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Entries tagged with “America” from Religion and Ethics Newsweekly

I spent most of this morning working for the Obama campaign here in my hometown of Charlottesville. I've been away from home since Thursday at a conference. First thing in the morning my family got up, got dressed, and we all went off to vote. I took my daughter and baby son into the booth with me, and my daughter got to help select our choices and then confirm the ballot. My wife, who is Canadian, had never been to an American polling site before; she found it quite moving--all the people, excited outside, the matronly poll workers, even the middle-aged men seeming to move with the understated, regal deliberation of grandmothers.

After I cast my ballot, I began, somewhat covertly, to cry. I squeezed my daughter's shoulder hard enough with love and hope to make her scold me. Then it was off with her to school, and the rest of the day has been a whirl of data-entry, driving voters to the polls, getting balloons for this evening's party, and generally participating in the highly oxygenated anxiety that is a party's local headquarters on the day of the election. I found it deeply exciting, but also humbling, even awe-inspiring, in a way for which I wasn't fully prepared.

Since then I've been thinking a lot about the curious, and not entirely unhappy, coincidence of meanings in the word "election." On the one hand, citizens elect representatives; on the other, prevalent in the faiths stemming from Abraham, God elects humans--first a people to be God's messengers and representatives to the world, and then, through them (but not canceling out their election), and in Christ, all of humanity to be God's children. An election is something someone does, to be sure; but it is also something that happens to people, as well. There is a remarkable coordination of theological and political significance in "election," and it is worth noting--if only to resist the powerful idolatrous temptations it presents to us.

Those temptations have such power, not least because they identify quite profound resonances between politics and theology in general. After all, so much of politics, as it exists today in this impatient, petulant, risibly sin-riddled world, is waiting. We wait at rope lines for candidates to pass; we wait for election returns to arrive late at night, faces pale in the sterile glow of TV screens; we wait while a canvasser reads us his talking points on the phone, or urges us to support her candidate on our doorstep.

Less obviously, we wait for our friends and family and neighbors and co-workers and new acquaintances to enumerate, in what often seems to us inexplicably, narcissistically meticulous detail, why their chosen candidate or cause is obviously the only right one, wondering all the while where to begin in disputing their whole way of seeing the world. Sometimes we must even wait for our own minds to make up their opinions on issues we feel we need to have a view on now, if not yesterday. And always we wait to see--with fear and trembling, if we are pious and wise--whether the political causes we supported ultimately turn out the way we hoped they would turn out. (Usually this means waiting to find out how, precisely, we shall be disappointed.) Much of public life is spent enduring interminable time, when time itself drones on.

And then, sometimes suddenly, a change comes. Everything happens, all at once: deliberation ends, the ballots are cast, the votes counted, decisions made, the New Thing emerges. The old order--which seemed so solid, so firm, so unchanging--is swept away by the unprecedented. Politics is a disconcerting concatenation of kairos and ordinary time, with jarring shifts from one to the other, a kind of wild oscillation between "now" and "not yet," the world as we know it and the Kingdom coming.

Lord knows there has been enough messianism and enough demonization in this campaign. People on both sides have participated in both of these temptations; I certainly have. It's obviously a temptation to be avoided.

And yet.

There is, after all, more than a superficial connection between the two realities. People do treat their faith like a simulacrum for politics all the time--assuming that religious differences easily classify all of us in this world, separating us into clear categories. And we all know what it means to treat politics with religious fervor, especially here in the United States. Since the beginning, American politics has been saturated with not just superficial pieties, but with profound theological currents as well. We've always been involved with a more or less self-conscious quarrel with God over whose election was more important--God's election of the people Israel, or our election of our leaders, and behind them, of ourselves.

Beyond these rivalries between America and America's God, however, there seems to me a still deeper analogy to which we should attend. It lies in the ambiguities of that term "election."

To be elected is to be marked out in a special way, to be sure. But election is not an unambiguously happy fate. It certainly hasn't been one for the people Israel. It wasn't for Jesus Christ. And Christian theology says it should not be understood as one for the graciously elected. The fundamental obligation of God's elect is to be present before and available to God, to say, in ancient Hebrew, hinneni: "Here I am." Hinneni was Abraham's answer to God's call to sacrifice Isaac, Samuel's reply to God's call to become a prophet, the reply of the people Israel in Sinai to God's election of them as a people. (It was also what Adam and Eve did not say to God in the garden, and what Cain did not say to God after killing Abel.) To say "here I am" is a deceptively simple thing to say; but it leads those who offer it, as a kind of sacrifice to God, to terrible places. It leads, as the risen Jesus says to Peter in the Gospel of John, to death: "When you are an old man, you will stretch out your hands and another will gird you and take you where you do not want to go." "When Christ calls a man," the twentieth-century martyr Dietrich Bonhoeffer said, "he bids him come and die."

