Gospel Independence
In May, a steering committee of nine prominent evangelical leaders and about 80 charter signatories issued an Evangelical Manifesto. In an era when most Americans think of evangelicals mainly as a voting bloc, these leaders tried to refocus the meaning of evangelical identity.
This manifesto had three aims:
- To tell the world and remind evangelical insiders that our identity is centered not in political activism (however positive that activism may be) but in our faith in Jesus and in his radical call to discipleship.
- To tell ourselves that we in many ways fail to live up to our calling in Christ, and that we need to reform our lives and our churches. Without such reform, we can hardly be surprised at the negative stereotypes that abound about North American evangelicals.
- To rethink our place in the public square and to stop exacerbating the political and cultural polarization of U.S. society. When public perceptions of evangelicalism are created by the harshest and most strident voices, it is important to create an evangelical culture of civility.
Cross-Centered Faith
The document stirred a lot of discussion and criticism. Much of the discussion missed the document's main thrust.
One leader, in an op-ed published the day before the document's release, claimed that it was some kind of "power play" by which "new leadership" was "staking a claim … with different emphases from the traditional, mainstream evangelical movement."
Actually, the steering committee and charter signatories are hardly new faces. They are seasoned leaders who have paid their dues leading large churches, denominations, and organizations such as Youth With a Mission, the National Association of Evangelicals, World Vision, World Relief, Wheaton College, Dallas Theological Seminary, Denver Seminary, Fuller Theological Seminary, Bethel University, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, Beeson Divinity School, Charisma, Sojourners, and Christianity Today. (Both CT's board chair and editor in chief served on the steering committee.) They signed as individuals, but they collectively represent centuries of mainstream evangelical leadership.
The op-ed's author clearly had a politicized vision of the "mainstream evangelical movement." And that is indeed part of the problem. The public perception of the word evangelical has taken on a decidedly political cast. But it is biblical, heartfelt, cross-centered faith that drives (or should drive) evangelicals, whether they are active in public policy, education, evangelism, Christian nurture, or relief and development. That biblical, heartfelt, cross-centered faith—and not a particular arena of activity—constitutes the heart of evangelicalism.
The text of the document makes it clear: It advocates no particular political agenda while it affirms evangelicals' well-known commitment to protecting human life at every age, to strengthening the family as God designed it, as well as to working on the wide variety of social issues that threatens the common good. The document advocates engagement in the public sphere while urging that we avoid captivity to political ideology.
In retrospect, it is clear that the steering committee should have engaged some key public policy leaders at an early enough stage of development—just as they should have engaged African American leadership at an earlier stage. But the cavil that the document is an attack on that politically active segment of evangelicalism is just not borne out by the document itself. It is critical only of those—Left or Right—who politicize the faith by subordinating the faith to political ideology or partisan power. The document praises those who engage the public square with gospel independence.

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jeri
As always, Satan insinuates himself into the mix. Evangelicals began involving themselves in politics with, I believe, the best of intentions. The taste of power turned into a lust for power, followed by the nation's disillusionment with followers of Christ, many of whom became as unlike Christ as any non-Christian. The crucified life was discarded, the politicized life embraced. The sad result is glaringly obvious.
Jeff
Introspection, self-criticism, and attempting to get along are all well and good. Paul said, "If possible, so far as it depends on you, be at peace with all men." (Romans 12:18) However, aside from a small handful of blowhards, I think evangelicals have already swung too far to the "try to get along" side of the spectrum. It would be very foolish to tone down one's political activism as a result of "negative stereotypes that abound about North American evangelicals." Evangelicals are hated, not because we're uncivil or polarizing, but because we stand for truth. "If the world hates you, you know that it has hated Me before it hated you." (John 15:18) The bottom line is that evangelicals have just as much right as anyone else to engage in the political process. The world wants to silence and intimidate us. Silly manifestos that kowtow to the world's criticism make us look like a scolded dog with our tail between our legs.
Scott McCarty
SOORY BUT MY COMPUTER REFUSES TO GIVE A 4 STAR RATING §§ I have the impression from looking at the USA from France where my wife and I have been evangelical missionaries since 1971, that the averge Christian in America has forgotten Matthew 28 :18-20 & Acts 1 : 8. In fact, the cure would be a nice, slow MEDITATIVE reading of the Book of Acts which should get everyone back on the WAY.