Some equate “American evangelicalism” with a far right-wing political movement.
They base this on a combination of two factors:
First, many leading spokespersons for far-right wing American politics call themselves “evangelicals.”
This has been going on since fundamentalists Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson established movements within American evangelicalism to promote conservative social and political causes.
I was not alone among evangelicals who were shocked when Jerry Falwell, a noted fundamentalist critic of Billy Graham, began calling himself “evangelical.”
Then, the national secular media began inviting Falwell onto their television shows to speak for “American evangelicals.”
Many non-fundamentalist evangelicals spoke up as best we could against permitting him and his ilk to represent us all. But the bandwagon rolled on and, we felt, over us.
Today, I am told, it is “too late” to rescue the label “evangelical” from this popular perception of an ultra-conservative religious belief system (what used to be known as “fundamentalism”) and ultra-conservative “Christian” political ideology (close to what I knew as a teenager as the ideology of the John Birch Society).
Others, including numerous Protestant Christians, still identify as “evangelical” without in any way identifying with or participating in the so-called Religious Right or fundamentalist theology.
They do not combine ultra-conservative politics with our nonfundamentalist but relatively conservative Christian faith.
They keep social and political beliefs and values informed by, but separate from, our devotion and worship.
They recognize that a person can be a devout Christian (“God-fearing, Bible-believing, Jesus-loving”) and have very different social and political beliefs from others like us.
They do not connect our Christian faith inextricably to any political ideology or movement.
They accept diversity, even pluralism, of social-political beliefs within “American evangelicalism” (to say nothing of other religious identities).
Sociologists of religion have studied “American evangelicals,” using spirituality and theology as their definition, and found that they are extremely diverse when it comes to political views and party affiliation.
Across the U.S., one can easily identify influential evangelical organizations and institutions that do not, in any way, identify themselves formally or informally with any political party, ideology or movement.
They include the colleges and universities of the Christian College Consortium and most in the Coalition of Christian Colleges and Universities. They include aid organizations, such as World Relief and World Vision.
They include seminaries that identify as evangelical, including arguably the largest seminary in the U.S. – Fuller Theological Seminary.
They include influential publishers, such as Zondervan, Eerdmans, InterVarsity Press, Baker and others.
They include parachurch organizations, such as Youth for Christ, the National Association of Evangelicals (approximately 50 Protestant denominations!), the Evangelical Theological Society and InterVarsity Christian Fellowship.
So, what makes an individual, church or organization “evangelical?”
Like many useful and even unavoidable labels, this one is “essentially contested.”
Definitions range from extremely loose (“like Billy Graham”) to extremely tight and narrow (belief in the inerrancy of the Bible).
The debate over “evangelical identity” will never end with total agreement. But we cannot allow media to define it.
Nor can we allow self-appointed spokesmen for a certain segment of self-identified evangelicals to speak for all.
According to the scholars who have studied “American evangelicalism,” it is a spiritual-theological identity and ethos (hardly a “movement”) rooted in the Protestant Reformation, the Pietist movement (which some have called the “Second Reformation”), revivalism (First and Second Great Awakenings) and the early (pre-1925) fundamentalist reaction against liberal Protestantism.
In post-World War II American context, nobody has stamped “American evangelicalism” more personally and spiritually-theologically than Billy Graham.
Scholars of “American evangelicalism” tend to identify it as a relatively theologically conservative (theologically non-liberal) form of Protestantism that emphasizes:
- The Bible as the written Word of God, authoritative for Christian faith and life
- Conversion to Christ by conscious repentance and faith as crucial to a mature and authentic Christian existence
- Christ’s atoning death on the cross as the only means of salvation (reconciliation with God)
- Some vision and measure of activism to transform the world in light of the vision of the Kingdom of God
This includes millions of people, including many who have no particular interest in politics and some who are actively involved in “left wing” social and political causes.
An analogy to the problem of the contemporary misuse, even distortion, of “American evangelicalism” is the Reformed identity.
“Reformed” is being co-opted by fundamentalist Calvinists through a large, youth-oriented movement called the “Young, Restless, Reformed Movement” on college and university campuses.
Slowly but surely “Reformed” – a Protestant identity going back to the Reformation itself – is being identified in the popular mind with “five-point Calvinism” combined with belief in “complementarianism” (Christian females should submit to males in the home and in the church) and “biblical inerrancy.”
This more than irks and irritates Reformed theologians and church leaders who are not five-point Calvinists, complementarians or biblical inerrantists.
“Reformed” is a spiritual-theological identity not tied to “five-point Calvinism” and certainly not tied to complementarianism or belief in biblical inerrancy.
To those who tell me I should give up calling myself “evangelical” because I’m not part of the Religious Right and not a fundamentalist theologically, I ask, “Do you believe historically Reformed churches, denominations, institutions ought to give up their Reformed identity just because most people have come to equate that with the Young, Restless, Reformed Movement of five-point Calvinism largely made up of people with no Reformed ecclesiology or spiritual-theological ethos?”
I could ask the same about the identity and label “Baptist.”
In large swaths of the U.S., especially the upper Midwest, Northeast and West Coast, “Baptist” is widely thought of – in the popular mind and in the press – as nearly identical with fundamentalism and even right-wing religiously informed politics.
Many, perhaps most, Baptist churches in large urban areas of those parts of the country have given up using the label “Baptist” even as they remain Baptist in faith and practice.
However, across the South and in “border states,” “Baptist” remains a strong, if diverse identity.
Moderate Baptists struggle to maintain their Baptist identity – pointing back to Baptist history – in the face of the rising tide of Baptist fundamentalism and the popular image of Baptists as religious extremists.
To moderate Baptists who lump all “American evangelicals” together I say, “Look to your own ‘house.'”
I have been an evangelical Christian all my life and am not willing to be lumped together with evangelicals who are really also fundamentalists on a right-wing political binge, or surrender my evangelical identity because of them and the media’s mindless cooperation with them (in narrowing the label “evangelical” down to them).
Roger Olson is the Foy Valentine professor of Christian theology and ethics at George W. Truett Theological Seminary in Waco, Texas. He is the author of numerous books, including “Against Calvinism” and “The Story of Christian Theology.” This article is edited from a longer version that first appeared on his blog. It is used with permission.
Roger Olson is the Foy Valentine professor of Christian theology and ethics at George W. Truett Theological Seminary in Waco, Texas. He is the author of numerous books, including “Counterfeit Christianity” and “The Story of Christian Theology.”