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Republican Theology - The Civil Religion of American Evangelicals (Hardcover)
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Republican Theology - The Civil Religion of American Evangelicals (Hardcover)
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As an electoral bloc, contemporary white evangelical Christians
maintain a remarkable ideological and partisan conformity, perhaps
unmatched by any other community outside of African Americans.
Historically, evangelicals have supported various political
parties, but their approach to civil religion, or the way that they
apply the spiritual to the public realm, has, as Republican
Theology argues, been consistent in its substance since the
founding of the nation. Put simply, this civil religion holds that
limited government and a free-market are essential to the
cultivation of Christian virtue, while the livelihood of the
republic depends on the virtue of its citizens. While evangelicals
have long promoted conservative moral causes, from temperance and
anti-obscenity in the nineteenth century to abstinence education in
the twentieth, they have also aligned themselves on many other
seemingly unrelated agendas: in support of the Revolution in the
1770s, on antislavery in the 1820s, against labor unionism in the
1880s, against the New Deal in the 1930s, on assertive
anticommunism in the 1950s (a major theme in Billy Graham's early
sermons), and in favor of deregulation and lower taxes in the
1980s.
As Benjamin T. Lynerd contends, the rise of the "New Right"
movement at the end of the twentieth century had as much to do with
small-government ideology as with a recovery of traditional
morality. This libertarian ethos combined with restrictive public
moralism is conflicted, and it creates friction both within the New
Right alliance and within the church, particularly among
evangelicals interested in social justice. Still, it has formed the
entire subtext of evangelical participation in American politics
from the 1770s into the twenty-first century. Lynerd looks at the
evolution of evangelical civil religion, or "republican theology"
to demonstrate how evangelicals navigate this logic.
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