Evangelicals and Evangelism

 

BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: Now, the final part in our series on America’s Evangelicals. Today, “Evangelicals and Evangelism.” Despite their many differences, evangelicals share a common commitment to spread their faith. In our national survey, conducted with U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, 73 percent of all evangelicals told us they have tried to convince someone to accept Jesus. Tens of thousands do that through traditional career missionary efforts overseas, but the vast majority of evangelicals say they do it in their everyday lives. Kim Lawton has our report.

KIM LAWTON: Just over the border from Brownsville, Texas, steady Gulf winds blow across Matamoros, Mexico. In this “colonia” or neighborhood, there’s no running water or electricity, and few have jobs. Mexican Protestants have established a tiny church here: Mision Peniel. A team of evangelicals from Crossroads Community Church in Greenville, South Carolina, has come to help support Mision Peniel and bring in new members. They’re on what’s known as a short-term missions trip — this one only five days long.

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In Greenville, Jim Frady designs tires for Michelin. Here, he sees himself as an ambassador for Jesus.

JIM FRADY (Volunteer, Adventure in Missions): I think that God calls us in his word to be his hands and his feet. I feel honored to be the hands and feet of Jesus Christ and just serving these people. I’m just going to be Christ as best as I can represent him.

LAWTON: Rather than making a career missionary commitment, more and more evangelicals are going on short-term trips, from a few days up to a year. This team is working on a variety of projects in the colonia, but they are all motivated by a desire to spread their faith in Jesus. They believe accepting Christ is the only way to salvation.

SHAWN LABELLE (Volunteer, Adventures in Missions): If we really believe that there is a literal heaven and a literal hell, then we believe that we need to at least share that with people and give them the option to know clearly.

LAWTON: In the New Testament Book of Matthew, Jesus tells his followers to go into every nation making disciples and baptizing them in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Christians call it the Great Commission. And evangelicals take that very seriously.

The word “evangelical” comes from the Greek word for “gospel” or “good news.” Evangelicals believe the central message of the gospel is that Jesus came to save people from their sins. In our survey, an overwhelming 84 percent of America’s evangelicals said they believe the only hope for salvation is through a personal faith in Jesus Christ, and they want everyone to accept that salvation for themselves.

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Luis Palau

LUIS PALAU (Evangelist): We should be very happy and we should want everyone to hear it and to accept it, because it’s beautiful, marvelous, life-changing, direction-changing, life-enhancing — it’s the best news in the world. So that’s why evangelicals feel compelled to pass it on.

LAWTON: Today, evangelicals are passing their message on through a vast missionary effort both overseas and at home. Evangelism has become a many-faceted, multibillion-dollar enterprise that uses technology and innovation to reach as many people as possible. Three quarters of America’s evangelicals say they’ve given time or money to help spread the gospel either in the U.S. or overseas. And 63 percent say they talk to others about their belief in Jesus at least once a week.

But it’s an enterprise that is also increasingly controversial in a pluralistic world.

Randall Balmer teaches religious history at Columbia University’s Barnard College and has written widely about evangelicals.

Dr. RANDALL BALMER (Professor, Barnard College, Columbia University): We’re living in a multicultural, religiously pluralistic context, and I think we all have to figure out how to operate within that context. What is right, what is the appropriate form of discourse with someone else? How can I disagree with someone without being disagreeable myself?

LAWTON: For example, is it appropriate to evangelize people who are already baptized Catholics?

Dr. ROSANN CATALANO (Roman Catholic Scholar, Institute for Christian and Jewish Studies): You know, people are free to do as they want, but if the reason for their outreach to other Christians has to do with the fact that they see Christianity in binary terms — either you’re an evangelical Christian or you’re not really a Christian — I would find that offensive.

LAWTON: Rosann Catalano is a Roman Catholic scholar with the Institute for Christian and Jewish Studies in Baltimore. She works with people of other faiths and disputes the core evangelical teaching that Jesus is the only way to salvation.

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Dr. CATALANO: God speaks to people across our world and across time in a variety of ways, and it seems to me an enormous act of hubris on my part, or pride on my part, to say, “I know the mind of God, and God wants us to come to God only through the path that Jesus provides.”

LAWTON: But the evangelicals on this team are unapologetic in their belief.

Mr. FRADY: The Scripture says, “There’s only one way to come to the Father.” It’s what I believe to be the truth. And so, all I can do is try to express that and tell people that. I don’t want to force it down them. I want them to choose, just like I did. I chose.

LAWTON: They say what’s important is accepting Jesus as one’s personal savior, not church affiliation.

