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More prayer on the right, and less politicking?

Pulpits which thundered on the right, now turning away from the culture wars?

Sandhya Bathija, writing at the Americans United for Separation of Church and State blog, says::

William Graham Tullian Tchividjian, the grandson of famous evangelist Billy Graham and the new pastor of Ft. Lauderdale’s Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church, surprisingly says he has no interest talking politics. It’s quite a change from his grandfather, and even more so from his predecessor, TV preacher D. James Kennedy.

Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church’s former pastor was a religious right leader who pursued the culture wars from his pulpit and on his radio and television broadcasts, books, pamphlets, tapes and DVDs.

That left an impression. One Tchividjian is correcting.

On Tuesday he told the Miami Herald:

”Dr. Kennedy came from a completely different generation, and my leadership by that fact alone will be different,” Tchividjian said.

While the late Kennedy kept a hand in all aspects of the church organization, including its radio, television and print media arm, and Westminster Academy and Knox Theological Seminary in Fort Lauderdale, Tchividjian will oversee only the main church.

”Those ministries have gone their own separate ways. They have their own presidents,” said Coral Ridge executive minister Ronald Siegenthaler. “The church will be more focused on the local community, as opposed to more national and international outreach.”

We feel Bathija is right when she argues that Tchividjian is in step with the Pew Forum’s August 2008, survey which found that 52 percent of Americans agreed that houses of worship should keep out of politics.

If a harbinger, Tchividjian is certainly a notable one. He will, however, not be lonely. The demographics are, for many, irresistible.

January 23, 2009 - Posted by | Cultural, Religion | , , , ,

3 Comments

  1. The anti-christian group separation of church and state says churches should stay out of politics and a Pew survey says that Americans believe that churches should stay out of politics, therefore you all use that as support for staying out of politics! Bathija says killing unborn babies is OK and a Pew study says most Americans say killing unborn babies is OK, therefore you all now should say we were wrong, killing unborn babies is Ok! Wow and I thought the Bible was the governing text for all of life.

    Comment by Thomas Riley | January 24, 2009

  2. Thomas Riley, I do think you have a point or two, but possibly not about this blog entry.
    We suggest that the Rev. Tchividjian and others will be more successful at reaching prospective new church members if they stay out of or at least distance themselves from political activism. We infer this from the polling data — standard marketing practice.
    You seem to us to argue that the Bible forbids abortion and requires ministers/pastors/etc … to be politically active.
    We aren’t attempting to address either of those issues here.
    We’re reporting a trend and commenting on why that trend is likely to persist and grow.

    Have a good day.

    Comment by baptistplanet | January 24, 2009

  3. […] The best pastors are, of course, adapting quickly. […]

    Pingback by Why denominational decline? « BaptistPlanet | January 25, 2009


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