The Daily - By Challenging Evangelicals, She Changed Them
Episode Date: December 24, 2019This week, “The Daily” is revisiting some of our favorite episodes of the year and checking in on what has happened since the stories first ran. Today, we return to the story of Rachel Held Evans ...and speak to her husband, Daniel, as he heads into his first holiday season since her death.In her absence, the community she created still engages with her work online. “It tells me there’s a lot of pain in the world,” Mr. Evans said. “I find hope that there are people not yet born who may still read her words.” Guests: Elizabeth Dias, who covers religion for The Times and Daniel Evans, Rachel Held Evans’s husband. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading:Rachel Held Evans, the best-selling author who challenged conservative Christianity and gave voice to a generation of wandering evangelicals wrestling with their faith, passed away in May after experiencing excessive brain swelling.
Transcript
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Hey, it's Michael. All this week, The Daily is revisiting our favorite episodes of the year,
listening back, and then hearing what's happened since they first ran.
Today, we return to the story of Rachel Held Evans. It's Tuesday, December 24th.
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
Today.
In a brief but prolific career,
a young writer asked whether evangelical Christianity could change.
In doing so, she changed it.
My colleague Natalie Kitchereff speaks to religion reporter Elizabeth Dias about the legacy of Rachel Held Evans.
It's Monday, June 3rd.
It's always interesting to me as the religion reporter for The New York Times, which spiritual figures break out into the mainstream. And I think the last time I wrote an obituary was for Billy Graham.
And the word redemption means to buy back. Why do you need to be bought back? Because
the Bible says you're the slave of sin. He was this giant of evangelical culture.
He died at 99 and defined generations of evangelical culture.
You must make a choice tonight.
Are you going to continue down the broad road that leads to destruction,
or will you change and go the narrow road that leads to eternal life?
This is the choice that only you can make.
Asking one question about your faith will undoubtedly lead to another.
Rachel Held Evans was a 37-year-old writer.
Changing your mind about one idea means you will likely scrutinize others.
Who didn't always even seem totally sure that she was a Christian.
And allowing yourself to have doubts about Christianity or about your present version of Christianity puts your sense of safety, security, certainty at risk.
And yet, it is absolutely 100% worth it.
She almost single-handedly brought together an entirely new kind of community that is defining Christianity for
the next generation. Because living in faith, tried, tested, hard-won faith, is so much better
than living in fear. So my name is Rosella Ide White. My name is William Stell.
I am Julie Rogers.
I live in Washington, D.C. with my wife and our two cats.
When I first encountered Rachel and her work, I had just gone through a divorce.
I was still in conversion therapy, trying to become straight.
She gave me permission to trust that the spirit inside of me that was leading me to
come out as gay was the same spirit inside of me that was trying to follow God as I understood God
at that point. Rachel's become meaningful, I think, to so many because at some point she began
to realize, wait, what I've been told, what I've been told to believe, what I've been told to think
isn't all there is. And in fact, sometimes what we've been told to believe, what I've been told to think isn't all there is.
And in fact, sometimes what we've been told to think, told to believe, has been hurting people.
So, how did we get here?
When does the world meet Rachel Held Evans?
I started having questions about my faith when I was in
college. I was going to a Christian college. During that time, the U.S. invaded Afghanistan.
We got involved in Iraq. And I sort of became more aware of world events and how the circumstances
of one's birth affect their entire life. And so I started having questions about what that meant
when so many people in the world either never had any exposure to Christianity or that exposure has been limited.
I think the book that really started to put her on the map was A Year of Biblical Womanhood.
She committed to spend one whole year living exactly as if she followed all of the rules
for women in the Bible.
Right.
There's a famous passage in the Bible, Proverbs 31, and it's this long description of all
of these things that make a wonderful woman.
One of those verses is, you know, her husband is respected at the city gate.
So she made this sign, Dan is her husband.
And so she made this sign that said, Dan is awesome, and held it up
just inside of the town's entrance. Amazing. I certainly don't recommend that any other woman
try this. You know, part of the point of doing this was to show that none of us are actually
practicing biblical womanhood and that we need to be more careful with how we treat the word
biblical. You know, we kind of throw that around and stick it in front of other loaded words to try and bolster our position on something. And that's not only disrespectful to
women, it's also disrespectful to the Bible. I don't think it's meant to be read that way
and reduced to this adjective. This idea of challenging reading the Bible as this literal
document, I mean, it's really provocative because the whole evangelical system
for so long had been about biblical literalism, when you had to understand the Bible exactly for
the words that it said literally. I think what often makes someone so powerful is when they
start to actually name something that a lot of people feel. Yeah. And she was writing at the same time that social media was really taking off.
