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Jim Wallis

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An Open Letter to Glenn Beck

Posted: 09/02/10 03:20 PM ET

Dear Glenn,

I think we got off on the wrong foot. I listened to your speech last Saturday and heard a lot of things that we agree on. In fact, I have used some of the same language of our need to turn to God, and the values of "faith, hope, and charity" (love). What I would like to find out, and others would too, is what you mean by that language. Until last weekend, you have consistently described yourself primarily as an entertainer, and the public has known you as a talk show host. But last Saturday, you sounded more like an evangelist or revivalist on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. I know we disagree significantly on many issues of public policy, but you said that people can disagree on politics and still agree on basic values and try to come together. Maybe we should test that. Instead of my being up on your blackboard and a regular target of your show's rhetoric, why don't we finally have that civil dialogue I invited you to months ago? Your speech on the Mall suggested and even promised a change of heart on your part, so why don't we talk? Here are a few things I think we could talk about.

First, I've been asked by people in the media if it matters that you are a Mormon. I unequivocally answer, no, it does not. We don't want more anti-Mormon bigotry any more than we want the anti-Muslim bigotry now rising up across the country. By the way, you should speak to that (against it). On Saturday you talked about the fact that our nation has some scars in our past. I think one of those scars is the historical persecution and bigotry that many Mormons have faced, as well as Catholics, Jews, and Muslims. But, as you said, instead of dwelling on the bad things of the past, we need to learn from them and look to the future. The best way to do that is to make sure we all stand for religious liberty and tolerance, and are careful not to denigrate anybody else's faith tradition, experience, or language. If you are ever in need of an evangelical Christian to speak out against anti-Mormon sentiment directed at you or others, I am here to help.

In an interview the day after your rally you said that you would like to "amend" your statement in which you accused President Obama of being a racist and said he had a deep hatred in his heart for white people. I commend you for that. But a simple and straightforward apology would have been better. All of us say things we shouldn't sometimes, but you have consistently mischaracterized the president's faith. You also said in that interview that you would like to have a conversation about it. I'd like to do that.

I also think it would be a good thing to stop attacking people and churches you label as "social justice Christians," not just because I'm tired of being on your blackboard, but because I think you genuinely don't understand the concept and how central it is to biblical faith, and how essential to the whole gospel. I am sure there are those who have misused the term, just as there are those who will co-opt any good label that exists. If "social justice" were truly code for Communism or Marxism or Nazism, as you have suggested, I would be right beside you in condemning it.

In his opening sermon at Nazareth, Jesus gave his own mission statement when he declared, "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor, he has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor." Those were his very words, Glenn, including the stuff about releasing captives and freeing the oppressed -- language you have been pretty critical of. In fact, the end of Jesus' famous sermon in Luke 4, about proclaiming "the year of the Lord's favor," was a direct reference, according to most biblical scholars, to the "year of Jubilee" in the Hebrew scriptures, which called for a periodic freeing of slaves, cancelling of debts, and returning land to original owners. It was written into the Torah as legal code and not just left up to individual charity. It was about "social justice" and even "redistribution" -- two of the least popular words on your show. You regularly criticize other people's "versions" of Christianity. How about Jesus' version of Christianity?

I thought you might be changing your own mind a bit when I heard you lifting up the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and associating yourself with him on the 47th anniversary of his eloquent "I Have a Dream" speech, given from the very place you stood on Saturday. I was encouraged by that because Dr. King was the archetypal social justice Christian and the primary teacher for many of us on the social implications of biblical faith. His personal faith led him to fight for racial and economic justice -- social justice. I hope you read many of his words before you spoke on the anniversary of his great speech, because we can't claim the mantle of King without also embracing his message. You seemed to affirm King's assertion that racism was not simply a private moral issue but one that required response through federal action and legislation. I'd like to talk with you about the rest of King's dream. If King was right about racism, could he have also been right about poverty and war? I didn't hear much about King's words on either of those issues in your speech on Saturday.

