Evangelicals, once at the periphery of American life, now wield power in the White House and on Wall Street, at Harvard and in Hollywood. How have they reached the pinnacles of power in such a short time? And what does this mean for evangelicals--and for America?
Drawing on personal interviews with an astonishing array of prominent Americans--including two former Presidents, dozens of political and government leaders, more than 100 top business executives, plus Hollywood moguls, intellectuals, athletes, and other powerful figures--D. Michael Lindsay shows first-hand how they are bringing their vision of moral leadership into the public square. This riveting volume tells us who the real evangelical power brokers are, how they rose to prominence, and what they're doing with their clout. Lindsay reveals that evangelicals are now at home in the executive suite and on the studio lot, and from those lofty perches they have used their influence, money, and ideas to build up the evangelical movement and introduce it to wider American society. They are leaders of powerful institutions and their goals are ambitious--to bring Christian principles to bear on virtually every aspect of American life.
Along the way, the book is packed with fascinating stories and striking insights. Lindsay shows how evangelicals became a force in American foreign policy, how Fortune 500 companies are becoming faith-friendly, and how the new generation of the faithful is led by "cosmopolitan evangelicals." These are well-educated men and women who read both The New York Times and Christianity Today, and who are wary of the evangelical masses' penchant for polarizing rhetoric, apocalyptic pot-boilers, and bad Christian rock. Perhaps most startling is the importance of personal relationships between leaders--a quiet conversation after Bible study can have more impact than thousands of people marching in the streets.
Faith in the Halls of Power takes us inside the rarified world of the evangelical elite--beyond the hysterical panic and chest-thumping pride--to give us the real story behind the evangelical ascendancy in America.
"This important work should be required reading for anyone who wants to opine publicly on what American evangelicals are really up to."
--Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)
"For people wanting an understanding of how evangelicals have acquired so much power, money, and influence in the past 30 years, this is the ultimate insider's book."
--Sojourners Magazine
"Anybody who wants to understand the nexus between God and power in modern America should start here."
--The Economist
"Fascinating."
--John Schmalzbauer, Wall Street Journal
"Evangelicals, as D. Michael Lindsay demonstrates with impressive research and inexhaustible energy in Faith in the Halls of Power, have made great strides in entering mainstream institutions like academia, government, the media and business...Lindsay accurately reflects the evangelical subculture he describes...He works hard, incredibly hard, to get across his points that evangelicals are present in all our prominent institutions and that we should get to know them better."--The New York Times Book Review
"This important work should be required reading for anyone who wants to opine publicly on what American evangelicals are really up to."--Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)
"Fascinating"--John Schmalzbauer, Wall Street Journal
"An impressive and admirably fair-minded book: anybody who wants to understand the nexus between God and power in modern America should start here."--The Economist
"It's the rare scholarly book that could appeal to a nonacademic audience. Like the powerful people it covers, the book refuses to accept a narrow identity. It aims to make waves in the larger world."-Lisa Gray, Houston Chronicle
"A remarkably balanced look at what Lindsay describes as 'the most discussed but least understood group in America today.' Combining academic rigor with flowing prose, Lindsay presents the fruits of over 10 years of research on elite evangelicals, including unprecedented interviews with 360 of them, among them two former presidents. Lindsay lets these leading evangelicals speak for themselves, but he also points out their inconsistencies and omissions...Those looking to understand the current generation, however, would do well to read D. Michael Lindsay, for he captures the complexities of evangelical life in a book that no one interested in the current state of American life can ignore."--The Weekly Standard
"Mr. Lindsay refreshingly bypasses the usual media impulse to treat evangelical leaders, their institutions and followers as exotic outcroppings of the American power elite. Adopting instead a clearly sympathetic view of the exercise of religious ideas in the public sphere, Mr. Lindsay is able to elicit not only the now-familiar story of the evangelical elite's post-Reagan era prominence, but also the less-appreciated story of how those same leaders' dalliance with worldly power is reshaping contemporary Protestant piety."--New York Observer
"This well-written history of the rise of evangelicals in American society provides a scholarly account of the motives and methods of how this new religious movement has reached the peaks of power in politics, academia, business, media, and philanthropy. The book is thorough and full of facts, outlining what makes a person evangelical and how evangelicals have acquired so much influence...delivers a clear picture of how evangelicals have become a dominant force in the United States...for people wanting an understanding of how evangelicals have acquired so much power, money, and influence in the past 30 years, this is the ultimate insider's book."--Sojourners Magazine
"If your schedule and normal reading load means you can only read one book on contemporary American evangelicalism per year, THIS is the one you need to grab."--Evangelical Studies Bulletin
"Faith in the Halls of Power is the most sophisticated and comprehensive study of Evangelical leadership and power in America."--Commonweal magazine
"This definitive work addresses the whos, whys, whats, and implications of the evangelical movement's increasing impact on the realm of politics and the marketplace...Highly recommended."--Library Journal
"A well-written, thoroughly researched, nuanced, and elegant account of the rise of evangelicals. It is an important volume that merits the attention of academics and nonacademics alike."--Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
"People of faith have an enormous impact on our society. Michael Lindsay's brilliant book has the story everyone else has missed. You must read this book."--Senator Bill Frist, M.D. (R-TN)
