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Thursday, May 29, 2008
Frank Pastore :: Townhall.com Columnist
What Went Wrong With the Evangelical Manifesto?
by Frank Pastore
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After the release of the Evangelical Manifesto, Frank Pastore interviewed Manifesto signer and National Religious Broadcasters President Frank Wright.

Frank Pastore: The Evangelical Manifesto. You probably heard about it some time ago and you chose to sign it. Why?

Frank Wright: Well, I actually had a chance to read it and study it over a period of several days before I signed it. And I didn’t sign it on behalf of the National Religious Broadcasters, in fact no one signed on behalf of an organization, all the signers were signing as individuals.

Here’s the background on this: 50, 60 years ago the term “fundamentalist” in our cultures wasn’t a bad term. It described those people who were committed to the fundamental teaching of scripture, the fundamental articles of faith, the means of grace. “Fundamentalist” was once upon a time a good thing. Over time the culture sort of decomposed or destroyed that word, and gave it a very pejorative meaning. And if you would have asked an average Christian today, “Are you a fundamentalist?” they’d go, “Oh, no, no, no, not me. Don’t put me down in that camp.” And many fundamentalists, including my mentor Dr. D. James Kennedy began to describe themselves as Evangelicals. They felt that term was a better fitting term.

What’s happened in the last 20 or 30 years is the same thing: The term “Evangelical” has been deconstructed by our opponents on the left and made into something pejorative. So, with that as a background, what attracted me to the Evangelical Manifesto was that it was an affirmative articulation—and I thought a biblical one—of what it meant to be an Evangelical, what doctrines did you hold, what defined who we were. In other words, it was an attempt for Evangelicals themselves to define the meaning of the term, rather than having unbelievers and the culture continue to define it in a pejorative manner.

In the aftermath of the press conference introducing it, it took on quite a different character. Instead of an effort to reach the culture with a different understanding of “what it means to be an Evangelical,” it turned a little bit into a skirmish between Evangelicals on the left and conservative Evangelicals on the right.

Pastore: A lot of the Evangelical Manifesto goes after fundamentalists and they refused to name names. I don’t know who they are talking about. My guess is they are talking about James Dobson and Tony Perkins and Chuck Colson and those of us that are on the political right who are taking the Christian worldview into the political realm, like with this gay marriage here in California. I don’t want to be passive about this. I don’t want marriage re-defined. I want Christians to vote and be involved and to express their worldview. I think this document undermines a lot of that. Am I right, wrong, indifferent, am I missing it?

Wright: No you’re not, you’re tapping into how the debate actually turned out, which was not how the Manifesto was intended. Let me back up two steps and remind you of a conversation we had about a Dr. Stephen Carter at Yale University. He wrote a book entitled “God’s Name in Vain.” In that book his thesis was that the African-American church in America had lost its prophetic voice in the culture by being too closely identified with the Democrat Party. He warned white Evangelicals (he himself is an African American) and said, “You have the same risk if you become too closely identified with the Republican Party. You could lose your prophetic voice in the culture.” Continued...

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About The Author
The Frank Pastore Show is heard in Los Angeles weekday afternoons on 99.5 KKLA and on the web at kkla.com, and is the winner of the 2006 National Religious Broadcasters Talk Show of the Year. Frank is a former major league pitcher with graduate degrees in both philosophy of religion and political philosophy.
 
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Frank Keeps Changing his Rant
If any of you heard Frank on KKLA, he actually changed his rant about the evangelical manifesto many times.

First, Frank claimed that "NO conservatives signed it." (not even close to being true)

Then he changed his story and said, "Some conservatives signed it, but I KNOW they didn't read it." (how condescending and not true).

Then he changed his story again after interviewing Frank Wright, who did read it and sign it, to what you read now.

It's amazing how a kneejerk reactionary can contradict himself over and over, and yet for some odd reason never mentions it.

Talk about a God-size ego trip.

Passive Evangelicals
No true, caring evangelical would sit on the political sidelines while critical cultural issues like defense of marriage, abortion and Judeo-Christian values are in play. If you are an evangelical and expect to sit out this election and then ride a tsunami of pure conservatism in taking back the government in 2012, forget the fantasy. The Dems/Socialists/Marxists (one in the same; see the left wing nut above) intend to take absolute control of all three branches of the governement and establish an insurmountable shift in the US voting center of gravity with amnesty and citizenship for illegal aliens. If that happens middle class Americans will be invalidated politically for decades. So wake up, evangelicals, lest you become victims of your own studied passivity.
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