Episodi

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    What are the warning signs that a church leader will become a tyrant? How do we prevent church hurt from becoming our identity? What are ideologies and how do they become the overall focus of some ministries?
    Mike Cosper is the co-host of Christianity Today's The Bulletin podcast, the producer and host of The Rise and Fall of Mars Hill, and now the author of The Church in Dark Times.

    Discussion Questions:

    How does Mike define "Ideology"? What does it mean to have a strong ideology? Do you have any? How does this differ from having a simple belief?

    Why do you think so many people today struggle with anxiety? How can ideologies protect us from our anxiety? Why might that be a poor crutch?

    Mike recommends worship as a way to fend off anxiety. Why could that help?

    Is it wrong for churches and organizations to have a missions statement or goals?


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    In the Kanawha County Textbook War episode, Chris shared that the people of that county fought against some textbooks and stories being read in classrooms and as homework. Edgar Allan Poe's The Cask of Amontillado is one of the texts that was contested.
    So Chris decided to read it here as a bonus episode at the end of October. Enjoy!
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    Frances Schaeffer is one of the most important theological thinkers of the 20th century. He urged fundamentalists and evangelicals to think outside of their separatism and consider how they could reach the world and expand their worldview. He began his career as a preacher in the United States, but a foreign missions board asked him to assess the state of fundamentalism in Europe after WWII. While there he saw great works of art and met fascinating people. Eventually, Schaeffer moved to Switzerland to start L'Abri, a chalet community where wanderers could come, live, and discuss the gospel.
    That's where the story may have ended. But his lectures were turned into audio cassettes and books. Then, from this small mountain village, Schaeffer became one of the best-known evangelicals in the world. Once he returned to the United States, his books took on a Christian nationalist tone which sticks with us today.
    Our guest for this episode is Barry Hankins. He's the author of Frances Schaeffer and the Shaping of Evangelical America. He is a professor of history at Baylor University.

    Sources:


    Francis Schaeffer and the Shaping of Evangelical America by Barry Hankins


    The Evangelicals by Frances Fitgerald


    Reaganland by Rick Perlstein

    A helpful article about the Renaissance

    A helpful article about the Enlightenment

    Schaeffer's film How Should We Then Live?


    Gospel Coalition article about secular humanism


    A Christian Manifesto by Frances Schaeffer


    Discussion Questions:

    Have you read any of Schaeffer's work?

    What is your "worldview"? How did you get it? How did you become aware of that concept?

    Should all Christians have an idea of their worldview? Should it look a certain way?

    What do you think about the middle part of Schaeffer's ministry when he was preaching in L'Abri? How does it differ from the last third of his ministry?

    How have you seen Christian nationalism? What parts of the Bible do people use to justify it?


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    Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique kicked off second-wave feminism in the United States. The book was published in 1963 and addressed what she called "the problem that has no name". As women's roles shifted with the invention of electricity and the number of workers needed to run farms decreased, women's roles shifted. The idea of a "traditional" woman went from a farm laborer or factory worker to someone who kept the home and managed her children's schedules. This left many women feeling unsatisfied and searching for their purpose in life. Friedan's book addressed those issues and inspired more extreme views of women.
    Several "Christian" books were published to respond to Friedan and second-wave feminism. One was The Total Woman, the number one bestselling nonfiction book of the year which has sold over 10 million copies. Published in 1973, it was the genesis of the scene in Fried Green Tomatoes where Kathy Bates goes to the door to meet her husband wrapped in Saran Wrap. It encouraged women to use costumes to greet their husbands, to avoid being "shrewish", and to use Norman Vincent Peele's philosophy of positive thinking.
    Another book was The Spirit-Controlled Woman by Beverly LaHaye. This was a companion piece to a book written by her husband Tim LaHaye, but it somehow managed to avoid telling women how to live by the Spirit.
    Special guests join Chris for this episode. Each took a different book so we can better understand this movement and counter-movement.
    Special Guests:

    Amy Fritz of the Untangled Faith podcast


    Anna Tran of the Love Thy Neighborhood podcast



    Jen Pollock Michel author of In Good Time, A Habit Called Faith, and Surprised by Paradox



    Sources:


    The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan


    The Spirit-Controlled Woman by Beverly LaHaye


    The Total Woman by Marabel Morgan


    Discussion Questions:

    What is your relationship to the books we discussed in these episodes?

