White Christian America Needs a Moral Awakening
By confronting their faith’s legacy of racism, white Christians can build a better future for themselves, and their fellow Americans.

By confronting their faith’s legacy of racism, white Christians can build a better future for themselves, and their fellow Americans.
White Christians are no longer the majority in America, but they’re still driving election results.
New polling finds that their support for the president remains strikingly high. But are they mortgaging the future of the faith?
Two-thirds of those who voted for the president felt his election was the "last chance to stop America's decline." But his victory won't arrest the cultural and demographic trends they opposed.
Most Americans take a pragmatic view of responding to the challenges posed by illegal immigration.
The presidential candidate has resurrected divisive GOP campaign tactics that target and alienate minorities.
A once powerful demographic group is losing ground in American politics.
White evangelicals are culturally and economically disaffected—anxious to protect the conservative Christian culture rapidly disappearing in America.
A new focus on systemic institutional problems reflects the changing demographics of the faithful.
On discrimination and religious-liberty claims, the battle for equal rights is far from over.