First Things
November 29, 2016
 
Recalibrating the Culture  War in 2016
 
By: Darrell  Bock
 
 

We thought that the culture war was behind us  and that we were entering a 
Brave New World in which Christians would be a  harassed minority in a 
society captive to progressive ideals of personal  liberation. November 8 
proved 
that expectation wrong in the Electoral  College—but not necessarily on the 
streets. We still live in a contested  environment. The candidate who 
flouted political correctness won. But his  victory does not necessarily 
represent 
a victory for religious conservatives—at  least, not in the way we’re used 
to thinking. There are crucial differences  between the influential 
Religious Right of the 1970s, or even that of the 2000s,  and the political 
influence and prospects of religious conservatives  today. 
Though Trump was elected by a significant  margin in the Electoral College, 
he received slightly less of the popular vote  than his opponent did, and 
significantly less than an outright majority. These  numbers tell an 
important story. The nation is deeply divided. The election  result disturbed 
as 
many Americans as it elated. Some are outraged enough to  march before Trump 
even takes the oath of office. Such demonstrations are  unprecedented, and 
they give dramatic expression to how divided we are. There is  no moral 
majority awaiting religious conservative leadership. We’ve been at this  for 
more 
than a generation, and the divisions have become more evident, not  less. Our 
“victory” will be deceiving if we do not attend to all that is going  on. 
There also exists an important division among  those who handed Trump the 
win. The evangelical Protestant vote, which has  played such an important 
role in the Republican Party’s success in recent  decades, came in three parts. 
Close to twenty percent did not vote for  Trump—through abstention, a third 
party, or a vote for Hillary. Almost  eighty-one percent did vote for 
Trump. Hidden in that large number, however, is  a crucial reality: The Trump 
vote was itself divided, with many ballots cast  ambivalently or lukewarmly. 
The back-and-forth among evangelicals before  election day shows this to have 
been the case—with one magazine laying out seven  different options for how 
to vote. 2016 was not like 2000, when evangelicals  warmly embraced George 
W. Bush’s compassionate conservatism. Trump occasioned  among evangelicals 
much debate as to whether a vote for him was a vote for good  or, at best, for 
the lesser of two evils. Post-election discussion shows the  same, with a 
recent piece in Christianity  Todayasking whether the term “evangelical” 
still has value. 
I don’t have hard data, but given my  experience, I believe the 
hold-your-nose Trump support constituted a significant  minority, if not a 
majority, of 
the evangelical vote. Evangelicals were  motivated by specific concerns—the 
Supreme Court, religious liberty, the  pro-life cause, maintaining the rule 
of law, and constitutional limits on  government—as well as by a general 
feeling that the government had intruded on  our lives in excessive ways. 
Evangelicals, by and large, were not voting for  Trump the man, nor for his 
agenda. Their support was targeted and  strategic. 
This targeted support for Trump suggests an  important change in 
evangelical voting patterns. In the old Religious Right,  voters largely 
adopted the 
conservative political agenda without exception. We  signed on to the agenda 
of tax cuts and de-regulation, as well as post–September  11 wars, because 
we saw this political agenda as part of a broader conservative  agenda that 
included our moral and religious values. 
Today, that wholesale support does not exist.  The internal fragmentation 
of what looks, from the outside, like solid support  stems from the fact that 
secular conservatism itself is in disarray. This  naturally affects the 
political judgments of religious conservatives, as it  undoubtedly affects 
secular voters. Trump’s ideological profile was, and  remains, ambiguous. The 
same is true of his cultural symbolism, which is  authoritarian and yet, in 
places, quite transgressive. Trump’s initial  appointments likewise suggest 
that the internal debate is not over, even within  Republican and conservative 
ranks. Debate among political conservatives spills  over into debates among 
religious conservatives. Sometimes the line between  power politics and 
faith can get blurry. 
There are further reasons for evangelical  ambivalence. In 2016, 
evangelicals are more likely to want to promote racial  reconciliation than 
they were 
in the 1970s, when the Religious Right burst onto  the scene. The attitude 
then was that racial issues had been mostly solved by  the changes of 1960s, 
a belief that present realities show was premature.  Similar changes have 