Election to the presidency, too, is hardly an unambiguous blessing. Just look at presidents' "before" and "after" pictures to see what I mean. George W. Bush looked like he was still uncomfortable in a suit in 2000; now his suits look more at ease than his face, and his once full dark head of hair has become thinner, and unambiguously grey. When Eleanor Roosevelt told Harry Truman that her husband had died, he said, "Eleanor, is there anything I can do for you?" To which Eleanor wisely replied, "Harry, is there anything we can do for you?" No doctor would recommend the job of president to people who cared about their health; no insurance agent would willingly insure a president against death. To be elected president seems, in part, to mean that one is set apart for a certain kind of public suffering. What looks like the polished marble of divine promise turns out, after a few years in the office, to have been the sandstone of simple humanity, forced to wrestle with super-human challenges. Would that we were all a bit more like Eleanor Roosevelt.

Lincoln.jpg
Abraham Lincoln at Grant Park in Chicago
Wise presidents seem to know this from the beginning, or at least seem prepared to learn it. Abraham Lincoln famously said, "I claim not to have controlled events, but confess plainly that events have controlled me." Perhaps, as with God's election of people, all a president can do is say, "Here I am." Perhaps all presidents are Abraham.

But in this, as in all things, presidents are simply representatives of the people, the incarnation of the popular will. They suffer for all of us; they take upon themselves what is rightfully ours. If so, our belief that we elect presidents is an illusion; we are simply picking one of us to endure, in a particularly vivid way, what is the rightful desert of all of us. We simply pick someone to be the first to absorb what history throws our way. Our election still rests on events beyond our control. Our election is, once again, consequent to our being elected. Whether by history or God, in this respect, does not matter; what matters is that we receive more than we decide; we are acted upon more than acting, and no one, ironically, more so than the winning candidate, the "leader," whichever he is, who will now know what it is to be taken by another and led through four years in a way he did not wish to go.

I told you at the beginning of this essay that I was away from home this past weekend. I was in Chicago at the annual conference of the American Academy of Religion. Everyone was talking about the election, of course. But few among my fellow conference-goers seemed to realize the fearful symmetry to which we were witnesses. My conference was in the Chicago Hilton and Towers, fronting Grant Park--the same hotel that the 1968 Democratic National Convention was held in, and the same park that saw the famous Chicago "police riot." On Friday night, I was in the Presidential Suite on the 24th floor of the hotel, facing out on Grant Park. It was in that suite that the newly nominated Democratic presidential candidate Hubert Humphrey sat, tears streaming down his face. The tears were not from sadness or despair, but simply from the tear gas rising from the streets outside; but I like to think that Humphrey's tears were also a premonition of what that convention's catastrophe foretold for the Democratic Party: forty years in the wilderness.

Last Friday night, looking out the same windows that that tear gas came in, I saw the tents coming up in Grant Park for the Obama victory party. Tonight, God willing, I say, Obama will hold his victory celebration in Grant Park, with the old Hilton looming overhead, a brooding mausoleum of the ironies of history.

History has not ended. It has ironies in store for all of us, and certainly for a President Obama, or a President McCain. Whoever you supported for the presidency, whichever man wins it, whatever your religious beliefs, or irreligious beliefs, or nonreligious beliefs: Say a prayer, or think a good thought, give all best wishes for the man we elect tonight to be our next Abraham, and watch him as he walks out on his stage, out into the open, to say--still innocent of the blades and cudgels already hurtling at him from the future--"Here I am." In the years to come, may he be faithful to his words.

--Charles Mathewes teaches theology and ethics at the University of Virginia. His most recent books are A THEOLOGY OF PUBLIC LIFE and PROPHESIES OF GODLESSNESS.

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The conventions are over. Truckloads of trash have found their way to landfills, despite best efforts to "go green." Massive sets of Democratic Doric columns and the 51 foot by 30 foot high-definition screen of the Republicans, composed of 561 Hibino four-millimeter Chroma LED panels and often filled with shots of an American flag flapping in the breeze, have all been returned to wherever it is such things go. Pundits, left and right and indifferent, have offered their takes on anything and everything. Religion and the conventions has been a popular theme.

obamaportrait.jpgFor the first time in their history, the Democrats seemed to do "religion" right, reflecting Obama's firm belief that all religious voices belong in debates concerning public policy. Appointing a Pentecostal minister as the chief executive officer of the convention brought new religious twists, including a rousing interfaith service on Sunday afternoon and four "faith caucuses" held throughout the convention. Both Republicans and Democrats began and ended each session with prayer from a variety of religious leaders, though the Democrats, as was especially true of their delegations as a whole, held a decided edge in the diversity department. The important speeches all ended with the obligatory "God bless America" or similar ritualistic catch-phrases meant to communicate the piety of our great country. Speeches were carefully crafted to include meaningful religious references where appropriate, but unplanned references crept in here and there. In addition to the two references to God scripted in his VP acceptance speech, Joe Biden added four impromptu, colloquial, perhaps even profane references in actual delivery (not quite the pious references Democrats had in mind), as in "God, I wish that my dad was here tonight." Family values got their pitch as well, as both parties highlighted (exploited?) the children, spouses, and parents of their candidates.

