Study: Election created new ‘values voter’ 17 November, 2008
Posted by Zack in DC.1 comment so far
Congratulations to Faith in Public Life for sponsoring this great survey around the elections. This really helps to underline a shift that a lot of us have been seeing anecdotally.
This from the Christian Science Monitor:
Americans painted a new picture of the “values voter” in the recent election.
They rejected the “culture wars,” with its narrow agendas and liberal-conservative divisiveness, in favor of politics that build bridges on a range of contentious issues. The readiness to work together is revealed in a national poll on voters’ priorities and values taken on Nov. 5-7 in the immediate aftermath of the election.
Nearly three-quarters of voters (and of religious voters) said people of faith should promote the common good, not protect their own views. Even groups most active in the religious right said a broader faith agenda would best reflect their values.
Only 1 in 5 white Evangelicals and 1 in 8 Catholics said an agenda focused on abortion and same-sex marriage best expressed their values. A majority of both Evangelicals (55 percent) and Catholics (51 percent) opted for a broad agenda that also includes poverty, the environment, and the war in Iraq. The survey involved a nationally representative sample of 1,277 voters and had a margin of error of 3 percent.
“Our poll shows that Catholics and white Evangelicals reject the idea that focusing on one or two issues is the right way to engage in public life,” says Katie Paris, of Faith in Public Life, which sponsored the survey conducted by Public Religion Research in Washington.</blockquote>
Read the whole article here.
Thanks Matt 18 August, 2008
Posted by Zack in DC.1 comment so far
The PR check this month goes out to Matt Stoller.
It’s official: Obama is not the Antichrist 8 August, 2008
Posted by Zack in DC.11 comments
Update on my previous post…
The Left Behind authors just put out a press release. Turns out the McCain ad that not-so-subtly implicated Obama as the spawn of Satan was just a false alarm:
CAROL STREAM, Ill., Aug. 8 /Christian Newswire/ — John McCain’s campaign ad “The One” has generated a lot of buzz regarding the “Left Behind Series.” Political commentators are comparing McCain’s portrayal of competitor Barack Obama with the blockbuster apocalyptic series’ depiction of the antichrist. But even the series authors Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins don’t think Obama is the antichrist. What may have been created as a farce has generated a firestorm of controversy on the internet.
LaHaye and Jenkins take a literal interpretation of prophecies found in the Book of Revelation. They believe the antichrist will surface on the world stage at some point, but neither see Obama in that role. “I’ve gotten a lot of questions the last few weeks asking if Obama is the antichrist,” says novelist Jenkins. “I tell everyone that I don’t think the antichrist will come out of politics, especially American politics.”
“I can see by the language he uses why people think he could be the antichrist,” adds LaHaye, “but from my reading of scripture, he doesn’t meet the criteria. There is no indication in the Bible that the antichrist will be an American.”
Jenkins and LaHaye don’t take McCain’s commercial or the antichrist speculation over Obama too seriously.
Pundits have pointed out that there are similarities between the “Left Behind Series” character Nicolae Carpathia and Obama. Other than some vocabulary and charisma, Carpathia, a young Romanian politician who eventually oversees a one-world government, and Obama don’t have much in common. “If even the people who created the character Nicolae Carpathia don’t see the comparisons as warranted, then perhaps this is overblown,” says Jenkins.
“Left Behind” is a series of 16 apocalyptic novels (1995-2007/Tyndale House Publishers) using end time prophecies in Revelation as a framework. All sixteen books reached the “New York Times” bestseller list with seven reaching the #1 spot. Overall more than 63 million copies have sold in the “Left Behind” product line. For more information on the “Left Behind Series,” visit www.leftbehind.com.
Press contact: Beverly Rykerd at Beverly@rykerd.com or (719) 481-0537.
Matthew 25, a P.A.C. 19 July, 2008
Posted by Zack in Brian McLaren, DC, Matthew 25 pac.18 comments
Matthew 25 is an organization started by some evangelical Christians that endorse Barack Obama. It is a political action committee that is raising money for ads on Christian radio, among other things. But the story is more interesting than that. Brian McLaren’s endorsement of Obama, at a Matthew 25 event last week, is a major step for this whole community. Some other Christians (who are in some ways more radical politically than McLaren) are gently or indirectly opposing making any endorsements. Check out this satire by Mark Van Steenwyk at Jesus Manifesto. (And check out the debate with Thom Stark in the comments on that post.) Then check out Shane’s post on God’s Politics: “Advise Everyone Endorse No One.”
