(http://www.scienceandreligiontoday.com/) _e Record_ 
(http://www.scienceandreligiontoday.com/topic/on-the-record/)  

 
 
 
 
Nov 1,  2011 
_Why Evangelicals Believe Weird Things_ 
(http://www.scienceandreligiontoday.com/2011/11/01/why-evangelicals-believe-weird-things/)
 
 
>From _Jonathan Dudley_ (http://jonathan-dudley.com/) , a graduate of Yale 
Divinity School, a  student at The Johns Hopkins University School of 
Medicine, and the author of  Broken Words: The Abuse of Science and Faith in 
American  Politics: 
In a recent _op-ed in The New York Times_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/18/opinion/the-evangelical-rejection-of-re
ason.html?_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=tha212) , Karl  Giberson and Randall 
Stephens lamented “the evangelical 
rejection of reason.”  The lay evangelical community, they explain, would 
rather get its science from  folks like the young-Earth creationist Ken Ham 
than from the evolution-believing  NIH director Francis Collins, even though 
both are evangelicals. 
As someone raised in the evangelical community, I am poignantly aware of 
the  problem they describe. I grew up listening to James Dobson on the radio, 
reading  books by Ken Ham, and learning to view the environmental movement 
as a left-wing  conspiracy. I was shocked, then, when upon going off to study 
biology at an  evangelical college, I discovered that the vast majority of 
professors at such  colleges accept evolution and support the environmental 
movement. 
Why is there such a disconnect between the lay evangelical community and 
the  best evangelical scholars when it comes to science? In my book _Broken 
Words: The Abuse of Science and Faith in American  Politics_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Broken-Words-Science-American-Politics/dp/0385525265/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpi_
1) , in addition to critiquing popular evangelical  beliefs, I also explore 
the sources of this discrepancy. 
Lay evangelicals evaluate the arguments made by “experts” in a manner  
different from many non-evangelicals. The latter will often ask: How 
prestigious  is her academic pedigree? Is she representing the consensus of 
similarly  
credentialed experts? Insofar as I can understand her arguments, do they  
convince me? Lay evangelicals ask different questions: How good of a 
Christian  is this guy? (Or, in evangelical parlance, “How is his walk with the 
LORD?
”) How  closely do his arguments line up with my understanding of the 
Bible? Is this guy  one of us? 
Evangelicals also tend to come under the sway of those with the biggest  
microphones, not the best arguments. Although many evangelical scholars are 
also  capable of projecting piety, they rarely have the resources to flood the 
 airwaves or the communication skills to connect with the average believer. 
 What’s more, evangelical scholars, despite often lamenting the 
intellectual  problems with the lay community, are generally more interested in 
pursuing  scholarship than becoming the type of rousing, populist leader 
necessary 
to  redirect evangelical Christianity. 
The evangelical community also keeps its scholars in check. When a college’
s  base of donors, prospective students, and even board of trustees are made 
up of  lay evangelicals, this places severe limits on what its scholars can 
say  publicly. This fact became apparent at my alma mater, Calvin College, 
when  public outcry and the powers that be combined to _silence two scholars 
advocating_ (http://www.thebanner.org/news/article/?id=3032)  the 
acceptance  of human evolution. 
A final major source of this disconnect is the evangelical community’s  
understanding of the Bible. Most lay evangelicals understand the Bible as  
offering all they need to know on matters ranging from the origin of species to 
 
imminent destruction of the Earth. This notion makes experts unnecessary to 
form  valid beliefs. But it is also untenable; what communities think is 
the “clear  teaching of the Bible” varies throughout time and among cultures 
in a manner  that can be directly traced to different starting beliefs. How 
lay evangelicals  interpret the Bible, ultimately, reflects how those they 
take as authority  figures interpret it. 
The disconnect between lay evangelicals and scholars is a problem with  
tremendous consequences, both for politics and for the level of scientific  
literacy in America. The vast majority of evangelicals are lay people, and 
thus,  their beliefs, and not those of their scholars, are what end up 
mattering 
 politically. What the lay evangelical community believes about evolution 
or  global warming impacts which GOP candidates will succeed (Jon Huntsman 
doomed  his campaign by voicing his belief in science on both issues). It 
impacts how  much support will exist in the House and Senate for legislation 
dealing with  climate change. It impacts what local school boards will teach in 
public schools  about human origins. 
It’s a problem, therefore, that affects every American. The first step to  
addressing it is to understand that. Secular America often laments the 
impact of  evangelicals in politics, thinking their anti-intellectualism is 
inherent in  evangelical Christianity. But as the community’s scholars 
demonstrate, it  doesn’t have to be this way. The real question is how to 
replace the 
James  Dobsons and Ken Hams of the world with their more qualified 
evangelical  counterparts.


-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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