Posts Tagged ‘election’

A Campaign “Calling” in Nevada?

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

Senate candidate Sharron Angle (who is challenging Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in Nevada) recently gave an interview to David Brody of the Christian Broadcasting Network in which she described her campaign for public office as a “calling.” She also made similar comments to Ralph Reed of the Faith and Freedom Coalition saying that she believes “that God has been in this from the beginning, and because of that, when He has a plan and a purpose for your life and you fit into that, what He calls you to He’s always equipped you for.”

Today Interfaith Alliance issued a statement in response Angle’s comments, calling on all politicians to stop using their religion to appeal to voters, a practice that weakens both religion and politics. Of course, candidates for public office are free to talk about how their faith informs their thinking. But candidates should always remember that they represent people of diverse beliefs, and the policies they create need to be based on fidelity, not to their religious scriptures, but to the Constitution.

See below for the full text of Interfaith Alliance’s statement:

Sharron Angle’s recent comments on her race against Sen. Harry Reid being ‘a calling,’ and that she considers herself a ‘faith-based politician’ should be deeply troubling to anyone who cherishes religious freedom. If elected to represent the people of Nevada in the United States Senate, Ms. Angle will do so as a representative of the people of her state, not of her church. My guess is that God will be just fine without playing a role in either candidate’s campaign.

Candidates for public office are free to talk about how their faith informs their thinking, but should not imply that policy position will be based on scripture rather than the Constitution. It has been my experience that when candidates intentionally insert faith into politics, the purpose is rarely to protect religion; rather it is done to enhance a political position.

Daily News

Monday, September 29th, 2008

In today’s news:

Please keep your seats and tray tables in their full upright and locked position as we prepare for religion and politics in today’s news – from Interfaith Alliance.

Daily News

Friday, September 26th, 2008

In today’s news:

Religion and politics in today’s news – from Interfaith Alliance.

New Video – Pulpit Politics: The Race for Pastor-in-Chief

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

Remember the endorsement courtship and nasty split between pastors and politicians during the primaries?  Now, the Religious Right’s Alliance Defense Fund is organizing more pastors to endorse more politicians from the pulpit this Sunday!

Interfaith Alliance’s new video – Pulpit Politics: The Race for Pastor-in-Chief – is a fresh reminder of what happened in the primaries, and previews what’s to come if clergy are further encouraged to compromise their integrity for partisan politics.

After you watch the video, forward it to the leader of your congregation, and ask your clergy to sign our clergy pledge!

In fact, a story from today’s Los Angeles Times features our clergy pledge as the counterweight to Alliance Defense Fund’s effort towards “setting the stage for a collision of religion and politics.”

America’s pulpits are for prayer, not partisan politics. Let’s keep our pulpits free from the political machinery we’ve already seen devastate clergy and sidetrack the campaigns in this election.

After you see the new video, you can watch our video on the Top Ten Moments in the Race for Pastor-in-Chief for ten more reasons religion and partisan politics are better left kept a long-distance relationship.

Daily News

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

In today’s news:

Religion and politics in today’s news, now available without a prescription – from Interfaith Alliance.

Daily News

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

In Today’s News:

Religion and politics in today’s news, from Interfaith Alliance.

Daily News

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

In today’s news:

Let’s make it happen. Religion and politics in today’s news, from Interfaith Alliance.

Religion, the Election, and the Media (cross-posted from BeliefNet)

Thursday, August 7th, 2008

Below is a post that I wrote for the new BeliefNet blog Progressive Revival:

The Pew Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism and the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life have published a report that confirms my suspicions about the use of religion on the campaign trail. The study found that we are in the midst of an election for a Pastor-in-Chief rather than a Commander-in-Chief.

An analysis of over 13,000 news stories from January 2007 through April 2008 revealed that religion is playing a disproportionate role in this election. Religion accounted for roughly ten percent of all stories that did not focus on political strategy or tactics. By comparison, foreign policy issues garnered 14 percent of these stories, and stories about race and gender only made up 11 percent.

The United States is in the midst of two wars, one of which is costing our taxpayers $6 billion every month. Terrorism represents the greatest foreign policy crisis of our generation. At the same time, American society is being transformed as Senators Clinton and Obama challenged traditional stereotypes of who is best fit to be president. And despite these profound changes and challenges, religion is receiving almost as attention in the media as foreign policy and race/gender issues. And the scary thing is that George W. Bush, who revolutionized using religion for partisan gain, isn’t even on the ballot.