Democrats hope their efforts to take faith seriously will close the perceived "God gap" between the political parties. A Pew Forum poll released the week before Denver indicates that Obama has made some progress in closing the gap. Thirty-eight percent of Americans (it was 26 percent just two years ago) find the Democrats generally friendly toward religion. But they are still behind the 52 percent of Americans who see the Republicans that way. If Democrats can pick up a few percentage points among white Catholics and evangelicals, the election would be much harder for Republicans to win in November.

To be honest, I'm less interested in these kinds of analyses of religion and the conventions than I am in how the conventions actually demonstrated a religious vision of America and its role in the world. This slant on religion and the political parties has been largely ignored by most. In what ways did the conventions reveal how parties and candidates think about America religiously, something Sidney Mead described as "the religion of the Republic"? Mead, an American religious historian who died in 1999, argued in his book THE LIVELY EXPERIMENT that America itself possessed a transcendent and universal religion that is "articulated in terms of the destiny of America, under God, to be fulfilled by perfecting the democratic way of life for the example and betterment of all mankind." These conventions demonstrated well that American civil religion, or the religion of the Republic, still moves many Americans to convention ecstasy, including Americans who claim to take Christian faith, or other traditional faiths, so seriously.

For the Democrats, signs proclaimed a commitment to "change you can believe in." But the theme of the convention consistently emphasized a need to renew the "promise of America." America is the one "glorious nation" under God "where anyone who works hard enough can make the most of their God-given potential." "This," proclaimed New York Governor David Paterson, "is the promise of America." Throughout, Democratic leaders sounded the theme that the essential promise of America (and therefore, the country's mission) is threatened by the fiasco of the last eight years of Republican leadership. From states like Missouri, Iowa, West Virginia, and others the convention heard speeches emphasizing how hardworking people have survived the challenges of life to make it, and how the past decade has threatened to take away their hopes at keeping their slice of the "American dream" alive. In this way, the Democrats appealed to the self-interest of every American. They spoke of an America focused on individual accomplishment and advancement. Hillary Clinton hammered the theme well: "I ran for President to renew the promise of America. To rebuild the middle class and sustain the American Dream. . . .We need leaders once again who can tap into that special blend of American confidence and optimism . . . who can help us show ourselves and the world that with our ingenuity, creativity, and innovative spirit there are no limits to what is possible in America." Bill Clinton echoed these phrases with his own as he stressed that the "American Dream is under siege at home."

obamawide.jpgIn his inspiring address, Obama spoke of his parents who believed in an America where "their son could achieve whatever he put his mind to." "It is that promise that has always set this country apart -- that through hard work and sacrifice each of us can pursue our individual dreams but still come together as one American family, to ensure that the next generation can pursue their dreams as well." The mission of America, for Democrats, is to keep "the American promise alive." Thus, if threatened from the outside, Democrats can and will take the military actions necessary to secure the American future, to keep America "that last, best hope for all who are called to the cause of freedom, who long for lives of peace, and who yearn for a better future." In other words, America is the great example for the world and must be protected, but its promise must never be abused or misused. Bill Clinton spoke a one-liner that said it best: "People the world over have always been more impressed by the power of our example than by the example of our power." Obama summarized "the promise of America -- the idea that we are responsible for ourselves, but that we also rise or fall as one nation; the fundamental belief that I am my brother's keeper; I am my sister's keeper. . . . Individual responsibility and mutual responsibility -- that's the essence of America's promise." Then, continuing his use of biblical allusions to apply to Americans, Obama closed his speech with "Let us keep that promise -- that American promise -- and in the words of Scripture hold firmly, without wavering, to the hope that we confess." Is he talking of the hope Christians have in Christ? No, here the hope is the one that all Americans share in the promise of America -- the hope that we can succeed, have a good life, and teach the world how to live by our example.

