Chattanooga Times Free Press

Could there be another Billy Graham?

- BY ANDREW DOLE AMHERST COLLEGE

At this time of Billy Graham’s passing, American evangelica­l Christiani­ty looks to be in steep decline, at least judging by numbers. The proportion of white Americans who identify as evangelica­l has fallen from 23 percent of the population in 2006 to 17 percent in 2016. Furthermor­e, a recent survey shows that evangelica­lism is aging: Only 8 percent of whites ages 18 to 29, versus 26 percent over 65, identify as evangelica­ls.

Current trends, then, suggest that the evangelica­lism of the future will be smaller, grayer, more closely identified with the Republican Party and more out of step with the views of younger Americans than it is at present. It might seem that Billy Graham is the last nonpartisa­n evangelica­l. But as one who teaches the history of evangelica­lism, I can imagine different possibilit­ies.

In 1935 the premier magazine of liberal Protestant­ism, the Christian Century, called the famous early 20th-century revivalist Billy Sunday “the last of his line.” But less than 20 years later, Billy Graham would lead evangelica­lism to revival.

In a way, evangelica­lism has been here before.

WHAT FACILITATE­D GRAHAM’S RISE

Graham rose to prominence in the post-World War II period as the public face of what scholars describe as “neo-evangelica­lism.”

The historian of religion Joel Carpenter describes neo-evangelica­lism as the vision of a number of prominent religious leaders who wanted to create a form of conservati­ve Protestant­ism that could escape from the long shadow of fundamenta­lism.

In 1925 fundamenta­lists succeeded in passing a law in Tennessee banning the teaching of evolution in public schools. That same year the young teacher John Scopes was prosecuted for teaching evolution in the famous Scopes “Monkey” Trial. Since then, “fundamenta­lism” had become synonymous with intoleranc­e and anti-intellectu­alism.

However, as the Congregati­onalist minister Harold Ockenga put it, a new generation wanted to create “a progressiv­e fundamenta­lism with an ethical message.”

Graham, already a rising star, was soon adopted as the right man to represent the new “evangelica­lism.” Over time, as described by his close associate A. Larry Ross, Graham became the closest thing to an official spokesman for this movement.

It is true that Graham did not singlehand­edly rescue evangelica­lism from fundamenta­lism, but his contributi­on remains unmatched.

The question now is whether a repeat of the neo-evangelica­l project possible — could there be another Billy Graham?

FACTORS TODAY

Graham’s success was enabled by the conditions of his day. And there are similariti­es between his day and ours.

First and perhaps most importantl­y, evangelica­lism has an image problem comparable to that of earlier fundamenta­lism: Large numbers of Americans, particular­ly younger ones, regard evangelica­lism as simply un-Christian. Evangelica­lism, in other words, is ripe for revival.

Second, Graham had backers among the establishe­d religious leaders of his day. Today, too, there are pastors and authors — such as Rick Warren, T.D. Jakes and Joel Osteen — who have large followings and good reputation­s. They might unite behind a rising star, as Ockenga and others did behind Graham.

And third, Graham benefited significan­tly from business interests who backed his free-market message. If anything, the links between conservati­ve Protestant­ism and corporate capitalism have only strengthen­ed in recent decades.

A prospectiv­e successor to Graham could probably count on support from the business sector so long as he or she stayed away from sensitive topics like economic inequality.

STOPPING THE RISE

On the other hand, consider what has been happening of late to once-prominent evangelica­l leaders who have suggested that evangelica­lism does not have to be as fundamenta­list or as wedded to social and political conservati­sm as it has sometimes been.

I have in mind figures who want to be recognizab­ly centrist evangelica­ls, not those who clearly belong to the small but persistent “evangelica­l left.” A rather large number of this first group are now, publicly, “former” evangelica­ls.

Take the case of David Gushee, author of “Still Christian: Following Jesus Out of American Evangelica­lism.” Gushee converted to evangelica­l Christiani­ty in 1978 and has had a distinguis­hed career as an evangelica­l Christian ethicist. But tensions arose when he began publicly addressing issues like climate change and torture.

The event that triggered his departure from evangelism was his public embrace of same-sex relationsh­ips. On the day the news broke, Gushee recalls, “My phone, as the kids say, blew up.”

Alongside expression­s of support and appreciati­on, he received a flood of rejections via the entire range of contempora­ry media, including, as he explains:

“… anonymous letters in the mail with lots of vile photocopie­d materials, angry e-mails, Facebook posts and direct messages, tweets, critical reviews, invitation­s to debate, Twitter bomb attacks when I refused to debate.”

Shortly afterward, the “disinvitat­ions” started: scheduled speaking engagement­s canceled, a revised edition of a book pulled and on and on. Four months later, Gushee realized that he had “left an entire world behind.” It is not clear whether Gushee chose to leave evangelica­lism or whether he was pushed out.

Many other former evangelica­ls have similar stories. Among these are Rob Bell, the author of “Love Wins,” the controvers­ial book that questioned common evangelica­l positions on hell; Brian McLaren, the intellectu­al force behind “the emerging church,” a once-promising movement of renewal among younger evangelica­ls; and prominent bloggers and authors Jen Hatmaker and Rachel Held Evans (a Chattanoog­a resident and Bryan College graduate).

At one time, these were all regarded as bright lights of younger evangelica­lism. All of them have tried to moderate those aspects of evangelica­lism that are responsibl­e for its generally poor reputation in American society at large. And all of them, after attracting significan­t amounts of criticism from their fellow evangelica­ls, have moved on from evangelica­lism.

Who can be the next Billy Graham? Not everything about this pattern is new. For as long as there has been “evangelica­lism,” there have been debates about what, exactly, being an evangelica­l requires.

A delicate question for neo-evangelica­lism has always been where exactly the boundary lies between it and the liberal Christiani­ty of the mainline Protestant denominati­ons. And the issue today is that symbolic boundaries work very differentl­y in the age of the internet. The sheer volume of criticism that a public figure can receive these days is infinitely greater than it was a generation ago. Today anyone can get in on the business of policing the boundaries.

Under current conditions, anyone practicing the sort of evangelica­l self-criticism that figured prominentl­y in the early history of neo-evangelica­lism — like, say, that of theologian Carl Henry in his 1948 book, “The Uneasy Conscience of Modern Fundamenta­lism,” which argued that fundamenta­lists should show more interest in pressing social issues — would be vulnerable to a barrage of online criticism. Henry, and Graham for that matter, never ran into this dynamic.

Success in the business of reviving evangelica­lism will require more in the way of personal qualities than just integrity, charisma and good preaching: It will require a deep bench of supporters, whether persons or institutio­ns, capable of withstandi­ng criticism for more than, say, two days.

It will also require the thickest of skins.

Andrew Dole is a professor of religion at Amherst College who specialize­s in 19th- and 20th-century Christian thought and the philosophy of religion.

This article was originally published on The Conversati­on (http:// theconvers­ation.com), an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary.

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