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The Immoral Majority
The Immoral Majority: Why Evangelicals Chose Political Power Over Christian Values | Ben Howe
3 posts | 3 read
Evangelicals are losing the culture war. What if its their fault? In 2016, writer and filmmaker Ben Howe found himself disillusioned with the religious movement hed always called home. In the pursuit of electoral victory, many American evangelicals embraced moral relativism and toxic partisanship. Whatever happened to the Moral Majority, who headed to Washington in the 80s to plant the flag of Christian values? Where were the Christian leaders that emerged from that movement and led the charge against Bill Clinton for his deception and unfaithfulness? Was all that a sham? Or have they just lost sight of why they wanted to win in the first place? From the 1980s scandals till today, evangelicals have often been caricatured as a congregation of judgmental and prudish rubes taken in by thundering pastors consumed with greed and lust for power. Did the critics have a point? In The Immoral Majority, Howestill a believer and still deeply conservativeanalyzes and debunks the intellectual dishonesty and manipulative rhetoric which evangelical leaders use to convince Christians to toe the Republican Party line. He walks us through the history of the Christian Right, as well as the events of the last three decades which led to the current state of the conservative movement at large. As long as evangelicals prioritize power over persuasion, Howe argues, their pews will be empty and their national influence will dwindle. If evangelicals hope to avoid cultural irrelevance going forward, it will mean valuing the eternal over the ephemeral, humility over ego, and resisting the seduction of political power, no matter the cost. The Immoral Majority demonstrates how the Religious Right is choosing the profits of this world at the cost of its souland why its not too late to change course.
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review
jillrhudy
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Mehso-so

I admire Howe‘s principled stance but found the book to be pretty mediocre. More history of the religious right movement might have been interesting if he were a more compelling writer. Heard some names I‘d forgotten ages ago such as Mike Farris and Ralph Reed who did a lot of my thinking for me in my 20s. #politics #religion #culture

review
swynn
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Mehso-so

Howe is an evangelical Christian who claims that evangelical support of Donald Trump amounts to abandoning principles for short-term earthly gains. I happen to agree. I am a former evangelical myself, and find the messianic rhetoric about Trump deeply weird, Lovecraftian even. But while Howe's book is occasionally enlightening it is also rambly, scolding, and repetitive. Then again it's aimed at an audience to which I no longer belong, so YMMV.

blurb
hwestfall
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My 65 year old neighbor asked if we could read this together and then discuss. It has lead to some interesting discussions and we haven‘t even made it to chapter 5 yet! I am not sure that this book is for everyone but I have appreciated the talks and time spent with my neighbor/friend ❤️

Tamra This one definitely sounds like fodder for interesting conversation. 5y
9 likes1 comment