{"url":"https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u","title":"Lynchburg beyond Liberty's shadow","domain":"sojo.net","imageUrl":"https://images.pexels.com/photos/34586173/pexels-photo-34586173.jpeg?auto=compress&cs=tinysrgb&h=650&w=940","pexelsSearchTerm":"Lynchburg Virginia street","category":"Politics","language":"en","slug":"10ecf2c6","id":"10ecf2c6-73a7-4ab7-9677-85e3d51ca375","description":"Sojourners profiles Lynchburg residents building diverse communities amid Liberty University's conservative dominance.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april","summary":"## TL;DR\n- Sojourners profiles Lynchburg residents building diverse communities amid Liberty University's conservative dominance.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)\n- Liberty employs thousands with 16,000 on-campus students in a city of 80,000, while Lynchburg is nearly 40% nonwhite or multiracial.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)\n- Article highlights gospel work by five interviewed pastors, activists, and leaders fostering open, just, affirming spaces.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)\n\n## The story at a glance\nMartha Park's article in Sojourners' April 2026 issue spotlights Lynchburg, Virginia—home to Jerry Falwell's **Liberty University**—and efforts by local pastors, activists, and political leaders to create diverse, affirming communities. Liberty, the city's top employer with over **16,000** on-campus students, shapes much of its conservative evangelical image, tied to figures like Falwell Sr. and Jr. This piece appears now in a magazine issue focused on progressive Christian perspectives, countering Liberty's influence amid ongoing national debates on evangelical politics.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)[[2]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/editors-very-sojourners-easter)\n\n## Key points\n- Lynchburg sits in the Blue Ridge foothills, population around **80,000**, best known for **Liberty University**, founded by Jerry Falwell Sr. in 1971 after his 1967 segregation academy.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)\n- Liberty has **16,000** residential students and **140,000** total including online, making it a major fundamentalist institution and culture shaper in white conservative evangelicalism.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)\n- Falwell Jr. boosted its politics by endorsing Trump in 2016 and joining the **Project 2025** advisory board ahead of 2024.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)\n- City named after Quaker abolitionist John Lynch but held enslaved people during Civil War; today nearly **40%** nonwhite or multiracial, full of contradictions beyond Liberty's reach.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)\n- Park interviewed five locals—pastors, activists, political leaders—on building open, diverse, just, affirming communities, termed \"gospel work\" outside Liberty affiliations.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)[[2]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/editors-very-sojourners-easter)\n\n## Details and context\nWriter Martha Park, from Memphis, conducted interviews last year (2025) with five unnamed individuals countering Liberty's shadow through inclusive faith efforts. One example: **Jarrett Banks**, pastor at **First Christian Church**, offers an open and affirming space, critiques white Christian nationalism linked to Liberty, and notes their church is blacklisted for students due to past female pastors.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)\n\nLynchburg's history mixes abolitionist namesake with slavery; Liberty's roots in segregation highlight tensions. Progressive voices, like those in past \"Red Letter Revival\" events, have long pushed social justice there against conservative evangelical norms.[[3]](https://www.npr.org/2018/04/07/600565196/lynchburg-revival-activists-warn-of-rising-christian-nationalism)\n\nThe article, illustrated by Park, appears paywalled beyond intro in previews, emphasizing complexity over simple conservative stereotype.\n\n## Key quotes\n> \"Lynchburg badly needs what we’re offering here: a traditional church that is open and affirming, a pastor who is speaking out about white Christian nationalism, *which is Liberty*.\"[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)  \n— **Jarrett Banks**, pastor, First Christian Church\n\n## Why it matters\nLiberty's influence defines evangelical politics nationally, but stories like these reveal grassroots Christian diversity in its backyard, challenging one-dimensional views of faith in red America. Readers interested in faith communities see models for justice-focused work amid conservatism, potentially inspiring similar efforts elsewhere. Watch local elections and church growth in Lynchburg, as these voices may gain traction or face pushback—outcomes depend on broader evangelical shifts.[[1]](https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u)","hashtags":["#evangelicalism","#lynchburg","#libertyuniversity","#christianactivism","#socialjustice","#diversity"],"sources":[{"url":"https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/lynchburg-more-liberty-u","title":"Original article"},{"url":"https://sojo.net/magazine/april-2026/editors-very-sojourners-easter","title":""},{"url":"https://www.npr.org/2018/04/07/600565196/lynchburg-revival-activists-warn-of-rising-christian-nationalism","title":""}],"viewCount":2,"publishedAt":"2026-04-08T17:06:25.378Z","createdAt":"2026-04-08T17:06:25.378Z","articlePublishedAt":null}