Christian Ethics Today

The Fall of the Evangelical Nation (by Wicker)

Book Reviews
“Some books are to be tasted, others swallowed.”          Francis Bacon (d. 1626)

The Fall of the Evangelical Nation
Christine Wicker, Harper One, $25.

Reviewed by Jeffrey Weiss, Dallas Morning News Religion Columnist.

     The author, a former reporter who covered religion and other beats for The Dallas Morning News, throws her best punch with her first sentence: “Evangelical Christianity in America is dying.” The rest is nuance and numbers, woven around compelling anecdotes.

     The nuance: She defines evangelicalism as what most people would call the religious right.

     The numbers: Largely using statistics supplied by the groups themselves, she makes a strong case that they represent no more than 7 percent of adult Americans and that the percentage is shrinking.

     Her premise matters, she says, because evangelicals should not command the degree of power or influence their image has seemed to justify.

     The book is strongest when she’s laying out her numbers and introducing us to people. Her speculative attempts to enlist sociology, neuropsychology and evolutionary biology to explain the drop in evangelical numbers are less convincing.

     You need not know much about religion or numbers to appreciate this book. She breaks down her arguments into simple bites that are not dumbed down. Her portraits of evangelicals and those who have left the fold are colorful and engaging. Her case is not beyond critique—is her definition too narrow?—but a reader will have no trouble understanding her points.

Note: This review appeared in the DMN, June 2008, and is reprinted with permission.

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