Fundies ranks crack over culture wars
By Libby
I can't help but think this is good sign that at least the theocracy is one less thing we have to worry about. It's seems the fundies are splitting over social wedge issues.
It's a long piece but the gist is the hard right fringers are losing their influence. Social moderates and the younger generation are tired of the relentless pitch for government nannyism over private lives and are looking for a return to true Christianity with its stress on spreading the doctrine through good works rather than government edicts.
It couldn't have come at a better time.
I can't help but think this is good sign that at least the theocracy is one less thing we have to worry about. It's seems the fundies are splitting over social wedge issues.
So when Fox announced to his flock one Sunday in August last year that it was his final appearance in the pulpit, the news startled evangelical activists from Atlanta to Grand Rapids. Fox told the congregation that he was quitting so he could work full time on “cultural issues.” Within days, The Wichita Eagle reported that Fox left under pressure. The board of deacons had told him that his activism was getting in the way of the Gospel. “It just wasn’t pertinent,” Associate Pastor Gayle Tenbrook later told me.
Fox, who is 47, said he saw some impatient shuffling in the pews, but he was stunned that the church’s lay leaders had turned on him. “They said they were tired of hearing about abortion 52 weeks a year, hearing about all this political stuff!” he told me on a recent Sunday afternoon. “And these were deacons of the church!”
These days, Fox has taken his fire and brimstone in search of a new pulpit. He rented space at the Johnny Western Theater at the Wild West World amusement park until it folded. Now he preaches at a Best Western hotel. “I don’t mind telling you that I paid a price for the political stands I took,” Fox said. “The pendulum in the Christian world has swung back to the moderate point of view. The real battle now is among evangelicals.”
Fox is not the only conservative Christian to feel the heat of those battles, even in — of all places — Wichita. Within three months of his departure, the two other most influential conservative Christian pastors in the city had left their pulpits as well. And in the silence left by their voices, a new generation of pastors distinctly suspicious of the Republican Party — some as likely to lean left as right — is beginning to speak up.
It's a long piece but the gist is the hard right fringers are losing their influence. Social moderates and the younger generation are tired of the relentless pitch for government nannyism over private lives and are looking for a return to true Christianity with its stress on spreading the doctrine through good works rather than government edicts.
It couldn't have come at a better time.
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