Gina Welch is a smart, young, citified Jewish writer who grew up in Berkeley, California, and graduated from Yale. In a desire to know more about evangelicals, whom she kept running into when she moved to Virginia, she decided to attend Jerry Falwell’s Thomas Road Baptist Church in Lynchburg. As a bonus, she thought her unlikely pairing with Falwell could provide the grist for a book. In her words, “I considered him a homophobe, a fearmonger, a manipulator, and a misogynist—an alien creature from the most extreme backwater of evangelical culture.” (Falwell described himself as a fundamentalist, not an evangelical, a distinction lost on most in secular culture.)
As for Welch herself, “I cuss, I drink, and I am not a virgin. I have never believed in God.” A neophyte to religion, Welch didn’t know you could just show up at church. She thought you had to qualify somehow, like pledging a sorority or being invited into a country club, so she signed up for a Connections class designed for people interested in membership. Soon she found herself immersed in an exotic subculture with its own rules: no swearing, drinking, smoking, premarital sex, plunging necklines, spaghetti straps, facial piercings, short skirts, or R-rated movies.
At first the lingo confused her: insider phrases such as “feed my lambs,” “soul-winning,” and talk about spiritual gifts. Over the next months she played by the rules (mostly) and faked her way into a singles ministry called EPIC: Experiencing Personal Intimacy with Christ. She attended worship services, learning in time to appreciate the rousing “praise music” that at first seemed jarring and distasteful. With some misgivings she went forward for conversion, got baptized, and even volunteered for a mission trip to Alaska, all as part of her undercover journalism and without revealing her true identity.
Predictably, Welch encountered some things that made her uncomfortable. Her initial introduction to the ministry of Thomas Road took place around Halloween at an elaborate haunted house called Scaremare which featured fake aborted fetuses, attack zombies, and an actor hanging on a cross with his head lolling on his chest. Fear seemed ubiquitous, with Falwell predicting the rapture in 2006 and a Gospel magician delivering a scary talk to children about hell. In one of her most unsettling experiences Welch presented the plan of salvation at Children’s Church, reciting such phrases as “Jesus the savior took our sins to the cross,” and “The Bible says, ‘and without the shedding of blood is no remission.’” She adds, “When I finished my segment I virtually ran to the side of the room.”
Though she objected strongly to Falwell’s politics and cringed at his fundraising techniques and hucksterism, over time she found herself captivated by his charm and charisma, so much so that she felt genuine sadness at his death in 2007. She dared not tell her other-world friends about his effect on her, for they were repulsed by his right-wing views and the anti-gay policies of his church and his school, Liberty University. “Unable to explain the odd couple of my affection for Jerry Falwell and my loathing of his ideals,” she nevertheless attended the memorial service after his death.
To her credit, Welch genuinely wrestled with the main points of evangelical theology. The Trinity baffled her, as did the Atonement: How could Jesus taking on our sins satisfy an angry God? She listened to her teammates explain the gospel in Children’s Church. “The message—it’s okay that you do bad things, because everyone does bad things, and everyone can be forgiven, but you should try to be as good as you can be anyway—was a nice one. But the phrasing of it—Jesus loves you in spite of the fact that you’re a dirty rotten sinner—how could that provide children with solace?”
Everywhere she turned, theology seemed a conundrum. The Bible contains apparent contradictions but is inerrant; we are completely forgiven but still must do good works; Jesus died to please God yet somehow was God. The book that records her experience admirably avoids a tone of condescension about doctrine and those who believe it, though in the end she remains unconvinced.
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I have read other undercover accounts of evangelicals reported with far less empathy. Indeed, Gina Welch accepts at face value the transformed lives of those she meets: a former cocaine addict now a student at Liberty University, recovering addicts serving on the staff of a rescue mission, couples who selflessly adopt children as part of their pro-life commitment. After she herself responds to an altar call in order to seek baptism, she writes, “I was supposed to have a kind of flinty satisfaction and sense of homecoming, as if I could fall into the crowd and be received in a soothing embrace as intensely familiar as a relative’s laugh. But I felt more like a knock-kneed fawn at a meeting of wolves, my wolf-hide disguise slipping out of place. Because even though I had just had my first hint of what Evangelicals feel that make them so passionately devoted, and even though it would be some time before I found myself called upon to pray out loud, I was still not a Christian.”
