3.1 You're Seeing Things
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3.2 Loading the Cultural Weapon
6. Neo-evangelicalism was birthed in the context of a religious war. You have likely heard of the Scopes Trial in 1925. A teacher was taken to trial for teaching the theory of evolution. It marked a sort of turning point in American culture. From that point on, evolution would be the culturally dominant theory of human origins.
Evolution was just one part of "modernism" that these new evangelicals were responding to. The late 1800s had seen all sorts of theories come out of Germany about the Bible. They questioned everything from the inspiration of the Bible to the divinity of Jesus.
Neo-evangelicalism was founded in part to fight for the Bible. New seminaries like Fuller Theological Seminary would be founded. Christianity Today would be sent free to almost every pastor in America, including a regular diet pushing back on these modern religious ideas. In 1976, the editor of Christianity Today, Harold Lindsell, would call this "the Battle for the Bible." [1] In 1972, Josh McDowell would write a book similar in its feel: Evidence That Demands a Verdict. [2]
The fight against evolution similarly started to ramp back up in 1961 when Henry Morris published a book called The Genesis Flood. [3] I have some friends who just returned from the Grand Canyon, and they overheard a Christian high school teacher presenting some of the ideas from that book to some high school students. "Scientists think the Canyon developed gradually over millions of years of erosion, but it was really created as part of the Flood less than 5000 years ago."
7. These are all part of the battle lines drawn in the second half of the twentieth century. Lindsell would stir up the "inerrancy debates" of the 1980s and 90s. He was strongly disturbed that Fuller removed the word inerrancy from its statement on the Bible. Over time, a purge would ensue among conservative evangelical schools and institutions, with the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy (1978) setting the boundary lines of orthodoxy. Faculty who couldn't sign it found themselves without a job.
A couple observations. While these "fighters" were growing a larger and larger following, they did not hold power in the larger society. Later on, some fought to get "intelligent design" in the public schools but were eventually rebuffed as "religious" rather than "scientific." Similarly, those who ran the biblical studies programs at the most powerful universities and the Society of Biblical Literature largely did not give Lindsell's ideas the time of day.
I would say that, in general, these forces were dismissed by the power centers of culture for fifty years and more. When people feel dismissed and mocked for decades, they don't just look for truth. If they manage to get in power, they often get pay back.
8. The Reagan presidency marked a major shift in the religious culture wars. Reagan was the hero. While Jimmy Carter had been personally religious, Reagan embodied cultural Christianity. He revived the spirit of the 50s, when "In God We Trust" was put on the dollar bill and "One Nation Under God" was added to the pledge of allegiance.
But for our purposes, the most significant outcome was the fusing of evangelicalism with Republicanism. Evangelicals had always leaned Republican. They had overwhelmingly supported President Nixon, for example. Kristen Kobes du Mez has argued that there was always a tendency for evangelicals to like strong men. [4] Reagan embodied the cowboy of evangelical culture.
How did this fusion happen?
It happened in large part through the efforts of fundamentalists like Jerry Falwell. Prior to Reagan, Falwell had spent most of his political energies pushing back against the government's attempt to integrate the South. For example, he weighed in heavily on the IRS' threat to take away Bob Jones' tax exempt status because of its rules against interracial dating and other similar policies.
He framed this opposition to the government as religious freedom. Bob Jones used verses from the book of Ezra to argue that God opposed the integration of the races. Of course Ezra was addressing the mingling of Israelite faith with the religions of the surrounding peoples, not making a manifesto on racial separation.
9. Segregation was not going to be a winning issue. But the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision on abortion in 1973 provided just what the doctor ordered. Southern Baptists like Falwell had not originally been opposed to abortion. Nine days after the decision, the Baptist Press hailed the decision as a win for religious liberty. That year, the former president of the Southern Baptist Convention, W. A. Criswell, wrote, "I have always felt that it was only after a child was born and had a life separate from its mother that it became an individual person." He would radically change his position a decade or so later.
In 1979, Jerry Falwell started the "Moral Majority," and a movement was born. Abortion became the key issue, but the movement also pushed for having prayer in the schools and having the Ten Commandments prominently displayed in schools and courthouses. Clearly, the overwhelming majority of evangelicals today genuinely believe that abortion is wrong. But the birth of this movement did involve some political calculation. [5]
Over time, this would become the issue that made it impossible for the majority of white evangelicals to vote for a Democrat. It also would become a path toward villainizing the Democratic Party as the party of a new Holocaust. Democrats would understandably be thought of as "baby killers" by millions of evangelicals.
It is easy to see how over time, the Republican Party could virtually have a blank check to do whatever it might want -- evangelicals would never vote for the other side.
