Editor’s Note from July 17, 1981

This issue of CHRISTIANITY TODAY celebrates the magazine’s silver anniversary. While a 25-year span is but a brief moment when set against two millennia of church history, for evangelicalism, these years were filled with breath-taking movement.

In the wake of World War II, the U.S. Supreme Court could identify Americans as a Christian people. Now we are a pluralistic society, dominated intellectually by secular humanism. Then, Time magazine and other oracles of American culture snidely labeled all evangelicals as fundamentalists and couldn’t tell the difference between evangelicalism and evangelism; now, they speak of the “Year of the Evangelical,” and in our last election, the three best-known candidates all professed to be evangelicals. Then, evangelical seminaries were seen as tiny hold-outs for the faith; now they have so far outproduced the more liberal schools, that the under-30 group of ministers is today the most theologically conservative. Then, separatistic Covenant Seminary split off a split-off of a split-off; now, it is a focus of union for four Presbyterian and Reformed bodies. Then, charismatics were still “holy rollers” and unknown outside Pentecostal denominations; now, they represent a major force in evangelicalism, and every major denomination claims them.

For one who has lived his adult life through these years and participated actively in these events, it is difficult to appreciate the radical nature of changes on the American and world religious scenes. And it is nearly impossible to assess their permanent significance for evangelicalism.

For our twenty-fifth anniversary, we have drawn together articles that will help you to assess not only from where evangelicalism has come and where it is now, but also the direction in which it is headed for the immediate future. Some of these articles appear in this current issue; others will come in later issues.

One feature deserves special note: that king of humor, Edmund Clowney, president of Westminster Theological Seminary, reascends his throne as Eutychus I to poke us with his gentle jibes and rouse us from our stodgy ways. In spite of letters to the editor. I still have hopes that evangelicalism has matured, because I think I hear us laughing at ourselves more—as I am sure the good Lord does.

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Modern ‘Technoculture’ Makes the World Feel Unnaturally Godless

By changing our experience of reality, it tempts those who don’t perceive God to conclude that he doesn’t exist.

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A Brief Word from Our Sponsor

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Evangelicals Struggle to Preach Life in the Top Country for Assisted Death

Canadian pastors are lagging behind a national push to expand MAID to those with disabilities and mental health conditions.

Excerpt

The Chinese Christian Who Helped Overcome Illiteracy in Asia

Yan Yangchu taught thousands of peasants to read and write in the early 20th century.

What Would Lecrae Do?

Why Kendrick Lamar’s question matters.

No More Sundays on the Couch

COVID got us used to staying home. But it’s the work of God’s people to lift up the name of Christ and receive God’s Word—together.

Review

Safety Shouldn’t Come First

A theologian questions our habit of elevating this goal above all others.

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