Study: Conservatives Grow Wary Of Mixing Religion, Politics

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ERIC GORSKI | August 21, 2008 05:48 PM EST | AP

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Social conservatives are growing more wary of church involvement in politics, joining moderates and liberals in their unease about blurring the lines between pulpit and ballot box, a new study found.

Fifty percent of conservatives think churches and other places of worship should stay out of social and political matters, up from 30 percent four years ago, according to a survey released Thursday by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life and the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press.

That significant shift in conservative thought has brought the country to a tipping point on the question: a slim majority of Americans _ 52 percent _ now think churches should keep out of politics.

That's an eight percentage point increase over 2004 and the first time a majority of Americans has held that opinion since Pew officials started asking the question 12 years ago.

On this question, the gap between conservatives and liberals is narrowing: just four years ago, liberals were twice as likely as conservatives to say churches should stay out of politics. Now, 50 percent of conservatives and 57 percent of liberals think that. Four years ago, 62 percent of liberals opposed church involvement in politics. Democrats and Republicans are about even on the question, as well.

The survey also found largely unchanged attitudes along religious lines on the presidential choices compared with 2004, despite Democrat Barack Obama's strong play for religious voters and Republican John McCain's hesitancy to talk about his own faith and problems connecting with his party's evangelical base.

McCain leads Obama 68 percent to 24 percent among white evangelical Protestants, comparable to what President Bush was polling four years ago. But the support is tepid: just 28 percent of white evangelicals call themselves "strong" supporters of McCain, well short of Bush's 57 percent in 2004.

Changing attitudes about mixing church and politics could emerge as a factor in the fall campaign _ particularly for McCain. Both campaigns are plotting get-out-the-vote efforts in faith communities, but past Republican successes came when attitudes were more welcoming.

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The attitude shift cut across conservative constituencies: 46 percent of Republican Protestants want churches out of politics, up from 28 percent in 2004. Thirty-six percent of white evangelical Republicans hold that view, up from 20 percent four years ago.

The question asked specifically about places of worship, which by law cannot take stands for or against candidates or political parties but may speak out on issues. So the public might hold different views about political stances taken by religious leaders speaking as individuals or religious advocacy groups.

The findings come after midterm elections in 2006 that saw Democrats seize control of Congress, a landmark court ruling this year legalizing gay marriage in California, and also amid an identity crisis among conservative evangelicals about which issues should take priority and who speaks for the movement.

Among the groups that shifted strongly away from wanting to see churches involved in politics: Americans who are less educated, those who believe gay marriage is a very important issue and those who think the two major parties are unfriendly to religion.

"To my mind, that spells frustration," said Andrew Kohut, president of the Pew Research Center. "But by the same token, we know these very same people are not interested in less religiosity in the political discourse. They almost universally want a religious person as president.

"It's not that they want to take religion out of politics, it's that their frustrations with the way things seem to be going are leading them to say, 'Well, maybe churches should back off on this.'"

The survey confirmed that white non-Hispanic Catholics, who make up about 18 percent of the electorate, are shaping up to be a big swing vote this fall: 45 percent support McCain, while 44 percent back Obama. Democrat John Kerry, a Catholic, was doing better at this juncture in 2004, winning 50 percent of those Catholics.

Asked which candidate "shares my values," 47 percent of all respondents replied Obama and 39 percent said McCain. White evangelicals favor McCain on that question, the religiously nonaffiliated leaned Obama, while white non-Hispanic Catholics and mainline Protestants were split.

Democrats have made inroads in closing the so-called God gap, at least by one measure: 38 percent of respondents said the party is "friendly toward religion," up from 26 percent two years ago. Even so, considerably more people _ 52 percent _ viewed the Republican Party as religion-friendly.

___

On the Net: http://pewresearch.org/

Social conservatives are growing more wary of church involvement in politics, joining moderates and liberals in their unease about blurring the lines between pulpit and ballot box, a new study found. ...
Social conservatives are growing more wary of church involvement in politics, joining moderates and liberals in their unease about blurring the lines between pulpit and ballot box, a new study found. ...
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- HC4BO I'm a Fan of HC4BO 43 fans permalink
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They Started It .... Busched !

New Pro-Obama book coming out soon ...

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Pre-order at Amazon at Reduced Price ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:17 PM on 08/21/2008
- 4real I'm a Fan of 4real 30 fans permalink
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Well McCane has no problem mixing religion with politics as he mocks religion with his 'the one' ad.
I wonder if those holy people from saddleback would think it funny.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:12 PM on 08/21/2008

A just how "religious" is whoring around your "stand-by-your-man" wife, living with your mistress THEN dumping the old wife and kids? If God had intended him to stay with her, she would have gotten rich and stayed thin . . . . all depends on how your God works.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 PM on 08/21/2008
- Bubba Gump I'm a Fan of Bubba Gump 252 fans permalink
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God is forgiving. But God does expect us to stop our sinful ways. In John 8:2-11, the scribes and Pharisees caught a woman "taken in the very act" of adultery. Jesus had mercy on her. And in verse 11, Jesus told her, "Go, and sin no more."

I've got a question. How likely was it for this adultress to be caught when she knows the law requires her to be put to death? Don't you think she'd be discrete? Notice also that the scribes and Pharisees brought only the woman to Jesus, even though the Levitical Law called for both adulterors to be put to death. (see Leviticus 20:10) In my opinion, they had a buddy set up this woman as a scape-goat to trap Jesus! And of course, the buddy received religious immunity!

Sound like American politics and religion today?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 AM on 08/22/2008
- Coinyer101 I'm a Fan of Coinyer101 750 fans permalink
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he may have lost votes there.iff they think obama's the messiah,then BO's probably got their vote wrapped up,now.who wouldn't vote for the messiah?better than the guy's in the white house,and their new protege',who are each in serious need of an exorcism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 PM on 08/21/2008
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