    What is the difference between first-wave feminism and second-wave feminism?

    How have the roles of women changed in society in the last 200 years? What role did electricity, the Industrial Revolution and wars shaped those roles?

    What was the "problem that has no name"? How did/does it impact women's lives?

    How does this vision of feminism compare and contrast to biblical images of women?

    How have we added or subtracted from what the Bible says about women to create our modern image of a "Christian woman"?

    Morgan advised her readers to meet their husbands at the door in costumes. What is your opinion of this idea?

    What did she mean when she said she had been "shrewish"? Is that term insulting to women? Why?

    Is the "Christian ideal" vision of women one that requires women to stay home with children?


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    In the 1960s, Tom Tarrants was a young man on a mission - to save America from Communism, Marxism, and desegregation. He was prepared to do anything, including joining the Ku Klux Klan, drive-by shootings, or even dying for his cause. Yet God had a far greater plan for this would-be revolutionary.
    Find the Compelled Podcast at https://compelledpodcast.com/
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    The National Women's Conference was set to take place. State meetings were overrun by conservative women causing disruptions to the meetings as they paid the entrance fee with pennies or made noises during the discussions. But liberal women were not angels either. Some went so far as to accuse the conservatives of sending in mental patients to do their voting.
    It's easy in all of the noise to forget that this was a monumental meeting. Women from all over the country gathered together to discuss issues that impacted them. They ran the show. They set the agenda. Conservative women, by and large, didn't show up for the main meeting. Why? Because of conspiracy theories circulated by groups led by people like Phyllis Schlafly saying that the elections would be rigged. Also, they started their own conference across town.
    This pro-life, pro-family rally was only about three hours long. But it packed a big punch. People from all over the country took busses overnight to attend. They couldn't stay the night because hotels were already booked up for the main meeting. So they came and went on the same day, taking the pro-family, pro-life movement with them.
    In this episode, Chris winds up a three-part mini-series that takes us from Phyllis Schlafly's turn against the ERA to this momentous weekend in 1977. The fallout of the conference is still with us today as religious people on the right work together to accomplish their goals, often trying to undo what liberals on the far left have already done. Extremes continue to snipe at extremes as the middle tries to get things done.
    Our guest for this episode is Marjorie Spruill, author of the book Divided We Stand. It is an excellent resource that is balanced and well-notated.
    Sources:


    Divided We Stand by Marjorie Spruill


    Reaganland by Rick Perlstein


    Interviews from the National Women's Conference


    Phyllis Schlafly Report from December 1977


    NBC's coverage of Phyllis Schlafly's funeral with Donald Trump's eulogy


    Discussion Questions:

    What were some positive outcomes of the National Women's Year conference?

    What were some challenges they faced?

    Why did conservatives feel shut out of the conference?

    What do you think about the role of conspiracy theories in conservative circles (example: Schlafly's insistence that the meeting votes were rigged)?

    Schlafly was overlooked in the Reagan administration. Why do you think that is?

    Why is it so hard for people of different beliefs to work together, even for the common good?

    What do you think would have happened if the IWY conference had not featured lesbian rights? Should it have avoided that controversial topic, or was it an issue whose moment had come?


