Churches and Cultural Climate-Change Denial (Part Three): Forecasting and Futurescape


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If English Anglican white Evangelicals thought the analysis of Robert P. Jones represented a range of subjects on which they’d rather not comment on (i.e., “…Let’s just get back to those Mission Action Plans, church-plant, grow, grow, grow…”, etc.), then he has done some more calculations and projections for us to wrestle with.  As he is charting the deep and rapid changes in the cultural currents, his data and research that should give yet more cause for concern to white Evangelicals in the UK and USA. 

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Churches and Cultural Climate-Change Denial (Part Two): Money, Sex and Power


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One of the leading commentators on religion and politics in the USA is Robert P. Jones, who is the CEO of the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI).  His recent books on the churches and racism have rightly attracted high praise for their depth of research, the range of statistics he draws on, and the bodies he consults (e.g., Pew Foundation, several Washington DC-based polling and research centres, etc). Best of all, perhaps, is his unimpeachable clarity: the boldness and frankness of his prescient analysis; and his conclusions and future projections.  Few could easily argue with his devastating blend of data, history, cultural and political analysis, and his very nuanced feel for and understanding of religion in contemporary America.

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Churches and Cultural Climate-Change Denial (Part One): Learning from Canute


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Dry Stone Wall, Orkney
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The myth of King Canute is one of those stories that you may remember from your childhood. Like one of Aesop’s Fables, we may have lost the original point of the story long ago, but the tale nonetheless persists.  Cnut the Great ,also known as Canute, (born 975?; died 12 November 1035), was King of England, Denmark and Norway, which were often referred to together as the North Sea Empire during his rule.

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