Eventually Welch did learn to pray out loud, a terrifying experience that she prepared for by practicing at her desk at home. She liked the sense of calmness that prayer produced, and even the informality that evangelicals use in talking to God. The friendliness, optimism and, yes, genuine happiness of the people she got to know surprised her. As she recalls, “what I envied most about Christians was not the God thing—it was having a community gathering each week, a touchstone for people who share values, a safe place to be frank about your life struggles, a place to be reminded of your moral compass. Having a place to guard against loneliness, to feel there are others like you.”
The worship services eventually won her over too. She was amazed by the church members’ generosity in giving and their passion in singing. Some raised their arms high in the air, like rockets about to take off, alarming her at first until she decided that people at sports and political events showed just as much passion with less at stake. The stirring song “Days of Elijah” became one of her favorites.
After almost two years Welch abruptly ended her experiment. Friends at the church were hurt that she broke off contact, not even returning their phone calls. As she turned to writing the book, her experience at Thomas Road continued to affect her. Impressed by what she had learned about forgiveness, she met with a former teacher to seek reconciliation over a past dispute. She watched old services on her laptop and to her horror found herself singing along. “I felt awful if I slept late on Sundays, couldn’t figure out how to organize my day, couldn’t relax. I missed hearing Ray [one of the pastors] preach. I really missed my friends. I missed the warmth, the easy smiles people offered me when I walked into the room. I missed singing at the top of my lungs in church…. I was sick from lying. I had a sour stomach all the time.”
In a revealing passage, Welch describes the effect of hearing a sermon on Psalm 139. “God-love, the love in the psalm, the love in Jesus loves you—that was Mobius strip love, love with no beginning or end, love that was both calm and complete, unflinching in the face of anything you could reveal about yourself. Who wouldn’t want that? I certainly did, especially in that moment—knowing the secrets in my own heart, knowing that soon they’d be revealed.” She ends the moment of longing and vulnerability with this line: “But wanting it still didn’t make me believe it.”
After a long break, almost two years of no contact, Gina Welch returned to Thomas Road and met separately with a former friend named Alice and with Pastor Ray, who had guided her during her stay there. She came clean, telling them of the project, sparked by her desire to write a book that would help people understand evangelicals better. She admitted the deception, the questionable ethics of what she had done. She ended the project after the trip to Alaska in part because she felt uncomfortably close to the people she was lying to and in part because she knew it was wrong to feign belief in something others staked their lives
on. They took it well. Pastor Ray even prayed for her, and for the book, which would be published the following year as In the Land of Believers: An Outsider’s Extraordinary Journey into the Heart of the Evangelical Church.
The conversation with Alice took a different tack. Alice talked about her feelings of abandonment, of betrayal. “I thought we were friends,” she said. She imagined Gina looking at Caller ID and deciding not to answer her calls. Welch apologized for hurting her, but not for the project itself. She quotes Joan Didion: “Writers are always selling somebody out.”
Church had changed her, Welch admitted to her friend Alice. She writes, “I loved having that sense of community and also that serious, regular self-inquiry. Our relationship had changed me; feeling so happy in our friendship had made me think differently about Christians. But just like her, I couldn’t imagine ever believing anything other than what I believed. I had no choice in that.”
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I learned a lot from In the Land of Believers. Aside from its dubious ethics, her project offers a fascinating and instructive glimpse into a subculture that is rarely examined so respectfully from the outside. In fact as I read her book I recalled my own days growing up in exactly the opposite environment from Gina Welch. I knew virtually no one but evangelicals. I too had to learn the Christian phrases that soon became clichés, went forward again and again wondering if this time might be genuine, practiced praying aloud to sound spiritual, puzzled over my lack of feelings during such solemn events as baptism and the Lord’s Supper. Those who grow up in the church and those who approach it as a sociological experiment face the same danger, that it may become a comfortable pattern of behavior insulating us from reality rather than expressing it. Jesus criticized the most spiritual people of his day, the Pharisees, for precisely that.
Through the grace of God, and after a time of tossing aside the subculture like a stifling and unwelcome costume, I found that the words and practices can convey reality as well as hypocrisy. I must disagree with Welch’s conclusion, “I couldn’t imagine ever believing anything other than what I believed. I had no choice in that.” Surely we do have a choice, and Welch made one in turning away from what she observed at one particular church.
Even so, Welch’s account reminded me of the true attraction of the evangelical church to someone who approaches it with inbuilt hostility. In the New Testament, Jesus, Paul, John, and James each stress one principle above all others: Love God and love your neighbor. Church surveys show that 80 percent of all conversions come about as an outgrowth of friendship. Thomas Road follows the Southern Baptist tradition of programmed evangelism, yet all the expensive and well-designed programs of evangelism combined produce only a fraction of the results of simple friendship. In the words of Tim Keller, “Don’t think in terms of what used to be called friendship evangelism. Think in terms of friendship. Your evangelism should be organic and natural, not a bunch of bullet points and agenda items that you enter into a conversation hoping to get to so you’re almost like a marketer.”