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    In 1977, the Congress of the United States allotted $5 million for the National Women's Conference. The money was intended to bring together women from around the country so that they could put together recommendations for the Congress and President. It would highlight women of color, and those minorities who were sometimes overlooked like Native American women. But there was conflict from its inception.
    Liberal women, some of the same who turned NOW into a liberal group, took control. They did not want the far-right to participate, women like Phyllis Schlafly who had fought so hard to stall the ERA. This only made conservative women more bitter.
    There was more fuel for the fire. Gay and lesbian rights were added to the discussion topics of the convention. That was a big deal in 1977 when conservative women rallied around Anita Bryant and her fight against equal rights for homosexuals in Miami, Florida. The Bible says that homosexuality is a sin, so some conservative religious people did not want to give homosexuals rights in the US. So for liberal women to incorporate a gay and lesbian plank into the National Women's Conference was a BIG deal. And a way to pick a fight with conservatives.
    The battle ultimately led to conservatives hosting their own conference a few miles away. This gathering ultimately united the Religious Right and kicked off the Pro-Life, Pro-Family movement that we know today. How did women play a role in uniting evangelicals with the Republican Party?
    Our guest today is Marjoie Spruill. She is the author of the fantastic book Divided We Stand. She is a distinguished professor emerita of history at the University of South Carolina.
    Sources:


    Divided We Stand by Marjorie Spruill


    Reaganland by Rick Perlstein


    The Evangelicals by Frances Fitzgerald

    Anita Bryant's orange juice commercial

    Phyllis Schlafly on PBS video

    Former President Trump's eulogy for Phyllis Schlafly

    Andy Warhol's cover art for Time Magazine of Bella Abzug


    New York Times article about women swinging while their husbands were in Vietnam

    "Revive Us Again" by Joel Carpenter


    Discussion Questions:

    What is your impression of Anita Bryant? Do you remember her?

    What rights should homosexuals have in the United States? In the last episode about Phyllis Schlafly, we looked at conflicting opinions of what equal rights look like for women. Should they be treated the same as men or have equality plus protections? Let's transfer that question to homosexuals. Should they have equal rights, fewer rights, or equal rights plus protections?

    Should women on the president's council have opened the National Women's Conference to women on the far right?

    What do you think will happen once the conference is launched?


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    Phyllis Schalfly was a remarkable woman. Regardless of your politics, you have to admire the impact that one person, who was never elected to office, could have on national political conversations. Schlafly was already part of the in-crowd in Washington when she took a stance against the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA). She was an exercise in nuance herself-- a woman who fought for traditional views of women in society, while also earning a law degree and touring the nation on speaking tours. She had a family and held a prominent position in the national zeitgeist, even building on battles fought by Anita Bryant.
    But who was Phyllis Schlafly? She was a Catholic woman, which is important because Catholics had long been the victims of prejudice in the United States. She was a mother, a popular speaker, publisher of The Phyllis Schlafly Report newsletter, and author of books like A Choice, Not An Echo, which was a conspiratorial screed about stealing elections. This lady knew how to turn a story. She ran for Congress in 1955 and again in 1970, losing both times.
    Then in 1972, she learned about the ERA. The Equal Rights Amendment was first proposed by Alice Paul in 1923. The goal was to have men and women treated equally under the law. That means that women would no longer receive special protections either. So... a double-edged sword, right? Women in the 1960s and 70s still had a ways to go when it came to equality. It brought forth some big questions about how to achieve it.
    Schlafly wanted to protect the protections. So she formed STOP ERA (Stop Taking Our Protections, ERA) to rally her followers against the ERA. This was a big twist because state after state had rushed to ratify the amendment. But once Phyllis got going, they applied the brakes and waited.
    Schlafly may have single-handedly stopped an Amendment to the Constitution.
    In this episode, we're going to learn about this dynamo. A woman who is both loved and hated. An intelligent woman, and someone who traded in falsities.
    Our guests for this episode are Marjorie Spruill, author of Divided We Stand and Angie Maxwell, author of The Long Southern Strategy.