There is much blame to go around that explains this troubling trend. The presidential candidates on both sides of the aisle were more willing than ever to seek the endorsement of religious leaders, incorporate religious rhetoric into their speeches, and promote their religious affiliation as a misguided proxy for sound judgment and clear vision.

Both Senators McCain and Obama had some buyer’s remorse after seeking the support of controversial clergy. But candidates cannot have it both ways. They cannot continue to use clergy for political gain and then discard them when it no longer fits their agenda.

The media deserve much of the blame as well. Last summer, CNN’s Soledad O’Brien asked Senator John Edwards to name his biggest sin. Multiple debate moderators asked various candidates to name their favorite Bible story.

These types of questions have no bearing over a candidate’s ability to serve as president. The media are the staunchest supporters of the First Amendment’s guarantees of free speech and press, yet it appears they have not read Article VI of the Constitution, which prohibits imposing a religious test for public office.

The problem is not that religion is being incorporated into the presidential campaign. Rather the problem is that religion is being used as a divisive tool instead of a unifying power. The candidates need be less concerned with appearing “holier than thou” and focus instead on explaining the role their values play in their political worldview. The media needs to stop asking irrelevant (and irreverent) questions about the candidates’ religion and start asking the candidates to outline their views on the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause.

If we can nurture a more positive relationship between religion and politics, a survey result like this one would be encouraging rather than lamentable.

Daily News

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

In today’s news:

Religion and Politics in today’s news, from the omnipresent party headquarters at Interfaith Alliance.

Is Rick Warren turning political after all?

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

We learned yesterday that Rick Warren is planning to host both presidential candidates at his Saddleback Church on August 16. It will be the first time the two presumptive nominees have met face-to-face, and probably the only time they’ll do so before the conventions.

Rev. Warren – ‘Pastor Rick’ to his flock – will interview them one-on-one, one at a time, but has promised to get them both on stage together for a brief moment and handshake. Expect to see full-throttle media coverage … ten bucks says CNN designs a special logo.

It’s interesting to see Rev. Warren get this close to partisan politics. In the past he has focused his energies – and that of his 20,000-plus weekly flock – on transcending-politics issues such as global poverty and the world AIDS crisis.

He did send around an e-mail shortly before the 2004 election outlining the five non-negotiable issues – abortion, stem cells, gay marriage, cloning and euthanasia – on which he hoped to hear ‘the right answers’ from the candidates of that year. But he later publicly regretted sending it, and he has appeared to studiously avoid any more dips into the political mud.

Along with mega-pastor colleagues Joel Osteen in Houston and Bill Hybels in the Chicago suburbs, Rev. Warren has appeared to shun overtly political talk in favor of real-life, practical Bible interpretation. They’re a far cry from the Falwell and Robertson of the ’80s and ’90s.

The goals he describes for this event don’t seem to include any endorsement, either explicit or implicit, and the fact that both candidates will appear means that neither will get a bump just from being seen at the church. Clearly Pastor Rick has been studying our election-year materials.

Of concern, though, are some of the local reactions the event has elicited. A quick sample, from the Orange County Register:

“We’re a Christian nation and we need Christian leaders” – Joy Blake, a Republican whose father owns a barber shop near Saddleback.

“Without question this country was established on Christian values and ethics so the candidates must share their religious values with this Orange County constituency.” – Rev. Mark Whitlock, Senior Minister at Christ Our Redeemer Church in nearby Irvine.

“Orange County is Republican headquarters. It will be interesting to see Senator Barack Obama in a Republican setting.” – Heather Truong, 27, of Costa Mesa.

Even if Rev. Warren studiously avoids picking a side or playing favorites, will his Orange County community see this visit as further proof that any successful candidate has to pay tribute to a “Christian Nation”? Are they aware that more than a fifth of Americans consider themselves something other than Christian? Will the citizens of Heather’s “Republican setting” be able to reconcile Sen. Obama’s Democratic label with his worn-on-the-sleeve faith practice?

I make no predictions, but it will be interesting to watch.

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