I think a lot of women were asking these questions and struggling with these issues.
And what I love about the internet, what I love about blogging,
is it gives platforms to people who wouldn't otherwise have them,
particularly in Christian culture.
At the church I was raised in, I couldn't even pass the offering plate, much less teach
a Sunday school class or speak in front of the congregation.
And so blogging gave me a voice in evangelicalism that I would never have had because I'm a
woman.
She broke down the access barrier of who could be asking questions about what it meant to be a Christian and who
got to talk about what those answers might be. And how was she received by the larger evangelical
Christian world? Well, I think at first she was a bit of a curiosity. You've told me you have doubts.
Yes. What do you doubt? I mean, what's the hard part for you? Oh my goodness, where to start? I
mean, a lot of this is really hard to believe.
And oftentimes I think all this resurrection stuff, we made it up because we're afraid of death and this solves that problem.
And I doubt when I see people who claim to be Christians not behaving like Christ.
I doubt the more I learn about science and our place in the universe, I wonder where does God fit into all of this?
So my doubts are a pretty consistent part of my faith.
She'd speak at churches and most of the time she was being interviewed by men.
I was often told, you're losing faith.
Just pray more.
Just read your Bible more.
That'll fix it.
At the same time, other people were really flocking to her.
There's so many of us that have been disconnected from the church because the church has been so black or white.
from the church because the church has been so black or white.
Christians who thought, you know, I've been told my entire life that women can't lead.
I wonder if Christianity has something else to say.
And I think a lot of these people, their struggles were the same, right?
It's the same kinds of doubts and questions.
In her, they found this safe place to actually think through some of those.
I still doubt. I still wake up some mornings unconvinced that the God I worshiped in church on Sunday even exists. And I don't
want to glorify that experience because sometimes it sucks. Sometimes it's really lonely and really
hard and really scary. But I know for a fact it's better than the alternative.
I have to tell you, as I said, I've been going through an evolution on this issue.
I have to tell you, as I said, I've been going through an evolution on this issue.
I've always been adamant that gay and lesbian Americans should be treated fairly and equally.
It's funny to think about now, but even President Obama then was just kind of getting to the point where he was openly supporting gay marriage. I had hesitated on gay marriage,
in part because I thought civil unions would be sufficient.
In the evangelical world, the division was there,
but it was much more under the surface because evangelical teaching has long been
that homosexuality is a sin,
and that comes from longstanding interpretation
of biblical passages.
I'd just like to start by saying thank you to everybody for coming tonight.
I really appreciate it.
In the midst of all of this, Rachel decides to question
some of what she'd been taught to believe about it.
The Bible is not opposed to the acceptance of gay Christians.
In 2012, there was this guy named Matthew Vines.
Being different is no crime.
And he put a video up on YouTube.
Being gay is not a sin.
You see him in front of a church and he's speaking and he's giving this argument that was pretty revolutionary at the time. And for a gay person to desire and pursue love and marriage and family is no more selfish or sinful than when a straight person desires and pursues the very same things.
You can be gay and be a Christian. And Rachel wasn't immediately on board, but she listened. 2013, she did a blog post about that talk that I had given and was using it as a way to open up
the conversation among the readers on her blog about the Bible and same-sex relationships and
really to try to start presenting an affirming case for understanding same-sex relationships
from a biblical standpoint. And the way that she was approaching it was not, again, by saying, this is what I think, but rather these arguments are worth considering. Let's
talk through them. Let's think through them. He wasn't like an academic or biblical scholar or
someone famous, but she was just interested in what he had to say. She puts this idea out there
like, well, you know, evangelicals, maybe we're wrong about homosexuality.
And so she and this online community that she's building are working through these questions together.
And this conversation does not seem like it's necessarily going to be the easiest one for the evangelical establishment to stomach.
Yeah, that kind of change was such a threat.
For months after that,
she was on the receiving end of a lot of mocking, abusive commentary.
The idea for her of changing her mind about homosexuality not being a sin,
that's enough to cause people to say she's a heretic. And yet,
in the midst of all of that... You know, it's so scary to leave behind a really conservative
faith community, even if it's a sort of toxic community, if you don't have somewhere else to go.