    Important Sources:


    Divided We Stand by Marjorie Spruill


    The Long Southern Strategy by Angie Maxwell


    Reaganland by Rick Perlstein

    A helpful list of milestones in women's rights


    Video of Esther Peterson

    Video of Phyllis Schlafly talking about A Choice, Not An Echo on C-SPAN

    A copy of Ladies, Have Ya' Heard? as mentioned in the episode

    Illinois State Archives interview with Phyllis


    An article from Time Magazine about the ERA's history

    Britannica article about The Fairness Doctrine


    Smithsonian article about Phyllis Schlafly


    Discussion Questions:

    What do you think about legal protections for women? Are you an Esther, an Alice, or a Phyllis?

    The ERA is really short. Do you think it should be more specific to clarify its position?

    How have you seen sexism? How has it impacted your life?

    Have you seen women treated well in the workplace? What made the difference?

    Are stay-at-home mothers respected in our society? If not, what can you and your church do to support them?

    What are your impressions of Phyllis?

    Are you okay with people using conspiracy theories to bolster their followings?

    We've spent a fair bit of time this season talking about parachurch organizations. What are your thoughts on them?


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    RJ Rushdoony is not a household name. But he influenced a lot of interesting people, from members of the New Right to the Christian homeschooling movement. His books and lectures inspired people to pull their kids out of public schools and teach them at home. But who was RJ Rushdoony?
    He was deeply impacted by his time doing missionary work on a Native American reservation. There he saw how difficult it was to get anything done and to give people proper access to their government. He went on to work with libertarian organizations like Spiritual Mobilization and the Volker Fund. His mentor Cornelius Van Til taught him to see the triad of government, church, and family in a new way. In Rushdoony's mind, those three spheres should not interfere with each other. BUT, he did want Christians to run the government. Instead of doing a top-down change, he wanted change to begin with families, then rise to the church, eventually taking over the political sphere.
    Howard Phillips, one of the founders of the New Right, was a disciple of Rushdoony. So was his son, Doug Phillips, who founded the homeschooling movement known as Vision Forum. In this episode, Chris interviews Paul Hastings of the Compelled podcast about how they met at a Vision Forum film festival.
    The special guest for today is Michael McVicar, author of "Christian Reconstruction: R.J. Rushdoony and American Religious Conservatism."

    Sources:


    Christian Reconstruction: R.J. Rushdoony and American Religious Conservatism by Michael McVicar


    Reaganland by Rick Perlstein


    The Evangelicals by Frances Fitzgerald

    Helpful article about libertarian philosophy


    One Nation Under God by Kevin Kruse


    Discussion Questions:

    How do you think Rushdoony was impacted by his experiences on the reservation?

    What is libertarianism? What do you think about it?

    In what ways have you seen libertarianism presented in evangelical culture?

    What did Rushdoony think about public schools? How was this a departure from progressive-era Christian thinkers?

    How does Christian homeschooling differ from other forms of homeschooling?

    Why did homeschooling take off in the 1980s and 1990s?

    What role, if any, should Christians play in public schools?


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    In 1974, Alice Moore was a member of the school board in Kanawha County, West Virginia. The board met to hear the recommendations of the textbook committee and approve them. But Alice protested when she read a portion from the Autobiography of Malcolm X, which thanked Allah for preventing Malcolm X from being a black Christian. From there they uncovered a number of potentially offensive texts, some because of language, others because of discussions of rape. Race was likely a factor as well, though Moore denied it.
    Local pastors decried what they saw as secularism and humanism creeping into public schools. Parents blocked school buses, and others kept their children at home. Soon, there were fights, and dynamite was used to blow up school buildings. What started as a disagreement over books erupted into an all-out war. One that echoed in other parts of the country at the same time as families wrestled with changes in education.
    Sources:

    "The Great Textbook Wars" - award-winning documentary on the battle

    "The Invisible Bridge" by Rick Perlstein


    "Soul on Ice" by Eldrige Cleaver (archive.org)


    "Androcles and the Lion" by Aesop


    Texas Monthly article about the Gablers


    Video of the Gablers talking to William F Buckley on "Firing Line"


    The New York Times article about schools closed in WV


    The New York Times article about the textbook war

    Radio interview about the John Birch Society


    Discussion Questions:

    Had you heard of the textbook war before?

