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May 21, 2007

Boomer Evangelicals Are Less Political

Falwell's death brings out the obits on evangelical political activity.

With the death of Jerry Falwell, The New York Times reports that old-school political activism has also died among evangelicals. The piece says that evangelicals are getting more interested in issues with widespread appeal, like AIDS and the environment, and losing their bombast when it comes to hot-button issues like abortion. See Rick Warren, Bill Hybels, and Rich Cizik.

It's nothing new really. The story's been written dozens of times. But, some stats may be new to readers. The Times reports,

John C. Green, a senior fellow at the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life ... placed evangelicals into three camps - traditionalist, centrist and modernist - based on the how rigidly they adhered to their beliefs and their willingness to adapt them to a changing world. The traditionalists are evangelicals who are usually labeled as the Christian right, while the centrists might be represented by the newer breed of evangelical leaders, who remain socially and theologically quite conservative but have mostly sought to avoid politics. The two camps are roughly the same size, each representing 40 to 50 percent of the total.

Experts agree, though, that the centrist camp is growing

If it's true that centrist evangelicals are a growing group, what do we make Ohio's patriot pastors, Dobson's increased political activity, and the Family Research Council's new position as evangelicals' main lobbying group?

Comments

Just because Dobson, FRC, and others are still making a lot of noise-- I think we can say that doesn't necessarily mean they are representative of evangelicalism. And while these groups release a lot of press statements and are topics in media, don't forget that our "centrist" representative Rick Warren is author of one of the best selling books of all time. Doesn't that say something about the political shift?