The Republican "religion of the Republic" stressed other commitments. While the Democrats emphasized the disastrous economy and the loss of America's standing as example across the world, the Republicans emphasized placing "Country First." While they also sounded well the note that all Americans should prosper, they emphasized that Obama was not tough enough to insure America's safety. He would, warned Mike Huckabee, "continue to give madmen the benefit of the doubt." Fred Thompson told the convention that John McCain would be the kind of president "who feels no need to apologize for the United States of America." Republicans believe in an America whose mission is threatened more by external forces than internal economic problems. "Our country is calling," Thompson reminded listeners. President Bush emphasized the "dangerous world" we live in and the need for a president who will protect America by staying "on the offense [and] stop attacks before they happen." Rudy Giuliani touted McCain as the "man who believes in serving a cause greater than self-interest [then, going off-script] and that cause is the United States of America -- America comes first!" McCain's address to the convention offered a kind of religious testimony. In moving terms people often use when talking of their experiences of God, he said that the prison in Hanoi changed him: "I wasn't my own man anymore. I was my country's."

rncconvention.JPGIn the well-established tradition of President Bush and any self-respecting religion, Republicans spoke often of good and evil and America's representation of the good in the world. Romney said it clearly: "Republicans believe that there is good and evil in the world. . . John McCain hit the nail on the head: radical violent Islam is evil, and he will defeat it!" In facing the threat posed by radical Islam and all other evils, John McCain and Sarah Palin will "keep America as it has always been -- the hope of the world." This Republican hope for the world does not rest in the American example of living freely, but rather in its proactive expansion of freedom across the world. Republicans are, Giuliani exclaimed, the party that "believes unapologetically in America's essential greatness." Palin attacked Obama as one who "wants to forfeit" in Iraq and is "worried that someone won't read [al Qaeda] their rights." But McCain possesses "the special confidence of those who have seen evil, and seen how evil is overcome." Though she did not do so at the convention, she told ministry students meeting at her former church in Anchorage that American troops in Iraq are serving in a "task that is from God." In the Republican understanding of the religion of the Republic, little seems to separate America and expansion of freedom from good, and the threats to these from evil. While McCain's speech was much more subdued than Palin's and underscored that government should "make sure you have more choices to make for yourself," he claimed to "know how the world works" and to "know the good and the evil in it." Where Democrats are running to renew the promise of America and its example, Republicans are running, in McCain's words, "to keep the country I love safe," and to "see the threats to peace and liberty in our time clearly and face them."

These are two very different versions of the religion of the Republic. One emphasizes the life of the ordinary American and the divine right existing in the promise of America to fulfill all God-given potential. It is largely a religion aimed at self-interest. As Hillary Clinton said, "it comes down to you -- the American people, your lives, and your children's futures." In this version, America serves as an example of freedom to the world, the nation where human beings can thrive and succeed and live the life that God intended them to live in harmony and peace with one another -- a nation that models what God intends for all nations. Americans can fight external enemies, if need be, to preserve the promise of the nation, but they are not proactively looking for a fight. No word about how the American drive for success, even at the individual level, affects the rest of the world, or how the American freedom to consume impacts resources for everyone else.

mccainsign.JPGThe other version highlights evil in the world and is confident that America is the divine agent called to fight it, a nation on the offensive. Here the nation is the church, the place where God is present and active in mission, but it is clearly the nation, on God's behalf, that defeats evil and brings freedom and democracy, by any means necessary, to the rest of the world. Like the Democrats, Republicans can also quote the Bible, as President Bush did at Ellis Island on the first anniversary of 9/11 when he said, "This ideal of America is the hope of all mankind. That hope drew millions to this harbor. That hope still lights our way. And the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness will not overcome it. May God bless America." Without acknowledging it, President Bush used John 1:4, a passage describing the Word of God, in whom "was life, and the life was the light of all people," to refer to the hope of America and its role as a light to the nations. This messianic, and very religious, understanding of America contains profound, and usually tragic, implications for all other peoples and nations in the world.

So what are good people of faith to do with these versions of the religion of the Republic? Of the two versions, I'm more drawn to the former than the latter, to an understanding of example rather than imperial mission. But from a Christian perspective I am put off by its constant appeal to self-interest. I genuinely miss some expression of the prophetic vision of Jimmy Carter's understanding of the "spiritual malaise" that continues, I think, to affect American life. But others will have to make their own choices. My hope is that they will do so with the full recognition that, while both parties try to convince us that they are hospitable to people of faith, each is actually proposing a competing religious vision to those that the traditional faiths espouse.

-- Mark G. Toulouse is professor of American religious history at Brite Divinity School and the author of GOD IN PUBLIC: FOUR WAYS AMERICAN CHRISTIANITY AND PUBLIC LIFE RELATE (Westminster John Knox Press, 2006). Beginning January 1, he will be principal and professor of the history of Christianity at Emmanuel College, Victoria University, in the University of Toronto.

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Mitt Romney's speech at the Bush Presidential Library is firmly anchored in what Jon Meacham, in his book AMERICAN GOSPEL, describes as the "public religion" of the nation's civic life. In a number of felicitous phrases replete with biblical allusions and echoes from the American civic canon, Romney pledged his absolute fealty to religious liberty, which he described as central to "America's greatness" and the survival of a free land. "Any believer in religious freedom, any person who has knelt in pray to the Almighty, has a friend and ally in me," he declared.

