Houston Chronicle Sunday

‘A shift is inevitable’

There’s dramatic generation­al divide over white envangelic­al attitudes on gay marriage

- By Sarah Pulliam Bailey WASHINGTON POST

A new survey shows a dramatic shift in attitudes toward favoring gay marriage among a younger generation of white evangelica­ls, a group considered to be one of the most conservati­ve on the issue.

Just a decade ago, the gap between younger evangelica­ls and older evangelica­ls on the issue was not wide, according to the Pew Research Center. But a new survey suggests that the generation­al divide has grown much wider, with about half of evangelica­ls born after 1964 now favoring gay marriage.

According to Pew, 47 percent of Generation X/millennial evangelica­ls (those born after 1964) favor gay marriage, compared with 26 percent of boomer and older evangelica­ls (those born between 1928 and 1964).

“I think a shift is inevitable. It’s just a matter of how long,” said Julie Rodgers, a lesbian who once worked for evangelica­l Wheaton College in Illinoise.

Rodgers was once part of an ex-gay ministry and ran in Southern Baptist circles. She was seen by some as a poster child for celibacy while she was a staff member in Wheaton College’s chaplain’s office. The college received backlash for hiring her and she became gay marriage affirming while she was there, so she resigned from her position in 2015. She said she looked to people like Christian ethicist David Gushee, who changed his views and began to affirm same-sex relationsh­ips in 2014. Rodgers said her views began to shift when she saw another way of interpreti­ng the Bible.

“When pastors and leaders begin to come out [as LGBT affirming], people are going to move. They just need permission,” she said. “It gives people another perspectiv­e and permission to say, ‘I feel that way, too.’ ”

Earlier this month, Rodgers got engaged to Amanda Hite, an entreprene­ur based in D.C., whom she met after she left Wheaton.

Two years after the Supreme Court legalized gay marriage nationwide, support for it is at its highest overall, with 62 percent favoring gay marriage and 32 percent opposing it. In 2010, according to Pew, a little less than half of Americans supported it.

When young people see an issue legalized, they begin to believe it must be right, said Glenn Stanton, director of Family Formation Studies at Focus on the Family. “We see that with pot in Colorado,” he said. “There’s a legitimizi­ng and institutio­nalizing when you make something legal.”

But Stanton believes the attitude shifts don’t really reflect a change in young evangelica­ls’ conviction on the issue, which he said was “paper thin.”

“A quality of youth is being idealistic and wanting to believe the world can be a certain way,” Stanton said. “Why can’t we all get married?”

Support for same-sex marriage has risen across all religious groups in recent years. As a whole, white evangelica­ls still stand out in opposition to gay marriage; 35 percent of white evangelica­ls favor gay marriage, compared with about 60 percent who are opposed.

Evangelica­lism is fueled by networks of churches, nonprofits, colleges, book publishers and media outlets and popular authors and artists. With no hierarchy or unified theology, LGBT issues have threatened to tear apart churches and institutio­ns, raising questions over whether one can be both LGBT affirming and an evangelica­l.

Most of the nation’s largest megachurch­es do not marry gays and lesbians, but some people think that attitudes might be shifting in some churches. Most evangelica­ls believe gay people are welcome as members and leaders in their churches — as long as they remain celibate.

In May, a megachurch in Orlando called Northland, A Church Distribute­d, hosted a public forum by the Reformatio­n Project, an organizati­on that wants to change churches’ attitudes on LGBT issues.

Northland’s pastor, Joel Hunter, told the Orlando Sentinel that his church has no plans to change its position that the Bible prohibits gay relationsh­ips, but his church hosted the forum as a response to the Pulse shooting last year to build bridges with the LGBT community. Hunter said via text message that his elders have asked him to decline more press inquiries.

Matthew Vines, who dropped out of Harvard University to start the Reformatio­n Project, said Northland was the biggest church yet willing to host a conversati­on with his group. Vines believes there’s a slow, steady trajectory toward evangelica­ls affirming gay marriage.

When popular author Jen Hatmaker said last fall she affirms same-sex relationsh­ips, her books were pulled from Lifeway Christian Resources stores. But Vines thinks that Hatmaker and others who have become LGBT affirming still retain their influence. “I don’t think they were as successful­ly farewelled as they would have been three to five years ago,” he said.

Attitude shifts won’t happen overnight, Vines said. “It’s important that young evangelica­ls have changed their mind, but it’s not enough to create institutio­nal change,” he said.

The question for many evangelica­ls has been whether LGBT issues are matters where they can agree to disagree and still work together, perhaps like the question of when children should be baptized or whether women can be ordained.

When the issue came up for World Vision, one of the largest Christian nonprofits in the country, in 2012, the answer was a sharp no — it lost thousands of donors right away. And InterVarsi­ty Christian Fellowship, a major ministry, announced last fall that its employees must affirm its views that marriage is between a man and a woman.

Some evangelica­ls believe there’s a difference between supporting gay marriage as a public policy matter and gay marriage as sanctioned by churches. A large majority of white evangelica­ls (including younger generation­s) continue to see homosexual relations as morally wrong, according to the General Social Survey.

The 2016 survey found 75 percent of white evangelica­ls saying homosexual sexual relations are always or nearly always wrong. That number is down from 82 percent in 1996 and 90 percent in 1987. The survey does not show a large generation­al gap, however. In 2014-2016 surveys, 70 percent of Generation X/millennial white evangelica­ls said samesex sexual relations are nearly always or always wrong, compared to 81 percent of baby boomers/older generation­s.

 ?? New York Times ?? Two years after the Supreme Court legalized gay marriage, support for it is at its highest overall, with 62 percent favoring gay marriage and 32 percent opposting it. In 2010, less than half of Americans supported it.
New York Times Two years after the Supreme Court legalized gay marriage, support for it is at its highest overall, with 62 percent favoring gay marriage and 32 percent opposting it. In 2010, less than half of Americans supported it.

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