And let's talk about salvation. You have emphasized that you believe strongly in personal salvation, as opposed to "collective salvation." As an evangelical Christian, I also believe deeply in personal salvation -- it is the foundation of my faith. But we need to ask ourselves, what are we saved for? Is salvation just about getting a pass into heaven? Is it just for us? Or is it also for the world, and being a part of God's work and purposes in the world today? When I read a passage like Matthew 25 or Amos 5, I believe it's clear that God won't hear my prayers if I don't care for the least of these, or I refuse justice to those in need. You spoke about charity at your rally on Saturday. Throughout the Old Testament it is clear that God requires compassion and charity from individuals, but God also requires justice from society. We agree that personal charity is important, but the God of the Bible is also a God of justice. His prophets regularly challenged the priorities, policies, and behavior of kings, rulers, employers, judges, and any leaders (including religious ones) who practiced injustice and robbed the poor of their dignity and rights. The leaders of his day were so upset with Jesus' challenge to their status quo that they killed him. Would they have been so threatened if Jesus was just asking people to be better persons and volunteer more often? Jesus announced the kingdom of God, which would change everything -- personally, spiritually, socially, economically, and even politically -- not with a new government or program, but with a new way of living that included both love and justice.

Before, I thought you were just another cable news talk show host. But now, you are using the language of a spiritual and even a religious leader. You acted as though you now want people to look to you for that kind of spiritual leadership. But to invoke the name of God and the vocation of a spiritual leader has consequences. It brings with it a whole new level of responsibility and accountability. It will require a more civil and even humble tone than you are used to. It will likely mean saying some different things and, certainly, saying many things differently than you have in the past. Pundits and talk show hosts say things that divide, create conflict, and get good ratings. They appeal more to fear than to hope. But spiritual leaders try to avoid vitriol and bombastic language, and to rather seek to find common ground and bring people together to find real solutions to real problems. So let's talk about that too.

You said your rally day was the start of the nation turning to God. Many people in this country have already done that and, in fact, try to do it every day. But maybe it was the start of Glenn Beck becoming a different kind of public voice than you have been before. I hope so. And one good way to demonstrate that is to agree to an honest and civil conversation with somebody you have often attacked. How about it, Glenn?

portrait-jim-wallisJim Wallis is the author of Rediscovering Values: On Wall Street, Main Street, and Your Street -- A Moral Compass for the New Economy, and CEO of Sojourners. He blogs at www.godspolitics.com.



<strong><img title="portrait-jim-wallis" src="http://blog.sojo.net/wp-content/uploads/portrait-jim-wallis.jpg" alt="portrait-jim-wallis" width="60" height="73" /><em>Jim Wallis</em></strong><em> is the author of </em><a href="http://www.sojo.net/index.cfm?action=special.RV&amp;item=RV_order">Rediscovering Values: On Wall Street, Main Street, and Your Street -- A Moral Compass for the New Economy</a><em>, and CEO of </em><a href="http://www.sojo.net/">Sojourners</a><em>. He blogs at </em><a href="http://www.godspolitics.com/"><em>www.godspolitics.com</em></a><em>.</em>

<strong><a href="http://www.sojo.net/index.cfm?action=sojomail.subscribe&amp;source=web_blog_content">+Click here to get e-mail updates from Jim Wallis</a></strong>

