In Moscow, Idaho, conservative 'Christian Reconstructionists' are thriving amid evangelical turmoil
by Crawford Gribben
Professor of history, Queen's University Belfast
Evangelical groups in the U.S. have for years faced dwindling numbers. And a messy cultural fight over the direction of the movement might serve to drive further defections.
But while some of the largest Protestant denominations in America, such as Southern Baptists, continue to hemorrhage members, one small group of conservative evangelicals appears to be bucking the trend despite numbering only around 1,300 or so.
For the past 30 years, believers from across the United States and beyond have been gathering in Moscow, a city in northern Idaho with a population of around 25,000. Here, as part of the Christ Church congregation, they have set their face against the cultures of American modernity. Guided by a controversial social theory known as Christian Reconstruction, which holds that biblical law should apply in todays setting, they look to the Bible to understand how they believe American institutions should be reformed. Followers believe that abortion rights and same-sex marriage, among other evidences of what they would see as moral decline, will eventually be repealed. Their goal is simple the conversion of the people of Moscow to their way of thinking as the first step toward the conversion of the world.
This hope might appear to be unrealistic. But as a scholar who has charted the rise of the movement in my book Survival and Resistance in Evangelical America, I know that these believers have already made steps toward that goal.
Read more:
https://theconversation.com/in-moscow-idaho-conservative-christian-reconstructionists-are-thriving-amid-evangelical-turmoil-162652