and that woshgsrks. that's show business but that is not the gospel of jesus christ. christianity seems to be a bit in both of the categories at the moment. try um fanlt asent and plummeting catastrophe. on the one hand, ivevangelicals seems to be in the media quite a bit as a political phenomenon with no small amount of influence. on another hand, survey after survey after survey shows trouble, dem graphically with millennial and generation z, churchgoers or x churchgoers. and the unrest here turns out is not exactly what the doomsayers have been predicting all along. younger evangelicals are not yielding to the inestability of secularization. nor are they leaving churches in large numbers because they want to liberalize historic doctrine or ethics. the obstacle, it seems to me, is not secularism as much as cynicism. i wonder if it is just another badge of tribal identity. another vehicle for political action or even worse, just another marketing scheme. the campus ministry dropped evangelical from their name. they found this to be an unwieldly obstacle. so many stud