Mr. LABELLE: I think that you can be Catholic and not have a relationship with God. You can be focused more on the hoops to jump through, if you will. I think you can be Baptist or you can be nondenominational and not have a relationship with God.

LAWTON: Professor Balmer says evangelicals have a long history of adjusting their methods to fit the times.

Dr. BALMER: Evangelism’s always changing, and I think that’s the genius of evangelicalism throughout American history, is the way in which evangelicals have adapted to the cultural idiom.

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Dr. Randall Balmer

LAWTON: In the 18th century, popular evangelist George Whitefield and his dynamic preaching led America to what was called the Great Awakening. In the 19th century, circuit-riding ministers took the message across the country with western settlers. In the 20th century, preachers such as Billy Sunday and later Billy Graham led mass urban revivals, and many evangelists turned to radio and TV. Now, it’s the Internet.

Bishop T. D. JAKES (The Potter’s House): We didn’t change our message to fit the continuity of technology, but we continued our message through that medium. And it’s exciting to see a whole new genre, a whole new market of people we can reach through this medium.

LAWTON: One of America’s most prominent evangelists, Luis Palau, has adapted his own ministry to better fit contemporary society. The Argentine-born preacher once translated at Billy Graham crusades and then began holding his own crusades. Now he’s changing his format.

Mr. PALAU: We’ve switched from the method that worked during World War II and after World War II, you know, the concept of the campaign, or as Dr. Billy Graham used to call it, a crusade. It was acceptable in those days. We now have what we call festivals. We try to understand the culture.

LAWTON: In spring break 2003, some 200,000 people showed up for Palau’s evangelistic beach festival in Fort Lauderdale. There was lots of contemporary music and dancing — and in the midst of it all, a gospel message.

Mr. PALAU (Preaching at Beachfest): Jesus says to you tonight, “Man, let me come into your heart.” And he wants to do it right now. Right now, right now.

LAWTON: Palau’s ministry has teamed with actor Stephen Baldwin to produce an evangelistic DVD called LIVIN’ IT, which features skateboarding and extreme biking.

STEPHEN BALDWIN (Actor): LIVIN’ IT was simply, how can we take this skate culture and create an outreach tool that is edgy, doesn’t have that cheesy Christian thing that everyone complains about. Let’s make something new, let’s do something really cool.

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Really, what my faith and my walk with Christ is all about is sharing that with people, you know.

LAWTON: Baldwin became a born-again Christian in the wake of 9/11, thanks to the evangelizing efforts of both his wife and his housekeeper. Now he also finds himself in the unexpected role of an evangelist.

Mr. BALDWIN: Not to become some guy who’s, like, “Repent!” I’m not that guy. I’m the new guy that is going to bring it to people and, hopefully, bring it to the youth of America in a new way.

LAWTON: Some in the evangelical community worry that such nontraditional methods could compromise the message.

Dr. BALMER: I think a lot of evangelicals are concerned about how the translation of the gospel into the popular idiom has the tendency, or at least the danger, of watering down the gospel itself.

Mr. BALDWIN: The Bible is the word of God. And God’s a pretty powerful guy, you know. He created everything. So I think if he can do that, then he can keep his word exactly how he wants it.

LAWTON: Another born-again actor, Kirk Cameron, takes an aggressive approach to evangelism.

Cameron and New Zealand evangelist Ray Comfort say modern evangelism focuses too much on God’s love and not enough on his judgment. They have a TV show airing on Christian networks that adopts a “hellfire and brimstone” style of preaching that was popular in decades past.

KIRK CAMERON (Actor): When a person understands the horrific consequences of violating God’s law, then they will run to the Savior to escape the wrath to come. And if we’re true and faithful followers of Christ, that’s what we’ll be telling them: that there is wrath to come.

LAWTON: Other evangelicals prefer a more subtle approach.

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Mr. LABELLE: There’s a verse that says, “Always be willing to tell the reason for the hope that lies in you, but do it with gentleness and compassion.” I think when you beat anybody over the head, it just gives Christianity a bad name, and a lot of bad stuff has been done in the name of Christianity. I don’t want to contribute to any more of that.

LAWTON: Ninety-seven percent of all evangelicals told us they believe the best way to spread the faith is by setting a good example for others to follow. That’s the philosophy of Adventures in Missions, the evangelical group that organized the short-term missions trip to Mexico.

BILL BRITTON (Adventures in Missions): Because this generation has been lied to by just about everybody, it really requires much more of a demonstration than it does require just a proclamation.

LAWTON: The team from Greenville saw this firsthand. Many had limited Spanish-language skills. They weren’t preaching; they were building houses.

