Like the Republican Party, Is American Christianity  Collapsing?

_www.christianpost.com_ (http://www.christianpost.com) 







 
By _Brandon  Showalter_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/author/brandon-showalter/) , CP Contributor
July 21, 2016|2:13  pm









 
 

With a contentious Repulican National Convention now underway an 
evangelical  author is arguing that "evangelical Christianity in America as we 
have 
known it  is on its way out." 
John S. Dickerson, a pastor, author and speaker who wrote the 2013 book The 
 Great Evangelical Recession, spoke with the Christian Post Tuesday. 
Conservative  Christian leaders he knows who have had cultural influence in the 
past but still  refuse to acknowledge the decline are "isolated from reality, 
because we are  already past the tipping point," he added. 
Conservative political commentators in recent months have agreed. 
The Federalist's Ben Domenech, who opined that the GOP "was going to  
Cleveland this week to die," noted in a February 23 Daily Beast  article that 
evangelicals "have for decades believed that the country was  more conservative 
than not, more Christian than not" and that bipartisan support  for 
religious freedom and the civic faith of the nation was conducive to that.  
During 
the Obama era, however, that has been shown to be a "polite fiction." 
Since coaches now get fired for praying at schools, fire chiefs lose their  
jobs for quoting scripture, and state governments fine florist shops, 
bakeries,  and other small businesses for refusing to provide products for 
same-sex wedding  ceremonies, the view evangelicals had that the Christian 
faith 
was a cornerstone  of America's greatness has all but evaporated. 
Others suggest the larger story is that evangelicals do a lousy job passing 
 on their values and orthodox beliefs to the next generation much in the 
same way  Republicans failed to address the brewing nativism and 
conspiratorial viewpoints  percolating in their own party. 
Author and American conservative columnist Rod Dreher cites Michael  
Brendan Dougherty's analysis recalling Republican anxieties during the  George 
W. 
Bush presidency. Dreher argues the same thing happening with the  
Republicans is occurring with Christians and links that unfounded political  
paranoia 
with widely misreported Pew Research findings and a "prophetic"  2009 
Christian Science Monitor piece by Michael Spencer (now deceased)  spelling a 
dismal future for evangelicals. 
Said Spencer in 2009, "This collapse [of evangelicalism] will herald the  
arrival of an anti-Christian chapter of the post-Christian West. Intolerance 
of  Christianity will rise to levels many of us have not believed possible 
in our  lifetimes, and public policy will become hostile toward evangelical  
Christianity, seeing it as the opponent of the common  good.







 
 
 
In an interview with Pastor J.D. Greear on June 29 regarding the Southern  
Baptist decline, CP highlighted the same issue raised by Dickerson, that  
"not only is evangelical influence overblown — at best they represent 10 
percent  of the population of the United States and are concentrated in certain 
regions  of the country — most do not evangelize." 
But the Pew data also leaves Dickerson and others hopeful about the future 
of  evangelicalism. 
The Pew surveys Dreher cites were misrepresented in the press;  evangelical 
numbers actually held steady and it was the mainliners who declined.  Media 
outlets skewed the data to set a false narrative about what is really  
happening. 
When the report first came out, CP reported Ethics and Religious Liberty  
President Russell Moore's sanguine remarks. It "shows that there are more 
honest  atheists in America today," meaning that people who identified as 
Christians due  to cultural expectations rather than devotion are no longer 
doing 
so. Those who  spurn Christianity don't want what Moore calls 
"almost-Christianity," that is  essentially traditions, such as mainline 
Protestants, 
that "jettison the  historic teachings of the church as soon as they become 
unfashionable." 
"The churches that are thriving are the vibrant, countercultural  
congregations that aren't afraid to not be seen as normal to the surrounding  
culture. This report actually leaves me hopeful. The Bible Belt may fall. So be 
 
it," Moore said. 
Dickerson concurs, adding, "2 Peter tells us that we have a living hope. 
And  the church is not successful based on how big it is or how loved it is by 
 society. Our hope is in the resurrection of Jesus Christ." 
"What I can also tell you anecdotally, from traveling around the country is 
 that the remnant is very sincere and we shouldn't underestimate that  
sincerity."






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