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Disowning Conservative Politics, Evangelical Pastor Rattles Flock
By Bill Alkofer for The New York Times , Sunday 30 July 2006
The Rev. Gregory A. Boyd leads a congregation outside St. Paul.
The requests came from church members and visitors alike: Would he please announce a rally against gay marriage
during services? Would he introduce a politician from the pulpit? Could members set up a table in the lobby promoting
their anti-abortion work? Would the church distribute “voters’ guides” that all but endorsed Republican candidates? And
with the country at war, please couldn’t the church hang an American flag in the sanctuary?
After refusing each time, Mr. Boyd finally became fed up, he said. Before the last presidential election, he preached
six sermons called “The Cross and the Sword” in which he said the church should steer clear of politics, give up
moralizing on sexual issues, stop claiming the United States as a “Christian nation” and stop glorifying
American military campaigns.
“When the church wins the culture wars, it inevitably loses,” Mr. Boyd preached. “When it conquers the world, it becomes
the world. When you put your trust in the sword, you lose the cross.”
Mr. Boyd says he is no liberal. He is opposed to abortion and thinks homosexuality is not God’s ideal. The response
from his congregation at Woodland Hills Church here in suburban St. Paul — packed mostly with politically and theologically
conservative, middle-class evangelicals — was passionate. Some members walked out of a sermon and never returned. By the
time the dust had settled, Woodland Hills, which Mr. Boyd founded in 1992, had lost about 1,000 of
its 5,000 members.
But there were also congregants who thanked Mr. Boyd, telling him they were moved to tears to hear him voice concerns they
had been too afraid to share.
“Most of my friends are believers,” said Shannon Staiger, a psychotherapist and church member, “and they think if you’re a
believer, you’ll vote for Bush. And it’s scary to go against that.”
Sermons like Mr. Boyd’s are hardly typical in today’s evangelical churches. But the upheaval at Woodland Hills is an
example of the internal debates now going on in some evangelical colleges, magazines and churches. A common concern is
that the Christian message is being compromised by the tendency to tie evangelical Christianity to the Republican Party
and American nationalism, especially through the war in Iraq.
At least six books on this theme have been published recently, some by Christian publishing houses. Randall Balmer, a
religion professor at Barnard College and an evangelical, has written “Thy Kingdom Come: How the Religious Right Distorts
the Faith and Threatens America — an Evangelical’s Lament.”
And Mr. Boyd has a new book out, “The Myth of a Christian Nation: How the Quest for Political Power Is Destroying the
Church,” which is based on his sermons.
“There is a lot of discontent brewing,” said Brian D. McLaren, the founding pastor at Cedar Ridge Community Church in
Gaithersburg, Md., and a leader in the evangelical movement known as the “emerging church,” which is at the forefront of challenging the more politicized evangelical establishment.
“More and more people are saying this has gone too far — the dominance of the evangelical identity by the religious
right,” Mr. McLaren said. “You cannot say the word ‘Jesus’ in 2006 without having an awful lot of baggage going along
with it. You can’t say the word ‘Christian,’ and you certainly can’t say the word ‘evangelical’ without it now raising
connotations and a certain cringe factor in people.
“Because people think, ‘Oh no, what is going to come next is homosexual bashing, or pro-war rhetoric, or complaining
about ‘activist judges.’ ”
Mr. Boyd said he had cleared his sermons with the church’s board, but his words left some in his congregation stunned.
Some said that he was disrespecting President Bush and the military, that he was soft on abortion or telling them not
to vote.
“When we joined years ago, Greg was a conservative speaker,” said William Berggren, a lawyer who joined the church
with his wife six years ago. “But we totally disagreed with him on this. You can’t be a Christian and ignore actions that you feel are wrong. A case in point is the abortion issue. If the church were awake when abortion was passed in the 70’s, it wouldn’t have happened. But the church was asleep.”
Mr. Boyd, 49, who preaches in blue jeans and rumpled plaid shirts, leads a church that occupies a squat block-long
building that was once a home improvement chain store.
The church grew from 40 members in 12 years, based in no small part on Mr. Boyd’s draw as an electrifying preacher
who stuck closely to Scripture. He has degrees from Yale Divinity School and Princeton Theological Seminary, and he
taught theology at Bethel College in St. Paul, where he created a controversy a few years ago by questioning whether
God fully knew the future. Some pastors in his own denomination, the Baptist General Conference, mounted an effort to
evict Mr. Boyd from the denomination and his teaching post, but he won that battle.
(Partial)
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