iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Is Rick Santorum A Catholic Or An Evangelical? Yes.

Rick Santorum Catholic Evangelical

Posted: 01/11/2012 10:13 pm

By David Gibson
Religion News Service

(RNS) Just days after Rick Santorum surged to a virtual tie for first in the Iowa caucuses, conservative activists at an invitation-only summit along the South Carolina coast were buzzing about the former Pennsylvania senator's sudden and promising breakthrough.

Deal Hudson, who directed Catholic outreach for George W. Bush's White House before starting the conservative group Catholic Advocate, was among the movers and shakers at the annual Awakening gathering on Kiawah Island. He was especially pleased to hear such praise for a fellow Catholic -- until Hudson realized something odd.

"There were a number of knowledgeable people who were very enthusiastic about Rick but didn't know he was Catholic," Hudson said with a quiet laugh. "I was really surprised."

To be fair, those conservative kingmakers may not be the only ones who don't know what church Santorum attends, much less care. But that, some say, is exactly the point.

Polls in Iowa showed that rank-and-file evangelicals threw most of their support to Santorum, a devout Catholic, rather than either of Santorum's evangelical rivals, Rep. Michele Bachmann or Texas Gov. Rick Perry.

And in South Carolina, where the Jan. 21 primary is shaping up to be a make-or-break date for social conservatives who want to slow Mitt Romney's momentum, evangelicals make up about 60 percent of likely voters. Surveys already show Santorum already spiking to a strong second place behind Romney.

Santorum "is exactly what we need to bring the country back -- and I think he can beat Obama," Lynn Waldrop, a Greenville, S.C., homemaker and born-again Christian, told Reuters.

In addition, many of the dozens of evangelical leaders set to meet in Texas this weekend in a last-ditch effort to settle on a social conservative candidate are reportedly tilting strongly toward Santorum.

Whether any of this will slow or derail Romney's path to the nomination is uncertain. But it does raise the broader question of why a Pennsylvania-born grandson of Italian immigrants who attends Mass in Latin is emerging as the favorite of conservative Protestants.

The answers help explain not only the political dynamics of the current race, but point to a generational shift from the 1960 campaign, when John F. Kennedy had to reassure evangelicals like Billy Graham that he wasn't too Catholic to be president.

"Now here we are, 50 years later, and evangelicals are not only willing to vote for Roman Catholic candidates but frankly they are flocking to Roman Catholic candidates" like Santorum and Newt Gingrich, said Ralph Reed, head of the Faith and Freedom Coalition and a top evangelical political activist.

"This is a big moment in American religious and political history."

Both Reed and Hudson note that Santorum's appeal to conservative Protestants isn't really -- or even mainly -- a case of mistaken religious identity. Plenty of evangelicals know Santorum is a practicing Catholic; it's just that it doesn't matter the way it once did.

What's really important is that Santorum espouses their values, because in a multi-front culture war, an "ecumenism of the trenches" prevails over Reformation-era disputes about doctrine. So when Santorum makes full-throated opposition to gay marriage and abortion his signature issues, he is effectively singing from the evangelical hymnal.

"Rick Santorum may technically not call himself an evangelical but he is definitely one when it comes to social issues, so don't get too caught up in the title of 'Roman Catholic,'" David Brody, chief political correspondent for Pat Robertson's Christian Broadcasting Network, wrote after the Iowa vote.

"Santorum is an evangelical at heart."

He may also be more of an evangelical in policy. Indeed, if Santorum's opposition to gay marriage and abortion are in sync with the Catholic bishops, those positions resonate far more with conservative Protestants than they do with the average Catholic.

Moreover, Santorum openly splits with the hierarchy -- espousing positions traditionally associated with evangelicals -- in his opposition to immigration reform and universal health care, and his support for aggressive military action abroad and steep spending cuts at home.

Santorum's religious rhetoric is just as important in cultivating his evangelical appeal, and that is something new for Catholic politicians.

He has "an evangelical style," Hudson notes, which can be seen in his references to home-schooling his children, his support for teaching creationism in public schools, and his regular testimony about his personal relationship with Jesus. (Santorum adds that the U.S. needs to have "a Jesus candidate.")

Santorum is also a youthful 53, and a squeaky-clean family man. He has a large family, and relates affecting stories about a son that died at birth and about his youngest daughter, who suffers from a terminal illness.

That kind of confessional, public piety has generally been foreign to Catholics, and remains so for many of the older generation. During the 2004 campaign, Democratic nominee John Kerry struggled to make "God talk" while George W. Bush spoke comfortably about his faith.

Yet Santorum is not an outlier. Rather, he represents a new kind of religious hybrid, the result of a kind of cross-pollination between evangelicals and Catholics that has taken place in recent decades.

That interaction began in earnest in the 1980s as conservative evangelicals and conservative Catholics began collaborating in the battle against abortion. The visibility and popularity of the late Pope John Paul II gave it a boost.

"It's the influence of the John Paul II revival in the Catholic Church which encouraged a 'less urbane' rhetoric about personal faith," Hudson said.