STEVE BEST (Volunteer, Adventures in Missions): It’s hard to communicate with them, so it’s much easier to show them our love to them by doing the work, and in that way we’re showing how Christ also loves them.

LAWTON: Some team members did more direct evangelism as they walked through the colonia and prayed God would lead them to the right people to talk with. They said they tried to first build relationships, then earn the right to talk about faith.

TOM STEINER (Volunteer, Adventures in Missions): We’ve seen just very generous, very giving people, and very loving people and friendly people.

LAWTON (To Mr. Steiner): And they seem very open to what you want to say, or open to talking about God or other issues?

Mr. STEINER: Some were; some weren’t. You kind of get a sense after talking to them that they’re just, you know, wanting [you] to back off, so you do that, you know? We’re not trying to force anything on anybody. It’s just showing Christ’s love. And some people just aren’t ready for it.

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Shawn LaBelle

Mr. LABELLE: Does playing soccer with a little boy and encouraging him, and helping along, does that help somebody become a Christian? I’d like to think so. You’re just giving, and you have no idea what the results are. You know, maybe one day in heaven we’ll find out.

LAWTON: Gene Mims, vice president of the Southern Baptist LifeWay Christian Resources, says it is possible to be too subtle in sharing the gospel.

GENE MIMS (Vice President, Southern Baptist LifeWay Christian Resources): We need to share the message as well as live the message. Sometimes, unfortunately, some people share the message without living it, and then sometimes people live the message without sharing it.

LAWTON: LifeWay produces materials to help evangelicals spread their faith.

Mr. MIMS: Evangelism is important, or it wouldn’t be so hard. Everything else in the church is easier than evangelism.

LAWTON: In a chain of bookstores across the country, they sell attention-getting merchandise: T-shirts with catchy slogans, and kitschy items such as the Rubik’s Cube-like “evange-cube.” There are also workbooks and dozens of videos that give simplified tips on presenting the gospel.

Bishop JAKES (Preaching): Give me a radical person who’ll turn the whole joint over and preach the infallible, immutable word of God.

LAWTON: Despite all the energy and activities, evangelical leaders worry about their movement’s long-term commitment to evangelism.

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Bishop T. D. Jakes

Bishop JAKES: I am concerned that we’re not the soul-winners that we used to be. I think that we’ve become preoccupied with so many other things and perhaps become too reliant on evangelists and ministers to do the job that should be the responsibility of every Christian.

LAWTON: Many also wonder about a possible softening of evangelical beliefs. In our survey, less than half of all evangelicals agreed that only born-again Christians would go to heaven.

Dr. BALMER: If they are forced to kind of turn that around and apply that principle to their neighbors, to their friends and people that they know from school or work, whatever it might be, I think they’re much less willing to say those folks also are condemned to damnation.

LAWTON: Some experts said the number could indicate a broadening evangelical acceptance of other branches of Christianity.

Evangelicals may debate how and when to share the gospel, but they still believe almost unanimously that they should do it, even in a pluralistic world. Ninety percent told us they think it’s important to spread their faith.

Back home in Greenville, the Crossroads missions team reported on their experiences in Mexico to the rest of the congregation. They said they returned with a new enthusiasm to evangelize in every area of their lives.

Mr. STEINER: God brings people across my path every day for a reason, and definitely trying to be more prayerful and aware of those kinds of things and just see how I can be Jesus to somebody I’m meeting every day, or somebody at the grocery store, the gas station, or whatever.

Mr. FRADY: I look at evangelism more now as a process, to be a part of the process — not just to get an answer, to knock on a door and get an answer that you can chalk up a number. I may never see that person actually say, “Yes, I believe.” But I can play a part of the process to get them closer to the point of believing.

LAWTON: I’m Kim Lawton reporting.

United Methodist Church Update

 

BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: Sharp debate over homosexuality this week at the General Conference of the United Methodist Church, the nation’s second largest Protestant denomination. Nearly 1,000 delegates — half of them laypeople — were in Pittsburgh for the church’s national meeting, which occurs once every four years. U.S. mainline denominations are all deeply divided on gay issues. Last year, the U.S. Episcopal Church consecrated an openly gay bishop. But the United Methodists this week stood firm in their opposition to homosexuality.

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In a series of votes, United Methodist delegates reaffirmed their church’s traditional policy, which says the practice of homosexuality is “incompatible with Christian teaching.” They said marriage should be between one man and one woman, and they maintained a ban on “self-avowed practicing” homosexuals in the pulpit.

