Episode 414 : Isaac Sharp - The Other Evangelicals

Published: July 7, 2023, 7:30 p.m.

b'Our guest for #414 is Isaac Sharp, author of The Other Evangelicals: A Story of Liberal, Black, Progressive, Feminist, and Gay Christians\\u2015and the Movement That Pushed Them Out. Isaac B. Sharp is director of online and part-time programs and visiting assistant professor at Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York. He is the coeditor of Evangelical Ethics: A Reader in the Library of Theological Ethics series (Westminster John Knox, 2015) as well as Christian Ethics in Conversation (Wipf & Stock, 2020). About the book: What\\u2019s the first thing that comes to mind when you hear \\u201cevangelical\\u201d?
For many, the answer is \\u201cwhite,\\u201d \\u201cpatriarchal,\\u201d \\u201cconservative,\\u201d or \\u201cfundamentalist\\u201d\\u2014but as Isaac B. Sharp reveals, the \\u201cbig tent\\u201d of evangelicalism has historically been much bigger than we\\u2019ve been led to believe. In The Other Evangelicals, Sharp brings to light the stories of those twentieth-century evangelicals who didn\\u2019t fit the mold, including Black, feminist, progressive, and gay Christians.
Though the binary of fundamentalist evangelicals and modernist mainline Protestants is taken for granted today, Sharp demonstrates that fundamentalists and modernists battled over the title of \\u201cevangelical\\u201d in post\\u2013World War II America. In fact, many ideologies characteristic of evangelicalism today, such as \\u201cbiblical womanhood\\u201d and political conservatism, arose only in reaction to the popularity of evangelical feminism and progressivism. Eventually, history was written by the \\u201cwinners\\u201d\\u2014the Billy Grahams of American religion\\u2014while the \\u201closers\\u201d were expelled from the movement via the establishment of institutions such as the National Association of Evangelicals. Carefully researched and deftly written, The Other Evangelicals offers a breath of fresh air for scholars seeking a more inclusive history of religion in America.'