    What did you think of the passage from "Soul on Ice"? Should it be read by senior students headed for college? What about other students?

    Who should decide what gets taught in local school districts? How about nationally?

    How did Alice Moore and others act appropriately? How about inappropriately?

    The KKK and John Birch Society show up a few times this season, often opportunistically. Does their appearance automatically smear all participants as racist?

    What else was going on in 1974 that could have escalated the panic of the era?


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    Something had to be done. The Great Depression meant the loss of a vast number of jobs and left families waiting on bread lines. Economists like John Meynard Keynes puzzled over what to do. President Hoover took a laissez-faire approach to the catastrophe, only to have matters get worse. Then Franklin D. Roosevelt came into office and his administration kicked The New Deal into gear. It was a program that offered diverse aid to citizens from protections for money in banks to homeowner assistance.
    Many Christian leaders came to hate the New Deal, especially libertarians. Their opposition to the New Deal as creeping socialism sparked the National Prayer Breakfast, some of Billy Graham's speeches, and the bonding of capitalism to Christianity and the US. So we should probably know what the New Deal was!
    Our guest on this episode is Justin Rosolino. He's a high school history teacher and the author of the book "Idiot Sojourning Soul".
    You can find pictures of Chris' 50-mile New Deal Bike Tour on the website at www.trucepodcast.com.

    Helpful Links:

    FDR's Inauguration Speech on C-SPAN


    Interesting YouTube video about the causes of the Great Depression



    Topics Discussed:

    What was the Social Gospel?

    Who was Franklin Roosevelt?

    What was the New Deal?

    The Civilian Conservation Corp

    The Works Progress Administration

    Jenny Lake - Grand Teton National Park

    Unemployment


    Discussion Questions:

    Why do some people dislike the New Deal?

    Which of the programs most impacts you?

    What do you think of the New Deal? Was it a form of socialism?

    Do you think there will ever be another New Deal in the US?


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    In 1955, the Board of Regents for New York issued an optional prayer to be used in public schools. It became known as the "Regent's Prayer". Here it is: "“Almighty God, we acknowledge our dependence upon Thee, and we beg Thy blessings upon us, our parents, our teachers, and our Country.” That short prayer was contested not only by non-religious people but also by Protestants who thought that it was too vague. What God is it talking about? Where is the mention of Jesus or the Holy Spirit, salvation, sin, grace, etc.?
    With help from the ACLU, parents sued and the case made it all the way to the US Supreme Court. It was known as Engle v. Vitale. It overturned prescribed prayer in schools. In this episode, Chris goes through the arguments the court and Justice Hugo Black made during this landmark decision. A year later, the Court heard Abington School District v. Schempp, which ended prescribed Bible reading in public schools.
    This season we're covering how American evangelicals bonded themselves with the Republican Party. There are a lot of reasons that evangelicals started to vote as a block in the late 70s and early 1980s. They range from women's liberation, changes in attitude toward taxation, and battles over gay and lesbian rights, to education. This is part of our coverage of the education section. This episode has been rewritten and recorded, updating an episode from season 3.
    Sources:

    "One Nation Under God" by Kevin Kruse


    Transcript of Abington School District v Schempp


    Census data about public and private schools


    Transcript and audio of Engel v Vitale


    Discussion Questions:

    Did you ever pray in school? What did you pray?

    Did you ever read the Bible in school?

    Is there an "ideal" prayer that should be read in schools? If so, what is it? What objections might parents have?

    Is it important for school children to learn about religions in school?

    Do you agree or disagree with Justice Hugo Black?