10. Another key player in the late twentieth century was D. James Kennedy of Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. I grew up in Fort Lauderdale and so spent my teen years in the shadow of his growing influence. Kennedy held to a soft form of what might be called "dominionism." He believed that Christianity should work hard to "reclaim America for Christ." [6]
Note the word "reclaim." There is an assumption here that America was founded as a Christian nation. The Puritans of the 1600s feature large as America's true origins. The Enlightenment influence on the Founding Fathers is largely dismissed as they are portrayed as deep men of faith. A key figure in this interpretation today is David Barton, a popular Christian speaker and writer on the subject.
Much of what is happening currently under the second Trump administration is the enactment of these goals that have been simmering and growing under the surface of American culture within evangelicalism. The famed Project 2025 is a roadmap to see many of these values enacted within American society from the top down. It can be seen as the culmination of fifty years of hoping and planning.
The question for us in this chapter is, how much of these developments was truly biblical, and how much is actually cultural?
11. Evolution, inerrancy, abortion, reclaiming America. The family. Here, the main figure beyond question was James Dobson, whose organization Focus on the Family is still going strong almost fifty years after its founding in 1977. Although he started giving parenting and family advice (e.g., Dare to Discipline, and Love Must Be Tough), he would increasingly wade more and more into the poltical arena, especially on the question of abortion. [7]
Then the Supreme Court would legalize same-sex marriage in 2015. This change in the culture had been percolating in movies and the arts, but it suddenly became the law of the land. Evangelical Christians experienced this as a seismic shift, and the issue would end up ripping several denominations asunder, most recently the United Methodist Church.
The question of transgenderism followed swiftly at hand. Evangelicals felt like the culture was rushing headlong down a cliff like the pigs in the story of the Gerasene demoniac. For those who believed the United States was once a Christian nation, the decline seemed especially precipitous. Now Democrats were not only baby killers but "child mutilators" as well.
The question of gender has awakened another of fundamentalism's earlier streams, namely, the question of what a man and a woman actually are. As early as 1961, Bill Gothard had founded the Institute in Basic Youth Conflicts, which had presented a strongly patriarchal view of the home. [8] Some of these views have come back with a vengeance in this current climate.They were always lurking. In 1987, the Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood was founded. The debate over women in ministry and leadership has become especially acute in these last years. Views that were far out of the mainstream about women in the military or the appropriateness of women in leadership have suddenly come under discussion in the public sphere.
Pete Hegseth, the current "Secretary of War," for example, has said that women should not be in combat, and his ties to the dominionist pastor Doug Wilson are well known. Wilson was recently asked to preach at the Pentagon at Hegseth's personal invitation. The alignment of the second Trump administration with these fundamentalist streams is striking. For many if not most evangelicals, it is a matter of celebration. For many others, it is very alarming.
Clearly, we are living in a time of an immense cultural torrent. These forces are swirling around us and coming at us from every side. Humans are not good at complexity or nuance. We are prone to group thinking and binary thinking, "us-them" thinking. So we will often find ourselves on one side or the other -- sides whose contours are constantly changing, often without us even realizing it.
But what does the Bible really say? What should a citizen of the kingdom think about these things, rather than a cultural Christian swept away by the tidal forces?
[1] Harold Lindsell, The Battle for the Bible (Zondervan, 1976).
[2] Josh McDowell, Evidence That Demands a Verdict: Historical Evidences for the Christian Faith (Campus Crusade for Christ, 1972).
[3] Henry Morris and John Whitcomb, The Genesis Flood: The Biblical Record and Its Scientific Implications (P & R, 1961). In 1970, Morris founded the "Institute for Creation Research," which has been sponsoring debates and literature for over fifty years. I've attended or listened to a few. In more recent times, Ken Ham founded Answers in Genesis, the organization that created the Ark Encounter and Creation Museum in Kentucky.
[4] Kristen Kobes du Mez, Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation (Liveright, 2021).
[5] Francis Schaeffer and Catholic opposition to abortion also played a significant role in turning the tide of religious opinion against abortion. See Schaeffer's Whatever Happened to the Human Race? (Crossway, 1979).
[6] In this, he was significantly influenced by Rousas John Rushdoony, who thought that America should be governed by biblical law -- including Old Testament law. Rushdoony was thus the father of "Christian Reconstructionism."
A parallel movement is the "Seven Mountain Mandate," going back to the 1970s. Christianity should not only dominate religion but the family, education, government, media, arts & entertainment, and business.
[7] Almost ten years later in 1986, Randall Terry would found Operation Rescue, which took an even more aggressive stance toward stopping abortion.
[8] Gothard himself was forced to resign from his own organization in 2016 amid serious allegations of sexual harassment and abuse.
1. What is Evangelicalism?
1.1 Revivals of the 1700s and 1800s
1.2 The "New" Evangelicalism
1.3 The Poltical Takeover