I doubt Jesus keeps track of how many theological arguments his followers win; he may well keep track of how we love. Even the Apostle Paul, who worked as hard as anyone in history to bring people into the kingdom, had to admit, “If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing.” Gina Welch has moved on to other writing projects, and I imagine the mysteries and knowledge she heard about in Lynchburg will gradually fade away. Her experience of being loved, even by those she deceived, likely will not.
Philip, I thoroughly enjoyed this post and your insights and I believe Gina Welch will one day become a believer because she was shown LOVE, just as you said. I heartily agree with you about friendships. She will never forget this experience. I’ve visited relatives in Lynchburg several times over the years. I never met Falwell but did meet his patient long-time secretary. I went to a 4th. of July celebration at Liberty a few years ago – Falwell was quite a prankster – thousands of people were told President Bush was going to be in the audience – a Bush impersonator was driven in with an entourage of “important” people. I was not amused.!… On visits to Lynchburg I have met many Liberty students and they are so friendly, respectful, and well-behaved. It’s a good environment as far as I can tell. I predict she will write another book one day – as a believer! Thank you posting about this. I might read her book. We need to be reminded often of how much we influence others in subtle ways. Waiting for a new book from you – – a fan from N.J.
I’m not sure I think there is much of a choice to believe, or at least it may not feel like there is much choice. Perhaps believers can’t easily imagine this. Still, “I think there is no suffering greater than what is caused by the doubts of those who want to believe.” Flannery O’Connor. http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/show/214071 (The rest of the quote is lovely too.)
What I can’t imagine is spending two years as an “undercover” fundamentalist. Imagine, living two years as someone you are not. That is rather chilling.
This is really fascinating. Seeing things from her perspective gives voice to a lot of things we experience but have been unable to express, often because of a variety of fears.
It seems as if the things which last longest and speak the deepest –sheer friendship, for example– are the things we often emphasize least. Agape love, grace in action, is a powerful thing. But this is often offset by our insistence on conformity to the “doctrines of grace.” We tend to think that doctrine must come first in teaching and sharing God with others, and then love will flow out of that afterwards. Is it such a blasphemous thing to suggest that maybe we have this backwards?
After reading this, I think we need to be wiser about the preaching of the atonement of blood in particular. It’s such a lynch pin that we feel we have to defend it strongly and state it loudly, as if stating it will have a magical effect on the hearers or powers of darkness. I dare say we often push confession of the mechanical facts of the atonement rather than letting His love lead the way and verify it in the hearer’s heart in His timing.
A large part of us seems to care more about pushing confession of creed beliefs more than listening to people or letting them take their time. This is especially obvious with how we push our children, isn’t it? We must convince our children of their utter depravity, of their sins, of the blood atonement, etc., rarely stopping to think whether it might traumatize them at a young age (not to mention unbelievers who walk in off the street). To merely suggest that we think more carefully about how strongly we emphasize these things (and on whom) would elicit chastisements of being ashamed of the faith or hiding what we believe, etc.
I fear that evangelical response to Welch will prefer to focus on her and whether she was right or wrong in doing this, rather than a stark look in the mirror at our own intolerance and cult-likeness at times. It’s more comfortable to evaluate her than to look in the mirror.
Excellent blog. I have very mixed feelings about what she did. But I so agree with you when you said, “He may well keep track of how we love”. I know that’s true. By His grace may I be a vessel of His love to those both in and out of the faith.
This story has given me a lot to think about.
PS: Like the lady from NJ, I’m waiting for a new book from you, too!
Thanks for this review! Makes me want to go download the kindle edition now.
As a Messianic-Jewish NYC native who, as a middle schooler, was uprooted and transplanted in Lynchburg, VA (and for a while in this same church) I find this book fascinating. I’m sad to say, Gina walked away from the Church with much more openness, grace and forgiveness than I did.
My experience as an ‘insider’ was significantly different than her’s as an ‘outsider’. As a result of inconsistencies that I experienced between was the Bible teaches and how Christians were living, I allowed anger and bitterness towards the Church (and ultimately Jesus) to form in my heart . . . it took a chisel and great persistence on the part of the Holy Spirit to convict me of my sin , transform my life, and bring me back into fellowship with the Church.
What an important reminder of the necessity to live as Loving-Disciples, not just Church-Members.