The Evangelicals do not appear to wish to mount a counter-attack against the Supreme Court... the older Evangelicals may not have the funds to donate to «changing the Nation» (many are retiring), and the current
young Evangelicals see «gay marriage» as a minor event.
Not exact matches
The teaching that men are to be the «spiritual leaders» of their homes is found nowhere in Scripture, and yet I — along with far too many
young evangelical women — spent hours upon hours fretting over this in college, worrying I'd never find a guy who was more knowledgeable about the Bible than I, who was always more emotionally connected to God than I, who was better at leading in the church than I, and who consistently exhibited more faithfulness and wisdom than I. (In fact, under this paradigm, I came to
see many of my gifts as liabilities, impediments to settling down with a good «spiritual leader»!)
U.S. News & World Report has a great article about what many
see is a return to liturgy, ritual, and symbol among
young evangelicals.
As a result, the past decade has
seen a precipitous decline in
young evangelical identification with the Republican Party.
At any rate, the outcome will provide the
young evangelical «righteous remnant» (the explicit terms, incidentally, in which they
see themselves) with an excellent opportunity to «go the way of the cross,» paying the cost of radical discipleship.
The culmination of a long process of thinking and rethinking can be
seen in the May / June issue of The Other Side, a
young -
evangelical activist magazine.
David Kinnaman, whose book «You Lost Me» examines why
young evangelicals are leaving the church, says more youth
see heterosexual marriage as outdated.
While liberal and moderate Protestants and Roman Catholics were
seeing boundaries and identities erode and their
young moving from belonging to merely preferring, the
evangelicals and company were gathering in, building and providing boundaries.