Gay rights supporters sponsored several demonstrations urging their church to change those policies. But they were defeated even on a resolution that would have officially acknowledged for the first time that Christians disagree whether homosexuality is compatible with Christian teaching.

JOHN EDGAR (Delegate, Ohio): What we need to do is recognize that it’s not just the thousand delegates here, but the eight million United Methodists and all of the millions of folks we’re trying to reach are in very different positions on this issue.

ABERNETHY: Gay rights advocates did win one partial victory. The church’s Supreme Court ruled that it lacked the authority to reconsider the case of the Reverend Karen Dammann, an openly lesbian minister who was acquitted of violating church law. At the same time, the court warned that disciplinary action may be taken in the future against any bishop who ordains or appoints a practicing gay minister.

While conservatives have the momentum, many of them say the deep divisions still threaten their church’s future.

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PATRICIA MILLER (Delegate, Indiana): I think we clearly are a schismatic church now. It’s just we’re continuing to try to live in the same house, if you will, and the same church. But we are clearly schismatic.

ABERNETHY: Some conservative grassroots activists began exploring the idea of a formal split along conservative-liberal lines. United Methodist leaders said no split is imminent. They said debate over important issues is healthy.

Bishop PETER WEAVER (President, Council of Bishops): This is nothing new. This, in fact, I think, strengthens the church when we can be having vigorous, respectful, and loving — but vigorous — conversations about what is God’s will for our life and for our church in this time of our history.

ABERNETHY: Those conversations will go on. Gay rights supporters have pledged to continue seeking change.

Alan Wolfe Extended Interview

Read more of Jeff Sheler’s interview about America’s evangelicals with Professor Alan Wolfe of Boston College:

How influential is evangelical Christianity in the United States today?

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It’s extremely influential. It’s certainly the most rapid-growing of all of our religions. It’s had an enormous impact on the society. Just look at who the President of the United States is.

What specific impact are evangelicals having on American mainstream culture?

It’s definitely mainstream. We used to talk about evangelicals as if they were kind of a countercultural force, as if they were marginalized from the society. But if the culture we’re talking about is the popular culture, the culture of NASCAR racing and Grand Ole Opry and all the things that I see when I turn on cable television, then the influence of evangelicals is everywhere. There is a kind of emotionality to our culture that I think owes a great deal to evangelical forms of worship. There is a kind of populism to our culture that I think grows out of the way evangelicals structure their entire approach to religion.

Rick Warren’s THE PURPOSE-DRIVEN LIFE and the Left Behind series, the success ofTHE PASSION OF THE CHRIST, which of course was driven by substantial evangelical marketing and involvement — are those things an indication that movie marketers and NASCAR marketers are tapping a Christian market, just going where the money is, or is it really reflecting more of a homogenization of the mainstream culture?

I think it’s the homogenization. We’re dealing with an interesting situation here. Evangelicals, unlike fundamentalists — with whom they’re often confused — are charged with a mission to go out and make converts. The Great Commission in the Bible speaks of this: Make disciples of all nations. So evangelicals can’t ignore the culture. Their whole religious sensibility is based upon meeting the culture halfway. At the same time, American culture — just like American religion — is an enormously powerful force. It will change religion, just as religion will change culture. One of my arguments really is that evangelicals often lose this battle. They’re far more shaped by the culture than they are capable of shaping the culture to their own needs.

Can you give an example?

I could give lots of examples, but I think the whole megachurch phenomenon is premised upon the idea that we can’t do anything with people unless we get them to church first, so the priority is to get them in there. But to get them in there, you downplay the Christian symbolism, you take the crosses off the church, you make the pews as comfortable as you possibly can, you put McDonald’s franchises in the lobby. Sometimes you don’t even know you’re in church when you go to church, because the church doesn’t look like a church.

Would you say that contemporary Christian music, Christian pop and all of that, is part of the homogenization as well?

I definitely think so. It’s clear that that’s what people want. If you’re in the business of getting the people there, you’ve got to give them what they want. It comes at a huge cost. The job of an evangelical church is not to reach out to a guy like me, but I’m the kind of person that loves Johann Sebastian Bach. When I think of church, I think of organs and Bach chorales. These are the first things that evangelicals throw out of their churches. Sometimes I’m asked: What’s a megachurch? My one-sentence answer is: a megachurch is a church without an organ.

Is evangelical higher education an example of the evangelical Christian subculture?

