paradox wrote: ↑November 15th, 2020, 11:39 pm
stokesjokes wrote: ↑November 15th, 2020, 11:36 pm
Best I can find is that 2/3 of white evangelicals voted for Reagan in 1980, compared to 80% for Trump in 2016. This doesn’t really tell us anything useful regarding the points in that article, because it is about policy support- research is showing that white evangelical Christians basically say they agree with everything from the Republican Party from a policy standpoint. They’re not talking about which candidates they support, but the positions themselves.
Are you aware of the fact that Bill Clinton won Evangelical vote back in 1996? Bottom line is that working people care about jobs and paying bills--some happen to be Evangelicals.
Right, and what the research is saying is that kind of thing would be impossible in today’s climate. The evangelical church is being formed and molded into the evangelical/Republican church.
Some of French’s concerns about this:
“The backlash [from leaving the GOP] was so intense that I remember telling my wife that it was easier being a Republican Christian in Cambridge, Massachusetts than being an independent Christian in Columbia, Tennessee. In my entire life, I had not experienced direct and personal hatred and intolerance like I experienced from other Christians, including Christians who’d known me for decades.“
“What’s the cultural effect of a very, very Republican Christianity? It’s way too simple to say that it impairs the ability of Christians to reach their friends and neighbors. In some places it enhances the church’s appeal and integrates Christians within their community. In other places it creates a host of challenges and needlessly alienates Christians from their fellow citizens.“
“This unity of church and party imbues all political disputes with an intensity far beyond their true eternal weight, and it does so on issues up and down the Republican platform, including on matters far beyond the classic culture war issues that allegedly define and motivate Evangelical political involvement. “
“When party identification merges with church identification, political cohesion fosters religious intolerance. “