It’s going to be very interesting to watch evangelicals attempting to resist and sometimes succumbing to the allure of Barack Obama over the next few months. May I suggest a third way between a sign-your-life-away endorsement (which by the way Brian McLaren is not giving) and disengagement:
Why not state the obvious: a vote for Barack Obama is an intervention that can reasonably be expected to lead to less war, more health, better education, more reconciliation and more compassion. “Ah, compassion!” you say, “That’s what we voted for in 2000 and 2004 with Bush! We’ll never be burned like that again!” But think about that: Bush said compassion, but he talked about cutting services, trying teenagers as adults, ignoring the environment, etc… The difference between McCain and Obama isn’t the difference between Satan and Jesus, but it is the difference between millions of people being able to go to the doctor and not being able to, the difference between hundreds of thousands of Iraqis (and Iranians?!) dying. And so on… Is it possible that Obama could do the opposite of what he is promising? Sure. But is it possible that the homeless people your home group is working with will fall off the wagon? Sure. These are the risks we take as humans in a broken world. There’s no way to get away from those risks.
Must-see event in DC & NY, Friday & Saturday 26 June, 2008
Posted by Zack in DC, Jesus for President.1 comment so far
I’ve written about Shane Clairborne and his latest book with Chris Haw called Jesus for President. The Jesus for President tour has been winding its crazy way across the country for the past couple weeks.
And it’s getting to DC tomorrow! So go visit. If you are curious about this movement I’ve been writing about, go check it out. People will be praying and singing, but they won’t mind at all if you don’t. Just go sit in the back if that makes you feel comfortable and take it all in. I guarantee you will find this event fascinating and massively encouraging.
*** In DC it’s here: ***
Friday, JULY 27 — 7PM.
Calvary Baptist Church
755 8th St. NW
Washington, DC 20001
202-347-8355
View Larger Map
*** In NY it’s here: ***
Saturday, JULY 28 — 7PM
Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church
7 West 55th St.
New York, NY 10019
212-247-0490
London, then RootsCamp 13 April, 2008
Posted by Zack in DC, rootscamp.1 comment so far
Sorry I haven’t posted much over the last week. I was in London working on an IT project. And then there was RootsCamp DC.
At RootsCamp, I did a presentation on the Revolution in Jesusland. I played audio excerpts from sermons and we talked about them. It went really well. One Democratic campaign staffer in the group outed herself as an evangelical Christian and talked about the urge to keep her sometimes-ridiculed identity secret in Democratic professional circles. The group cracked up at some parts of the audio clips, such as when a preacher spoke against pornography, helping to make her point.
Here are some pictures of RootsCamp:
You can see the sign for my session in the picture above. The full subtitle was:
Have all the fundamentalist Christians become anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist revolutionaries?
No, just a few million of them.
PS: if you’re confused about RootsCamp, it’s like Foo Camp or Bar Camp.
Faithful America starts petition to stop ridiculous exit poll practice 20 February, 2008
Posted by Zack in 2008, DC, exit polling, Faith in Public Life, Faithful America.7 comments
The newly relaunched group Faithful America has started a petition to stop exit polls that ask only Republicans about their religious affiliation and church attendance:
The presidential primary exit polls, sponsored by ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, Fox and the AP, must stop stereotyping people of faith. We call on the media pollsters to ask all voters — Republicans and Democrats — the same religion questions on the exit poll surveys.
What’s also incredible, by the way, is that the same exit polls only ask Democrats about union membership.
Do TV ratings depend on telling a meta-story of an America divided into two completely separate cultures or something? Why do they run their polls this way?
Faithful America is a project of Faith in Public Life, the organization that commissioned its own exit polls that showed that religion and political parties do not match up. A whole lot of people have been complaining about this polling issue, and it’s great that Faith in Public Life and now Faithful America are standing up and doing something about it.
Byron York on the GOP’s “Huckicide” 19 December, 2007
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My buddy Byron York at the National Review seems to be one of the only Republican pundits to be comfortable with Huckabee’s populist appeal:
Mike Huckabee was on the “Today” show this morning. Meredith Viera asked him to react to Rich’s remark that nominating Huckabee would be suicide for the Republican party. Huckabee began with his standard line about how he is not part of the “Wall Street-to-Washington axis, this corridor of power.” “They don’t control me,” Huckabee said. “I’m not one of theirs. I’m not one of those guys that just owe my soul to the people on Wall Street. I’m not a wholly-owned subsidiary of them. I don’t live in the circles of power in Washington. I really do come right up from the people.”
Fine. Then Huckabee got into what is really the basis of his appeal for many voters. He’s tapping into that new sort of evangelicalism, that Rick Warren-style worldview that David Brooks and others have been writing about for a few years now. It is real, it is different from older-style evangelicalism, as well as from economic or national-security conservatism, and Huckabee has his finger on it.