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12:46 AM on 09/25/2010
Dr. King never fought for Social Justice, his fight was for what every person should want... Equal Justice. That's why some thought he should be destroyed, while the vast majority of Americans loved him for it. Do not tarnish his memory by pretending he was embracing a marxist leaning theology.
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mrrobinson2u
Respect for Marriage Act NOW! Repeal DOMA NOW!
12:55 PM on 09/14/2010
Can we make his book required reading for all US representatives???
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RobChattaTN
there's no such thing as objectivity
09:22 AM on 09/14/2010
mmmm....so what if 'evangelical Christians' DID talk to each other and explore the essentials of the faith? good list of 'talking points' we can all use with our friends who may disagree with us.
05:38 PM on 09/13/2010
I completely agree with Wallis. Beck must realize the consequences of his recent change in rhetorical language. Over the last two years, Beck has set himself up, quite definitively, as a partisan political entertainer; a talking head with strong political convictions (if not sometimes just opinions) and a need to air them. The great scandal of Saturday's march was that Beck suddenly started singing a different tune. He invoked God, Christian values, and ultimately set himself up as a spiritual revivalist. His language henceforth must necessarily change, or all his talk from Saturday will be exposed as just another one of his media-driven performances, yet not so entertaining this time.
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blueskyseas
Veni, Vedi, Velcro. I came, I saw, I stuck around
08:47 AM on 09/12/2010
Well said.
11:36 PM on 09/07/2010
What should also be taken into account is that Beck, like so many others, is a creature
of the media, of TV, all of which tend to be a bit silly, mildly stated. And thus the lure of
deceit, false promises on the secular level. For an easy, laid back reflection of that culture
comprehensively, here a secular song parody that gives a nice insight into the deviousness
of all that:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6CqRcCHk_Pc
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Lisa Shields
Poet & Advocate For Special Needs Children
08:08 AM on 09/07/2010
I am old enough to remember when it was considered impolite to talk about religion, or politics. I now understand why. I don't discuss my religious beliefs with anyone, outside of my family. That is a deeply personal, intimate fact of my life, and I am grossly uncomfortable wit anyone who wears their denomination on their sleeve, so to speak.

I believe when a religion invests itself in politics, they have crossed the line. The penalty for doing so should be a loss of their tax exempt status. What was it that Christ said? "Render unto Caesar? Time perhaps for his followers to read the man's words. Hate had nothing to do with following Christ.
And neither did politics.
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Mag7
Smarter than the Average Dog
10:47 AM on 09/06/2010
It's bad enough that Glenn Beck pretends to have a running dialogue with God, but even worse is that so many "Christians" support this man's hubris to say so. I live in the South and it simply amazes me that the evangelicals I work with are so viciously against the man voted to the presidency. It doesn't end at questioning Obama's faith, but really, proclaiming him as the anti-Christ? All in the name of Christ?
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Edward Standley
opinionated jerk
09:37 AM on 09/06/2010
How can the term "social justice" possibly be misinterpreted? How can justice be bad? In any form?
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norman60
01:42 AM on 09/06/2010
Beck is using "the green snake in the green grass" tactics. "He n't want to be identified for whahHe doese
11:00 PM on 09/05/2010
Reverend Wallis, I think your invitation, perhaps drafted while Glenn Beck was denouncing President Obama's Christianity as "a perversion of the gospel of Jesus Christ as most Christians know it," is falling on deaf ears. It didn't take long to realize we won't see "the start of Glenn Beck becoming a different kind of public voice" as you'd hoped. That went slpat on Fox News Sunday.

When has any prominent member of the opposition party made such a defamatory, incendiary attack on a sitting president's faith? The audacious irony is that he's elevated himself to the position of arbiter of Christian orthodoxy -- denied to his Mormonism by all mainline churches -- and judged President Obama's faith as apostasy!

This log in Beck's eye (overlooked by most conservatives) is like the GOP's gay former chairman: using power to tear down and de-legitimize others, even though you live in the same ghetto. For purely political/financial gains.

This ugly attack came mere hours after his "Restoring Honor" rally, his first post-rally act as a "religious leader" making a spiritual pronouncement. The obvious spirit of his words should make Christian conservatives ashamed as well as wary. Where's the honor in attacking your president's faith?

