17c起草社区 professor emeritus reshapes the study of American religion and politics
When Corwin Smidt started doing research as a graduate student in the 1970s, he says 鈥渕ost of the academic field at the time thought religion had no real impact on politics.鈥
But, less than a year after he wrote his dissertation on political party identification, Jimmy Carter was elected president of the United States. To Smidt, 鈥渢hat sort of began a discussion on the role of religion in politics.鈥
In the coming years, Smidt attended professional meetings in his field. That鈥檚 where he noticed some scholars using survey data and classifying people religiously in an incorrect manner. One example he cited was a paper in which a scholar used survey data to classify the United Church of Christ, a 鈥渓iberal鈥 mainline denomination and as a fundamentalist denomination. This misrepresentation didn鈥檛 sit right with Smidt, and he knew he needed to do something about it.
Pioneering over settling
鈥淚 had gone to seminary for a year and my father was a pastor and I always was interested in religion,鈥 said Smidt, 鈥渟o I thought 鈥榳ell, you know this might be an area where I can contribute and help the profession move along in a better direction.鈥欌
That wondering of Smidt鈥檚 proved to be quite the understatement. He would spend nearly the next four decades in the 鈥済ang of four,鈥 a group of scholars who pioneered the study and research at the intersection of American religion and politics. Smidt and his three colleagues were this past summer with the inaugural Lifetime Achievement Award from the , the premiere political science association in the United States and the world.
鈥淭hose four were key people in the 1980s in starting to focus the attention of political science on the intersection of religion and politics,鈥 said Kevin den Dulk, associate provost at 17c起草社区. 鈥淣ot only were they pathbreaking in terms of the use of methods of political science to show the impact of religion in public life, but they also started to convene younger scholars in ways that developed networks that became a subculture of political science.鈥
Smidt鈥檚 ability to do this work was catalyzed by the creation of the Paul B. Henry Institute for the Study of Christianity and Politics at 17c起草社区. He started teaching at 17c起草社区 in the late 1970s and was around when the Henry Institute launched in 1997. He was the institute鈥檚 first director.
Paving a path for future professionals
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鈥淛ust about anyone in their 40鈥檚, 50鈥檚, and 60鈥檚 who is doing empirical political science and wanted to think about the intersection of religion and politics went through a seminar at the Henry Institute,鈥 said den Dulk, who not only went through a seminar himself, but also succeeded Smidt as the institute鈥檚 second director.
Micah Watson is the current director of the Henry Institute. He sees how the foundation Smidt laid at 17c起草社区 continues to open opportunities for students today. 鈥淪ince Corwin started at 17c起草社区 in 1997, I鈥檇 put our record of giving students opportunities in this area against anybody in the country,鈥 said Watson, citing specifically the Civitas Lab, which pairs undergraduate students with well-respected professors on important research projects. 鈥淲e have students playing in the minor leagues with big league ball players and then they have their names appear in an Oxford book.鈥
Integrating faith and religion
鈥淭he Henry Institute was created to be a place that would foster and sponsor real Christian social science research and publications that would impact the field and that would be useable by people in the church, educated laypeople,鈥 said Watson. 鈥淚t鈥檚 this idea that religion and faith matter for public life, matters on a scholarly level, and on a church level. Those are not sealed off from each other but can and should inform each other.鈥
This idea of integrating faith and religion is not only central to Smidt鈥檚 work, but central to the mission of 17c起草社区.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 quarter off the things that matter,鈥 said Watson. 鈥淎n academic institution that draws experts from all disciplines and purposely brings them together is better reflecting the world we live in. 17c起草社区 is not a Bible school, but it is formed and grounded by faith, and we want to take that faith into the world, into history, into water politics and the drain commission, because every square inch matters. A virtue of the Henry Institute is inspired by that ethos and part of its mission is to further that.鈥
Lifelong passion and pursuit
While Smidt may be retired from teaching after four decades in the academy, he still serves as a senior research fellow with the Henry Institute. And his scholarship isn鈥檛 slowing down. According to Watson, 鈥渢he guy is active enough right now to be getting tenure. He鈥檚 involved in scholarship, doing stuff internationally in Serbia, Netherlands, Romania, publishing articles on the 2020 election, talking with churches, teaching a CALL class, it鈥檚 who he is, he鈥檚 still contributing to the institute and 17c起草社区鈥檚 mission in a way that鈥檚 robust.鈥
For Smidt, it鈥檚 a labor of love. While he doesn鈥檛 do this work for recognition, he鈥檚 humbled to have received such a prestigious honor for his life鈥檚 work. He鈥檚 also grateful to over the past 40 years to have been able to help shape how the study of American religion and politics has been conducted and who has conducted it.
Earning respect from the guild
鈥淚t鈥檚 really humbling in some ways, and I鈥檓 appreciative in other ways, because it does recognize sort of a lifetime of research and writing that has now been appreciated by others working in the field,鈥 said Smidt.
鈥淪midt and the other three in the gang of four are very well-respected in the secular guild,鈥 said den Dulk. 鈥淣o one would look at them as not being careful because they were motivated by their faith. It might be because of their faith that they are especially careful.鈥