David Brooks: The Dissenters Trying to Save Evangelicalism From Itself [View all]
New York Times
Think of your 12 closest friends. These are the people you vacation with, talk about your problems with, do life with in the most intimate and meaningful ways. Now imagine if six of those people suddenly took a political or public position you found utterly vile. Now imagine learning that those six people think that your position is utterly vile. You would suddenly realize that the people you thought you knew best and cared about most had actually been total strangers all along. You would feel disoriented, disturbed, unmoored. Your life would change.
This is what has happened over the past six years to millions of American Christians, especially evangelicals. There have been three big issues that have profoundly divided them: the white evangelical embrace of Donald Trump, sex abuse scandals in evangelical churches and parachurch organizations, and attitudes about race relations, especially after the killing of George Floyd.
Thabiti Anyabwile pastors the largely Black Anacostia River Church in Washington, D.C. Its been at times agonizing and bewildering, he says. My entire relationship landscape has been rearranged. Ive lost 20-year friendships. Ive had great distance inserted into relationships that were once close and I thought would be close for life. Ive grieved.
Tim Dalrymple is president of the prominent evangelical magazine Christianity Today, which called for Trumps removal from office after his first impeachment. As an evangelical, Ive found the last five years to be shocking, disorienting and deeply disheartening, he says. One of the most surprising elements is that Ive realized that the people who I used to stand shoulder to shoulder with on almost every issue, I now realize that we are separated by a yawning chasm of mutual incomprehension. I would never have thought that could have happened so quickly.