"Jesus tells his followers to 'be in the world but not of the world.' This has created tension for the faithful from the first century Church until today. D. Michael Lindsay takes the reader where faith meets politics and culture. This book explores how modern evangelicals struggle to apply the principles of Christ to an ever-changing society. Faith in the Halls of Power provides crucial insights into how evangelicals are influencing and being influenced by our world."--Senator Mark Pryor (D-AR)
"For more than three decades evangelical Christians have been self-consciously assuming positions of leadership across virtually all sectors of American society. Michael Lindsay's fact-filled book, based on his unique collection of personal interviews, presents a striking self-portrait of this new elite and how they reached power."--Robert D. Putnam, Professor of Public Policy, Harvard University, and author of Bowling Alone
"Quick, which of these fellows exercises more influence upon American life: Michael Moore or Rick Warren? If your answer is Michael Moore, you should read this book. It's an engaging account of how evangelical leaders like Rick Warren and many, many others have swept into the halls of power--from the White House and corporate boardrooms to the Academy and Hollywood. Through interviews with more than 350 evangelicals in leadership positions, Michael Lindsay provides a fresh, valuable portrait of a powerful force in modern America."--David Gergen, Advisor to Presidents Nixon, Ford, Reagan, and Clinton
"Michael Lindsay got it right. As someone of faith who has been in the public eye for many years, I can say that he tells the story of faith-based leadership with all its perils and possibilities accurately and with deep insight." --Ken Blanchard, co-author of The One Minute Manager and Leading at a Higher Level
"Whether you are a disgruntled evangelical who sometimes fears that the media's caricature of evangelicals is true or a skeptic who dismisses evangelicals as members of the flat-earth society--or something in between--this is the book for you! Through D. Michael Lindsay's first-rate scholarship, we are given a fair and accurate account of who evangelicals really are and how they have influenced our culture for the good. In our age of divisiveness and distrust, this is a welcome contribution."--Rebecca Manley Pippert, author of Hope Has Its Reasons and Out of the Salt Shaker
"An outstanding book. If more proof were needed that simple stereotypes about American evangelicals, whether from Left or Right, are inadequate, this book supplies it abundantly." --Mark Noll, author of America's God
"Evangelicals are sometimes painted as complete morons; sometimes they're marginalized, sometimes demonized, sometimes ignored. Seldom are they presented as a multifaceted movement with texture, tension, depth, and even paradox. Michael Lindsay strikes the needed balance and presents 'the state of the union' for Evangelicals in the U.S." --Brian McLaren, author of A New Kind of Christian
"Given the confusion and misunderstanding surrounding the evangelical movement in the U.S., Michael Lindsay has produced a work of lasting importance. A keen and disciplined researcher of the religious scene, Lindsay has drawn upon hundreds of personal interviews with evangelical leaders representing the power centers of politics, academe, entertainment and business. He brings readers a clear and authentic account of the extent to which evangelicals are changing America."--George Gallup, Jr., Founding Chairman, The George H. Gallup International Institute
"Who are those evangelicals? Where did they come from? And what do they intend to do with our country? Such questions asked by innumerable Americans receive in this book a response that is both sympathetic and critical. Michael Lindsay puts all of us into his debt with this thoughtful analysis of the rise of a new center of leadership in our public life."--The Rev. Richard John Neuhaus, Editor-in-Chief, First Things
"Faith in the Halls of Power is an extraordinary, definitive examination of Evangelical participation in American cultural and political affairs. Lindsay brings a gift for thoughtful, clear writing to bear on an impressive amount of research, and the entire project is guided by a sincere and refreshing effort to be fair. It sparkles with insight."--Frederica Mathewes-Green, columnist for Beliefnet.com and author of Facing East: A Pilgrim's Journey into the Mysteries of Orthodoxy
"Drawing on hundreds of personal interviews, Michael Lindsay has richly captured what C. Wright Mills would have never seen a half century ago - but has now become a potent pillar of America's 'power elite.' United by faith and friendship, evangelicals have built the networks, acquired the assets, and embraced the calling to remake American politics and culture. Faith in the Halls of Power is a compelling portrait of one of the most far-reaching but least appreciated social transformations of our time."--Michael Useem, Professor of Management and Director of the Center for Leadership and Change, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
"Michael Lindsay's new book gives us a strikingly lively account of American Evangelicalism at a time when an elite that was once largely closed to Evangelicals now includes them in significant numbers. He makes it clear that Evangelicalism is a diverse phenomenon, even in some respects an amorphous one, but in one regard, devotion to radical individualism, Evangelicals are more similar to than different from other Americans. In this crucial respect they cannot be considered counter-cultural, which may be encouraging or depressing news depending on one's point of view." --Robert Bellah, co-author of Habits of the Heart
"The stereotype of Evangelical Christians as uneducated, rural, and culturally marginal has been slow to break down. Yet Evangelicals are prominent among political and economic power brokers, active in cultural production, and increasingly well represented among elite university students. Michael Lindsay does a large service by tracing the extent and pathways of this change. He shows an incorporation into the American mainstream that is changing not only US society at large but also the Evangelical movement that has long seen itself as marginalized. That so many have been slow to see the pattern of change makes his book all the more welcome."--Craig Calhoun, University Professor of the Social Sciences, New York University
"Faith in the Halls of Power is a well-written, thoroughly researched, nuanced, and elegant account of the rise of evangelicals. It is an important volume that merits the attention of academics and nonacademics alike." --Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
"If your schedule and normal reading load mean you can only read one book on contemporary American evangelicalism each year, THIS is the one you need to grab." --Evangelical Studies Bulletin