American evangelicalism has often been punctuated by dual commitments to the United States and to God. Those commitments were strongest within politically conservative evangelicalism. Though representing a solid majority among professing evangelicals, conservatives could not speak for the movement as a whole. Politically progressive evangelicals, beginning in the 1960s, formed a dissenting opinion of the post-World War II revival of Christian nationalism. They dared to challenge American action abroad, noticeably during the Vietnam War. Their critique of Christian nationalism and conservative evangelicals’ close ties to the Republican Party led them to seek refuge in either progressive policies or the Democratic Party. A third, underexplore...
This project is an inquiry into evangelical identity, particularly the identity politics of white, A...
The essays in this collection engage and build upon the exciting new scholarship in the histories of...
Religion can shape the form nationalism takes: the notion of the nation itself can be filled with re...
American evangelicalism has often been punctuated by dual commitments to the United States and to Go...
Christian nationalism in the United States has neither been singular nor stable. The country has see...
In the 1970s, a movement arose among white American evangelicals and fundamentalists that has been l...
In the last half of the twentieth century, neo-evangelicalism moved from an anticommunist nationalis...
In recent decades Protestant evangelicalism has become a conspicuous and--to many Americans, worriso...
The 2004 Presidential election brought into focus the mobilization and effectiveness of the New Chri...
Previously known for their domestic social and political activism, American evangelical Christians h...
What does it mean to be a Christian citizen of the United States today? This book challenges the arg...
Between 1945 and 1980, evangelicals emerged as a key political constituency in American politics, he...
What does it mean to be a Christian citizen of the United States today? This book challenges the arg...
The church in the United States faces a dilemma: How is it possible for Christ\u27s followers to wor...
In this thesis I explore how evangelical Christians in two different churches in the US relate to th...
This project is an inquiry into evangelical identity, particularly the identity politics of white, A...
The essays in this collection engage and build upon the exciting new scholarship in the histories of...
Religion can shape the form nationalism takes: the notion of the nation itself can be filled with re...
American evangelicalism has often been punctuated by dual commitments to the United States and to Go...
Christian nationalism in the United States has neither been singular nor stable. The country has see...
In the 1970s, a movement arose among white American evangelicals and fundamentalists that has been l...
In the last half of the twentieth century, neo-evangelicalism moved from an anticommunist nationalis...
In recent decades Protestant evangelicalism has become a conspicuous and--to many Americans, worriso...
The 2004 Presidential election brought into focus the mobilization and effectiveness of the New Chri...
Previously known for their domestic social and political activism, American evangelical Christians h...
What does it mean to be a Christian citizen of the United States today? This book challenges the arg...
Between 1945 and 1980, evangelicals emerged as a key political constituency in American politics, he...
What does it mean to be a Christian citizen of the United States today? This book challenges the arg...
The church in the United States faces a dilemma: How is it possible for Christ\u27s followers to wor...
In this thesis I explore how evangelical Christians in two different churches in the US relate to th...
This project is an inquiry into evangelical identity, particularly the identity politics of white, A...
The essays in this collection engage and build upon the exciting new scholarship in the histories of...
Religion can shape the form nationalism takes: the notion of the nation itself can be filled with re...