Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 June 2018
In the early 1970s, a group of progressive evangelicals challenged the mid-century cultural conservatism of their tradition. Activists associated with Reformed, Anabaptist, and neo-evangelical institutions denounced militarism, racism, sexism, economic injustice, and President Richard Nixon's “lust for and abuse of power.” When this coalition met in 1973 to issue the Chicago Declaration, delegates effused a profound sense of optimism. The evangelical left held very real potential for political impact.
Within a decade, however, the movement seemed to be in disarray. This article suggests the centrality of identity politics to evangelicalism in the 1970s and outlines the fragmentation of the progressive evangelical coalition along gender, racial, and theological lines. The formation of the Evangelical Women's Caucus, the growing stridency of the National Black Evangelical Association, and the divergence of Anabaptist-oriented Evangelicals for Social Action and the Reformed-oriented Association for Public Justice sapped the evangelical left of needed resources and contributed to its impotence into the 1980s. The forces of identity politics, which also plagued the broader political left, were powerful enough to sabotage even a group of evangelicals with remarkably similar theological convictions, religious cultures, and critiques of conservative politics. The story of the fragmenting evangelical left, however, reflects more than broader culture's preoccupation with identity. It points to often-overlooked religious elements of the broader left. And alongside the New Left and the New Right, the evangelical left's debates over racial, sexual, and theological difference added to the disruptions of the liberal consensus in the 1960s and 1970s.
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23. Quoted in Bonnie M. Greene, “Confrontation in Black and White: Evangelicals for Social Action, Third Annual Workshop,” Vanguard (September–October 1975): 25–26.
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44. Evon Bachaus to Ron Sider, December 31, 1974, in Folder “1974 Chicago Aftermath,” ESA Archives.
45. Letter from Nancy Goodwin, HIS 25, no. 8 (May 1965): 23; Letha Scanzoni, “The Feminists and the Bible,” Christianity Today 17, no. 9 (February 2, 1973): 10–15.
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54. Hardesty to Sider, October 25, 1974, in Folder “1974 Chicago Workshop Planning,” ESA Archives. A letter from David Moberg to Ron Sider reveals the awkwardness—and good humor—with which many men in the evangelical left handled the sometimes awkward transition: “Greet all the brethren—of both genders!” See Moberg to Sider, April 15, 1974, in Folder “1974 Workshop Planning,” ESA Archives. Ron Sider, Text of opening comments, in Folder “1974 Chicago Workshop,” ESA Archives.
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107. Richard Pierard, “The Eighteenth-Century Model of British Evangelicals,” in Folder “1975 Chicago Workshop,” ESA Archives.
108. Bert Witvoet, “A Sojourner Came to Town,” Vanguard (September–October 1979): 5–7.
109. Greene, “Confrontation in Black and White,” 26; “Chicago Crisis,” Christianity Today 20, no. 1 (October 10, 1975): 69.
110. Judy Brown Hull to “Whoever is interested,” November 1975, in Box 4, Folder 7, “ESA Third Workshop (1975); An Open Letter,” ESA Collection, BGCA.
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113. Quoted in James Davison Hunter, “Shaping American Foreign Policy,” in Cromartie, Evangelicals and Foreign Policy, 77.
114. Steve Mott, “The Politics of Jesus and Our Responsibilities,” Reformed Journal (February 1976): 7–10; Isaac Rottenberg, “The Shape of the Church's Social-Economic Witness,” Reformed Journal 27 (May 1977): 16–21; Jim Wallis, “What Does Washington Have to Say to Grand Rapids?” Sojourners 6 (July 1977): 3–4; Isaac Rottenberg, “Continuing the Dialogue,” letter to the editor, Sojourners 6, no. 10 (September 1977): 38; Nicholas P. Wolterstorff, “How Does Grand Rapids Reply to Washington?” Reformed Journal 27 (October 1977): 10–14; Isaac Rottenberg, “Dimensions of the Kingdom: A Dialogue with Sojourners,” Reformed Journal 27 (November 1977): 17–21. Representatives from Sojourners and the Reformed Journal met for a two-day conversation in April 1978. For a report of the meeting, see Marlin Van Elderen, “Setting Aside Common Stereotypes,” Sojourners 7, no. 6 (June 1978): 32.
