Archive for the ‘faith based initiative’ Category

Did you accomplish anything this week?

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

“Did you accomplish anything this week?” That question, posed to me every weekend by one or more people, raced through my head repeatedly as I spent most of Tuesday in a meeting in an office of the White House.  Often the answer to that query is “yes.” Tuesday’s response was “Yes, taking one small step.”  However, that small step involved far more than a single day. It required an investment of focused attention, persistent action, research, commentary, and advocacy that stretched from 1999 to the present moment.  And still more steps are required.

About a year ago I was asked to serve on President Obama’s Task Force on Reform of the Office of Faith Based and Neighborhood Partnerships.  The assignment of the task force was to recommend steps for bringing that office more in line with the Constitution.

I had opposed the establishment of such an office since 1999 when presidential candidates in both major political parties voiced support for allowing government funds to flow into religious organizations to support faith-based social ministries.  This new initiative within the executive branch of our government posed an unprecedented threat to our nation’s fidelity to the religious freedom clauses in the First Amendment of the Constitution.

The Obama Administration knew they were inviting a critic on to this task force.  Indeed, U.S. News and World Report carried a story on my acceptance of the invitation on its blog.  Immediately after the presidential election I had met with the Obama Transition Team to request that they abolish the faith-based office in the White House.

Today the recommendations of our task force are being presented to cabinet members and other leaders in the Administration who will engage the president in conversations about the issues we have raised. Getting to this moment took time.  Members of the task force are incredibly diverse–racially, politically, professionally, religiously, economically, and ideologically.  Some members wanted a relaxation of emphasis on church-state separation while others, like me, were interested in strengthening the constitutional guarantees that have saved our nation from an entanglement of religion and government that has caused problems in other nations.

Our recommendations span several concerns—transparency, public postings of recipients of government money and for what purposes, attentiveness to religious freedom issues, and more.  From the first time we met, however, one question had loomed larger than all of the rest—whether or not to mandate or only suggest that religious recipients of government funds form a separate legal entity into which to receive that money in order to protect the integrity of the religious organization and prevent a merger of taxpayers’ money and tithes and contributions from offering plates.  For a year, the debate went on—passionate but civil.  In the end, the vote on the recommendation endorsed the mandatory position—by a majority of one.  Such is the divide on the meaning of religious freedom in our nation as well.

As I sat in a White House office, I wonder if all of the time and work were worth it to assure such a small step, to win what some would consider a minimal victory for religious liberty.  Yes is the answer that resounds inside me.  The fate of the big issues in our time are decided by hundreds of small steps taken, minor victories won, and the Constitution defended word by word one issue at a time.  At least for this moment, a slide toward government-subsidized religion has been stopped.

This small step, this minor victory, likely will go virtually unnoticed.  But, without it, the news would be big—journalists reporting a sea-change, a major shift, in which legal and religious leaders endorsed a position contrary to the United States Constitution.  So goes the work of a lifetime—tracked one step at a time.

Citizens worry that separation of religion and government is for show

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

When I read the headline “Religious leaders worry that Obama’s faith council is for show” in The Washington Post this morning, I imagined the story might have something to do with how concerned people are that the faith council may not be able to convince Josh DuBois to rein in the activities of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Partnerships, an office with both a title and an agenda tweaked only slightly from the disastrous Bush Administration office of similar name.

Upon reading the full text, however, I discovered that the article’s focus was, instead, on those who think the faith-based partnership isn’t doing enough to entwine our domestic agenda and our country’s religious organizations.

Apparently, “critics” are concerned about the fact that the council hasn’t been allowed to weigh in on issues like religious hiring and abortion. They’d really like the council to be able to tackle those, because they want religious organizations that receive federal funding to be able to turn away job applicants on the basis of their religious beliefs, and because they want to influence the president’s reproductive health agenda with their religious views on abortion.

That’s all well and good, but the article all but skipped over the other half of the “critics,” whose concern stems from a very different point of view.

Faith plays a very important role in our country and is a large part of the diversity that makes us so unique, but it often plays a disproportionate role in public debate. People of faith have every right to speak out on the issues that are important to them, but a line is crossed when we put religious concerns about political issues before all else.