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    It seems like so many people define their faith by what they believe about Donald Trump. How can godly Christians return to the gospel to get us back on track?
    In this round table discussion episode, Chris is joined by Pastor Ray McDaniel of First Baptist Church in Jackson, WY and Nick Staron to prepare us for the season.
    Topics Discussed:

    What is Christianity?

    The importance of forgiveness and going to those who are angry with us

    Why it is important to cover things like the Watergate scandals of the 1970s in a Christian podcast

    The need for humility in our lives

    The gospel in 10 words or less


    Do you have a gospel message in 10 words or less? Find Truce on social media and let us know!
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    When did Republicans, the party of Abraham Lincoln, start courting the American South? It's a big question! For decades, Republicans were known as the party that helped black people (except, you know, for ending Reconstruction to help gain the White House). Then, with the nomination of Barry Goldwater, the tide turned. Goldwater's team promoted him as a racist when he toured the South. And... he won some ground in the traditionally Democratic region.
    So when it came time for Richard Nixon to run in 1968, his team decided to court the South. Not out in public like Goldwater had. Instead, they decided to operate a campaign of "benign neglect" where they would not enforce existing laws meant to protect African-Americans.
    Our special guest this week is Angie Maxwell, author of The Long Southern Strategy.

    Discussion Questions:

    What caused the rift in the Democratic Party that made Strom Thurmond leave (hint: it has to do with Truman)?

    What was the Democratic Party like before Truman?

    What influence did Strom Thurmond have on Nixon?

    Who was Barry Goldwater? How did he change the Republican Party by courting white Southerners?

    How might the idea of the South being "benighted" impact them as a people?

    Why do so many evangelicals see themselves as "benighted"?


    Sources:

    "The Long Southern Strategy" by Angie Maxwell and Todd Shields.

    "Reaganland" by Rick Perlstein


    YouTube clip of Nixon not wanting "Law and Order" to mean "racist"

    Nixon talking about "law and order" in a speech


    Nixon's campaign ad about protests and tear gas


    Article about Nelson Rockefeller

    Nixon's civil rights ad


    Helpful Time Magazine article


    "These Truths" book by Jill Lepore


    Bio on Strom Thurmond


    Article about Reconstruction

    "The Evangelicals" book by Frances Fitzgerald

    Truman's speech to the NAACP


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    Billy Graham, the famous evangelist, was good friends with Richard Nixon. The two played golf and gave each other advice. Graham was the person who encouraged Nixon to run for president a second time. He also encouraged Nixon to regularly attend church, so Nixon started the first regular church service in the White House, only to make it another "it" place to be seen. But when Nixon's crimes were made public, Graham continued to support him, commenting only on the strong language used by the president.
    What does it mean for Christian leaders to stand behind a corrupt president? In this episode, Chris interviews David Bruce, a historian at the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.
    NOTE: I thought it was especially important to outline the many crimes of the Nixon administration. Today these crimes are downplayed by bad actors wishing to rewrite history. It is important to emphasize that not only were there immoral acts of shenanigans, there were real crimes perpetrated against individuals, organizations, and the American people.
    Sources

    "The Surprising Work of God" by Garth M. Rosell

    An article from The Atlantic about the Pope and Mussolini

    "The Popes Against the Protestants" by Kevin Madigan

    NPR interview with Kevin Madigan

    "A Prophet With Honor" book by William Martin

    "The Invisible Bridge" by Rick Perlstein

    "The Evangelicals" by Frances Fitzgerald

    "The Failure and the Hope: Essays of Southern Churchmen" book of essays accessed on Google Books

    New York Times article about how the Watergate break-in was financed

    Pat Buchanan hearings during the Watergate investigation

    Frost/Nixon transcript



    Discussion Questions:

    Was Billy Graham being a good friend by supporting Nixon after Watergate?

    Should religious leaders maintain a certain amount of distance between themselves and people of power?

    Why do we like to see our governmental leaders as religious people?

    Was Nixon's church service in the Whitehouse wrong to be a gathering place of the rich and famous?