Romney appealed to the "common creed of moral convictions" shared by all Americans, that every human being is a child of God and thus entitled to inalienable rights. In a Tocquevillian turn of phrase, Romney said that "freedom requires religion just as religion requires freedom." "Freedom and religion endure together," he said, "or perish alone." Evocatively, Romney also linked the Constitution's prohibition against state religion to the religious vitality in America, in contrast to Europe's established churches with cathedrals "so inspired...so grand...so empty."  

Because Romney's speech obviously harkens back nearly a half century ago to John Kennedy's address before Baptist ministers in Houston, it is instructive to compare the two. Like JFK, Romney pledged his loyalty to the Constitution and declared that if he was fortunate enough to take the presidential oath of office he would view that as "my highest promise to God." Like Kennedy, Romney assured his fellow Americans that "no authorities" of his church would "exert influence over his presidential decisions." In a direct echo of Kennedy's address Romney said that he was not a Mormon running for president but an American running for president who happened to be Mormon. Like Kennedy, Romney linked the history of his people to the American story of advancing tolerance and freedom, but he did so by shining the light on shortcomings: "Anne Hutchinson was exiled from Massachusetts Bay, a banished Roger Williams founded Rhode Island, and two centuries later, Brigham Young set out for the West."  

Unlike Kennedy, Romney did not entertain the possibility that a conflict could arise between the dictates of his religious faith and his constitutional obligations. Kennedy declared that if such a rare choice presented itself he would resign from office. Romney made no such declaration.  

Romney also had to go further in defining his faith than did Kennedy. Although he refused to explain his church's distinctive doctrines -- because to do so would "enable the religious test the Founders prohibited in the Constitution" -- Romney did declare his Christianity in simple, accessible language: "I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and the Savior of mankind." But he also embraced the "the faith of my fathers," pledging to be true to his Mormon beliefs. He did not think that would sink his candidacy because Americans respect "conviction" and "tire of those who would jettison their beliefs, even to gain the world."

Tellingly, where Kennedy outlined the challenge from communism, Romney identified as a mortal threat to America the "theocratic tyranny" of "radical violent Islam." Though not likely to be well received by American Muslims, this phrase seems designed to create solidarity with the majority of non-Mormons in the nation.

Romney's speech was more overtly religious than Kennedy's. Kennedy in effect said that his faith would have no bearing on his public work, and he went out of his way to oppose positions -- such as state support for parochial schools -- backed by his church hierarchy. Declaring that the separation of church and state should be "absolute," Kennedy envisioned a civic life in which no religious body would seek to influence public policy (which he described as attempting to impose its will on officials).

Reflecting the tenor of public discourse in conservative circles today, Romney, in contrast, charged that church-state separation had been distorted by secularists in an attempt to remove religion from public life. "We should acknowledge the Creator as did the Founders -- in ceremony and word. He should remain on our currency, in our pledge, in the teaching of our history, and during the holiday season nativity scenes and menorahs should be welcome in our public places."

In evoking both the Bible and America's public religion, Romney described how he "was taught in my home to honor God and love my neighbor." He saw his "father march with Martin Luther King" and his "parents provide compassionate care to others." He said he was moved by "the Lord's words," in Matthew 25, to feed the hungry and clothe the naked.           
 
Romney's speech celebrated religious pluralism in more vivid terms than Kennedy. Where Kennedy referenced the Jew, the Quaker, the Unitarian, or the Baptist who suffered persecution for their faith, Romney made a more personal declaration. He declared that he loved "the profound ceremony of the Catholic Mass, the approachability of God in the prayers of the evangelicals, the tenderness of spirit among the Pentecostals, the confident independence of the Lutherans, the ancient traditions of the Jews... and the commitment to frequent prayer of the Muslims."     

Romney's speech was thus even more ecumenical than Kennedy's. One could hear evocations, even, of John Paul II's encyclical Fides et Ratio, when he spoke of how "reason and religion" join to lift the human spirit in the cause of liberty. 

Will the speech make a difference? Probably. It was an often eloquent and evocative address designed to allay concerns of evangelicals, tie his personal story to the nation's heritage, and appeal to the broader public. But it remains to be seen whether it will do enough to win the hearts of born-again Christians who still view Mormonism as a non-Christian cult. One thing is likely: whether or not Romney wins the presidency, his quest will renew and advance the distinctly American refrain for religious freedom.     

-- Allen Hertzke is professor of political science and director of religious studies at the University of Oklahoma.
 
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A minister friend used to say: "It's hard enough to give a good sermon, harder still to give a sermon that will do any good." A large congregation awaited Mitt Romney's sermon this morning, especially in Iowa, as he sought to explain his faith and how it would inform his presidency. It was a good speech but, given all that he needed to accomplish, it seems doubtful that it will do enough good to propel his campaign through Iowa and other tough Republican primaries.