It may be impolitic to say so, but my concern with the role of faith in the Obama Administration is not whether or not faith leaders are being listened to. It’s the fact that the faith-based office is still operating under the rules of the Bush Administration, which are deeply flawed and of questionable constitutionality. We all need to keep in mind that, since the government accepts taxes from and represents every person in the country, whatever their beliefs, it is not free to create policies or pass laws that favor any one, or several, belief system or systems. That would be the establishment of religion, prohibited by the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. Which, guess what?, exists to protect religion as much as it does the government.

Rev. Gaddy talks to Dan Gilgoff About the White House Faith-Based Office

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

Dan Gilgoff of U.S. News & World Report, and a frequent guest on State of Belief, has posted an interview with Rev. Gaddy about the White House office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships entitled Critic of White House Faith-Based Office Joins Task Force on Reforming It. Rev. Gaddy says in the inteview that:

I have thought all along it would be best not to have such an office, and I still have that opinion. But if there’s going to be an office, I want to do everything I can to see that it is constitutional in nature and that it operates both legally and in the spirit of protecting the First Amendment’s historic separation between religious institutions and government institutions.

The 46,000,000 Minority

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

A new study this week revealed that 15% of Americans consider themselves ‘nonreligious,’ up from 8% in 1990.

As a point of comparison, 1.4% of America is Mormon. Mitt Romney aside, there is a long history of Mormons serving as members of Congress and in other high-ranking government positions, including the current Senate Majority Leader. And yet, a group more than 10 times as large has but one Congressional representative. The stigma surrounding the nonreligious in politics is vast and deep, as Kay Hagan can attest.  

When secular organizations do speak out, such as the billboard recently put up by Humanists of Idaho, they are portrayed as un-American bullies. The nonreligious are often reduced to advocating for themselves through the judicial system because of the public derision they face.   

It is high time for non-religious Americans to have more of a voice in the political process. The early statements coming from the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships are a good start, but the inclusion on atheist, agnostic, humanist and similarly non-theist groups is far from complete.

Federally Funded Faith

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

I was in the mood for some good old-fashioned theocracy this past weekend. With a trip to Iran well beyond my budget, I turned to Mike Huckabee. He didn’t disappoint, chatting up the evils of that darned separation of church and state on his FOX talk show with former Nixon aide Chuck Colson.

The duo attacked the prospect of the Obama Administration’s new White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships reversing Bush’s policy of allowing religious organizations that receive government funding to discriminate by only hiring people of the same faith.

Colson argued that his own organization, Prison Fellowship, doesn’t “have anything to give people except Christ. Nothing else. Nothing else is going to change people’s lives.” If that’s really the case (and what reason do I have to doubt the organization’s founder?), then Prison Fellowship shouldn’t have received federal money even under Bush’s faith-based initiative, which explicitly banned grant-receiving groups from proselytizing.

Colson claims that the content is what makes PF effective, but since its content is the Christian faith (featuring the motto: “Changing Minds, Lives and Communities through Jesus Christ”), the organization has no constitutional grounds for accepting taxpayer money. He’s basically saying that the program wouldn’t work if Judaism, Hinduism, Taoism or any other non-Christian religion was taught.

Therefore, they argue, such groups must be allowed to discriminate in hiring. If Colson, et al. absolutely must continue their discrimination, then it shouldn’t be with taxpayer dollars.

This whole debate dodges the bigger issue: should a faith-based office even exist? For me, the answer is a resounding ‘no.’ I don’t want to see any of my tax dollars being funneled into religious organizations, Christian or otherwise.