Definitely, but at the same time, the same kind of forces are there. The colleges are in the same kind of dilemma, even if they’ve resolved it in somewhat different ways. It’s very important to places like Wheaton College in Illinois and Calvin College in Michigan to attract high-quality students, to attract a distinguished faculty. But when you do that, you inevitably become part of the whole admissions game and, in some places, of the sports culture of America. I’m fascinated, for example, by Baylor University, which retains a very strong Christian commitment, yet somehow that Christian identity in no way got involved with becoming as aggressively basketball-oriented as a school can be, and then having all the same forms of corruption and sin that go along in any big-time athletic conference. It’s a fascinating study in contradictions.

A school like Wheaton has a pledge for students. They have to abide by certain rules of conduct. The faculty has to abide by certain faith statements. Is one of the reasons in order to maintain a separate identity, to maintain the evangelical “distinctive,” passing it along to that next generation of young people?

I think so, for sure, but it’s almost like putting your finger in the dike. That’s what they’re designed to do. The real question is: Can they work? Wheaton College, for example, has decided to go back and revise its policy about forbidding dancing. I’m all for dancing, but Wheaton hasn’t been in the past. There was certainly a time when dancing was considered a sin in evangelical circles. It no longer is, and Wheaton is adjusting to the times. There’s another interesting example. What’s so important and what’s so fascinating to me about the evangelical approach to faith is that it’s based on a voluntary conversion, as opposed to, say, Catholicism. Evangelicals say it’s the individual himself or herself that should find a personal relationship with Jesus. But then when you have a faith statement and you have to sign it, and it’s a pledge, you’re taking away that voluntary character. If someone — a faculty member at Wheaton — finds that their personal search for Jesus leads them in the direction of the Roman Catholic Church, Wheaton won’t have a place for them. So it represents both the free-will style of faith and yet there’s this element of compulsion. How does an institution retain both of those in our culture? Wheaton is having a hard time with it, and I can understand why.

I want to talk about some of the questions that were in our poll. Did anything catch your attention?

Polls are very interesting. This one is as well. It certainly confirms that evangelicals, in many ways, are both part of the general American culture but also somewhat antagonistic to the culture. … The fact that evangelicals take the Bible so seriously, for example, which the poll reveals, probably makes them different from other Americans. I’d like to know more about that, though. I think there are certain kinds of things that go on in American religion that polls [find] hard to get at. So if a poll tells me that some percent of evangelicals believe that the Bible is the literal word of God, I want to know more. I want to know, how do you read the Bible? What parts of the Bible do you read? How familiar are you with all of its stories? And what do those stories mean to you? Those kinds of questions are much harder to get in a poll.

What do you make of the finding that evangelicals steadfastly believe they’re part of the American mainstream — 77 percent — but they believe by almost the same amount (three quarters) that the media are hostile toward their values, and they have to fight to get their voices heard by the American mainstream?

I think the media has been hostile to them in the past, although I think it’s not because the media tends to be atheistic, as many evangelicals might believe; it’s because the media looks for profit opportunities and, for a long time, didn’t see one in the evangelical community. Now, I think it does. The media has become quite aware of poll results, for example, and things like that. If they see an opportunity, they’ll move in that direction. So we’ve heard a lot of complaints from evangelicals about the way the media has ignored them. I think we’re going to hear even more complaints when the media starts paying a lot of attention to them, because then you just get drenched in the media culture, and that’s not a very good thing either if you’re an evangelical.

Is it surprising, though, that while 77 percent say they’re part of the mainstream, nearly half (47 percent) say evangelicals are looked down upon by most Americans?

I think most Americans think that they’re looked down upon by most Americans. The poll does a very nice thing of comparing evangelicals with nonevangelicals, so you do get a sense of the differences. But let’s not forget that many of the things revealed in this poll, to one degree or another, are shared by lots of people. We have a very funny kind of culture. If you’re a religious believer, you think that the whole world is organized by secular humanists and atheists who hate you. But if you’re an atheist, you believe that the United States is dominated by Christian fundamentalists who hate you. We’re such a complex country that anybody can find something that will make them feel marginalized and victimized. Religious believers, in that sense, are like everybody else. There’s a kind of culture of complaint, as one writer called it. And being an evangelical doesn’t excuse you from the culture of complaint.

No matter whether it’s atheists reflecting that view or Christians, it’s a way of creating solidarity within a movement?

I think it’s certainly part of that. I think it’s also part of belonging in America. This is what it means. That’s why evangelicals really aren’t that marginalized. Like everybody else, they worry about where they stand with respect to the markers of identity. So they look at the media and they have a problem. That’s such a classically American thing. All ethnic groups, for example – Italian Americans, Jewish Americans, Irish Americans — would say, “We haven’t been accepted by the media yet.” And they’d complain, and they register letters. Then, before you know it, they’ve got television programs. Then they felt that they belonged. I think we’re witnessing much of that same kind of phenomenon here.

