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Jim Wallis

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Evangelical Consistency and the 2012 Elections

Posted: 12/01/11 10:03 AM ET

One of the greatest failures of Christians in this country is when they don't think and act as Christians first. Instead, they think first as Americans, consumers, partisans, and sometimes even as Red Sox fans. This leads to bending over backward to justify un-Christian behavior and attitudes to fit these other identities. The biblical name for this behavior is idolatry.

Now, Christians can and do identify as Americans, consumers, partisans, and even Red Sox fans (the latter being my particular temptation!). But, it should never be our first or primary identity. Those other identities should all be subservient and accountable to our identity in Christ.

A piece by Michelle Goldberg in Newsweek chronicles some evangelical voters in Iowa trying desperately to contort their values in order to justify supporting Newt Gingrich. She quotes Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council as saying, "Under normal circumstances, Gingrich would have some real problems with the social-conservative community... But these aren't normal circumstances."

In other words, this guy clearly doesn't stand for our values but we are ready to jettison those in order to make sure our party wins the 2012 election.  Newt Gingrich's three marriages -- serving his first wife divorce papers while she was suffering from cancer, and cheating on his second wife while leading the impeachment battle against Bill Clinton for lying about his sexual sins -- would normally be disqualifiers for family values conservatives. Later in the article, Ralph Reed discusses evangelical support for Ronald Reagan, our country's first and only divorced president, and says, "These voters believe in forgiveness, they believe in redemption."

In other words, some people are willing to forget anything and turn a blind eye toward what they would otherwise see as moral failures, as long as they can count on faithfulness to political or party ideology. Moral consistency is the clear loser in such political calculations.

Unfortunately, many people who go to church on Sunday are more influenced by what they see on cable TV than by the Bible. I hear that lament from pastors all the time. Too many of their congregants' political priorities are determined by a party or ideology -- not the Word of God. Their identities are shaped by marketing and media campaigns that manufacture a view of the world in order to maximize their own power and profit.

The antidote is simple. Christians need to read their Bibles more. It makes a difference.

I was surprised, as were many others, when a headline in Christianity Today a few months ago read, "Survey: Frequent Bible Reading Can Turn You Liberal." While many studies have shown a correlation between frequent church attendance and conservative political views, a new study from Baylor shows that frequent Bible reading increases opposition to the Patriot Act and the death penalty, while broadening one's concern for social and economic justice.

In fact, Baylor set up a five-point scale to measure Bible reading frequency. Participants were asked, "How important is it to actively seek social and economic justice in order to be a good person?"  Each point moving up the Bible reading scale correlated with a 35 percent increase in Christians who would agree with that statement. 

Frequent Bible reading doesn't correlate with any neat political category. Concern about abortion and gay marriage also increase with regular reading of the Bible. Christians must and should engage, struggle with, and be accountable to the scriptures. It is what keeps us honest, ensuring that we are Christians before we are Americans, consumers, partisans, or Red Sox fans.

The good news is that while stories about Tony Perkins, Ralph Reed, and other evangelicals ready to jettison their core beliefs in pursuit of political power tend to make headlines, it's not all evangelicals.

A new poll from the Public Religion Research Institute in partnership with Religion News Service asked what different Americans favor or oppose when it comes to reducing the federal deficit. Here is what's surprising: 58 percent of white evangelicals now oppose cutting federal programs that help the poor, 72 percent oppose cutting federal funding to religious organizations that help the poor, and 60 percent favor raising taxes on those that make more than $1 million a year, in order to help reduce the deficit.

Those startling results are very important and should cause Republicans to reconsider their position on deficit reduction and begin listening to a significant part of their electoral base. Even more importantly, it might get them to start reading the Bible more.

Jim Wallis is the author of Rediscovering Values: A Guide for Economic and Moral Recovery, and CEO of Sojourners. He blogs at www.godspolitics.com. Follow Jim on Twitter @JimWallis.

 
 
 

Follow Jim Wallis on Twitter: www.twitter.com/jimwallis

 
 
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10:56 PM on 12/17/2011
I can't recall ever reading anything religious from this guy that wasn't viewed through a political lens.
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01:42 AM on 12/15/2011
I think the American Fundamental Prostantism consistency is somewhere between a Parmesan & a nice Emmental.