CHANGING LEADERS AND ENDURING VALUES

Monday, January 19th, 2009

Just as I seek to protect appropriate boundaries between religion and government, I also protect appropriate boundaries between my work as President of Interfaith Alliance and my role as Pastor of Northminster Baptist Church in Monroe, LA. That is not to say that I speak two different messages, rather that I deliver one message in two different styles. As leader of an inter-religious organization dedicated to protecting and advancing religious freedom I speak in a voice that people of all faiths can appreciate. As pastor of Northminster Baptist church, my comments understandably reflect a distinctive Christian orientation. From time to time however, as was the case this past Sunday, the two roles of my professional life overlap.  I could not ignore the immanent inauguration of a new president even in a service of Christian worship. That was the context of the sermon that I now post.  You will see here no attempt to proselytize.  My purpose in posting this message is three fold: first, to give you a window into my thinking as we move forward into this exciting new era; second, to offer ideas about leadership and values around which we can find unanimity; and third, to demonstrate how religious leaders can speak to contemporary issues apart from political partisanship and religious exclusion.

CHANGING LEADERS AND ENDURING VALUES

Rev Dr. C. Welton Gaddy
January 18, 2009
Northminster Baptist Church
Monroe, LA

The sermon for today is not what I intended, but perhaps more needed than what I had planned.  Of course, I am aware that this is the Sunday prior to the inauguration of a new president for our nation.  My original plan for today was to acknowledge the inauguration of this president here at Northminster in the same way I have treated the inaugurals for his two immediate predecessors—in each instance, in worship, devoting the pastoral prayers to intercessions for the new occupant of the Oval Office, his family, and our nation.

However, about a month ago, when, for the first time, I turned to the recommended lectionary readings for today, my eyes immediately widened as I read the caption for the lesson from the Hebrew Scriptures regarding “transitions in power.”  The ancient narrative reflects the incomprehensible importance of a change of leadership at the national level.  Set before us on this particular Sunday, the old story holds a promise of profound relevance for a nation and a church on the eve of the inauguration of a new leader.  But, whether in ancient Israel or in contemporary America, the subject of a change of leadership pulsates with a potential for controversy.  Yet, within the church, and hopefully within our nation, the threat of controversy is never a reason to avoid paying attention to truth.

I am well aware that some people in our congregation consider the president-elect the worst possible choice among candidates who sought the office of the presidency and dangerous beyond measure for our nation because of his politics, his priorities, his vision, and, yes, sadly I must say, because of his race.  At the same time, I also know others in our congregation could not disagree more with such thought.  Indeed, for you, this presidential inaugural stands as a peak of hope on the political landscape in our country.  So, all are listening for my bias either to pounce on it critically or affirm it enthusiastically.  My preference is to fulfill the expectation of neither and deliver a biblical sermon, knowing that, if anything, I likely will prompt the ire of both ideological points of view.

During the interim between the national elections and the inauguration of a new president, at their invitation, I have had several meetings with the presidential transition team to discuss specific concerns related to religion-based hatred that can give rise to hate crimes and to my specialty—the so-called faith-based initiative.  The Obama transition team asked me to share with them my criticisms of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives established by President Bush and to propose ways to achieve the purposes of that office in a manner compatible with the Constitution.

I have been told that at least one of my three recommendations may be implemented almost as recommended—compliance with non-discrimination practices as should be guaranteed by civil rights laws—and that Mr. Obama agrees with my second recommendation.  However, I also have learned that my third recommendation, which actually was my first priority, has virtually no chance of implementation—that is my request for the complete dismantlement of any faith-based office in the White House.

All of that is to say that I have cooperated with the president-elect’s transition team even as I cooperated, when possible, with various offices in the administrations of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush all the while criticizing both for their dallying with charitable choice legislation.  But, I am a minister, not a politician.  My goal is the preservation of a secular government that appreciates and protects religion even as it recognizes and defends the rights of non-religious citizens.  I want no part of an infusion of the government with religion or the intrusion of government in religion.  History, both sectarian and secular, dramatically demonstrates the horrendous problems produced by institutional intercourse between religion and government.

The scripture readings for today present grand guidelines, but by no means a blueprint for our government or for how transitions of leadership in this government are best made.  At the time the Hebrew Scripture for today was written, Israel knew only one form of government—a theocracy—in which supposedly God chose all leaders and told them precisely what they should do and say.  Surely, no one has to be convinced that, though many in our nation claim to support a theocracy, such a national pursuit would be unimaginably destructive given the diversity of religions and non-religious citizens in our land and the audacity and vigor of arrogant people among us who aspire to be Theo.

