An Introduction
An Evangelical Manifesto is an open declaration of who Evangelicals are and what they stand for. It has been drafted and published by a representative group of Evangelical leaders who do not claim to speak for all Evangelicals, but who invite all other Evangelicals to stand with them and help clarify what Evangelical means in light of “confusions within and the consternation without” the movement. As the Manifesto states, the signers are not out to attack or exclude anyone, but to rally and to call for reform.
As an open declaration, An Evangelical Manifesto addresses not only Evangelicals and other Christians but other American citizens and people of all other faiths in America, including those who say they have no faith. It therefore stands as an example of how different faith communities may address each other in public life, without any compromise of their own faith but with a clear commitment to the common good of the societies in which we all live together.
For those who are Evangelicals, the deepest purpose of the Manifesto is a serious call to reform—an urgent challenge to reaffirm Evangelical identity, to reform Evangelical behavior, to reposition Evangelicals in public life, and so rededicate ourselves to the high calling of being Evangelical followers of Jesus Christ.
Steering Committee
Timothy George
              Dean,
		      Beeson Divinity School, Samford University
Os
			  Guinness
			  Author/Social
			  Critic
John Huffman
            Pastor,
			  St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport
			  Beach, CA
  Chair,
			  Christianity Today International
Rich
			  Mouw
              President,
			  Fuller Theological Seminary
Jesse Miranda
            Founder & Director,
			  Miranda Center for Hispanic Leadership,
			  Vanguard University
David Neff
            Vice
			  President and Editor in Chief, Christianity
			  Today Media Group
Richard Ohman
            Businessman
Larry
		    Ross
              President,
			  A. Larry Ross Communications
Dallas
			  Willard
              Professor
			  of Philosophy, University of Southern
			  California
		  Author