Some of you know the
name Rachel Held Evans well; others, not so much. Regardless, it seems appropriate
to take some time to remember Rachel now, just before the 40th anniversary of her birth
on June 8. I'm greatly saddened that she didn’t live to celebrate the big 4-0,
as she died on May 4, 2019.
Who
Was Rachel Held Evans?
Rachel
Grace Held was born in Alabama but moved with her birth family to Dayton,
Tennessee, when she was 14. Dayton, you may remember, is where the (in)famous
Scopes Trial was held in 1925.
Five
years later, Bryan College, named for William Jennings
Bryan,
the prosecutor at the 1925 trial, was founded in that small city. Rachel’s
family moved to Dayton because her father got a job at the college there.
Rachel
graduated from Bryan College in 2003 and married Dan Evans, her college
boyfriend, that year. Rachel and Dan’s two children were three and one when
Rachel died.
During
her much-too-brief life, Rachel Held Evans (RHE) became a prominent Christian
blogger, author, and speaker. But because of her faith in Jesus, she regularly rejected
the biblicism, patriarchalism, and homophobic ideas of the conservative
Christianity of her youth.
What
Did Rachel Write?
RHE
wrote four books published between 2010 and 2018, the year before
her untimely death. The first was Evolving in Monkey Town: How a Girl Who
Knew All the Answers Learned to Ask the Questions. Four years later it was
republished as Faith Unraveled with the same subtitle.
Her
2012 book, A Year of Biblical Womanhood, became a New York Times bestseller in
e-book non-fiction, and her Searching for Sunday: Loving, Leaving, and
Finding the Church (2015) also became a New York Times bestseller
nonfiction paperback.
Rachel’s only book I have read is her last one, Inspired: Slaying Giants, Walking on Water, and Loving the Bible Again, published less than a year before her death. I was much impressed by it.
Here is just one of the many statements I liked in that book: “The apostles remembered what many modern Christians tend to forget—that what makes the gospel offensive isn’t who it keeps out but who it lets in” (Kindle ed., p. 186).
Those words embody her central emphasis.
Goodreads.com
has nearly 700 quotes from Rachel’s books that have been placed on their
website by her readers (see here). There have also
been over 10,500 ratings of Inspired posted on Goodreads—which is far
fewer than those for her previous two books!
Why
Remember Rachel?
One
main reason I remember Rachel and encourage you readers to do the same is
because her central emphasis, as indicated above, expresses the truth of one of
my favorite old Christian hymns, “There’s a Wideness in God’s mercy.”**
Here is what others said about her shortly after her death.
Writing for Religious
News Service on May 4, 2019, journalist Kately Beaty lauded
RHE
for preaching “the wildly expansive love of God.”
Two
days later, Eliza Griswold’s article in The New Yorker was titled, “The Radically
Inclusive Christianity of Rachel Held Evans.” (Griswold was a Pulitzer Prize
winner in 2019.)
Also
on May 6, Emma Green’s article in The
Atlantic
referred to RHE as a “hero to Christian misfits.”
Elizabeth
Eisenstadt Evans’s piece about RHE in the June 5, 2019, issue of Christian
Century was titled “Apostle to outsiders.” Journalist Evans (no relation to
Dan) wrote in the last paragraph, “Christianity in America is more lively,
loving, generous, and honest because of Rachel Held Evans.”
Journalist
Green concluded her May 6 article with these words: “Evans spent her life trying
to follow an itinerant preacher and carpenter, who also hung out with rejects
and oddballs. In death, as that preacher once promised, she will be known by
her fruits.”
Yes,
let’s fondly remember Rachel now and give thanks for the many fruits her much-too-short
life is still producing.
_______
**
There’s a Wideness in God’s Mercy (1862) by F. W. Faber
1 There’s a wideness in God’s mercy,
like the wideness of the sea.
There’s a kindness in God’s justice,
which is more than liberty.
3 But we make God’s love too narrow
by false limits of our own,
and we magnify its strictness
with a zeal God will not own.
4 For the love of God is broader
than the measures of the mind,
and the heart of the Eternal
is most wonderfully kind.
(From Voices Together, 2020)