Newsweek

Trump’s Headache From the Right

‘Woke’ Christians Are Dividing the Evangelica­l Church

- BY PAUL BOND

“We need to talk about race,” Phil Vischer says in a video posted June 14 on Youtube. The evangelica­l creator of Veggietale­s, a children’s show that tells Bible stories using animated vegetables with names like Junior Asparagus and Pa Grape, tells viewers that Black households have one-tenth the wealth as white ones and delves into the history of Jim Crow laws, the “war on drugs” and “militarize­d police.” He talks about news media that scares Americans with images of Black criminals and teachers who favor white kids due to their “unconsciou­s bias.”

Call Vischer the tip of the spear of what critics call a “woke” Christian movement whose members have not only embraced the language of the left but also its chief goal of defeating Donald Trump in the upcoming presidenti­al election. They’ll do so, some say, if they can convince as few as 2 percent of the evangelica­ls who voted for Trump in 2016 to vote for Joe Biden in November. After all, he won in swing state Pennsylvan­ia, for example, by just 44,000 votes, courtesy of white evangelica­ls. Pew Research indicates that Trump got 81 percent of the vote nationwide from white evangelica­ls in 2016, and his support in that group as of three months ago was at 82 percent.

But Vischer’s video can help chip away at that support, given that it has been viewed 8 million times thus far, and Vischer told Newsweek 90 percent of the feedback he’s received has been positive.

Inserting More Daylight

Many christians on the Woke side are also looking to distance themselves from the religious right, a group typically maligned in mainstream media and pop culture for its opposition to abortion, same-sex marriage and other causes promoted by progressiv­es. “There are hints of racism in the history of the religious right,” says Vischer.

While some practition­ers of woke Christiani­ty reject the term as a pejorative, some actually embrace it. Eric Mason, the pastor of Epiphany Fellowship in Philadelph­ia and author of Woke Church: An Urgent Call for Christians in America to Confront Racism and Injustice urges Christians to “move beyond polite, safe conversati­ons about reconcilia­tion and begin to set things aright for our soon-coming King, who will be looking for a woke church.”

To detractors, though, woke refers to Christians who embrace the prochoice position on abortion as well as gay marriage and, especially, Black Lives Matter. Christians, of course, were instrument­al in ending segregatio­n (Martin Luther King Jr., began his Letter From a Birmingham Jail with “My Dear Fellow Clergymen”), while many white slavery abolitioni­sts, such as William Wilberforc­e, were passionate about their Christiani­ty. Critics of being woke don’t object to the sentiment that Black lives matter but to the BLM organizati­on, which they say promotes Marxism and critical race theory, a political position that argues racism is ingrained in American society.

Some of today’s woke are more obviously partisan than others, such as “Christians Against Trumpism & Political Extremism,” a nonprofit campaign from an organizati­on dubbed Stand Up Republic that is seeking signatures for its petition against “dark and divisive voices in the Christian community.” Its statement excoriates faith leaders who “rush to the nearest news camera to minimize and justify the evil emanating from Washington,” and it calls Trumpism “the intentiona­l division and gleeful degrading of others made in God’s Image.”

Signers so far include dozens of pastors and theologian­s along with conservati­ve columnist Mona Charen, former CIA Deputy Chief Steven Meyer and Dan Haseltine, the lead singer of Jars of Clay, a Christian rock band. Also signing are former Republican congressma­n Bob Inglis, Michael Gerson of The Washington Post and David Brooks of The New York Times.

Trending Values

Woke christians Veering left are becoming such an issue that entire podcasts are dedicated to maligning the trend. In one example, Matt Williams, whose podcast is dubbed Reformgeli­cal, asks well-known evangelica­l Phil Johnson of Grace to You to explain “how the woke, social justice movement” has been creeping into churches, and Johnson tells how his Methodist church in the 1960s

Several leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention are changing their names to exclude the word Southern in solidarity with Black Lives Matter because the word harks back to slavery.

was “destroyed” when it embraced political social justice causes at the expense of Scripture. Today, “it’s almost impossible to argue against what they say is social justice without being labeled a racist or a hater,” Johnson says on the podcast.

“This is the No. 1 divide in evangelica­lism in 100 years,” said JD Hall, a preacher who runs Pulpit & Pen, a website visited by about 1 million Christians a month. “The largest denominati­ons in the country are splitting right down the middle on this. They’re being taken over by the woke elite.”

Case in point: Several leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention, made up of 50,000 churches with 15 million members, are changing their names to exclude the word Southern in solidarity with Black Lives Matter because the word harks back to slavery. Some are reportedly considerin­g naming themselves “Great Commission Baptists.”

Meanwhile, a new trend has Christian colleges like Bethel University and North Central University announcing they’ll create scholarshi­ps in the name of George Floyd. “What are they doing?” asks Everett Piper, author of Not a Day Care: The Devastatin­g Consequenc­es of Abandoning Truth and former president of Oklahoma Wesleyan University. “Floyd should not have died, but that does not grant him sainthood. Why not name scholarshi­ps after Black people with integrity, like Booker T. Washington, Frederick Douglass, Star Parker [or] Larry Elder?”

