
Source: Post-Election Evangelical: A Statement from Mark Labberton and Richard Mouw :: Fuller

Source: Post-Election Evangelical: A Statement from Mark Labberton and Richard Mouw :: Fuller

As the data comes in, the key will be to watch turnout. Source: Did white evangelical support for Trump drop due to lower turnout? | Religion News Service

Imagining the U.S. as a town of 100 people can help illuminate the nation’s religious diversity. Source: If the U.S. had 100 people: Charting Americans’ religious affiliations | Pew Research Center

Labels matter. So do definitions. Evangelicals are best defined by their beliefs. Source: No, Evangelical Does Not Mean “White Republican Who Supports Trump” | The Exchange | A Blog by Ed Stetzer

The 2016 election has revealed afresh a deep fissure—and a great opportunity. Source: After Trump, Should Evangelical Christians Part Ways? | Christianity Today

The obituary has been written many times over. The old-guard Religious Right would be diminished, perhaps vanquished, over its support of Donald Trump. Source: The Revival of the Old Religious Right | Religion & Politics

President Obama transformed the Democratic Party into a bastion of elite progressivism that alienated the working class. Source: Why Trump Won | Hoover Institution

Here’s some insight into what the Trump election is doing to one small community. Me, I could not imagine — literally, could not imagine — deciding I could not be friends with someone over his or he Source: When Politics Becomes Your Religion | The American Conservative

White, conservative Christians voted for the Republican candidate by a huge margin, but this election revealed deep fractures among leaders and churches—especially along racial lines. Source: Evangelical Leaders Reckon With Their Positions on Trump – The Atlantic

Source: BreakPoint Symposium: Where Do We Go From Here? | The Stream