
Fea offers amusing examples of his history students who often gravitate toward the typically evangelical America-is-a-Christian-nation approach or the typically (neo-)Anabaptist America-is-evil approach, neither of which is the best way to do historiography. In relation to these approches, Fea discusses John Howard Yoder and his historian followers, Howard Zinn's People's History of the United States, and--from the opposite perspective--Christian nationalists such as David Barton and his WallBuilders ministry. In contrast to these approaches, Fea argues that the "task of the historian is to use [the] five 'Cs'—change, context, causality, contingency, and complexity—to reconstruct the past and make her findings available to the public" (88), or, in short, for historians to cultivate "virtues such as humility, empathy, and hospitality" in their work and in their lives (95).
Fea's essay is provocative and challenging not only for Christian historians but also more broadly for Christians (and others) working in the academy. For more of Fea's provocative writings, see his recent book, Was America Founded as a Christian Nation? A Historical Introduction as well as his daily musings on his blog.
*This paragraph is adapted from pages 9-10 of the book.
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