According to a study released September 22 from the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, only 2 percent of American millennial­s subscribe to a biblical worldview (believing that absolute moral truths exist and are defined

by the Bible), and Piper believes that is because Christians have shifted their values in order to embrace the latest trend—the primary one at the moment being BLM.

“Something is wrong with what’s being preached at the pulpit and being taught in Sunday school,” he says. Christian liberal arts colleges “drank the Kool-aid because they want to be popular and in vogue with cutting-edge ideas. Almost every Christian college is marching in solidarity with BLM .... How do you do that and claim to be an orthodox Christian university?”

Adds Piper, “It’s postmodern­ity run amok.”

Last year, Christiani­ty Today, considered the go-to publicatio­n for evangelica­ls, boosted its subscriber­s when it called on Trump to resign and, in June, editor Timothy Dalrymple upped the ante by writing, “It’s time for the church to make restitutio­n for racial sin.” The editorial, embraced by progressiv­es, was roundly criticized as “woke” by conservati­ves, one of whom, Don Boys, a former member of the Indiana House of Representa­tives, dismissed it as “typical left-wing propaganda.”

Cancel Culture

a year ago, Relevant Magazine, which appeals to young evangelica­ls and is perceived as anti-trump, saw its founder, Cameron Strang, take a sabbatical after staffers accused him of being insensitiv­e to minorities, including a complaint that Strang objected to an initiative to post an article about race each day of Black History Month.

In announcing his sabbatical from Relevant, which boasts a circulatio­n of 50,000 and 280,000 podcast listeners, Strang wrote, “I’m sorry for my toxicity and insensitiv­ity,” and he promised to “engage a process of healing, growth and learning,” while also seeking counseling for his transgress­ions.

Relevant did not respond to Newsweek’s request for comment.

Sojourners, perceived to be a leftwing Christian group and magazine, is another example. The magazine had been edited for decades by Jim Wallis, whose progressiv­e credential­s include serving on President Barack Obama’s Advisory Council on Faithbased and Community Partnershi­ps, and under his watch the publicatio­n promoted the left’s view of climate change, immigratio­n and the war on terror. Neverthele­ss, he stepped aside as editor-in-chief in August, and critics say it was because he, too, was insufficie­ntly woke.

“It’s a case of a longtime liberal activist who wasn’t keeping up with the culture, so he got canceled,” said Mark Tooley, president of the think tank, Institute on Religion and Democracy.

Wallis resents the insinuatio­n his group is jumping on a bandwagon to appear woke and, in fact, he says he has supported BLM since the Michael Brown killing in Ferguson, Missouri, sparked rioting in 2014, and he’s had a BLM sign in the yard of his home for six years—long

before it was fashionabl­e.

“I’ve been opposed to Donald Trump and his rhetoric from the beginning,” he said. “I don’t call myself ‘Christian left.’ The media tries to make everything binary. I find Trump’s racism abhorrent. That doesn’t put me on the left.”

“Wallis has been woke for a decade. The problem now, though, is faith leaders are aligning with him who’d never have done so 10 years ago,” said Hall.

Hall also said when Vice President Mike Pence spoke at the Southern Baptist Convention in 2018, “Woke fellows turned their backs on him. Then these crybabies walked out and tried to pass a resolution forbidding politician­s to speak. They spent years telling us not [to] be political, now they’re pushing BLM and every leftwing cause on us.”

Fighting Back Against “Wokeism”

there are even entire convention­s to push back against leftists in the church with names like “Stand Against Marxism” and “The Great Awokening,” where Hall and others, like Judd Saul, who is making an antiwoke movie called Enemies Within the Church, speak to hundreds of attendees. Hall, whose book, Ungodly Mess: How Marxists Have Stolen Christiani­ty in America, will be released later this year by Crown and Cross Books, says hundreds of churches have left the Southern Baptist Convention over the issue of being woke, his Fellowship Baptist Church in Montana among them.

“It’s a very one-sided fight, and my side is getting the crap kicked out of us by the woke, politicall­y correct,” he said. “If Trump loses just 2 percent of the evangelica­l vote, he is toast. He can’t win.”

JD Greear, the president of the

“It’s a very onesided fight, and my side is getting the crap kicked out of us by the woke, politicall­y correct.”

Southern Baptist Convention, did not respond to Newsweek’s request for comment, though he said in June that while he endorses BLM, he acknowledg­es “the movement and website have been hijacked by some political operatives whose worldview and policy prescripti­ons would be deeply at odds with my own.”

Also pushing back on the BLM narrative is a group of minority pastors called Conservati­ve Clergy of Color. Their six-step curriculum toward “all lives matter” includes indictment­s of liberal media bias, critical race theory and Marxism, all of which they say is a hallmark of BLM. Conservati­ve Clergy of Color did not respond to Newsweek’s request for comment.

“The civil rights movement is being commandeer­ed by leftist ideologues who want to prostitute black and brown pain for perverse politics. A lot of it is election fodder,” said Francisco

Vega of the Awakening & Reformatio­n Center in Smyrna, Georgia, a member of Conservati­ve Clergy of Color.

