Rob Bell: 'Evangelical' has been hijacked to mean anti-gay

 (OWN)

The word 'evangelical' has been hijacked to mean anti-gay, anti-science and anti-immigrant, Rob Bell has said, condemning the way it's used in the US to refer to a "very narrow voting block".

"Whenever there's an election, there's all this talk about who the 'evangelical voters' are going to go with, and the 'evangelical voting block' – who are they going to side with?" the former megachurch pastor said in a YouTube video posted last Thursday.

"And when I hear that every time I just want to throw up. How did this word 'evangelical' come to mean what it means in our world?"

Bell went on to explain the root of the word evangelical. He said it was originally used by the Roman Empire when it proclaimed the 'good news' of having conquered other armies and lands.

"Now, a couple of thousand years ago...with the Roman Empire crushing everybody in its path, a small movement started among a group of people who believed that their leader, Jesus, had risen from the dead. And they believed that this was good news; that death doesn't have the last word...And so they took this Roman propaganda that said Caesar was Lord, and they said among themselves, 'Jesus is Lord'," he said.

The early church took the idea of good news "and said 'it's not good news when you destroy your enemy; it's good news when you love your enemy, and when you side with the widow, the poor, the immigrant and the stranger among you,'" Bell added.

"So the idea that a couple of thousand of years later, the word 'evangelical' refers to a very narrow voting block, with a couple of very narrow policies – it's so far from how it started, it's not even comprehensible."

Bell insisted that Christians need to "take back" the word. "Evangelical means good news, and it's good news for everybody that doesn't fit in...How did the word evangelical get hijacked like this?" he asked.

"We should take back this word as the joyous, buoyant announcement of good news that death, oppression and violence don't have the last word.

"If it isn't good news for everybody, then it isn't good news for anybody. And for many people the word evangelical has come to mean anti-gay, anti-science, anti-immigrant and it's so far from it's original intent which was the good news of God's love extended to everybody who's ever felt the boot of the empire on their neck.

"The word's been hijacked and it's wrong and we need to take it back. I'm an evangelical, and I believe in good news for everybody," he finished.

Previously embraced by evangelicals for his ability to draw people to the Bible and Jesus in creative ways, Bell caused controversy in 2011 when he published Love Wins, a book questioning the existence of hell. Though he had long encouraged Christians to think critically about faith, many people saw this as a step too far and he was widely accused of heresy. John Piper famously tweeted "Farewell, Rob Bell".

Bell, however, appeared to remain unphased. "I never spent a minute wondering whether I'm in or out," he told Religion News Service of his position as an evangelical.

"If we mean Jesus' message of God's revolutionary love for every person, and we can surrender and give our life to acts to loving kindness, then man, sign me up."

related articles
Conservative Christians are losing the argument: here\'s why
Conservative Christians are losing the argument: here's why

Conservative Christians are losing the argument: here's why

Beyond \'not in my name\': 7 ways to engage seriously with hateful heretics
Beyond 'not in my name': 7 ways to engage seriously with hateful heretics

Beyond 'not in my name': 7 ways to engage seriously with hateful heretics

The Rob Bell Show - The First Review
The Rob Bell Show - The First Review

The Rob Bell Show - The First Review

The problem with hating Rob Bell
The problem with hating Rob Bell

The problem with hating Rob Bell

America is not a Christian country. So why is religion so important in the Presidential election?
America is not a Christian country. So why is religion so important in the Presidential election?

America is not a Christian country. So why is religion so important in the Presidential election?

News
Church of England directs £600,000 towards clergy mental health and financial support
Church of England directs £600,000 towards clergy mental health and financial support

The funding package includes new grants for two national charities working with clergy facing psychological strain and financial pressure.

St William shrine fragments return to York Minster after 500 years underground
St William shrine fragments return to York Minster after 500 years underground

Fragments of a long-lost medieval shrine honouring St William of York have returned to York Minster for the first time in nearly 500 years, marking a major moment in the cathedral’s history and a highlight of its programme for 2026.

New research sheds light on why women are more religious than men
New research sheds light on why women are more religious than men

Gender gaps were found to narrow in line with degrees of modernisation, secularisation, and gender equality. But, the paper finds, the "gap does not vanish entirely – even in highly secular countries women remain more religious than men".

Prince and Princess of Wales visit Lambeth Palace to meet new Archbishop of Canterbury
Prince and Princess of Wales visit Lambeth Palace to meet new Archbishop of Canterbury

The Prince and Princess of Wales have paid an official visit to Lambeth Palace.