Romney faced high expectations and an almost impossible dilemma as he delivered this message. On one hand, the American people as a whole are ambivalent about the matter of faith and religion in their public leaders. They want leaders who are religious enough to have strong personal values, but who are not too religious in the sense of looking to God to tell them which policies to adopt. That has historically been a fine line for any candidate to walk, but it has become more difficult in recent years because of the rise of evangelical Christians as a political force and the very different expectations they bring to religion in public life.

One way to assess the speech, then, is to identify the several audiences Romney needed to address and the messages they needed to hear:

1)  The average American voter who wants religion, but not too much:

Here we could give Romney's speech high marks on content, but a lower grade on timing. The timing problem is that the American people generally aren't really paying attention yet to Mitt Romney and the stage full of Republicans running for president. If average Americans know, or care, that Mitt Romney is a Mormon, it is still not clear they know what that means. So, for the broad range of American opinion, this speech should have been given earlier, when Romney first entered the race, or later, as Kennedy did mere weeks before the general election when people were alert to the issues.  

Still, the content was good in that what the average American wants to hear is that a candidate is committed to faith -- we're still not ready for an atheist as president -- and that this faith has produced strong character and values in the candidate's life. Romney's appeal to the founders and to our history demonstrated that his faith stands in a strong, mainstream tradition. He referred not so much to the particularities of his church but to the "great moral inheritance we hold in common." His faith is witnessed, he said, in his "marriage and family." This would have been a good speech if the average American voter was his most important audience. But the speech wouldn't have garnered as much attention if that were its main object.

2)  Iowans (and other voters) concerned about a Mormon as president:

This was the audience people have assumed Romney needed to reach with some kind of explanation of Mormonism that would fit it into the mainstream of American faith and provide a defense against religious discrimination. Dealing with the particularities of Mormonism would have been too difficult in a short, national speech and was wisely not the tack Romney took. Instead, he sought to build a larger frame around his Mormon faith, one that placed it in the great middle of American values.  

First, he explained that his was the faith of his fathers and he "will be true to them and to my beliefs." Most Americans "inherit" their faith and will understand his loyalty. Then he addressed his beliefs about Jesus Christ, affirming that "Jesus Christ is the Son of God and the Savior of mankind," admitting that his church had "its own unique doctrines and history," without addressing them specifically. In fact, he said that defending his church's particular views would mistakenly make him a "spokesman for his faith" and would acknowledge that there was some kind of religious test for candidates. Instead, he said, we should focus on the "common creed of moral convictions" we all share.  

This part of the speech should satisfy many, but not all, who are concerned about a Mormon president. Frankly, I think it's easy to overestimate that concern since polls say people who express it generally don't even know much about Mormonism. But this is probably as far as a candidate can or should go in dealing with the particularities of his religion. Just as John Kennedy did not deal with the specifics of Catholicism, Romney should build a larger frame around his beliefs and let it go at that, again earning relatively high marks here.  

3)  Evangelical conservatives who vote in Iowa and other Republican primaries:

At this stage of the campaign, this is Romney's most important audience for a speech on faith, and here he receives lower marks. The new force in Republican politics in the last decade is the relatively large and active group of evangelical and other religious and social conservatives. This group accounts for 30 percent of the GOP voting base, and perhaps as much as 50 percent in Iowa. It is also a highly energetic bloc that can turn out votes and communicate its message.  

Unfortunately, it is not clear that Romney and his faith message can reach that group. So far this bloc, which helped elect George W. Bush, has been unable to agree on any candidate for president in 2008. In just the last couple of weeks, many evangelical conservatives in Iowa have concluded that Mike Huckabee, a Baptist minister, could in fact win if they got behind him, so support has been shifting away from Romney and toward Huckabee. One estimate is that two-thirds of Huckabee's support in Iowa comes from this group and only one-third of Romney's, so this is the key religious group for Romney to reach at this moment.

Romney's speech is not likely to sway this group. In fact, Romney is not a great match for evangelicals. Mormons come from a different religious tradition and culture than evangelicals, and Romney's religion naturally informs his values, convictions, and personal life more than it does his policy positions. But evangelical conservatives want precisely the opposite: they want to hear that a candidate is taking a particular stand on abortion and other social issues because of his faith. Romney's speech came close at one point, acknowledging that the "right to life" is a movement of conscience like "abolition or civil rights." But then he moved on. This will probably not be enough connection between faith and stands on issues to satisfy evangelical conservatives that Romney is their man.

