From EPPC Policy Briefly <[email protected]>
Subject Can Evangelical Journalists Say Anything Good about Evangelicals?
Date January 2, 2024 9:29 PM
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January 2, 2024
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** Can Evangelical Journalists Say Anything Good about Evangelicals?
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The same column and the same argument are on repeat, it seems.
Andrew T. Walker
National Review

The ability to receive critique is a mark of health.

The tendency to give nothing but critique is not.

I raise this question of critique because if anyone has followed along for the past two or three years, self-identified Evangelicals with elite-media platforms at such places as the Atlantic, Yahoo, the Washington Post, the New York Times, and even Evangelical outlets have a ceaseless fixation on criticizing Evangelicals, especially “white Evangelicals.” Think of such writers as David French, Pete Wehner, and Tim Alberta. Or Evangelical thought leaders who participate in documentaries about “Christian nationalism” produced by fabulously rich and progressive celebrities. The same column and the same argument are on repeat.
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Andrew joined the Guilt Grace Gratitude podcast to discuss his book, Social Conservatism for the Common Good.
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For the Wall Street Journal, Lance Morrow diagnoses the loss of trust in American society ([link removed]) .
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Henry Olsen writes for The Telegraph that Nikki Haley may have lost the media for good ([link removed]) .
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For The New Digest, Erika Bachiochi examines our current legal and political discord through different interpretations of women's rights ([link removed]) .
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At his keynote address at the annual Napa Institute Conference last summer, Ryan T. Anderson argued that Christians have an obligation to participate in public life ([link removed]) .
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