<em>Evangelical</em> Has Lost Its Meaning
Once a month or so Tommy Kidd and I get together for lunch at our favorite taco joint. Over the carnitas and barbacoa and guacamole we catch up on how our writing projects are going, and perhaps gossip a bit about what’s happening at Baylor University, where we both work. And more often than not, we end up talking about our complicated relationship with American evangelical Christianity. Because the future of that movement, which is our movement, matters to us—and, we think, matters to America.
Tommy is a Southern Baptist; I’m an Episcopalian, in the Anglican tradition descending from the Church of England. Very different things, one might think, and in some ways one would be right. Where has a praise band, has organ music; the central event on Sunday morning at his church is the sermon, while at mine it’s the Eucharist. And yet both of
You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days