Her online platform and community, I mean, that's just growing through all of this,
and it's getting stronger. And I feel like Rachel built up other
places and even create a movement that we could be a part of and belong to that sort of made it
much easier to fully come out of the closet. If I had not come across those people, I think
I likely would have stayed in conservative evangelical communities a lot longer,
maybe even tried to marry a man and just see if I could make it work.
Or that might have become so desperate and unbearable
that I would have just left the church altogether.
The next really big issue for her was around race.
She would talk about race or write about things
around people on the margin,
so whether it be racially or identity-wise, orientation.
Around this time, Trayvon Martin had been shot and killed,
and George Zimmerman, the man who had shot him,
he was acquitted.
Her piece on her blog about Trayvon Martin and the verdict
around complicity and doubt and her role as a white woman really,
really spoke to me. And so you have this moment when the loudest voices in the more mainstream
evangelical culture were white men speaking out. Quite frankly, I think it's more of a sin problem
than a skin problem. And when I hear people, you know, scream Black Lives Matter, I'm thinking, of course they do. But all lives matter.
But Rachel did the opposite here. Rachel starts to give up this platform that she had created.
Using her platform for a Black woman who speaks about racial justice, using her platform for a Native woman, an Indigenous woman who's calling out rights for Indigenous people. She did that all
the time. She starts promoting Black writers and speakers. I don't know that I had any standard
readers outside of my friends and family before Rachel Held Everett came along. Rachel introduced
me to her literary agent. She introduced me to her speaking agent. She started
a conference called Why Christian and allowed me to be one of the first speakers of that conference.
She not only used her social platform, she then created two whole events and then brought us to
be speakers at these events. We were different races. We were different sexualities. We were just different. We were so different.
She had this rare sense for when she needed to be the one to take a step back and to listen instead of speaking first.
So seeing her, hearing her fight with us and alongside us was just really powerful.
was just really powerful.
So through all of this,
all of this criticism,
backlash to a certain extent,
does she ever get to a breaking point?
Well, I don't know if I'd call it a breaking point,
but she does join the Episcopal Church in about 2014.
And it's very public about why
she's formally leaving the evangelical church.
You know, for all of my differences with evangelicalism, I still love that community
and still feel very much a part of that community.
And I didn't get the sense it was this, you know, wholesale rejection. It was more of a recognition
of the kinds of fights that she did and didn't want to have anymore,
and what kind of church she was able to call home.
It's her work to say, although there are rotten roots in our practices around Christianity,
we may not have to throw the whole thing out.
We'll be right back. Fast forward two years.
You have the 2016 election.
I'm wondering what her take on the candidacy of Donald Trump is,
especially given how many questions were being asked
around whether evangelicals were going to endorse this person, this candidate.
Right. Well, 2016 was pivotal crossroads for evangelicals in America with Donald Trump's candidacy.
Evangelicals have long voted for candidates who oppose abortion rights.
voted for candidates who oppose abortion rights, and then-candidate Donald Trump was promising to advance those causes in really significant ways. You know, in the middle of this, Rachel
comes forward and says, look, I am pro-life, but this is why I'm going to vote for Hillary Clinton.
And she ended up writing this article about how she was going to support Hillary Clinton, even though she was still
holding on to her pro-life views. So in the article, she said, even though I think abortion
is morally wrong in most cases and support more legal restrictions around it, I often vote for
pro-choice candidates when I think their policies will do the most to address the health and
economic concerns that drive women to get abortions in the first place. For me, it's not just about being pro-birth,
it's about being pro-life. So when does Rachel get sick?
So on Palm Sunday in the middle of April, Rachel sends out a tweet and she says, if you are the praying type,
I'm in the hospital with a flu and UTI combo and I'm having a severe allergic reaction to
the antibiotics. And she jokes, I'm going to miss Game of Thrones. And things escalated from there.
Her brain began having these seizures and they just didn't stop. And so she's in the ICU, and doctors put her in a medically induced coma.
and everyone organizes a prayer campaign for her with this hashtag, you know, pray for R-H-E.
And you started to just see this flood of prayers from all sorts of people,
many of whom, you know, had never ever met each other in person,
but were all part of Rachel's church, you know, on her social media feed. And then on May 4th came the news that all of the
sudden she had experienced sudden and extreme changes to her vitals and her brain was swelling.
And doctors took emergency action to stabilize her, but the swelling just caused severe damage and ultimately
was not survivable. So Rachel died early Saturday morning, May 4th, 2019.
For me personally, it feels like I've lost a champion.
