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Progressive Evangelicals and the Pursuit of Social Justice

Brantley W. Gasaway

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The University of North Carolina Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Religion/Theologie

Beschreibung

In this compelling history of progressive evangelicalism, Brantley Gasaway examines a dynamic though often overlooked movement within American Christianity today. Gasaway focuses on left-leaning groups, such as Sojourners and Evangelicals for Social Action, that emerged in the early 1970s, prior to the rise of the more visible Religious Right. He identifies the distinctive "public theology--a set of biblical interpretations regarding the responsibility of Christians to promote social justice--that has animated progressive evangelicals' activism and bound together their unusual combination of political positions.

The book analyzes how prominent leaders, including Jim Wallis, Ron Sider, and Tony Campolo, responded to key political and social issues over the past four decades. Progressive evangelicals combated racial inequalities, endorsed feminism, promoted economic justice, and denounced American nationalism and militarism. At the same time, most leaders opposed abortion and refused to affirm homosexual behavior, even as they defended gay civil rights. Gasaway demonstrates that, while progressive evangelicals have been caught in the crossfire of partisan conflicts and public debates over the role of religion in politics, they have offered a significant alternative to both the Religious Right and the political left.

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Schlagwörter

progressive evangelical movement, Post-American, evangelicals and gay marriage, Jim Wallis, Jim Wallis and homosexuality, public theology, Prism magazine, Ron Sider, John Alexander, evangelical public theology, evangelicals and social justice, Ronald J. Sider, progressive evangelicals, evangelicals and politics, evangelicals and homosexuality, evangelicals and racism, The Other Side, Evangelicals for Social Action, Sojourners, Sojourners and homosexuality, evangelicals and abortion, Tony Campolo, Chicago Declaration of Evangelical Social Concern, political theology, evangelical political theology, Red Letter Christians, liberal evangelicals, religion and politics, evangelicals and same-sex marriage, progressive evangelicalism, evangelical liberals, biblical feminism, evangelical left, public theology of community, evangelical feminism