come about regarding women’s equality and immigration.  Today, many 
conservative Christian leaders I know will (1) disapprove of any  policy 
changes that 
divide families through deportation, (2) desire genuine  religious freedom 
across the board as a way to protect the family, and (3)  resist 
generalizations about race as a way to dictate public policy. Families  matter 
deeply to 
evangelicals, as do the multi-ethnic features of the  church. 
Thus, for the first time in a generation,  overwhelming evangelical support 
for a Republican presidential candidate  coexists with significant 
misgivings and uncertainty about some aspects of the  conservative movement. 
The 
internal fragmentation of support for Trump opens the  door for conversation 
across political divides. As odd as it sounds, the  divisiveness of this 
election has the potential to change the static dynamic of  the last few 
decades. 
The time for imposing solutions on half our country,  whether from the left 
or the right, has passed. Perhaps if evangelicals model a  better political 
discourse among ourselves, the larger society will take  note. 
So what might this new conversation look like?  And does such a 
recalibration have biblical support? 
Talking with those who find President Trump a  frightening prospect is a 
good place to begin. The following are real  illustrations of concern, 
communicated to me by African-American and Hispanic  evangelicals who are 
attuned 
to what is felt in their larger communities. There  is a mother who had to 
explain to her five-year-old a post-election racial slur  that he had heard at 
school. There are blacks who have been taunted about being  shipped back to 
Africa. There are Hispanics, including native Hispanics, who  have received 
hostile remarks about building a wall. Pro-Trump evangelicals need  to 
confront such incidents—and others, as when a hijab is ripped off of a Muslim  
woman’s neck and she is told it will be used as a noose for a hanging. We may 
be  opposed to an imposed political correctness, but evangelicals should 
seek a  respectful, multi-ethnic society, not a nativist one. The church is 
made up of  people from many nations, and God’s work was for the whole world. 
2016 provides an opportunity to recalibrate  how we see and discuss the 
culture war. For too long we have seen the battle in  purely political terms: 
If we get the right people in power, we can restore  America as a “Christian 
nation.” But that way of seeing the confrontation was  never biblical. It is 
too simplistic, abstract, and impersonal. 
Ephesians 6:12 reminds us that our battle in  the world is not with flesh 
and blood, but with rulers,  principalities, and powers. Our battle is for 
the hearts of people who are  persuaded by forces that hold them in bondage, 
sometimes unawares. The struggle,  therefore, is not merely for political 
power, but instead for words powerful  enough to bring others (and ourselves 
more fully) to see the wounds that an  excessive, undisciplined, and selfish 
freedom can inflict. The war Paul asks us  to fight is not against political 
opponents seen as an enemy to be crushed. Our  mission is rather to inspire 
our neighbors’ allegiance to a set of ideas that  make society better. 
The core of the gospel entails seeking  engagement with those who are not 
yet rooted in the gospel. The gospel depicts  Christ’s own sacrificial work 
on behalf of those who had resisted God and needed  to be rescued from 
brokenness. At its core are efforts of grace, reconciliation,  and living with 
and 
loving one’s neighbor. There are standards, but they are  seasoned with 
grace. 
Paul described himself as an ambassador for  God with a ministry of 
reconciliation. Take a look at 2 Corinthians 5:17-21. An  ambassador does not 
seek 
war, but represents the perspective of his nation and  Savior. His concern 
extends beyond one nation. He serves the city he loves,  reaches out to the 
marginalized with empathy, and shows his love tangibly by  caring for others. 
He contends for and represents the truth that he believes  holds society 
together and promotes human flourishing. 
As we seek, like Paul, to serve the city we  love, we will need a 
recalibration of battle imagery, an introduction of gospel  values, and a new 
kind of 
conversation across social, racial, and gender  divides. The pursuit of 
truth and flourishing compels us to a new kind of  relating. Evangelicals are 
uniquely placed to aid in this debate and  dialogue—provided they grasp the 
opportunity gospel values offer. To forego a  reset risks turning opportunity 
into retrenchment and mutual defeat. Delicate  times require us to reach a 
different and better place than where we have  been.

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