Ep. 48: Why I Deconstructed Evangelicalism w/ Dr. David Gushee

 

Show Notes

Episode Summary

CW: Unfortunately, we experienced technical difficulties with the audio for this episode. We apologize for the inferior quality of the sound, but the content provided by Dr. Gushee is stunning and incredible, making it well worth the risk of producing an episode below our normal audio standards. Thank you for your grace with this one! Dr. Gushee was incredible.

Those of us in the deconstruction community have been accused of many things over the last few years by individuals and institutions in the evangelical establishment. We've been accused of deconstructing our faith because we want to sin more, or that we have a rebellious nature, or we just want to have sex with anything and anyone, or that we've been corrupted by a liberal agenda. None of these claims are true. In fact, from all the countless conversations we've had with fellow deconstructionists over the years, most of us left evangelicalism because evangelicalism left Jesus. This movement is toxic, harmful, and frankly it needs to die.

In this episode, Dr. David Gushee of Mercer University describes his own journey out of evangelicalism and provides language for the myriad of faithful reasons to leave this toxic movement behind. From Trumpism, white supremacy, LGBTQIA+ exclusion, and biblical literalism, Gushee gives language for why millions of us have left the church building. Plus, he provides not only one of the most succinct and beautiful apologetics for full LGBTQIA+ inclusion in the church, but he also provides a "biblical" justification for same sex marriage. 

Bio

Rev. Dr. David P. Gushee (PhD, Union Theological Seminary, New York) is Distinguished University Professor of Christian Ethics, Mercer University, Chair in Christian Social Ethics, Vrije Universiteit, and Senior Research Fellow, International Baptist Theological Study Centre.

Dr. Gushee is the elected Past-President of both the American Academy of Religion and Society of Christian Ethics, signaling his role as one of the world’s leading Christian ethicists. He is the author, co-author, editor, or co-editor of 25 books and approximately 175 book chapters, journal articles, and reviews. His most recognized works include Righteous Gentiles of the HolocaustKingdom EthicsThe Sacredness of Human Life, and Changing Our Mind. His book, After Evangelicalism, charts a theological and ethical course for post-evangelical Christians, a course he more personally relates in his memoir, Still Christian.

Over a full 28-year career, he’s been a devoted teacher and mentor as Professor Gushee to college students, seminarians, and PhD students. He’s also led significant activist efforts on climate, torture, and LGBTQ inclusion, and is a keynote speaker at churches, forums, and universities.

Quotables

  • “One of the reasons why I have left evangelicalism is that I believe that at least U.S. white evangelicalism has jumped the tracks in terms of being a faithful path for following Jesus…Something has gone pretty wrong with this branch of the Christian community.”

  • “Evangelicalism has some problems, and the LGBTQIA+ issue was only one of the problems.”

  • “U.S. white evangelicalism has become toxic and I don’t belong in that community.”

  • “America is a white Anglo-Saxon protestant nation. Everyone else is here by sufferance.” -Franklin D. Roosevelt

  • “The idea that this country belongs to white Christian people, notable of course white Christian men, white straight Christian men, is the founding power structure of our country.”

  • “Trump embodies disgust that someone like Barack Obama could become President of the United States.”

  • “Trump has embodied and advanced a reactionary narrative, but what could not have been anticipated was that 85% of white evangelicals went over the cliff with him.”

  • “Once Trump solidified his grip on the heart of the people, it has been unbreakable.”

  • “Trump has been both unveiled problems that were already there, and made them immeasurably worse.”

  • “Europeans began to think of themselves as not only as Christian, not only as superior, but as white. And spreading all over the world to colonize, Christianize, and enslave all over the world without any problem.”

  • “Evangelicalism and structured racism grew up together in America, and they intertwined to where you can’t tell where one leaves off and one begins.”

  • “White supremacism has not been repented and continues to resurface.”

  • “We don’t want our kids to go to school with black people.”

  • “All of this is pretty obviously adrift away from the Jesus we meet in the Gospels. Jesus is not the problem.”

  • “The reason why there is inclusion of LGBTQIA+ individuals is that we are following the radical inclusion of Christ.”

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Credits

This episode was produced by The Sophia Society and written by Gary Alan Taylor. Music is by Faith in Foxholes.

The Sophia Society

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Ep. 49: ReWilding And Refugia: Healing Our Sacred Earth w/ Dr. Debra Rienstra

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Ep. 47: Saving Jesus From Evangelicals w/ Dr. Robin Meyers