
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To: Alex Murphy
America is rapidly losing a shared frame of reference

This is an important statement.

We have been able to absorb people from every nation and every religion into a more or less cohesive whole, not by magic, but because of a loose ideological unity that transcends surface "diversities".

It has never been necessary for everyone to agree for it to work, but it required the loose agreement on the part of a significant number, a critical mass, to hold the rest together. That loose ideological unity has been based on the founding "classic liberal" ideals rooted in a Christian understanding of man, God, and morality.

Cut away the classic liberal ideals, cut away the Christian foundation underlying those ideals, and there is nothing to hold us together as a people. It is not necessary for everyone to agree, with an earnest core of believers the ship holds together. But there is a point at which, as the core gets smaller and more marginalized, the thing flies apart. America isn't an ethnicity, it is a moral alliance before it is anything else.

When we say "one nation under God" we are saying more than we know. Remove God from the equation and this nation unravels within a generation.

5 posted on 05/01/2009 1:58:49 PM PDT by marron
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To: marron
When we say "one nation under God" we are saying more than we know. Remove God from the equation and this nation unravels within a generation.

I could not help but to be reminded of the Israelites during the time of the Judges. Every few generations they needed a leader to save them from their oppressors who would also bring them back to the Lord. Only to fall away from God within a generation or two.

When I think about Americas seemingly fast decline from prominence around the world, I need look no further then our devotion to the One and true God. We as a nation have turned from Him and embraced the pagan Gods of the nations around us. For this we, like the Israelites, will end up under the control of the very pagans we seem to emulate.
6 posted on 05/05/2009 7:13:51 PM PDT by OneVike (Just a Christian waiting to go home)
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