Since God speaks to Beck (even dictating an unpublished book) he obviously has the courage of his convictions to make such claims about another's religion. Historically, prophets -- righteous and unrighteous -- have paid a high cost for their efforts. I am patiently awaiting payday for this one's labors.
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minerva117
The dog ate my micro bio.
10:46 AM on 09/07/2010
Since Beck is more a charlatan than a religious leader, his proclamations in his "Restoring Honor" rally should be taken with a grain of salt. A very LARGE grain of salt!
06:58 PM on 09/07/2010
Hmmm... a choice between a cattle salt lick and an Old Testament pillar of salt . . .
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caseyblab
09:37 PM on 09/05/2010
The language of spirituality is a costume Mr. Beck takes off at the end of the work day. He shows no interest in a commitment to a practice that requires some kind of honesty. How can you tell? Because he has every opportunity to learn and he chooses to warp the perceptions about the president's religion. He is a dishonest man, no doubt about it.
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ConservaYoda
Your micro-bio did not meet our guidelines
10:08 PM on 09/05/2010
But Jeremiah Wright is truly spiritual, yes? "God d@mn America" is very spiritual indeed.
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Weirdwriter
12:29 AM on 09/06/2010
ZZZZZZZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzZZZZZZZZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
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Skunkman
old & decrepit
07:59 PM on 09/05/2010
Glenn Beck promised a miracle at the 8-28 rally. Did anyone see a miracle? Why do people keep falling for his BS? Nothing happened, he does not get orders from god, there are no miracles, just reality and Becksters need to get a firm grasp of reality and stop looking for miracles and believing the conspiracy theories to help the US. Grow up, face reality, be responsible. You can wait the rest of your life for devine intervention. It will not happen, amageddon will not happen in your lifetime, deal with it.
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flyovermark
...Obamacare is tyranny...
08:21 PM on 09/05/2010
...if Beck's rally grows into a nation-wide revival, does that qualify as a "miracle"? Or would you still quibble that there were ONLY 87,000 people in attendence, and not the quarter-million that actually were?
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09:03 PM on 09/05/2010
4 plus 4=10,Fox new mathematics, They attendance does not matter if their were 80,0000,10 biz zillion, You want to see 1.5 million in one place,check labor day news,this being put together in 25 days ,not 6 months, this is going to rock your world, And miracles,man you have really lowered the bar,
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George R Williams
Publius Cincinatus
11:25 PM on 09/05/2010
And for every one person there were 100,000 that couldn't attend but desired to do so.
11:06 PM on 09/05/2010
How many of you know of someone (or yourself) that had a really bad habit (abusive alcohol, drugs, violence, etc...) etc where they were effectively killing themselves and the people who loved and/or cared about them. And then, be for religious reasons or otherwise, changed their life. How many of you didn't feel that in some since it wasn't a miracle?

I interpreted miracle not as God coming down the mountain, or that he would cure someone of a deadly disease, etc.. and all of that stuff. No I simply looked at his notion that you look inside and see the better part of you and bring it out. If that was about reaching into your faith -- so be it. If that was about some goodness to humanity -- so be it. The miracle Beck speaks to challenge everyone to look for being truthful inside and expressing that truth for faith, hope, and charity. And as he said later in his daily program -- it was not about a day -- it was about movement that will take time. That kind of miracle is surely a letdown to those that expected something wild to happen -- but I know watching my sibling overcome a terrible alchol problem that left with no relationship to their kids -- to one where he can celebrate having two beautiful children -- is some kind of miracle. Stop looking for the parting seas... a miracle can be a simple as a true change of
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Madagain
antirepublicanism
01:52 PM on 10/16/2010
How can you possibly associate Beck, and the truth? Have you ever saw someone blinded by their religion? Are you? Or is just because you believe, enough for you?
07:11 PM on 09/05/2010
Glen Beck like many of the new and old religious right invokes a spiritual motive only to cover up a base and vile one. Like his fronting for a gold company sponsor under investigation for fraud. A person of faith - any faith - would not do this. Glen Beck in everything he says and does is a fraud. If there's a real Glen there - he sold himself out a long time ago.
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flyovermark
...Obamacare is tyranny...
08:18 PM on 09/05/2010
...first let's see more than a mere accusation of fraud before condemning Beck's sponsor, and then more than an assertion from you that it also makes Beck a fraud...
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06:58 PM on 09/05/2010
I suspect you're wasting your time, sir. Glenn Beck is, and has always been, only interested in himself. He is a shallow reflection of a human being straining for self-aggrandizement. He will not respond to you because your challenge is diametrically opposed to his goals. Thanks for calling him out, though... I say he should start any change that may be occurring in his personal road of life with an apology to the wife of the Phoenix DJ he called and ridiculed on the air for her recent miscarriage. A person capable of that kind of action has a long way to go to get to the point where you are assuming he is.