I felt less alone in the world because she was in it.
I'm sorry.
This is really hard. Once she dies, it's instantaneous.
I mean, the outpouring of grief across the world.
It wasn't just people who might have considered themselves Rachel fans.
It was people that she had sparred with, you know, evangelical men who she'd taken to task were remembering how grateful they were to her for her authenticity.
She required a response. Her work and her life demanded a response from people who didn't agree. It didn't stop. That went on for days. People trying to make sense of how someone so loved and so young just died in the middle of this dynamic work that she was doing.
So I have to ask, Rachel built this community and now she's gone. What happens?
Well, you might think that when someone so central to a community dies us the fearlessness to evolve to.
And because she had created such community, we knew that we didn't have to evolve alone.
She walked with us.
If nobody else would, she would walk with us.
She said, the folks you're shutting out of the church today will be leading it tomorrow. That's how the spirit works, the futures and the margins. I hope that
we will embody her legacy of freedom because she set so many of us free.
I think the movement that she's built will only grow. Because she was here long enough and she was working long enough in order to make changes that I don't think will be able to be undone.
I really don't.
The last thing that her readers heard from her was this blog post that she wrote for Lent, and I'll read it.
She said,
It strikes me today that the liturgy of Ash Wednesday teaches something that nearly everyone
can agree on. Whether you are part of a church or not, whether you believe today or you doubt,
whether you are a Christian or an atheist
or an agnostic, you know this truth deep in your bones. Remember that you are dust, and to dust you
will return. Death is a part of life. My prayer for you this season is that you make time to
celebrate that reality, and to grieve that reality, and that you will know you are not alone.
I keep thinking about the women who showed up at the tomb on Easter morning.
On the days when I believe this story, I'm struck by the fact that they showed up with burial spices.
story, I'm struck by the fact that they showed up with burial spices. They showed up ready to walk through the rituals of grief and say goodbye to their friend. That was women's work in those days,
tending to those vulnerable things. But it's only in tending to the vulnerable things that we can
expect to witness a miracle. I can't promise you resurrection,
but I can promise you companionship.
I can promise you friends for the journey.
I can promise you fellow travelers
to help you carry those burial spices.
And as we tend to the vulnerable things together,
may the God of every season,
the God of survival, and if not survival, then death and resurrection, bless, preserve, and keep you now and forever. Amen.
We'll be right back.
Hey, Dan, it's Michael Barbaro.
How are you?
You know, I'm all right, buddy.
I'm all right.
How are you?
I'm okay.
I'm glad to hear that.
Yeah.
A few days ago, I called Rachel's husband, Dan Evans,
and I asked him what's happened to the community that his wife created.
Every time I post to her social media, people still engage.
Some people engage with it almost as if it's still her.
They say, thank you.
Some people engage with it knowing that it's me.
Being a writer, I guess that's just part of it where your words get to live on.
part of it where your words get to live on. I noticed a few days ago that there was a post getting traction on her website, and it was her post from 2014 called 26 Ideas for Advent.
Can you describe it?
Let me, you know, Rachel just says it better than I do.
When I wake up on Christmas morning, how will I be different? How do I hope the meditations and
practices of the season will shape me? How can I prepare myself, my home, and my family for the
arrival of Jesus in a way that nurtures a spirit of anticipation and hope? Have I left enough space
in the busy holiday season to pay attention, to listen, to wait, and to be surprised?
What does it mean to listen to the prophets in this season?
Not just the prophets of old, but the prophets of today.
Who is crying out for justice and peace from the margins?
And what will I do to heed their calls? So the 26 Ideas for Advent post,
once I saw that people were searching for it, I reposted that to her Facebook page. After posting
that, you know, you get hundreds of comments,
and some of them sympathy,
and some of them thankfulness.
Dan, what does all of this engagement
with Rachel's work,
even after her death,
what does that tell you?
It tells me there's a lot of pain
in the world, actually.
And her voice was needed by a lot of people.
But I'm thankful that all the words that she has written still exist.
I find hope in knowing that there are people not yet born
that still may read her words.
Thank you, Dan.
I really appreciate you speaking with us.
Yeah.
Thank you for having me.
And have a happy holiday.
And Merry Christmas.
Happy holidays.
I have a letter here
that I just wanted to read before I stop recording.
It says,
Rachel deeply impacted my spiritual journey It says, from the moment we read her words and are praying that she will be well we can't imagine how hard this is for you
it is hard
it is hard