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“If religious leaders and commentators in the U.K. and elsewhere could agree on these three proposals, not as a fixed agenda but as a common ground on which to start serious discussion, the struggles and questionings alike of protesters and clergy at St. Paul’s will not have been wasted.” - Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, endorsing a Vatican statement supporting a “Robin Hood” tax on financial transactions and a separation of retail and investment operations at banks. (Source:New York Times)
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Jim Wallis and Richard Land: Join the Great Conversation
Last night, at the National Press Club here in Washington D.C., the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission and Sojourners co-sponsored a conversation between Richard Land and me on what the religious and moral issues will and should be in the upcoming election year -- about one year out from voting day.
The packed room of reporters demonstrated a high degree of interest in what the faith community’s role might be in the upcoming election, at least in the opinion of two Christian leaders who are usually on different sides of politics, but who still call each other friends.
Amy Sullivan, of Time magazine, was our moderator and posed a series of questions to us before the audience joined in. Amy started by asking each of us what the primary issue/s would be for the faith community and what we would like them to be.
Richard said “the economy” would be the key issue and I agreed, pointing to the rising poverty rates and the basic questions about inequality raised by the Occupy movement. We differed over who was most responsible for the economic crisis -- I pointed to Wall Street and he blamed Washington (actually both bear responsibility); but we both spoke of poverty as a fundamental Christian concern.
We also agreed on the need for comprehensive immigration reform, having both addressed a conference on that imperative just last week, at an evangelical Christian college in the Midwest. Undocumented immigrants are in the biblical category of “the stranger” for Christians, and we are obligated to treat them as Jesus taught us to.
Land said it is “shameful” the way both political parties are using the issue for their own agendas. I noted that Leith Anderson, of the National Association of Evangelicals, said in the New York Times this week that the treatment of immigrants will be an issue that Christians will be watching in this election.
When Richard called for a “Manhattan Project” to remove the nation from dependence on fossil fuels and create a “clean energy nuclear future” I almost jumped out of my seat to say I agree with nearly all that -- except for the “nuclear” part. We agreed to discuss that in greater depth at a later time.
I suggested that evangelical Christians should unite in defense of the low-cost, but very cost-effective, foreign aid that feeds millions of hungry people around the world, keeps hundreds of thousands of infants from being born with HIV/AIDS, vaccinates millions against life-threatening diseases, and provides tens of millions of malaria bed nets that save lives in the global south.
Richard lifted up specific programs such as PEPFAR and the Millennium Development Accounts, which were developed under President George W. Bush and have enjoyed wide bi-partisan support, but are now in great jeopardy in the deficit reduction process. Some cuts can kill, we agreed.
Both of us talked about the broken system in Washington, now being protested by both the tea party and the Occupy movement, and the need for people of faith to hold our political and economic leaders accountable.
We disagreed on nuclear weapons policy, as on the causes of the 2008 recession, and the safety and sustainability of nuclear power plants. But, when the issue of Herman Cain’s problems with accusations of sexual harassment came up, we both affirmed the deep connections between personal integrity and public leadership.
And we both agreed that Mitt Romney’s Mormon religion should not be a factor in the election. Rather, we instead should examine a candidate’s moral compass and policy positions.
One of the most interesting things about last night’s event were the issues that did not come up: abortion and gay marriage.
Both are issues Richard and I care about, even if we have different solutions and perspectives on how to address them. And yet the topics simply never arose, neither in any of the questions from Sullivan or the audience, nor in our responses to them.
Abortion and gay marriage are the two subjects that have dominated discussions of religion and politics for many years. But they weren’t even on the radar during our public conversation at the National Press Club Wednesday evening.
Richard raised the subject of marriage as an important antidote to poverty, another point on which we agree. And we both know that reducing poverty reduces the number of abortions, something we both support. Still, neither gay marriage nor abortion was mentioned.
People of faith -- including evangelical Christians -- will be voting both ways in the upcoming election. It is simply not true that they will be voting only on one or two issues.
And, if evangelicals focus on many of the issues central to their faith, rather than becoming partisan cheerleaders, they might be able to raise some critical issues in this election and to hold both sides more accountable, even in a campaign that both Richard and I suspect will be one of the ugliest in U.S. history.
At the end of the evening, Amy remarked that if the upcoming election debates were as civil and substantive as this evening was, we would all be very grateful.
Richard and I disagree about some things and agree about others, yet we were able to model respectful and dynamic public discourse.
Even if we end up canceling out each other’s votes a year from now on Election Day 2012, if in the intervening months more evangelicals and people of faith join the Great Conversation, we all win.
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.
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Is The American Dream God's Dream? by Lisa Sharon Harper The American Dream has always been at odds with itself, but our chosen economic system of the last 30 years has dragged America farther away from its common dream of equality. + Click to continue
One Reason the U.S. Must Continue Funding Foreign Aid by James Colten For every dollar spent on poverty-focused development assistance, we spend $36 on our military. And in some cases, foreign aid is sometimes more effective at achieving military goals than military funding itself.
