Opportunity of a Generation
Five issues will test the strength and unity of Christian conservatives in the new term.
By Tony Carnes | posted 1/20/2005 12:00AM

4 of 4

At home and abroad, Christian conservatives are on the move. The year 2005 will show if they end up on the same path toward the same goals.
Tony Carnes, based in New York City, is a senior writer for CT.
Copyright © 2005 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.
Related Elsewhere:
Our full election coverage and more Politics & Law is available online.
Our same-sex marriage full coverage is also available online.
Other recent Christianity Today coverage following the election includes:
Same Song, Second Term | It is a unique political moment for Christian conservativesor is it?A Christianity Today editorial (Jan. 10, 2005)
The New Civil War | Christians must be driven by the common good, not by any ideology. (Jan. 19, 2005)
Full Court Pressure | The battle for marriage shifts from voters to lawyers and lobbyists. (Dec. 30, 2004)
Dobson on the Gay Marriage Battle | The Nov. 2 election was the first step in a long fight for traditional marriage. (Dec. 30, 2004)
'Moral Values' Tops Voters' ConcernsBut What Does It Mean? | Sexual morality probably trumped social justice concerns, say observers. (Nov. 04, 2004)
Evangelicals' Political Power: From Question Mark to Exclamation Mark | Activists say same-sex marriage ban, abortion limits, and judicial appointments top agenda. (Nov. 04, 2004)