The historical text from Samuel is a narrative about God-chosen leadership.  Our governmental leaders are elected by their peers through national elections, not as the result of a divine declaration. However, place the Samuel text alongside the other biblical texts for today and you develop a profile of the values needed by the person who serves as our president and by all who claim to be good citizens.

Vision is important, critically important.

“The word of the Lord was rare in those days;” the narrative declares, “Visions were not widespread.”  That is not the case today.  Rather, it seems that everybody has “a word from God.”  So prolific are such claims and so loud are such boasts that the challenge we face is discernment regarding who is speaking personally and attributing the message to God and who is faithfully seeking to represent the divine will.

A leader without vision is not a leader, rather an impostor who represents more threat than promise.  Too narrow a vision will bury us under our own difficulties and isolate us from wise and helping hands in the global community.  But too broad a vision will foster an “imperial hubris” among us, dissipate our strength, and leave us devoid of moral and political influence.  A clear vision informed by basic moral values can lead a nation out of trouble, help construct a just society, and contribute to building a more peaceful world.

There is, however, a hurdle to be cleared, a temptation to be avoided.  Freedom is also important.  “You were called to freedom,” the apostle Paul wrote.

A good leader must not only have a good vision but also the wisdom, humility and patience to pursue the implementation of that vision without jeopardizing other people’s freedom.  Real leaders develop loyal followers not by force or law but as a result of garnering respect and trust.  Authentic leadership is earned and recognized not declared and enforced.

In a recently published memo to President-elect Obama a popular writer encouraged the president to function as a religious leader and spark a religious revival within the nation.  I could not disagree more strongly with that advice.  The electorate in this nation voted overwhelmingly for a president and commander-in-chief, not for a pastor, shaman, priest, imam, rabbi, or some other kind of religious leader.  We need a president who is a sharp politician, an adept international negotiator, a wise counselor, an effective change-agent, a relentless peace-maker, an economic rainmaker, and an expert administrator and motivator.  Our government does not need a president who seeks to function as the nation’s chief religious leader.  Indeed, if our president must ever choose between being biblical or being constitutional, I expect him to be constitutional.  If he must ever choose between compromising his conscience and enforcing the constitution, I expect him to resign from the presidency, thus protecting the integrity of his personal conscience and the authority of our nation’s constitution.  Only such decisions as these protect our freedom.

Finally, there is the matter of the enduring value of integrity.

I never will forget a conversation that I had one morning with Helen Thomas, the dean of the Washington Press Core and the woman who, prior to the last four years, always was called upon to ask the first question in presidential press conferences.  When I called Helen about doing an event together, an interview with her had just been published in a popular national journal.  So, as we started to talk, I told her I had seen the interview and liked it.  “What did I say?” she asked.  “Well,” I responded, “Among other things you said that all presidents lie.”  “They do,” Helen interrupted, this woman who knows presidents like few others among us, “All presidents lie,” Helen Thomas reiterated before she went on to say, “What is important is what they lie about.  I expect them to lie about their personal lives sometimes.  But, they should never lie about the affairs of state, their work for the nation.”

Yes, of course, I wish a president never lied.  But, I tend to think Helen is right.  At one time or another, a lie serves a president better than the truth.  That is the reality that drives some Press Secretaries crazy.  No lie is right morally speaking, but one lie is not the same as another in terms of national interests.  We have a right to expect the president to tell us the truth about our nation, its economy, its education, its military involvements, its greatest problems, and its promise.

The elderly leader named Eli insisted that truth, integrity, be the mark of the young man on whom responsibility for the leadership in Israel was to fall.  Eli knew God’s disclosure to Samuel involved bad news for his (Eli’s) administration, but Eli said to Samuel “What was it that God told you?  Do not hide it from me.”

Vision, a commitment to freedom, and integrity—these are enduring values that should mark the character of every leader.  But, now here is the kicker.  We should not expect of our leaders that to which we do not aspire and give ourselves.

No one can do what needs to be done in our nation working alone.  Remember, we are inaugurating a president, not creating a deity.