    How bad was the Watergate break-in? How does it change your mind about Nixon to know about the other criminal activity?


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    Harold Ockenga was a famous fundamentalist(ish) pastor from Boston. And he had a problem. Liberal Christians had the ear of the government. That meant that military chaplain positions and free radio time were going to liberals, not conservatives. Why shouldn't conservatives have access to the radio waves like theologically liberal Christians? But that would take unity among evangelicals, or, what he called neo-evangelicals.
    Neo-evangelicals were evangelicals who didn't separate from the world. In Ockenga's case, this meant maybe going to the movies or an opera. So he, along with other preachers like Billy Graham, founded the National Association of Evangelicals with the hope of uniting neo-evangelicals under one banner.
    It didn't work.
    The real story, though, sometimes gets lost. The was a big boom in evangelism in the 1940s as WWII wrapped up. Evangelists targeted the youth with organizations like Campus Crusade for Christ springing up left and right. This boom meant that churches swelled in the 1950s, only to begin their long slide a few decades later.
    In this episode, Chris speaks with Joel Carpenter, a senior research fellow at Calvin College and author of "Revive Us Again".

    Resources Used:

    "Revive Us Again" by Joel Carpenter

    "The Evangelicals" by Frances Fitzgerald

    "The Surprising Work of God" by Garth Rosell

    "Reaganland" by Rick Perlstein

    NPS article about the Bonus Army

    “After the Ivory Tower Falls” book by Will Bunch

    Billy Graham audio


    National Association of Evangelicals "The New Treason"



    Interviews from Harold Ockenga at Wheaton College


    Discussion Questions:

    What spurred the revivals of the 1940s?

    How has youth evangelism shaped American society?

    Why is it important to understand the role that cheap higher education played in shaping the 1960s?

    Why did neo-evangelicals feel that they needed access to the radio waves?

    Is unity important to the Christian walk?


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    Thomas McIntyre stood before the US Congress to deliver a moving speech. The man was being hounded by a fringe movement known as the New Right. The movement came from the work of men like Paul Weyrich, Howard Phillips, and Richard Viguerie. Their goal was to disrupt the Republican Party. They wanted to do away with much of the federal government and program to help the poor while simultaneously cutting taxes and increasing the military. They hoped to accomplish this by controlling direct mail. Direct mail! It sounds silly, but by inundating voters and congressional offices with bulk mail they could control the story.
    Men like McIntyre and Senator Mark Hatfield didn't know what to do with this influx of petty politics. Someone had even gone so far as to question Hatfield's Christian salvation just because of how we was going to vote on the Panama Canal treaty. What does giving the Panama Canal back to Panama have to do with salvation? Almost nothing.
    Today, we're going to explore this wacky phenomenon where we call something "Christian" or "biblical" if it fits out politics not if it is addressed in the Bible. How are we being manipulated by propaganda like this? And what can we do about it?

    Discussion Questions:

    Was the United States responsible in its claiming the Panama Canal as a territory?

    Are there things in your life that you mix with Christianity?

    How have your politics gotten confused with your faith?

    Does the Bible have anything to say on the Panama Canal treaty?


    Sources:

    "Reaganland" book by Rick Perlstein

    Handy article on the history of the Panama Canal


    Congressional record including the speeches


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    In this special bonus episode, Truce host Chris Staron walks you through a day in the life of a podcast host. He works about 11 hours per day between this show and his full-time job driving a school bus. Imagine what he could do if he were doing this show full-time!!!!

    Chris has worked on Truce for 6 1/2 years and is ready to make the show his main focus. We could make that happen if every listener gave $15 per year!
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    Season six is almost here! This season we're exploring the backstory of why so many evangelicals turned to the Republican Party in the 1970s and 80s. It's a huge story that involves murder, corruption, greed, taxes, school choice, racism, and a lot of big questions. Special guests include Rick Perlstein, Frances Fitzgerald, Marjorie Spruill, Jesse Eisinger, and so many more.
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