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November 23, 2009
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Home > 2008 > NovemberChristianity Today, November, 2008  |   |  
Misunderstanding Sarah
Media reaction to Gov. Palin shows ignorance of evangelicalism.



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The Vice Presidential nomination of Sarah Palin stunned the American public, especially the mainstream media. For weeks, the focus of Palin puzzlement shifted daily, from her support for aerial wolf hunting to her claiming per diem payments for nights spent at home to Tina Fey's jaw-dropping Palin impersonation.

But two sex- and gender-related questions caught our attention. First, reactions to news of Bristol Palin's out-of-wedlock pregnancy: liberal pundits gleefully announced that this was going to seriously undermine Governor Palin's standing with the Republican Party's evangelical base. Any informed evangelical watcher or evangelical believer could have told them that this is a non-issue.

It is a non-issue because John Newton's famous line, "I once was lost but now I'm found," defines the evangelical ethos. We specialize in troubled lives. Stories of transformation from sin and degradation to righteousness and wholeness frame the way evangelicals see life. From the slave-trading Newton to the White House "hatchet man" Chuck Colson, God saves people from their slavery to sin and uses them to restore others. Indeed, those of us who never did anything particularly shocking sometimes have trouble fitting in.

Evangelical pews are full of people whose family lives are untidy. If we get angry when a teen gets pregnant, it is not at the hot-blooded teens but at the fashion and entertainment industries that persistently sexualize the images of the young and set them up for bad choices. It's no wonder: One recent study showed that adolescents with a sexually charged media diet are more than twice as likely as others to have sex by the time they turn 16. Teen pregnancy is one of the situations in which it is easiest for us to hate the sin but love the sinner.

The second media reaction that caught our attention was liberal puzzlement over conservatives who believe that only men should lead churches and marriages, yet who would not hesitate to have a woman a heartbeat away from the presidency.

Richard Land told Christianity Today that such concerns are asinine. The president of the Southern Baptist Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission compares the Palins to the Thatcher household: Dennis was head of the family, while Maggie ran the government. Land subscribes to the Baptist Faith and Message, which teaches that ecclesiastical and marital leadership are male territory. But Land is married to a strong woman, a professional with a Ph.D.

Are Christians like Richard Land inconsistent? We don't think so. Gender is complex and fundamental and not a mere social construction. It functions in archetypal ways. Many conservative Christians (though not all) believe these archetypes provide symbolic structure to church and marriage. God distributes gifts across gender lines, and women and men who develop their gifts do so to the Giver's glory. God created church and marriage, they say, and God wrote the user's manual for each. But God also created society, and he gifted women from the biblical Deborah to Israel's likely new Prime Minister Tzipi Livni with the gifts to govern.

Not all evangelicals believe that biblical admonitions about gender, church, and marriage apply beyond their first-century context. Indeed, the late Kenneth Kantzer, Billy Graham's handpicked editor for CT, was an outspoken egalitarian. Yet the majority of evangelicals find it natural to follow what they see as a biblical pattern. Maleness and femaleness, though potent archetypes in church and home, are neither qualification nor impediment in any other endeavor.



Related Elsewhere:

Previous Christianity Today editorials can be found here.

For more politics coverage, see Christianity Today's campaign 2008 section and the politics blog.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 128 comments.See all comments
Chris   Posted: November 07, 2008 11:37 PM
CT this article is nothing but a total wash. Anyone in their right mind knows Sarah Palin wasn't ready to be V.P....thank God they did not get in office. Furthermore, if Sarah Palin would have been Michelle Obama you and the Republicans would have gave her hell. Also, education isn't everything, but it is sure helpful in certain occupations. She didn't even know that Africa was a continent or anything about Russia; except that see can see it. Lastly, she is supposed to be a christian and the campaign that her and John McCain ran was nothing Christlike, actually, it was more in line with a Spirit of Division and Hatred. Please don't get me wrong, I voted Republican in the last 4 elections, however, this time I chose to follow my conviction and I am glad I did....Go Obama! God chose you and He is going to use you mightly to bring healing to our nation.

OS   Posted: November 05, 2008 8:08 PM
It is a sad day in the American Evangelical Community. Sad not because MCCain-Palin lost. Sad because Luke 16 especially verse 8 hangs as a fitting conclusion to the shameful position of the evangelical leaders. How can we have tried to hard to defend the indefensible. Even the ungodly could see that Palin was unqualified and her choice nothing but patronizing and pandering. It was never about her faith or sex. She was simply unqualified and McCain a poor manager applying for a job that requires good managers.

sync   Posted: November 05, 2008 7:52 PM
my point of view is different. palin seem to be a classic case of playing the sympathy card. the question was pro-life. i believe god is both pro-choice and pro-life, because both are victims of circumstances. but a bigger issue was this.... there is a war going on out there and many non-american civilians and children are being killed, tortured and imprisoned unjustly. this elections are about setting these captives free! pro-life must include supporting these innocent people's right to live not just the right of irresponsible mothers to play the sympathy card, make excuses or worse, encourages teenagers to get pregnant, opt out of school, live on dole and demand that food to be on the table. God is building a people of power, people who help themselves, workplace ministers - whether they are black, white, young old, even muslims. we dont choose christians. god does.

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