RT Article T1 American evangelical islamophobia: a history of continuity with a hope for change JF Journal of ecumenical studies VO 51 IS 2 SP 224 OP 235 A1 Johnston, David L. 1952- LA English PB University of Pennsylvania Press YR 2016 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1647418585 AB This is a historical survey of Protestant attitudes toward and writings about Muslims since colonial New England to the present time, mostly leaning on Thomas S. Kidd’s American Christians and Islam (2009). The author makes three main arguments. First, there is an impressive amount of continuity in the polemical discourse that conservative Protestants have deployed against Islam and Muslims, some of which picks up tropes that go back to the early centuries of Christian-Muslim polemics. Second, this discourse is best studied through the lens of three principal matrices: the political, the prophetic/eschatological, and Christian mission to Muslims. Finally, since 9/11, there has been a hardening of evangelical Islamophobia, as well as a growing wing that seeks reconciliation.