Friday, May 9, 2008

What's manifest in the "Evangelical Manifesto"?

A group of mainly conservative Evangelicals has recently promoted an "Evangelical Manifesto" that appears to be designed as a voice of moderation calling on Evangelicals to avoid getting sucked into becoming toadies for a political ideology.

Like the "Baptist Manifesto" of 1997, which promoted a more communitarian and less individualistic approach to being Baptist, I think the document suffers from a poorly chosen name. Anyone old enough or well-read enough to remember the impact of Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto is bound to deal with some mental confusion. Marx's work was so influential that it's hard to separate the word "Manifesto" from "Communist," which makes it difficult for many people to give anyone else's "manifesto" an unbiased hearing.

I suspect that most people will not care enough about the subject to read the Evangelical Manifesto, and some who do care will rely on media summaries for their judgment, rather than slogging through the entire 19-page document, which is replete with seven-point statements that are sometimes repetitive.

In general, the paper appears to be a good thing, as it calls upon Evangelicals to realize that equally devoted followers of Christ may see things differently on the political front -- there's no one way for true believers to vote, no one issue that drives our votes, or one party to whom Evangelicals must pledge allegiance. In the light of the past 20 years' marriage between the most conservative Evangelicals and the Republican Party (some think of the GOP as "God's Only Party"), that word is welcome.

Even so, the statement gives much more attention to the dangers of "liberal revisionist tendencies" (eight paragraphs including five specific condemnations) than the errors of Christian fundamentalism (two paragraphs of general observations).

Some of those who champion the Evangelical Manifesto have been involved in precisely the same sort of political approach they now condemn, according to an analysis by Bob Allen at EthicsDaily.com, leading one to wonder how much they have changed and what their motives might be.

Given the falling stature of the Christian Right and it's unflagging support for the debacles of the current administration -- and the reality that Democrats now seem to be talking much more openly about their faith -- more cynical folk might see the statement as more tactical than confessional, though the authors to confess to a number of past missteps.

I couldn't help but note that the statement took pains to define "Evangelical" by laying out seven characteristic beliefs, essentially: 1) Christ is fully human and fully divine; 2) salvation is only through Christ; 3) a truly regenerate life must be empowered by the resurrection of Christ and the presence of the Holy Spirit; 4) the scriptures are inspired by God, exhibit "total truthfulness," and are the final word for faith and practice; 5) true disciples serve Christ in deeds as well as words, including ministry to the poor and oppressed; 6) hope and strength come from a belief in the Second Coming of Christ; and 7) all followers of Christ are called to grow through worship, fellowship, discipleship and ministry, and to share their faith with others.

Most Evangelicals would find little fault with the list as given. If "total truthfulness" of Scripture is a more palatable code term for the fundamentalist "inerrancy" doctrine, however, it narrows the field considerably. My guess is that the writers intended to leave the door open for interpretation there.

Despite the underlying questions, the document's call for a less radicalized approach to political involvement that does not see "the Christian position" as monolithic is welcome.

Whether it has any discernible impact on current practices -- such as the distribution of one-sided "Christian voter guides" -- remains to be seen.

4 comments:

foxofbama said...

Tony:
Good job; I gave the statement the Fox Treatment at my blog as well, emphasizinb a brief exchange I had at Samford recently with a Bonhoeffer scholar in the presence of Timothy George.
I like Parham's reservations about Timothy George in this matter; Land and George should not be given a pass.
Charles Marsh has an interesting nuance on inerrancy and Schaeffer and the Lausanne Covenant that I think should be a part of the inflection and parsing of this "manifesto".
Hoping you can bring your influece to bear on the creation of a breakout at Memphis CBF to discuss it all.
At a minimum think we should have a thorough go at it there.
Sfox

Mark Osgatharp said...

Tony,

You said:

"toadies for a political ideology."

And,

"Evangelicals and the Republican Party (some think of the GOP as 'God's Only Party'), that word is welcome."

These are probably very legitimate criticisms within themselves. But coming from the left they are quite laughable; for the religious left is just as toady for left wing politics as the religious right is for right wing politics.

You said,

"there's no one way for true believers to vote, no one issue that drives our votes, or one party to whom Evangelicals must pledge allegiance."

So why not just go ahead and say what the left has being saying for years - that there is really no one faith for true believers to believe, no one truth on which to base one's morals, no one conception of God for all the faithful - no, not one hill on which to die.

Mark Osgatharp
Wynne, Arkansas

Tim Dahl said...

They've never had a "hill on which to die," regardless of the misrepresentation by the book of a same name. With those guys, it was always a "hill on which to kill." Now, they are just cannibalizing their own.

For the fundies to try and coopt a voice of moderation is about 20 years to late, imo. More evangelicals are finally reading God's Word, and realizing that Christ cares for many issues, not just the 2 that Land/etal would call them to. The more they read the red letters, the less the Republican Party looks like God's party. God is calling us (regardless of political affiliation) to be counter-cultural. Lets get to work on His business. I'm sure it will be much more productive.

Tim Dahl
Lake Worth, TX

Chad Reed said...

http://www.ethicsdaily.com/article_detail.cfm?AID=10539