World Vision Foreign Aid


All is not as it seems.  Things do change.  Evangelicals do have groups, like World Vision, that challenge the status quo and remind folks of a necessarily broader social vision.  Martin Marty speaks today about the effort by Richard Stearns of World Vision to counter the unfortunate trend of a majority of evangelicals to oppose foreign aid.  He means to change that.  Marty commends him for this!  He reminds Catholics and Mainliners to also examine where they stand on issues such as this.  Take a read, offer your thoughts.
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Sightings  11/14/2011
World Vision Foreign Aid
-- Martin E. Marty

 While polarization marks and blights politics in America today, and while popular culture, commerce, and religion are afflicted with the all-or-nothing ideologies and practices that prevent the citizenry from meeting the challenges which only intensify as seasons pass, here and there and now and then Sightings spies counter-signs. While the media focus on conflict among and within religious communities, those who take the longer view can find occasions for inspiration. That I so often find such signs in publications like The Economist or The Wall Street Journal surprises some readers and perhaps needs some explaining now and then.
           
A half century ago the company of historians with whom I hung out began to speak of a “two-party system” in American Protestantism and, for that matter in Catholicism and other communities. Then and ever since, the parties kept redefining themselves, drawing revised lines, seeking and finding new causes, new enemies, and new friends. The lines hardened for decades when “the Christian Right” faced off against religious expressions of “the New Left.” My work often took me to places where  expectations imprisoned imaginations. Sometimes invited to mainly-evangelical conferences, I would be introduced as “the non-evangelical guest at this year’s meeting.” I would remind others that, among other things, I was the only participant who belonged to a church body which had the word “evangelical” in its very name. Enough about that.     
           
Times have changed. Today if one has a conference or project on worthwhile causes—the environment, health care, immigration, etc. etc.—one counts on leadership from among all ages, including camps named “evangelical,” an ever more diffuse company. I like to say that within Protestantism, the most creative and venturesome people came from “the left of the right and the right of the left—which is not the center.” The former group, thoroughly evangelical, ventures into the public sector on lines of engagement, not ideology. The latter, often called moderate or liberal or mainstream, draws on the historic and theological depths of their traditions. For the better.
           
This week we’ll take an example from The Wall Street Journal, where Richard E. Stearns, president of World Vision USA, makes “The Evangelical Case for Foreign Aid.” In a time of budget-cutting and neo-isolation, Stearns properly points out that evangelicals had not been visible in religious coalitions to counter the push from many politicians who would eliminate programs to “reduce global poverty and hunger, saving millions of lives.” “But why,” asks Stearns, “are evangelical Christians largely absent from this religious coalition?” While evangelicals agree with others that responding to hunger and poverty is not a partisan but a moral issue, 56 percent of them, when polled by Pew, showed that evangelicals are most ready to oppose anti-hunger and anti-poverty programs, proposing that they should be first to go. They swallow misinformation about such programs.
           
Awakened when he visited scenes of crisis—which are almost everywhere—Stearns came back and worked with World Vision and other such agencies to change evangelical minds and organizations and policies. He can point to progress, even as he chides the laggards. Something new is on the way. One hopes that similarly awakened and aroused leaders in similar groups also in Catholicism and other religious circles will keep reappraising their positions, revisiting their religious sources, and not worrying about lines drawn in the prime of “The Christian Right” and “the New Left.”

References

Richard E. Stearns, “Evangelicals and the Case for Foreign Aid,” The Wall Street Journal, November 11, 2011.

 Martin E. Marty's biography, publications, and contact information can be found at www.memarty.com.

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 In this month's Religion and Culture Web Forum, Eliza Slavet considers Freud's theory of Jewishness as it emerges from his final book, Moses and Monotheism. Slavet argues that Freud, writing on the eve of the Holocaust, proposed that Jewishness is constituted by the inheritance of ancestral memories, which Jewish people are inexorably compelled to transmit to future generations, whether consciously or unconsciously. As in her book, Racial Fever: Freud and the Jewish Question, Slavet ultimately argues that Freud's racial theory of Jewishness allows us to think about the dynamics of race as a concept, beyond the realm of physical variation, and to consider racial thinking without reducing it to racism.

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  Sightings comes from the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago Divinity School.

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