From news editor Daniel Silliman: Sometimes you don’t notice how much things have changed until you do some historical work and dig around in the archives.
Consider this three-person Q & A that CT ran in 1996. Tony Campolo, who died yesterday, joined Ralph Reed and Chuck Colson to talk about evangelicalism and politics. It was an election year, and Campolo was actively supporting Bill Clinton; Reed was head of the Christian Coalition and backed Newt Gingrich’s "Republican Revolution"; Colson believed in culture war but was also wary of the ways political operatives could co-opt pious people (one of his specialties when he worked for Richard Nixon before his conversion). They
were coming from really different places. From the vantage point of 2024, the fact they sat down together to chat on the record kind of boggles my mind.
And the conversation is so strange by today’s standards. The liberal gives credit to the Religious Right for politicizing Christians. The Religious Right leader speaks about the urgent moral concern of … tobacco. And gambling. And child tax credits. Then there’s general philosophical talk about the purpose of law.
I remember 1996, and it was not, by any stretch, a golden era. There are also things each of these men say that could legitimately raise eyebrows, if not hackles. It’s not impossible to see how we got from there to here. But I’m most struck by how different things were and how different evangelicals sounded not that long ago.
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in the magazine
As this issue hits your mailboxes after the US election and as you prepare for the holidays, it can be easy to feel lost in darkness. In this issue, you’ll read of the piercing light of Christ that illuminates the darkness of drug addiction at home and abroad, as Angela Fulton in Vietnam and Maria Baer in Portland report about Christian rehab centers. Also, Carrie McKean explores the complicated path of estrangement and Brad East explains the doctrine of providence. Elissa Yukiko Weichbrodt shows us how art surprises, delights, and retools our imagination for the Incarnation, while Jeremy Treat reminds us of an ancient African bishop's teachings about Immanuel. Finally, may you be surprised by the nearness of the "Winter Child," whom poet Malcolm Guite guides us enticingly toward. Happy Advent and Merry Christmas.
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