Tuesday, November 07, 2006

God and Politics

As a moderate to liberal (proudly so) Republican, whose religious upbringing was mainline Protestantism, educated in a Catholic University by Jesuits (and later converted to Catholicism), I find it interesting that the conservative (and many times evangelical) right has hijacked God in America's eyes.

"The American Right has been able to define “moral values” narrowly, almost
exclusively in terms of wedge issues like abortion and gay marriage. "

There is an interesting interview with Jim Wallis in Mother Jones Online that discusses the subject.

"I say at every stop, “Fighting poverty’s a moral value, too.” There’s a
whole generation of young Christians who care about the environment. That’s
their big issue. Protecting God’s creation, they would say, is a moral value,
too. And, for a growing number of Christians, the ethics of war—how and when we
go to war, whether we tell the truth about going to war—is a religious and moral
issue as well."

After being educated in a very religious activist university where social awareness and "Being a Man For Others" (flowing from Christian beliefs) permiated the air, I often find it disconcerting that some of these same moral values (social justice) are seemingly missing from the God of the Right. Sometimes, I get the feeling that those who believe in the God of the Right, think that poverty is a sin and is a judgment by God

" [Democrats] forget their own progressive history. Every major social
movement in our history was fueled in large part by religion and faith.
Abolitionism, women’s suffrage, child labor law, and most famously, civil
rights. Where would we be if the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had kept his
faith to himself? Here’s a party that was vitally connected to the civil rights
movement, led by black churches, now has driven so far [away], they’re
successfully portrayed by the Right as a secular party hostile to religion. "


"I think people who are religious or, say, even spiritual, have not felt like
there’s much of a home on the Left. That’s at least a huge political concern.
Even those who aren’t religious need to respect people of faith. The connection
the world’s waiting for is to connect the hunger for spirituality with passion
for social change. Because spirituality, when it isn’t disciplined by social
justice, in an affluent society, becomes narcissistic. . . . .becomes a commodity to be
bought and sold. So spirituality has to be disciplined by social justice."

God is not a Republican or Democrat.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I wonder if it isn't because some of today's liberal social issues are at odds with their religious teachings? Gay and Lesbian civil rights, for example. MLK would likely have not supported that. His wife did, near the very end of her life, but her views have been diminished by the NAACP; they claim she only changed her mind as a result of being old and confused. One of the more steadfast groups supporting the Democrats, people of color, are often opposed to LGBT rights and can be quite intolerant. (Thomas Scott, anyone?) The Democrats haven't done a good job of integrating the two and don't have the luxury of dismissing one group outright as the Republicans do. Politicians like Ken Anderson are rare in the Black community (and he's a Republican!)

"I find it interesting that the conservative (and many times evangelical) right has hijacked God in America's eyes."

I'm not sure "hijacked" is the right word here. It conjures an image of force and I don't think the Right twisted anyone's arm. I think we have a very active Right with a strong opinion and a less active Moderate and Liberal group of Christians who essentially ceded control out of apathy.

Wouldn't a Democratic party that plunged it's hands back into Christianity also have trouble with the athiests, agnotics, wiccans, polytheists, and other religious groups that make up its many and diverse mebmers?

I think the ability to champion progressive ideals without resorting to any particular theology for support is itself forward-thinking.

AngelSil said...

As a Jew and a Democrat (for lack of better political affiliation) I would have a problem with the party taking up the mantle of conservative religious politics of ANY denomination. I am amazed by the members of my faith who vote Republican knowing that the party is beholden to the Religious Right - a group of people which have not historically had much tolerance for those that don't accept Jesus as their savior.

Anonymous said...

Just a correction: It's "Ken Anthony". Shame on me for getting that wrong. I voted for him.