
New Books Network Amy D. McDowell, "Whispers in the Pews: Evangelical Uniformity in a Divided America" (NYU Press, 2026)
May 13, 2026
Amy D. McDowell, sociologist who studies religion, race, gender, and sexuality, discusses how everyday interactions in an evangelical church manufacture sameness. She explains how friendliness, small talk, and volunteer rituals silence contested topics. The conversation highlights multiracial tensions, gendered authority, avoidance of politics like Trump, and how surface-level outreach and compromise shape belonging.
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Welcome Church Was A New Inclusive Church Plant
- Welcome Church was an evangelical church plant that branded itself as multiracial and inclusive while being rooted in Southern Baptist church-planting networks.
- McDowell joined after the pastor invited her, noting the church appealed to homeschool moms, college students, Hispanic brothers and sisters, and mixed-class attendees.
Welcoming Vibe Is Enforced By Avoiding Politics
- Being welcoming at Welcome Church meant active friendliness and an implicit rule to keep politics out of everyday conversation.
- Leadership slogans like "we don't build walls, we build longer tables" signaled avoidance of polarizing debates such as Trump's wall or Confederate monuments.
People Of Color Stayed Hoping To Change Hearts
- Black and brown congregants reported discomfort but often stayed because they believed their presence could change racist whites' hearts.
- Some joined racial reconciliation groups like Be the Bridge and sacrificed personal comfort for the church's multiracial mission.