And if more Christians "acted like Christians", then there wouldn't be a Church, I don't think -- they'd be too busy helping others :3
06:24 AM on 12/13/2011
Thought provoking. Problem is that a "Christian" is an individual who believes that Jesus is the Son of God and follows His teachings in his/her life. I know of no politician that that does that. For a group of individuals to base their vote on a candidate because they believe he is the "most" Christian of the group is stupid. Jesus did not support the religious leaders of His time nor did He support the government - He supported a "Common sense God". Remove your ox from the ditch even on the Sabbath, spend less time cleaning the vessel and more time in Worship, take care of the downtrodden, forgive sinners, turn the other cheek, feed the hungry, heal the sick, ignore those who don't listen (shake the dust from your sandels and leave the town), run the money changers associated with the temple off the grounds, and render under Caesar what is Caesar's and unto God what is God's. The Religious Right desires a follower of Christ's teachings to be in government and rather than studying the candidates actions (You are known by your actions) to make a decision they follow the herd to slaughter. One or two Christian Issues supported by a candidate does not make the candidate a Christian (follower of Christ) just like attending Church does not make someone a Christian. I would point out that a strict Muslim follows more of Christ's teachings during his/her life than most of our American political candidates.
01:50 PM on 12/05/2011
Catch a clue Jim. No examples on the left?? You see victims everywhere you look. Most people are where they are based on the decisions THEY made. Keep telling people that the reason they dont have more, is because the guy up the street has too much, and whats worse, he got it dishonestly...ya, that'll help em...
05:02 AM on 12/05/2011
A great article ! But I remain agnostic in these matters. Where do I find the true principles of Christianity ? What is a "Christian" ? Where do I find his beliefs so that I can respectfully know and follow them ? I can't depend on my local religious leader because his version is almost ALWAYS in confllict with his neighboring religous leader's version of biblical interpretations. And there is no ONE universal Christian leader who can tell us what the hell God expects of us. And I surely don't trust myself to understand a collection of poems and stories written 2 to 4,000 years ago and translated thru 4 or 5 languages (a few dead ones) to arrive at answers I seek. So what can I do ? I sit and listen. That is my advice to those seeking moral guidance and spiritual sanity.
06:49 AM on 12/13/2011
Don't follow a "Christian" leader's teachings; he is only interpreting what he thinks is being said based on his experience. A "Christian" follows the teachings of Jesus. One can read the "New Testament" (any of its versions) to understand (for yourself) what Jesus taught. If you agree with what He teaches and try to follow His example you are then a follower of Christ. If you look to "One Universal Christian Leader" to tell you what is expected of you then you are a follower of that "Christian Leader" and not necessarily a follower of Christ. In my opinion, the "Old Testament's" ("collection of poems and stories") importance is that it is a history of the Hebrew people, shows that all leaders are inadequate (human), and can be interpreted to validate that Jesus is the Messiah and thus the Son of God. Remember that believing Jesus is the Son of God is an interpretation by man and not the interpretation that Jews or Muslims give to it - only Christians believe that.
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02:35 PM on 12/04/2011
"I contemplate with solemn reverence the act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should 'make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,' thus building a wall of separation between Church and State."

— Thomas Jefferson
"To Nehemiah Dodge and Others, A Committee of the Danbury Baptist Association, in the State of Connecticut," January 1 , 1802
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humanbeing-rick
Born in the USA 1947
09:02 AM on 12/04/2011
Excellent article, it is quite thought provoking. And so true.
Far too many people have been superficial about their religion, their principles and morals. It seems to be more important to go along with the crowd, and be popular, rather than their own faith and soul.
"This leads to bending over backward to justify un-Christian behavior and attitudes to fit these other identities." - And leads to the mean and cruel society of corruption that we have today.
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Craig Gosling
08:45 PM on 12/03/2011
Sure, read the bible. It will resolve all problems. You can find anything you want in it. Religions disagree with each other, Pastors disagree with each other, and church members disagree with each other, and the bible has so many contradictions how can one be sure about anything unless you talk personally with God, and even then god tells a different story to each prayer. What's a serious Christian to do?
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Bill J4321
01:48 PM on 12/03/2011
I guess to the evancrazicals, a grown man in magical underpants is just far scarier than an oily keebler elf with a propensity for adultery.
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dadoorsron
11:50 AM on 12/03/2011
When you refer to a 2000 year old collection of stories that reflects the ideology and political views of that time and writer. A solid argument can be made that the fall of the Roman empire and uprise of the christian belief help bring on the "Dark ages". So why would you want people to refer to the bible for there political plateform. I would argue with the addition of any more faith based ideology into politics this country will continue to sprial out of control.
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11:03 PM on 12/02/2011
Honour all men. Love the brotherhood. Fear God. Honour the king. 1 Peter 2:17 All the politics disciples of Christ need, follow Him, be occupied with His purposes, seek that you may excel to the edification of the church.
03:59 PM on 12/02/2011
Beware of those who put a fish on their cars on Sunday and pass laws the limit human rights on Monday... another great article by this compassionate man of God,,
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busterggi
I'm a Sally Randian
02:39 PM on 12/02/2011
Reading the bible may make one liberal but too many readings of it is more likely to make one an atheist.
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marignymitch
E pluribus unum percent
01:10 PM on 12/02/2011
The Word of God, Mr Wallis? What does it sound like?
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Bill J4321
01:48 PM on 12/03/2011
No one knows.
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Bart DePalma
Bart DePalma
09:02 AM on 12/02/2011
Polling vague statements like "programs that help the poor" or weasel words like "economic or social justice" are meaningless because they mean different things to different people. You would find that many of the folks who responded positively to those words, also supported eliminating the welfare entitlement and oppose Obamacare.
08:02 PM on 12/02/2011
I'm all for social justice PROPERLY understood, but I don't think that Jesus was teaching salvation through politics when he spoke of the "Kingdom of God." All political and economic systems are highly imperfect and subject to extreme corruption. None of them deserve to be equated with the Kingdom of God.
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SonicUltimate
12:58 PM on 12/03/2011
Its interesting to me that you would exclude religion from your list of sociopolitical systems that are "highly imperfect and subject to extreme corruption". I agree, social justice should be properly understood. However, the track record of religion interpreting the word of God has a pretty dismal track record of implementing social justice. I would say one that rivals even the most corrupt government or economic system.