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Published on Ekklesia (http://ekklesia.co.uk)

FAQ 23: Why do you sometimes seem to be bashing evangelicals?

We seek to be fair, critical and affirmative to Christians from all traditions.

Ekklesia has staff, associates and many supporters from the evangelical tradition – which actually covers a wide spectrum of belief and practice, contrary to the impression created by some lobby groups.

We have given positive coverage to evangelicals who have taken a stand on social justice, the environment, peacemaking, and equalities.

We cooperate in a small way with Sojourners in the USA and welcome the ‘Red Letter Christians’ initiative which emphasises a broad approach to biblical values. We are pleased to be a partner of the Speak network. We work with the Faithworks movement, though we have different outlooks on some issues. We sought to provide a way forward in recent arguments between evangelical Christian Unions in universities and campus student bodies.

Unfortunately some evangelical campaigning groups have taken what many see as a negative approach to issues like the Sexual Orientation Regulations (SORs), Jerry Springer The Opera (which we defended), assisted dying (a morally and practically complex dilemma) and other social and cultural questions.

In the USA and elsewhere, the organised ‘religious right’, often claiming the label ‘evangelical’ for itself, has dominated the public sphere with an agenda based on what some have called ‘a war theology’. It has also backed campaigns – recently mirrored in the UK – to force creationism and its cousin Intelligent Design (which we believe to be theologically as well as scientifically untenable) into the classroom.

Many evangelicals, as well as Christians of other persuasions, are saddened and disturbed by this, and have welcomed Ekklesia’s space for different voices. Not all evangelicals are anti-gay, for example, and a growing number challenge the ‘orthodoxy’ of the movement’s leaders on retributive theories of atonement – an issue we tacked in the book Consuming Passion (DLT: 2005).

See also www.generousorthodoxy.net [1], which represents the perspectives of those who are variously called progressive evangelicals, postconservative evangelicals, post-evangelicals, younger evangelicals, liberal evangelicals, and/or left evangelicals

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