The poll also shows that evangelical parents (76 percent) are more likely than other parents (54 percent) to prevent their kids from watching objectionable TV shows. Playing violent video games, 61 percent versus 47 percent. Do you find that surprising or significant?

Frankly, I’m not sure whether I believe it. There is an effect — and the poll notices this with respect to church attendance — there’s a footnote when it comes to church attendance that says, because of a sympathy effect — in other words, because people want other people to believe that they’re going to church — there is a tendency for people to exaggerate how often they go to church. I think the same kind of effect can be seen in some of these questions. I think what the poll shows … is that evangelicals think they play fewer video games and watch less violent television, rather than that they actually do. It would be important to compare with other Americans not what evangelicals say in polls, but how evangelicals actually act in reality. On some statistics, like out-of-wedlock births or rates of divorce, evangelicals really aren’t all that different from nonevangelicals. This is a finding of George Barna, who works for the evangelical community. He finds this over and over and over again.

Another finding in the poll: white evangelicals are almost evenly divided among themselves over whether the country is going in the right direction or is on the wrong track, about 45 percent on both of those. But, at the same time, more than three quarters of evangelicals — and similar percentages of the general population (71 percent) — think that, in terms of moral values, the country is on the wrong track. That seems to put evangelicals pretty much in agreement with the mainstream on whether the country is morally on the wrong track.

That’s an interesting and surprising finding. I’m struck by this evenly divided nature here, because you made a reference before to the “Left Behind” series, which is an attempt to popularize somewhat of an odd tradition in evangelical circles, a particular theory about the nature of the Second Coming. But if people were taking the theology of the “Left Behind” series seriously, half of them couldn’t think that we were in the wrong direction, because that’s a very depressing and dark, apocalyptic view of the American future. It suggests to me that all these millions of people who are buying the “Left Behind” series are buying it as an adventure series and not for the theology it contains, which is called premillenialist. I can assure you it wouldn’t conform to the idea that America could possibly be on the right track.

What about the success of Rick Warren’s THE PURPOSE-DRIVEN LIFE and Mel Gibson’s THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST? How would you explain those?

Rick Warren’s books are a fascinating phenomenon. I think he has come up with something that resonates with all kinds of people in the United States, and not just religious believers; that is, this idea of a purpose. I think he’s just simply put his finger on an unease that lots of Americans are feeling, that somehow their lives aren’t organized to a particular purpose. I see his book as appealing to many kinds of people, and not just evangelicals. I certainly come across people reading the book in all kinds of places that have very little to do with the evangelical community. It’s almost like a more academic study, Christopher Lasch’s book THE CULTURE OF NARCISSISM, many years ago. He has just identified a term that resonates widely with people and offered an approach to it that makes sense to people.

One of the poll questions asked: How much influence do you think born-again or evangelical Christians have had on the Bush administration? White evangelicals (34 percent) thought they had a lot of influence on the Bush administration; 38 percent said some influence, so together 72 percent [versus] 57 percent of the general population. Evangelicals think they have more influence on the administration than the general population does. What does that suggest?

I think they have had a significant impact on the Bush administration, and they understand that and take a certain amount of pride in it. I’m curious to know whether it’s going to continue. To take one example: when I talk to my liberal, Democratic, more secular friends, they say, “Sure, the evangelicals have had a big impact on the Bush administration. Look how he’s catering to their prejudices,” and so on. Indeed, some of what Mr. Bush does, like the decision about stem cells, was an appeal to the evangelical community. But there’s another side and, I think, a much more positive side. I think evangelicals were very much responsible for pushing Mr. Bush, in his State of the Union message, to address the issue of AIDS in Africa, which is a big concern among evangelicals. It’s something they take very seriously. And the president addressed those concerns. But he addressed those concerns more in rhetoric. He hasn’t come through with the money. Evangelicals are paying a lot of attention to that. I wonder if they’re not going, at some point, to be disappointed by politics when they see, like every other group, that you can only have so much political influence. It does run out after a while. I don’t know how they’re going to feel when a man that they probably see as really the first truly, genuinely conservative evangelical Protestant President of the United States disappoints them down the road. That disappointment is inevitable, and it’s going to be very fascinating to watch the implications of that unfold.

Is there any reason for evangelicals to take credit for what we’ve been seeing in the last couple of months since the Super Bowl — the FCC, congressional committees, a lot of people in general who are not evangelicals speaking out against moral drift, sex on TV and in the movies? Do they merit any credit for that when we’re talking about influence on the culture? Or is it just that the culture and evangelicals seem to be drifting in the same direction?