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119. See, for example, Larry Christenson, A Charismatic Approach to Social Action (Minneapolis: Bethany Fellowship, 1974), and issues of The Epworth Pulpit in the late 1970s.
120. Quoted in “Born Again!” Newsweek 88 (October 25, 1976): 68–70.
121. Webber, Robert and Bloesch, Donald, eds., The Orthodox Evangelicals: Who They Are and What They Are Saying (Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1978)Google Scholar; Webber, Robert E., Evangelicals on the Canterbury Trail (Harrisburg, Pa.: Morehouse Publishing, 1985)Google Scholar; Gillquist, Peter E., Becoming Orthodox: A Journey to the Ancient Christian Faith (Ben Lomond, Calif.: Conciliar Press, 1989)Google Scholar.
122. Wyn Wright Potter, “A Black Woman's Perspective,” Other Side 9, no. 4 (July–August 1973): 28–29. Also see “Report from Women's Meeting,” Update (April 19, 1982): 1, copy in Box VII, Sojourners Community, Sojourners Collection, Wheaton College Special Collections.
123. Adams, Jay E., Christian Counselor's Manual (Phillipsburg, N.J.: Presbyterian and Reformed, 1973)Google Scholar; Collins, Gary R., Effective Counseling (Carol Stream, Ill.: Creation House, 1972)Google Scholar; Dobson, James, Hide or Seek: Building Self-Esteem in Your Child (Old Tappan, N.J.: Fleming H. Revell, 1974)Google Scholar; Collins, Gary R., The Rebuilding of Psychology: An Integration of Psychology and Christianity (Wheaton, Ill.: Tyndale, 1977)Google Scholar; Narramore, Bruce, You’re Someone Special (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1978)Google Scholar.
124. “Proposals from the Women's Caucus,” November 1975, Box 2, Folder 15, “Thanksgiving Workshop, Evangelicals for Social Action (1974): Action Proposals n.d.,” ESA Collection, BGCA.
125. Richard Quebedeaux, Worldly Evangelicals (San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1978), 111.
126. See, for example, Jay E. Adams, Competent to Counsel (Phillipsburg, N.J.: Presbyterian and Reformed, 1970); Adams, Christian Counselor's Manual; Collins, Effective Counseling; Dobson, Hide or Seek; M. Wagner, The Sensation of Being Somebody: Building an Adequate Self-Concept (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1975); Larry Crabb, Basic Principles of Biblical Counseling (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1975); Collins, The Rebuilding of Psychology; Jay E. Adams, Lectures on Counseling (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1977); and Narramore, You’re Someone Special.
127. Richard Quebedeaux, Young Evangelicals: Revolution in Orthodoxy (New York: Harper and Row, 1974), 60.
128. Jim Wallis, “Conversion,” Sojourners 7, no. 5 (May 1978): 12.
129. Robert K. Johnston, Evangelicals at an Impasse: Biblical Authority in Practice (Atlanta: John Knox, 1979), 77–112.
130. Harold Lindsell, “Evangelicalism's Golden Age,” Moody Monthly (December 1985): 114.
131. Carl F. H. Henry, Evangelicals in Search of Identity (Waco, Tex.: Word Books, 1976), 13; “Interview: Carl Henry on Evangelical Identity,” Sojourners 5, no. 4 (April 1976): 27; see also Carl Henry, “Footnotes: Strife over Social Concerns,” Christianity Today 20, no. 18 (June 4, 1976): 944–45; “The House Divided: An Interview with Carl Henry” Eternity 27, no. 10 (October 1976): 36–39.
132. Garry Wills, “Born-Again Politics,” New York Times Magazine (August 1, 1976): 8–9; Michael Novak, “The Hidden Religious Majority,” Washington Post, April 4, 1976, 29; “Born Again! The Evangelicals,” Newsweek (October 25, 1976).
133. Freston, Paul, Evangelical Christianity and Democracy in the Global South (New York: Oxford University Press, 2008), 32 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.