One of the difficult aspects of presidential campaigns is you have to stir up your own base and win primaries, but also be able to move toward the center and win general elections. Romney's speech would have worked well next fall in appealing to the broad American voter base with his message of faith and values. But if the evangelical and social conservative voter group is as important to winning the Republican nomination as it appears, Romney may not satisfy them sufficiently to win primaries and make it to the fall general election campaign. It was a good speech, but may not do enough good with the one audience Romney most needs to reach right now, evangelical conservatives in Iowa and in other Republican primaries.

--David Davenport is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution and a professor of public policy at Pepperdine University. He teaches a course on "The Strategy and Rhetoric of Modern Presidential Campaigns" 

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A lot can hang on a preposition. Mitt Romney first promised a speech about his faith, then backed off to offer a broader take on America's religious landscape and its heritage of religious freedom. So rather than offering an apologetic for his own faith, Romney instead offered an account of "Faith in America." But the speech has me wondering whether there's a difference; more specifically, I wonder what's at stake in that "in." From where I sit, it looks like Romney's "own" faith is faith in America. Americans needn't worry about Romney's Mormonism because, at the end of the day, the faith that trumps all others is "Americanism."  

Don't get me wrong: this religion has a long and illustrious history (documented in David Gelertner's recent book, AMERICANISM: THE FOURTH GREAT WESTERN RELIGION). It is a noble faith that feeds off the blood of its martyrs - in particular "the greatest generation" to which Romney first appeals -- who made the greatest sacrifice for the sake of the religion's highest value: freedom (understood, I should note, in largely negative terms as freedom of choice). Indeed, "freedom" and "liberty" are the mantras of this faith, and Romney's speech invokes these shibboleths no less than thirty times (God or "the Creator" or "divine author" comes in at a close second with 21 references). And Romney doesn't fail to allude to the great artifacts of this religion. Americanism has its own sacred documents (the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution), its own saints (the Founding Fathers), and has even birthed its own cathedrals and grottos (just stroll the National Mall).

So if Mitt Romney was looking to quell concerns about his religion, I think he's performed admirably! He has indicated, in no uncertain terms, that he is an "Americanist" like almost every other presidential candidate (from I don't care which side of the aisle). He is an American before he is a Mormon. He is primarily interested in conserving America's role as a hegemon ("preserving American leadership" is the guise under which he segues to talk about religion). And he enthusiastically adopts Sam Adams's axiom that it's not the specifics of piety that matters, but rather whether one is a "patriot."  

If conservatives were worried about his Mormonism, I think Romney has laid his cards on the table and said to them: "Look, don't worry. Mormonism doesn't prevent me from being an Americanist.  We're brothers in that cause."  

In a way, this is refreshingly honest theology. In fact, if one pays close attention to the actual theology at work here -- that is, if one starts asking just which God is being invoked -- one finds that it is a particular deity: "the divine 'author of liberty.'" The god of the culture warriors has always been a generic god of theism (precisely like the god of the Founding Fathers): a "God who gave us liberty" (to do what we want). The "Creator" is a granter of inalienable rights and unregulated freedoms, a god who shares and ordains "American values." If evangelical culture warriors had worries about Romney's faith, his jeremiad today should confirm that he pledges allegiance to the same "God of liberty" that they do. We're all Americanists now.  

But I hope Mr. Romney and his culture warrior friends (whether on the right or left) won't be surprised if some of us find it hard to believe in Americanism and its God of liberty. Some of us just can't muster faith in the generic theism that is preached on the campaign trail, whether from the right or left. Some of us Christians have a hard time reconciling the Almighty, all-powerful, law-giving God of liberty with the crucified suffering servant born in a barn and executed at the hands of the elite. Some of us are trying to figure out what it means to be a people who follow one who relinquished his rights rather than asserted them, who considered submission a higher value than freedom. We serve a God-man who wasn't concerned with "preserving leadership" and the hegemony of the empire's gospel of freedom, but rather was crushed by its machinations for proclaiming and embodying another gospel.  

We're not out to win a culture war; we're just trying to be witnesses. We're not out to "transform" culture by marshaling the engine of the state; we're trying to carve out little foretastes of a coming kingdom. And so we can't share Mr. Romney's evangelistic zeal for the god of Americanism.

-- James K.A. Smith is an associate professor of philosophy at Calvin College and a fellow at Calvin's Center for Social Research. His books include INTRODUCING RADICAL ORTHODOXY (Baker, 2004).
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Governor Romney and his staff clearly knew they were dealing with the major issue that stands between him and the Republican nomination. This speech shows all the signs of careful craftsmanship. As written, it is a powerful address.

It must be remembered that Romney's current task is to win the Republican nomination, not the general election. He knows the electorate that awaits him in the primaries, with its disproportionately powerful bloc of conservative evangelical Christians. He needed to appeal to this group, many of whom believe that Mormonism is a kind of cult.

Read in this way, most of the speech offers material that could have been delivered by any socially conservative Christian preacher, activist, or politician. These standard themes include the following:

--Religion was central to the founders of our nation.

