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Entries tagged with “Theology” from Religion and Ethics Newsweekly

The 2008 presidential contest between Barack Obama and John McCain will likely be remembered for engaging religion at two levels: one thematic, the other cultural and demographic. Each points to how political religion paradoxically threads through and yet divides the American landscape.

At the thematic level, one could not help but note two theological resonances that coursed through the Obama campaign: change and hope. Wittingly or not, he eschatologized his campaign message, calling for metanoia (conversion, change) and a new future in political and public affairs.

Barack 110508.jpgThis fact belies the claim that he and the Democrats lacked a framework for organizing their ideas. Theirs was a this-worldly eschatology, attending to shareable temporal goods and the changes necessary to secure them. Further, this appeal to change meant more than putting distance between a new order and the Bush administration. Distances are quantifiable, measurable, linear. Obama's appeal to change suggests a qualitative transformation in our discourse, priorities, interactions, and expectations.  The metaphors of change and hope, however unspecified they might have seemed for those looking for program specifics, spoke to deep existential frustrations and desires across the country. They spoke to those who believe that political action can be meaningful and connective.

At the cultural and demographic level, the Obama-McCain campaign left a different track record on matters of political religion. Far from offering unitive themes and images, religion was served up to underwrite the culture wars. Jeremiah Wright's prophetic pronouncements on the left, Sarah Palin's homophobic, theocratic evangelism on the right: here religion worked in the service of political partisanship. However true or distorted these accounts might have been, such representations of religion support the idea that religious communities are fringe groups led by gadflies who live in an alternative universe, one that has de facto seceded from American public life. Moreover, such accounts work to represent religion as a source of faith-based moral simplicity, a conversation stopper that testifies to little more than to anger, fear, and distrust.

Scholars, the media, and public intellectuals owe it to fellow citizens to offer up an account of political religion that is other than aggressively divisive and utilitarian. We need rich discourses -- informed by history, anthropology, philosophy, and social theory -- that speak anew to the politics and ethics of belief in an increasingly globalized and pluralistic public culture. Further, we must get beyond reducing religion to matters of an individual candidate's personal faith or a diffuse set of values on which she or he relies. A denser, more multilayered account of what religion can bring to the political table can attend to religions that operate within the contours of mutual respect and that contribute to the conscientious pursuit of goods that we can discover and share in common.

--Richard B. Miller is professor of religious studies and director of the Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics and American Institutions at Indiana University.

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Two theological doctrines will be crucial to keep in mind as we witness the national political conventions and the climactic phase of the general election they inaugurate.

The first is the doctrine of sin. Our candidates possess the same flawed and fickle nature we all do, and so ultimately they will disappoint us. This will be tough to keep in mind at points in the coming weeks, as carefully rehearsed speeches, choreographed testimonies, and expertly produced videos will seek to make each candidate seem larger than life, capable of solving all our problems. But our candidates are neither saviors nor supermen, and in time their clay feet will show. Keeping that in mind up front will ease our disappointment and shield us from ceding our own responsibility for the change we seek in the world.

The second doctrine deserving our attention is eschatology, the teaching that, in time, God will redeem this world, wipe the tears from every eye, and create a new heaven and a new earth. What will best serve us, however, is not an eschatology that emphasizes God's eternal judgment or that wonders who will be left behind, thereby downplaying the significance of worldly affairs. Rather, confident of the eschatological promise that God will take care of the future, we are free to make a difference here and now, easing the burdens of our neighbor, seeking an increase of peace in the world, straining for a modicum of justice.

A healthy respect both for human sin and for God's promise of redemption allows us to cast a more realistic eye to the podiums erected in Denver and St. Paul. We should not seek from our candidates salvation of either the religious or political kind. We should ask and expect from them help and hope in our endeavor to make this a more trustworthy world -- a more modest goal, for sure, but one we might actually have hope of achieving over the next four years.

--David Lose is the Marbury Anderson Associate Professor of Biblical Preaching and director of the Center for Faith & Life at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota.

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