A
Shift Among the Evangelicals
Southern Baptists elect new Leader
by E. J. Dionne Jr.
Originally published by the Washington Post
Sometimes
very important elections receive very little attention.
When
the Southern Baptist Convention elected the Rev. Frank Page as
the group's president at its meeting this week in Greensboro,
N.C., the news appeared on the back pages of most secular newspapers
-- or it didn't appear at all.
But Page's
upset victory could be very significant, both to the nation's
religious life and to politics. He defeated candidates supported
by the convention's staunchly conservative establishment, which
has dominated the organization since the mid-1980s. His triumph
is one of many signs that new breezes are blowing through the
broader evangelical Christian world.
No, this is
not some liberal victory. Indeed, the Baptist Press reported
that Page went out of his way to tell reporters that he was not
elected "to somehow undo the conservative resurgence" in
the convention. But he also signaled that the spirit he hopes
to embody is quite different from that of the angry, right-wing,
politicized preacher who has been a stock figure in American
life for more than two decades.
"I believe
in the word of God," Page said. "I'm just not mad about
it."
The mellowing
of evangelical Christianity may well be the big American religious
story of this decade. The evolution of the evangelical movement
should not be confused with the rise of a religious left. Although
the margin of the Republican Party's advantage among white evangelicals
is likely to decline from its exceptionally high level in the
2004 election, a substantial majority of white evangelicals will
probably remain conservative and continue to vote Republican.
But the evangelical
political agenda is broadening as new voices insist on the urgency
of issues such as Third World poverty and the fights against
AIDS and human trafficking. Among the most prominent advocates
for a wider view of Christian obligation is Rick Warren, pastor
of Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif., and author of "The
Purpose Driven Life."
In the meantime,
Rich Cizik, vice president for governmental affairs at the National
Association of Evangelicals (and a self-described "Ronald
Reagan movement conservative"), has been a leader in urging
evangelicals to make environmental stewardship a central element
of their political mission. This has earned him attacks from
such prominent leaders on the Christian right as James Dobson.
In the Southern
Baptist election, Page, pastor of First Baptist Church in Taylors,
S.C., defeated two candidates more closely associated with the
convention's conservative leadership, the Rev. Ronnie Floyd of
Springdale, Ark., and the Rev. Jerry Sutton of Nashville. The
election was important because the Southern Baptist Convention
has been the locus of fierce struggles between moderates and
conservatives in which the right emerged triumphant.
In response to the resulting purges and acrimony,
moderate and progressive Baptists formed new organizations such
as the Nashville-based Baptist Center for Ethics. Robert Parham,
the center's executive director, argues that it would be a mistake
to read too much into Page's triumph. "This was a race between the right and the
far right," Parham said. "One election neither makes
a positive trend nor unmakes the essence of fundamentalism."
Bill Leonard, the dean of the Wake Forest University Divinity
School, largely agrees with Parham's analysis but argues
that many Baptists are sensitive to "static or declining" membership numbers
and the rising popularity of nondenominational churches such as
Warren's.
The election, he said, indicates that "the leadership of the
denomination that pushed it hard to the right on theological and
social issues is aging or passing from the scene and is unable
to rally the troops as they once did."
"Some people," Leonard added, "are tired of just
fighting liberals. You need a reason to be a Southern Baptist other
than just fighting liberals in the culture or in the church."
One other force was at work in this year's Baptist voting:
the rise of the blogosphere.
Over the past several years, an active network of Baptist bloggers
has opened up discussion in the convention and given reformers
and moderates avenues around what Parham called "the Baptist
establishment papers" and other means of communication controlled
by the convention's leadership. Thus may some of our oldest and
most traditional institutions be transformed by new technologies.
Religious movements stay vibrant thanks to the complicated
interaction of fidelity, reflection and reform. The evangelical
world is going through a quiet evolution as believers reflect
on the perils of partisanship and ideology and their reasons
for being Christian. This will probably affect the nation's
political life, but it will certainly affect the country's
spiritual direction. My hunch is that not only moderates
and liberals but also many solid conservatives welcome
the departure.

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