I don’t think they deserve any special credit. I’m very cynical about all this. We’ve had this with payola scandals in the past and all sorts of things like that. The media are pretty much unregulated in this country. They go out on a limb. They go too far. There’s a lot of huffing and puffing, and congressional committees, and so on. Then they say they’re going to rein it in. They fire Howard Stern, or they do something with Janet Jackson. Then the storm passes and it’s back to business as usual. I would have been prepared to say that evangelicals had a big influence on the culture if during the Super Bowl they took off all the Viagra ads, took off all the ads for every ED medication under the sun, if there was much less drinking. I’m struck by the fact that a company that I’ve long associated with sympathy for the evangelical position, the Coors Brewery, which has a long history of close interconnections with evangelicals, uses the most blatant, the most repulsive sexuality you can possibly use on its television advertising. Go after that, and then I’ll say that evangelicals have had a big impact on the culture.

They’re using the culture, the music, the movies, the books to convert, to evangelize. Are they successful at doing what they’re charged to do?

Everything I’ve seen suggests that they’re not very successful. I thought one of the most fascinating things in the poll was the fact that so many evangelicals — who are, after all, supposed to be born again — were born to evangelicals. This is an interesting dilemma among evangelicals. If you have had an experience in your life where you’ve seen the true light of Jesus Christ and you’ve made a conversion to that, and then you marry someone else who had a similar experience, and then you have a kid, now what are you going to do with that kid? If the kid goes through what you went through, you’ve got to let that kid find their own way. But it really does seem that evangelicalism is inherited and that its growth is really within the evangelical world. There’s a lot of switching, a lot of people moving from one evangelical faith to another. There are a lot of people that are converting from other faiths. For example, a surprisingly large number of evangelicals were once Catholics. But I think that’s much more out of a sense of personal search. I don’t see that the explicitly proselytizing, witnessing, heavy-duty evangelization has much of an impact. This is America. You’ve got to let people find their own way. And the way evangelicals generally do this is to say, “I’m going to do sort of a lifestyle form of evangelicalism. I’m going to lead a good life. Then I’ll shine and I’ll have this glow and people will see it and they’ll ask me about it. Then I can tell them about Jesus.” But the notion that you go up and ring doorbells, which Jehovah’s Witnesses do, or Mormons do — that’s not what most evangelicals do in America. It just doesn’t work.

What happens when evangelicals use the culture around them?

There’s a tremendous gamble when you use the culture, because the culture is using you. Amy Grant certainly found this out in her career, and all kinds of other evangelicals who use the culture will as well. If you want to use the culture, fine, but you’ll find that you’ll be talking about “the spirit” rather than about Jesus, that the specifically Christian content of what you’re saying will be downplayed to a much more general kind of spirituality. You’ll convert people to a general spirituality, but people are already, in this country, converted to that. I think the influence of explicit proselytizing on the part of evangelicals is exaggerated, both by evangelicals themselves who want to take pride in their accomplishments but also by secular people and by civil libertarians who want to exaggerate it, because then they can fear for the civil liberty violations they see that accompany efforts to proselytize.

Some people look at the influence of evangelicals — their numbers, their growth — and say we need to be afraid of these people, that if you’re not a Christian, if you’re not an evangelical, these people are dangerous. Do you agree?

No, I don’t. I think that the growth is, in fact, going to probably do more harm to evangelicals than less harm, because it’s going to expose them to so many parts of the culture that are going to change them in so many ways they can’t possibly anticipate. I’m always telling my more secular friends not to get so concerned here. We can’t forget that a significant proportion of the growth of evangelical Protestantism is African American. My liberal friends don’t worry about that even though, on homosexuality and other cultural issues, African-American evangelicals are just as conservative, if not more so, than white ones. We should recognize that the tremendous growth in evangelical America could not happen without the culture influencing the religion far more than the other way around. I have enough faith in American culture — in its democratic capacities, in its leveling capacities — to say to the evangelical community, “Welcome to the culture! We’d much rather have you in here, being influenced by the culture, than out there being a fundamentalist, being marginalized, being angry.” Really, it’s much better for democracy that evangelicals join the society than that they remain outside of it.

Evangelicals and Culture

 

BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: Now, part three in our series on America’s evangelicals — the largest group of Protestant Christians. Today, evangelicals and the secular world around them: who is having the greater influence on whom? Our national survey, conducted with U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT, found enormous concern about the impact of the secular world on evangelicals’ family values.