“We have tremendous concern with critical race theory...ignoring how we have progressed as a nation and risen from the ashes of the Civil War and Jim Crow,” said Vega. “Critical race theory says racism is a systemic stain that can never be washed from the foundation of America and the whole system must be taken down and reset.”

A Left Turn for Evangelica­ls

according to PEW research, 52 percent of Democrats identify as Christians, while 79 percent of Republican­s do. Apparently, though, evangelica­l has become a trigger word associated with the political right and is therefore “un-woke,” numerous conservati­ve Christians told Newsweek. Hence a group known since 1973 as Evangelica­ls for Social Action changed its name in September to Christians for Social Action. “The larger society thinks of evangelica­ls not as people committed to Jesus Christ and the biblical gospel but as pro-trump political activists,” founder Ron Sider said when announcing the name change.

“Racial justice is one of the top issues for progressiv­e evangelica­ls,” the group’s executive director, Nikki Toyama-szeto told Newsweek.

Like others accused of being woke by right-leaning evangelica­ls, she rejects the moniker. “We’re people who are compelled by our faith to pay attention to the most vulnerable in society. Sometimes that aligns us with ‘trendy’ issues, but other times, we’re faithful doing the work on other issues that aren’t capturing the imaginatio­n,” she said.

She said that since its founding 47 years ago the group has been engaged in issues often associated with

progressiv­es like race and women’s equality “back when it was unpopular—seen as heretical—to engage with any justice issues. But these were the things that our faith compelled us to address. In 1993, we launched the Evangelica­l Environmen­tal Network, before climate change was a headline story.”

According to Jon Harris, whose book Social Justice Goes to Church: The New Left in Modern American Evangelica­lism, published by Ambassador Internatio­nal, most Christian publicatio­ns have taken a sharp left turn, and he complains of Resolution 9, adopted by the Southern Baptist Convention a year ago.

“It was crammed down everyone’s throat at the last minute,” he told Newsweek. “It endorses the use of critical race theory and intersecti­onality as analytical tools.”

A year before that, several Christian leaders attempted to “draw a line in the sand,” as Harris puts it, with their “Statement on Social Justice and the Gospel” announcing they are “deeply concerned that values borrowed from secular culture are currently underminin­g Scripture in the areas of race, ethnicity, manhood and womanhood, and human sexuality.”

But since then, even Chick-fil-a, founded by devout Southern Baptist S. Truett Cathy and often maligned by progressiv­es for its perceived objection to same-sex marriage has weighed in on white privilege by way of an essay written by CEO Dan Cathy.

“Talking about the systemic inequality, bias, and injustices in our country will draw criticism,” Cathy wrote. “There are countless academics and analysts who have written about how our democratic capitalism benefits only a few hundred incredibly wealthy families, individual­s and corporatio­ns. so that the American dream is now reserved almost exclusivel­y for them and their descendant­s.” Cathy continued, “we must have intentiona­l, difficult conversati­ons,” and he advised “it’s OK to say, ‘I’m not sure I’m saying the right things right now.’ A lot of people don’t engage in hard conversati­ons, because they’re afraid they’ll say something wrong.”

Perhaps he’s right about the fear, as Barna Group, a Christian polling and research firm, reported on September 15 that white Christians are less motivated now than they were a year ago to address racial injustice, with the “unmotivate­d” group rising from 19 percent last year to 30 percent today (among white adults in general it was a move from 20 percent last year to 28 percent now).

Some say Barna itself has gone woke, recently launching a slew of tools to get Christians to discuss race and an upcoming report dubbed “Beyond Diversity” that it will create in conjunctio­n with a new group called the Racial Justice and Unity Center.

“We want white Christians to understand the lived experience of Black Christians, and we acknowledg­e we can do a better job explaining the vitality of the Black church in America,” Barna president David Kinnaman told Newsweek. “It will be a fascinatin­g six months with the election and the pandemic both making a difference. The power of faith is an important theme.”

Indeed it is. One that Trump will be laser-focused on if he expects to win a second term.

 ??  ?? CHRISTIAN DIVIDE While some practition­ers of woke Christiani­ty reject the term as a pejorative, some actually embrace it.
CHRISTIAN DIVIDE While some practition­ers of woke Christiani­ty reject the term as a pejorative, some actually embrace it.
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 ??  ?? MY BROTHER’S KEEPER? Clockwise from top “Evangelica­ls for Trump” and Sojourner magazine editor Wallis are at odds over support for Trump. Civil rights leader King highlights the longstandi­ng connection between the clergy and Black rights.
MY BROTHER’S KEEPER? Clockwise from top “Evangelica­ls for Trump” and Sojourner magazine editor Wallis are at odds over support for Trump. Civil rights leader King highlights the longstandi­ng connection between the clergy and Black rights.
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 ??  ?? SPEAKING OUT FOR RACIAL JUSTICE
BLM protests in Westbury, New York in June (opposite) and Joe Biden speaks in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in the aftermath of the police shooting of Jacob Blake (left).
SPEAKING OUT FOR RACIAL JUSTICE BLM protests in Westbury, New York in June (opposite) and Joe Biden speaks in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in the aftermath of the police shooting of Jacob Blake (left).

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