--Religious and moral values impose limits on the behavior of sinful people and thus protect our civilization and preserve liberty.

--The American way of life requires a robustly religious people.

--While we must institutionally separate church and state, we must not remove religious symbols from the public square or deny our religious heritage.

--God is the Creator and Jesus Christ is the Son of God and Savior of humanity.

--Religious beliefs motivate movements of conscience in America.

--Religion is not merely a private affair.

But Governor Romney struck other notes that reflect his particular experiences as a member of a minority religious community in America:

--Linking himself to John F. Kennedy, Romney argued that no person should be elected or denied election to the presidency due to his faith.

--In another allusion to Kennedy, Romney flatly ruled out any influence of church authorities on presidential decisions if he is elected.

--In a creative move that attempted to draw a connection to Abraham Lincoln, Romney argued that America's "political religion" requires a president to place his obligations to the rule of the law and the Constitution above any other moral or religious duty.

--Romney refused to disavow or distance himself from his Mormon (a word he used only once) faith and indicated that to do so would be to deny his own beliefs and the "faith of my fathers" -- an allusion to the old hymn, perhaps?

--The governor emphasized religious liberty and toleration in a stronger way than one often finds on the conservative evangelical right; he lamented that our ancestors too often forgot the value of religious liberty once they had gained their own freedoms; and in naming exiled victims of religious intolerance he included Brigham Young.

--Romney refused to be drawn into a point-by-point defense of Mormon doctrine on the basis that this would enable violation of the "religious test" clause of the Constitution.

How shall we hear and interpret this speech?

If I were an atheist or secularist, I would not find that this speech included me in its circle of who counts as a constructive American citizen. If, as Governor Romney said, "Freedom requires religion and religion requires freedom," then atheists or secularists by definition undermine freedom, the most cherished American value.

If I were Hindu, Buddhist, or Confucian, or a member of any other non-western religious tradition, I would feel invisible, because such faiths were invisible in the speech.

If I were Muslim, I would appreciate mildly the weak affirmation of our tradition's "frequent prayer," but would probably be not at all happy about the various attacks on "radical Islamists," a staple of so many speeches on the right these days.

If I were Jewish, I would take little comfort in the brief mention of our "ancient traditions...unchanged through the ages," because Judaism is an evolving contemporary religion and not just an ancient tradition.

As a centrist evangelical, I accept some but not all of the basic Christian right boilerplate that Romney articulated in his speech. I appreciate the religious liberty notes that his own experience as a religious minority caused him to emphasize. I agree that no president should be elected or rejected because of his faith and that no official church body can be allowed to dictate a policy position to a president.

On the other hand, as one who believes that Jesus Christ is Lord of my life and of the whole world, I cannot accept that election to the highest office in the land somehow creates a religious transition in which one's faith commitments get trumped by the demands of the office. Surely it cannot be as simple as that. "You shall have no other gods before me" is a pretty non-negotiable religious command.

Instead, I want to know how any presidential candidate who claims to be a religious believer translates that faith commitment into moral convictions and then, by extension, brings such convictions to bear on policy positions.

Romney essentially granted this point when he claimed that Americans have a common core of moral convictions that flow from our various faiths and even from our founding documents. He summarized this core as "the conviction of the inherent and inalienable worth of every life."

For me, personally, this conviction is exactly right. I want to hear how Governor Romney squares that conviction with every policy position he takes, including, for example, his stance on waterboarding, on taxes, on health care, on climate, and on immigration. As an evangelical who cares about such issues, I want a president who is able to see the connections between his policies and the tenderhearted compassion embodied in a human dignity ethic.

We don't need a "political religion" that trumps religious faith. We need a religious faith that humanely informs our laws and our policies.

--David P. Gushee is Distinguished University Professor of Christian Ethics at Mercer University and president of Evangelicals for Human Rights. His most recent book, THE FUTURE OF FAITH IN AMERICAN POLITICS: THE PUBLIC WITNESS OF THE EVANGELICAL CENTER, will be published in January by Baylor University Press.

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Governor Romney says some wise things about faith and freedom and politics. He unfortunately joins the crowd of Christians who love to bash the straw man of secularism, but he is right to ask for respect and to challenge those who expect him to address specific Mormon doctrines. What's missing is conscience, how religion's claims are mediated by conscience and, as John Kennedy acknowledged on a similar occasion, a moment might come when a president, like a citizen, might be required to object, or to resign. What's an even greater worry here is Governor Romney's commitment to conventional civil religion: what really matters is America, for which we ask our people to risk death, and to kill, and willingness to do so is apparently the major test of genuine American religion. So the big question, for all Americans, is what is our common good and what happens to us when we confine debate about that question to those who really worship America?

--David O'Brien is a historian of American Catholicism and professor of Roman Catholic studies at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts.
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