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"Hole-y" Bible Gets a Digital Makeover by Jack Palmer "The Holy Bible and the Holy Quran: A Comparison of Words," created by Pitch Interactive, might not make quite the dramatic visual statement as a "Bible full of holes," but the online comparison does allow us to see for ourselves how often, for instance, justice or poverty or wealth are written and spoken about in the Bible. + Click to continue
Seventy-two Days Does Not a Marriage Make by Tim King Our society confuses "market values" with moral values. The things we value that make our market work, aren't necessarily the same things that make relationships work. + Click to continue
#OccupyThePumpkinPatch: Good Grief! by God's Politics Editor There's something fantastically primal about the vivid palette of early color-TV mid-60s animation. Great Pumpkin, the third Peanuts TV special, first aired in 1966, introducing audiences to one of the most iconic moments in all comic-dom. + Click to continue
Boo! It's Jesus!: Halloween and Evangelization by Joshua Witchger At times such as these, the church often finds itself wrestling with the big question H. Richard Niebuhr posed in his seminal 1951 work, Christ and Culture. That is, to what extent should Christians engage in and interact with the world around them? + Click to continue
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British Clergy to Support #OccupyLondon with Circle of Protection, Prayer by Cathleen Falsani Other British clergy, however, are rallying behind the demonstrators, saying they would physically (and spiritually) surround protesters at St. Paul's with a circle of prayer or "circle of protection." + Click to continue
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#OccupySunday: We Are the 100 Percent by Tripp Hudgins Any society that will not care for its poor, in effect, prefers its rich... Happiness then becomes an increasingly shrinking target. One can never have enough. Justice becomes scarce. Keeping up with the Joneses becomes keeping up with the bills. Mercy vanishes. All that is left is debt and frustration. + Click to continue
Sunday SoJo: OpEds You Might Have Missed by Duane Shank A selection of this week's op-eds, on Iraq, the Occupy Wall Street movement, and a potpourri of other topics. + Click to continue
Wallis and Mohler Debate Social Justice and the Gospel by Tim King Mohler argued that the Gospel is the story of Christ's death for our sins through subsitutionary atonement as articulated by the Apostle Paul. Wallis argued for an "integral" Gospel that both includes personal salvation and the restoration of societal relationships. + Click to continue
The “Atonement-Only" Gospel by Jim Wallis The atonement-only gospel is simply too small, too narrow, too bifurcated, and ultimately too private. A gospel message that doesn't even try to change the world, concentrating only on individuals, only works for those who don't need the world to be changed. Therefore, it ends up being too white, too privileged, too male, and too American. + Click to continue
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Top Stories:
In age of political vitriol, opposing Christians call for civility
CNN.com Belief blog Jim Wallis, the progressive CEO of Sojourners, and Richard Land, the conservative head of The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, are two religious scholars with opposing political views. But at their joint event at the National Press Club in Washington Wednesday, they agreed on some issues as they discussed and debated faith and the 2012 election.
Romney's Mormonism to be a bigger issue in the general election, say evangelicals The Huffington Post But a prominent religious leader of the progressive left, Rev. Jim
Wallis, disavowed such tactics and specifically called out Hitchens for
being "as bad a secular fundamentalist as Jerry Falwell or the Ayatollah
Khomeini are bad religious fundamentalists."
"He is a hostile, vitriolic, hateful person when it comes to people of
faith," Wallis told HuffPost. "He is intellectually completely ignorant
of religion."
Is there such a thing as “the common good”? Houston Chronicle Sojourners is celebrating 40 years on creative/disruptive Christian presence in the US this year. Their fearless leader Jim Wallis wrote in the most recent magazine that there are 3 main “fights” they have fought (poor word choice for a pacifist?): 1. Against the privatization of faith; 2. Against the sexualization of sin; and their most current “fight”: for the common good.
The moral injuries of war in Iraq U.S. Catholic Jim Wallis has also voiced the need for religious support of veterans, saying on the God’s Politics blog at Sojourners, “Religious communities must reach out now more than ever to returning veterans to make sure they have the physical, emotional, and spiritual support they need…No matter what our view of the war, it is our collective responsibility to be healers for those who are coming home.”
Evangelical opposites to hold discussion on 2012 presidential race The Washington Post In evangelical America, the Revs. Richard Land and Jim Wallis are odd bedfellows.
Land is a leader of the huge, traditional Southern Baptist Convention who advises conservative talk show host Glenn Beck. Wallis is a staple on lists of the country’s most influential religious progressives.
"Sojourners in the news" articles are the most recent news clippings that mention Sojourners in any way - whether favorably or unfavorably. Though we provide the text on our site for your convenience, we do not necessarily endorse the views of these articles or their source publications.
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