Chuck

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Schaeffer had sold Falwell on the need to partner with “co-belligerents,” people of different beliefs but shared objectives. The implications, political and spiritual, were profound. Whereas Falwell had once treated theology as the imperative—prioritizing saving the individual soul, believing that America’s redemption was downstream from mass conversion—he was now operating in reverse, setting aside religious differences and working with non-Christians toward a supposed national salvation.
The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory: American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism
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