Conservative Christianity wanes in a shift to the center

By Adam Hamilton - Philadelphia Inquirer, Commentary
April 28, 2008
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April 28, 2008

Presidential elections often serve as measuring sticks for change in our country. If that trend holds this year, then conservative Christianity likely has passed its zenith in power and influence.

With John McCain headed for the Republican nomination, and Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama fighting it out for the Democratic nod, many conservatives feel left out.

Conservative Christianity's decline in influence mirrors the fate of the mainline church in the mid-1960s. In the late '50s and early '60s, Episcopalians, Lutherans, Methodists, Presbyterians and other mainline Christians dominated public discourse in America. They helped elect presidents and congressional leaders. But after 1964, their power and influence sharply declined.

The reasons for this decline were many, including missteps in the mainline church's approach. But it also reflected a time of social upheaval that left many in society yearning for a clear, black-and-white faith - in other words, conservative Christianity.

Now the growth of these conservative churches is likely to stall, then decline, unless they recognize the changes happening in society, which will leave them increasingly disconnected from emerging generations.

One of the most obvious signs of this is the change in political fortunes for conservatives, but I see it anecdotally in many other places as well. At one of the leading conservative seminaries in the United States, students question the doctrine of inerrancy (while the school continues to officially embrace it). I hear it from my friends who pastor large Southern Baptist churches as they express their frustration over the infighting that has racked their denomination in recent years.

I sense it in the passion of a young pastor who leads a relatively new nondenominational church. He recently led his congregation to carry signs in a crowded shopping area in Kansas City announcing that "God loves gay people." And, on this issue, I hear it when speaking with my teenage daughter's friends who attend more conservative churches, yet who reject their parents' views on homosexuality.

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Kristin Williams
press@faithinpubliclife.org
202-459-8625

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