That Catholic influence went the other way as well. A host of prominent conservative Christians -- including Hudson, who used to be a Southern Baptist -- have converted to Catholicism in recent years. Gingrich is one, and Santorum himself helped former GOP senator and current Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback become a Catholic. Jeb Bush is also a convert, and that has all contributed to a sense of cultural familiarity among conservative believers.

Evangelicals who did not actually become Catholic nonetheless began borrowing some Catholic concepts -- about social justice and natural law, for example -- from Catholicism, and deployed terms like John Paul's "culture of life."

In fact, Bush used Catholic terms so frequently that Santorum called him "the first Catholic president of the United States" -- a quip that underscores the evangelical-Catholic bond while tweaking Kennedy-style Catholics who Santorum and others criticize for privatizing their faith.

Reed, who cut his political teeth in the 1990s as head of the Christian Coalition, notes that no candidate will win evangelical hearts and minds (or votes) just by using the right words -- just ask Michele Bachmann. A candidate must be seen as faithful but also electable, and Santorum -- or others who follow him -- may be able to make that double-barreled argument.

Ironically, the downside for Santorum and the new generation of "hybrid" Catholics is that in winning votes from the religious right, they may also be losing the support of fellow Catholics who don't recognize themselves or their faith in the stump speeches of these staunch conservatives.

The poll numbers so far reflect Santorum's difficulty in winning Catholic backing: in New Hampshire on Tuesday (Jan. 10), Santorum's evangelical support (23 percent) was nearly three times his support among Catholics (8 percent). While there may be a way for him to secure the Republican nomination without his fellow Catholics, winning the general election without them could be near impossible.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST RELIGION

By David Gibson Religion News Service (RNS) Just days after Rick Santorum surged to a virtual tie for first in the Iowa caucuses, conservative activists at an invitation-only summit along the Sout...
By David Gibson Religion News Service (RNS) Just days after Rick Santorum surged to a virtual tie for first in the Iowa caucuses, conservative activists at an invitation-only summit along the Sout...
Filed by Jahnabi Barooah  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 211
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Post Comment Preview Comment
To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to.
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (7 total)
11:21 AM on 02/29/2012
I grew up in a Charismatic Catholic household. He sounds just like my parents. Yes, there are catholics like this out there.

Personally, I am a recovering catholic :)
04:58 PM on 02/25/2012
He is an evangelical catholic. But who cares. None of the candidates religion should be an issue in this election. The only area Rick is conservative in is the social arena. Otherwise he is nothing more than a big spending, establishment, Washington insider. Look up his voting record while he was in congress and decide for yourself.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kathleen Gersch
10:50 AM on 02/25/2012
he is neither. he is an opportunistic bull crap spewer.
02:08 AM on 02/07/2012
Rick Santorum is neither a Catholic or an Evangelical. He is a political opportunist who has found a message in Religion that he will try to ride into Political Success. He is the NO SEX candidate. If he thought he could get votes by telling people to pick their noses in public he would. He is a Shaman, a wolf in sheep's clothing, a fraud. Roger Williams, (A great Puritan Theological Thinker of the past) once said: IF YOU MIX RELIGION AND POLITICS YOU GET POLITICS. Said in the 1600s. Now Rick Santorum has mix Religion with Politics, so he is a politician looking for votes. The Puritans would have dunked Ricky in the pond for his blasphemy. Or drowned him as a test to see if he was truly a christian, if he died no christian, lived true Christian. I'd bet Ricky would have failed that test of faith.
11:16 PM on 01/14/2012
Where have all these sudden experts on catholicism and now an accusation that Santorum is a communist with some spanish connection? Is this an ad hoc last minute campaign to shovel anything that might get some bigots excited. The usual anticatholic rants come from crypto atheists who have to be flushed out, but they are generally directly vicious. Now an attempt at subtle bigottry via a political candidate who will sell out the world to the pope. This is late eighteenth century early nineteenth century hate tracts by the rabid dissident baptist and other radical preachers whose prejudice goes back centuries in Europe

