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Mark Driscoll built Mars Hill Church into one of the fastest growing, most innovative, and most influential churches in the country. The ever-colorful Driscoll crafted a hypermasculine theology, redefining Jesus from a "a hippie in a dress" to Warrior, Victor, and King. While Driscoll's church spectacularly imploded, his hypermasculine theology is foundational to understanding evangelical support for politicians like Donald Trump and the rise of Christian nationalism.
List of contents
- Introduction: Pussified Nation
- Chapter One: Evangelicals and Gender: The Road to Mars Hill
- Chapter Two: Real Men (Don't Wear Sweater-Vests)
- Chapter Three: Real Women: Wives, Mothers, and Lovers
- Chapter Four: Real Family: Dating and Marriage
- Chapter Five: Real Consequences
- Conclusion: Question Mark
- Notes
- Appendix A
- Bibliography
About the author
Jennifer McKinney is Professor and Chair of Sociology and Director of Women's Studies at Seattle Pacific University. Jennifer is co-author (with Martin Lee Abbott) of Understanding and Applying Research Design.
Summary
A look inside one of America's most politically consequential churches
Mark Driscoll, the founding pastor of Seattle's Mars Hill Church, indelibly impacted American evangelicalism. Driscoll's brash, authoritarian, and profanity-laden leadership grew Mars Hill Church into one of the fastest growing, most innovative, and most influential churches in the country--not an easy task in one of America's most secular cities. Driscoll's gender theology put men at the forefront of American Christianity, rebranding Jesus from a "gay hippie in a dress" to a sword-carrying, "robe-dipped-in-blood" warrior. This type of rhetoric paved the way for evangelicals' embrace of hypermasculine Christianity, priming the pump for their unprecedented support of Donald Trump in the 2016 and 2020 Presidential elections.
Making Christianity Manly Again places Driscoll's gender theology in its social and historical contexts and analyzes the contemporary social patterns that explain how a hypermasculine theology helped create a megachurch empire. By addressing the rhetoric of Driscoll's movement through his sermons, along with narratives from former Mars Hill Church members, sociologist Jennifer McKinney leads us to a better understanding of the dynamics of the evangelical impulse to reclaim and glorify men's power. These dynamics, as McKinney shows, have fueled a growing Christian nationalist movement, with enormous implications for religion and politics in America.
Additional text
This is a solid study of a very influential church, resting on an interesting theoretical foundation.