Our constitution has made this inaugural possible—a freely elected president of African-American lineage.  But it did not just happen.  We have had the constitution since the late 1700’s.  Rosa Parks had to bow her back and refuse to move to the back of a bus, knowing the possible consequences of that revolutionary act in a racist culture.  Martin Luther King Jr. had to decide that the bombing of his home and threats against his life and the wellbeing of his family would not stop him from giving leadership to a new movement to assure civil rights for all people.  Discrimination suits had to be filed.  Thousands if not millions of voter registration campaigns had to be launched.  Medgar Evers had to stand in front of an angry mob to enroll in a university.  Five little girls had to die in Birmingham and highlight the sheer meanness and lawlessness characteristic of dehumanizing bigotry.

Barack Obama is not the savior.  He cannot accomplish what needs to be accomplished in this nation alone.

Whether you support the new president or not, I am certain every one of us supports this nation.  So, as Barack Obama takes the oath of office on Tuesday and becomes the leader of the free world, I hope that each of us, silently or audibly, will voice an oath of responsible citizenship that involves, at the very least, promises to work for liberty and justice for all people.

Whatever our politics, our hopes and our dreams, a time for changing leaders is a time for us to reaffirm enduring values.

I hope that on Tuesday Chief Justice Roberts will not ask president-elect Obama to end his oath with the words “so help me God.”  Those words are not a part of the oath of office enshrined in the constitution for good reason.  However, if the man repeating the oath sincerely wants to emphasize the importance of his promises by adding “so help me God,” I hope he will speak those words.  And, I urge that our self-constructed pledge of responsible citizenship and our determination to live in this nation as faithful Christians be declarations of such importance and strength of resolve as to justify each of us saying “so help me God.”

Amen.

Religious Freedom Day 2009

Friday, January 16th, 2009

President Bush has declared today, January 16, 2009 as Religious Freedom Day.  Other presidents have done the same. However, it is an ironic act on the part of a president who leaves office with a dismal record on protecting and strengthening religious freedom. Consider President Bush’s faith-based initiative, opposition to comprehensive hate crimes legislation and treatment of Muslims following the events of September 11.  Why, this president has been known for using religious language to advance political agendas, further blurring the line between religion and government. Having said all of that, though, make no mistake about it, religious freedom – our first freedom – is well worth celebrating.

The date January 16th was chosen in commemoration of the signing of Jefferson’s Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, an act that Jefferson considered the major accomplishment of his life. The enactment clause of this historic document states:

That no man shall be compelled to frequent or support any religious worship, place, or ministry whatsoever, nor shall be enforced, restrained, molested, or burdened in his body or goods, nor shall otherwise suffer on account of his religious opinions or belief; but that all men shall be free to profess, and by argument to maintain, their opinion in matters of religion, and that the same shall in no wise diminish enlarge, or affect their civil capacities.

This document popularized and gave substance the concept of “separation of church and state.”

Unfortunately many members of the Religious Right continue attempts to hijack even an emphasis on religious freedom by distorting the promise of the constitution and suggesting that the meaning of religious freedom is freedom for our religion, not yours.

Among those who have joined the so called “Religious Freedom Day Coalition” are the Becket Fund and the Institute on Religion and Democracy, two organizations that consistently have sought to erase institutional boundaries between religion and government in an effort to impose their beliefs on all Americans.

My guess is that, for most Americans, January 16th will pass without a thought given to religious freedom, and that is unfortunate. Religious freedom, our first freedom, is essential to the integrity of religion and the vitality of democracy.

A House of Worship Providing Social Services without Government Support

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

The Washington Post has a very interesting story today about a house of worship in DC focused on faith-based activism. They provide everything from help finding jobs, to affordable housing and medical services for the homeless. It’s a good reminder that faith-based groups do just fine providing these services without the financial support – or interference – of government.

For me, it also serves as a reminder that many of us who seek to protect the boundaries between religion and government are eagerly waiting an announcement on the shape the White House Office of Faith-Based Initiatives will take in the Obama Administration. Early indications are that it will be an improvement on the Bush Administration’s approach, but will it go far enough?

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