Politics and God--Talk -- Sightings -- 6/11/07

A week ago Jim Wallis hosted a CNN broadcast candidates forum with Edwards, Clinton, and Obama in the hot seat. It has been suggested that recent displays by Democratic candidates to reach out to the religious folk in the nation is a new turn and is an effort to play catch up with the GOP. Without being partisan, Martin Marty begs to differ,, showing how Democratic Presidents and candidates have been very open and comfortable with piety. It's an interesting piece, and as Martin Marty says -- sightings doesn't do endorsements!


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Sightings 6/11/07

Pious Parties-- Martin E. Marty

Sightings on Mondays does not "do" partisan politics, so if you read out of this or into this a partisan endorsement or non-endorsement, I am not making myself clear. It is a comment on media and history.

First, media: The mantra or codified way of treating Democratic presidential candidates' public expressions of religion in 2007, as in last week's TV special, is to say that they are playing catch-up ball against Republican candidates, reaching for the religious constituency that the secular-minded modern Democrats abandoned. That may or may not be true in respect to strategy. But it is historically inaccurate to suggest that this is a new virus.
To review the history: After Woodrow Wilson's overplaying of the religious hand, Republican presidents Harding (Baptist), Coolidge (Congregationalist), and Hoover (Quaker) added little to public discourse about public religion. But in World War II Roosevelt began to restore such discourse, manifesting and promoting the life of prayer, demonstrating a kind of Episcopal serenity when facing crises.
Then there was Truman, to whom I paid attention while living briefly in his Washington. "I am not a religious man," he would say, "Mrs. Truman takes care of that." He despised what he thought was the political use of religion, but evidenced a Baptist Sunday School-boyhood grounding in biblical knowledge and did some public praying, without advertising or fuss. During the interregnum, Eisenhower said, "I am the most religious man I know." But back to Democrats, our subject today: LBJ, a member of the Disciples of Christ (Christian) Church was at ease with faith, while JFK (Catholic -- did you notice?) found his religion a public subject, whatever his personal faith might be. Jimmy Carter? How can mass communicators think and act as if the new candidates are inventing religious language in public life? Bill Clinton -- like Carter, a Baptist -- was a regular worshiper, and was accused of hypocrisy when he took a Bible to church, as most Baptists do. He was at home with it. And one year we heard of Reverend Jackson; Mondale, from a ministerial family; and ex-seminarians Gore and Hart and who knows who else running.

Why the perception of non-religion among people of that pious party? 1) Maybe things have changed, and there's been a secular take-over, causing religious amnesia in the party. 2) It could be that in reaction to Nixon-Reagan-Ford-Bush-Bush styles of public piety and the perceived "use" of religion, Democrats backed off. 3) If there were signs of verbal ungainliness in the pious sections of last Monday's CNN show -- Peter Steinfels found them in the three candidates' words (see "References," below) -- it may be because the planners of the program (Jim Wallis and company) wanted to stress how specific religious convictions do or should affect policy (for example, on poverty). Having to be creedal and confessional and pious does make many, including many of us who are not candidates, a bit nervous. Diffidence here is less a matter of faith than style.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer and other theologians have counseled some restraint in public God-talk. Since both parties' candidates are Bible folk, maybe some of them are responding to Sermon on the Mount text: Matthew 6:1, 5-8. You could look it up. Baptist scripture memorizers Truman and Carter and Clinton wouldn't have to. And while the Bible is open, note how Isaiah 58 shrieks out at a "prayerful" nation.

References:
Peter Steinfels's article "A Tentative First Step in Addressing Faith and Politics" (New York Times, June 9, 2007) can be read at: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/09/us/09beliefs.html?n=Top%2fReference%2fTimes%20Topics%2fPeople%2fS%2fSteinfels%2c%20Peter.
Martin E. Marty's biography, current projects, upcoming events, publications, and contact information can be found at www.illuminos.com.
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The current Religion and Culture Web Forum features "Christian Responses to Vietnam: The Organization of Dissent," by Mark Toulouse. To read this article, please visit: http://marty-center.uchicago.edu/webforum/index.shtml.
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Sightings comes from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.

Comments

jonathan said…
The religion of these candidates is embarassing. Their faith is one of preferred action, rather than giving oneself to the direction of God.

On one issue, their religion compells them to act and affects their politics. Yet on other issues, they preach a political stance that religion should never affect their decisions.

Their hypocrisy is overwhelming and unnapreciated by this guy. It's obvious that they only want to take advantage of the "religious" issue for 2 reasons:

1. To give liberally religious people another reason to vote for them

2. To decieve people into believing their faith is real.

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