Evangelicals on the Rise in the Northeast

December 1, 2003 at 7:35 pm

Some interesting observations about the rise of evangelicalism on college campuses in Boston and throughout the Northeast:

At Harvard University, “there are probably more evangelicals than at any time since the 17th century,” says the Rev. Peter J. Gomes, religious historian and minister of the university’s Memorial Church, who arrived on campus in 1970. “And I don’t think I have ever seen a wider range of Christian fellowship activity.”

After lagging far behind the rest of the nation, where a June Gallup Poll found that 41 percent of Americans identified themselves as “evangelical” or “born-again,” New England is beginning to close the gap, with congregations sprouting in rented schools and office parks. Nowhere is that more true than at Boston’s elite, soaked-in-secularism colleges, although you have to leave campus to find the strongest evidence.

I had the chance to talk with Kelly Monroe earlier this year about her work among graduate students at Harvard, and she confirmed many of these observations. It seems like many campus ministries are beginning to connect with this generation of young people.

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