s
02:19 AM on 02/07/2012
May I say, as an Anti-theist, who you will not need to FLUSH OUT, Mien Fuhrer. I stand before you with my contempt for those of faith, laid bare. Yes, my contempt. The purveyors of righteousness, endowed with the power of GOD to pass judgement on GOD's other creations. When I hear of Religious persecution by someone of faith, I hear a person of little faith. What does it matter what people say negatively about Religion. Christians went to their death in the Coliseum for their faith, and Christians today can't take criticism. Where is the armor your faith is suppose to provide you? I don't recall reading anywhere in the Bible of Jesus exchanging insults with his detractors.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wayne Peterson
08:51 PM on 01/12/2012
His agenda is to replace our Constitution with Christian Sharia law, under which all candidates for Congress, the Presidency and federal judgeships must be "biblically acceptable". Get rid of this idiot!
11:07 PM on 01/14/2012
Never rant while panicking, your paranoia is classic anticatholic bigotry. But in your case it borders on a severe neurosis.
photo
Kittypost
My micro-bio magnified 1000X --> .
03:15 PM on 01/16/2012
If you read chapter 2 of your Psychology 101 textbook, it will tell you not to make any sort of diagnosis on complete strangers. Or it's an acute case of Trollzheimer's. dk/dc
04:17 PM on 01/15/2012
Better a 'Christian Sharia' than continued living under the yoke of the Tal-Lib-ban.
01:27 PM on 01/12/2012
What's the mystery here? Of course he appeals to evangelicals. He's foaming at the mouth to bomb Iran. This is all part of accelerating the day of Armageddon. Someone asked him in NH how he could be pro-life and pro-war. He responded, "Have you ever heard of a just war?". As rude and as stupid the response was in itself, (that a preemptive strike doesn't even fit the first requisite: the damage inflicted by the aggressor on the nation or community of nations must be lasting, grave, and certain;), he didn't even deny he was pro war.
12:09 PM on 01/12/2012
Well, it appears that the average Catholic Republican in New Hampshire has more intelligence in relation to their voting choices than expected.
04:18 PM on 01/15/2012
People of average intelligence usually do not try to cipher the thinkling of an entire religion through the results of one primary.
05:12 PM on 01/15/2012
Nor the intelligence of another person based on even less information.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:08 AM on 01/12/2012
Santorum from a COMMIE FAMILY?

http://news.yahoo.com/santorum-communist-clan-113600418.html
04:20 PM on 01/15/2012
What tripe.
02:37 AM on 02/07/2012
Christianity in its purest form is definitely socialistic. Jesus preached helping the poor, kindness to others, stay out of politics; "Give on to Caesar..." Forgive the transgressors and your enemies. Matthew 6:24, he says "You cannot serve both God and Money" According to the Book of Acts, Jesus' original followers tried to live by these teachings after he left them. They formed a community in Jerusalem, known as the Nazarenes, in which everyone "had everything in common" (Acts 2:44), and any new member had to sell his or her possessions and give the proceeds to a common fund. Now you can't get any more socialistic than that, Ducky.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
12:54 PM on 02/08/2012
Gen: 6:4
10:16 AM on 01/12/2012
Let's get down to fundamentals...

Is Rick santorum? Yes!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:09 AM on 01/12/2012
Hes from a communist family in Spain.....how you like him now?

http://news.yahoo.com/santorum-communist-clan-113600418.html
04:21 PM on 01/15/2012
Makes absolutely no difference - nice try.
lovelygirl33
Fiscally Christian, Socially Inclusive
10:08 AM on 01/12/2012
Santorum is Catholic in name only. Catholics believe in and practice social justice.

The generational shift is that previously people's faith informed their politics. Now their politics actually change their faith. Mega-church 'Christians' will tell you Jesus would cancel programs that the poor depend on and that money is good and He wants you to keep it all for yourself. They are flocking to these candidates mainly because treasured money will be theirs by cutting these programs thus meeting their two most important religious tenets.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rockysparks
there's no law against being annoying.
08:30 AM on 01/12/2012
It doesn't matter whether Rick and his santorum are Catholic or Evangelical. What's more important is what they are not: Electable. Praise God.
04:23 PM on 01/15/2012
You must be joking - road kill would give Obama a run for his money.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rockysparks
there's no law against being annoying.
06:02 PM on 01/15/2012
Only if the road kill could prove it was born in the United States ...
IreneNH
Please feel free to disagree
08:09 AM on 01/12/2012
Rick Santorum is totally out of step with most Catholics. I hope he is the conservatives' choice to stop the Romney momentum. He will lose in a landslide.
photo
ryker88
Only the pure in heart can make a good soup.
09:03 AM on 01/12/2012
He is also out of step with people with any compassion.
04:27 PM on 01/15/2012
Anyone with so many children must have some compassion.
04:23 PM on 01/15/2012
How so?

Have you concluded your own private poll?
IreneNH
Please feel free to disagree
06:43 PM on 01/15/2012
No, I have not concluded my own private poll. However, there have been numerous polls done over the years that show the majority of those who identify as Catholics do not agree with the Church on various issues that Santorum espouses.
photo
ReMarker
Facts and reason For The Win!
08:07 AM on 01/12/2012
Most religious proselytizers, (for example; preachers, priests, mullahs, rabbis) especially radical religious fundamentalist proselytizers, believe believing in their personal brand of religion is a requirement for being acceptable to their deity and that 'non-believers' are not 'worthy' of anything other than being 'converted'.

Left to their own devices, these radical religious fundamentalist proselytizers prefer we mortals be governed by 'spiritual type' governments over governments devised by us mere mortals.

Santorum, Osama bin Laden, Pat Robertson, Warren Jeffs, Mike Huckabee, Pat Buchanan, Sarah Palin, Jim Jones, Charles Manson, Jerry Falwell and Joseph Smith Jr. are examples of people that prefer their spiritual vision of government over our government (the United States of America).

There is no way I would vote for a radical religious fundamentalist for any elective office.
02:54 AM on 02/07/2012
MIX RELIGION WITH POLITICS YOU GET POLITICS.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
F Sz
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidenc
08:03 AM on 01/12/2012
His church is Wall Street and his god is written like this: $