For instance, nearly three quarters of white evangelicals said the media are hostile to their values. As a result, evangelicals — more than other Americans — try to prevent their children from watching objectionable movies and TV. Also, they’ve created their own widely popular alternative music and books.

Jeff Sheler takes a close look now at evangelicals and culture.

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JEFF SHELER: MercyMe is a Christian band gone mainstream. Their hit single “I Can Only Imagine,” a song about heaven, not only appeals to young evangelicals but reached number four on BILLBOARD’s adult contemporary chart.

Christian pop star Stacie Orrico looks and sounds like other pop singers, but her crossover hits speak about finding more to life than material goods.

Cece Winans won seven Grammys as a gospel singer. Now her songs are making it on the R&B and adult contemporary music charts.

And the rock group Switchfoot got its start in Christian music but now is marketed as a secular band. Its videos are played on MTV.

From pop music to politics, evangelicals have become a much more visible presence in American culture. Their churches are energetic and growing while many mainline denominations are languishing. Their books have become fixtures on national best-seller lists. Their colleges are attracting students in record numbers.

Boston College sociologist Alan Wolfe thinks the cultural impact of evangelical Christianity is unmistakable.

Dr. ALAN WOLFE (Sociologist, Boston College): It’s extremely influential. It’s certainly the most rapid-growing of all of our religions. It’s had an enormous impact on the society. Just look at who the President of the United States is.

SHELER: Yet evangelicals have always struggled over their relationship to the larger society. The New Testament teaches Christians to be “in the world” but not “of the world.” Evangelicals traditionally have interpreted “the world” to mean non-Christian society. “Worldliness” to them meant sinfulness and was to be avoided. So they created their own parallel institutions and entertainment, to preserve and promote their values.

But since the mid-twentieth century, evangelicals have become increasingly engaged with the broader culture — as a means of spreading their faith.

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Dr. Alan Wolfe

Dr. WOLFE: Evangelicals can’t ignore the culture. Their whole religious sensibility is based upon meeting the culture halfway. At the same time, American culture — just like American religion — is an enormously powerful force. It will change religion, just as religion will change culture.

SHELER: Steve and Sharon Clausen are third-generation evangelicals who worship with their four teenage children at Christ Community Church in St. Charles, Illinois. Like three quarters of American evangelicals, the Clausens believe they are part of the cultural mainstream, but sometimes they feel besieged.

SHARON CLAUSEN (Member, Christ Community Church, St. Charles, Illinois): We want our kids to make a difference in this world. We don’t want to take a light, which we thought our kids were going to be in a dark world, and haul them away somewhere, so we decided we will put them in a public school setting and let them shine.

But when things happen in public school — the kids will bring home different things saying there had been a drug bust or things like that — all of a sudden the walls close in, and I do feel like I’m in the minority, and I do get tempted to yank my kids out and home-school them, sequester them, and protect them.

SHELER: Steve says he’s trying to guide his sons on sexual morality, but it’s an uphill fight.

STEVE CLAUSEN (Member, Christ Community Church, St. Charles, Illinois): My young men are being bombarded on a daily basis, whether it’s through television, through SPORTS ILLUSTRATED swimsuit issues, through walking the hallways of school, through the locker room banter. It’s a real battle for my boys.

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Steve and Sharon Clausen

Ms. CLAUSEN: Sometimes I want to get out there and say to these parents of girls, “Please do us a favor. Help our boys to stay pure, because when girls are dressing like that, it’s really tough.”

SHELER: Like over 80 percent of evangelicals, the Clausens worry about too much sex and violence in entertainment and closely monitor what their children see.

ALI CLAUSEN (Member, Christ Community Church, St. Charles, Illinois): My friends go to a lot of movies that are not really good movies. Last night I got asked to go to a movie with my friends, and I refused because I knew I wasn’t allowed to watch that movie.

SHELER: Sometimes, the kids admit, the peer pressure can be daunting.

CODY CLAUSEN (Member, Christ Community Church, St. Charles, Illinois): It makes me feel left out maybe a little bit. It’s probably good that I’m left out of that kind of stuff because it’s God’s protection on me. But overall, it doesn’t feel good.

Ms. CLAUSEN: The biggest thing that bothers me about culture is the “no fear” thing. I think it came in with THE SIMPSONS — that you don’t fear adults. There is no respect for authority, and I think it has slowly torn away at our youth. We are taught to fear God. We are taught to respect God, respect authority, and respect parents, and that’s a huge thing for me as a mom to fight against all the time.

SHELER: The Clausens’ eldest son, Taylor, attends Wheaton College, an elite liberal arts school just outside Chicago. Wheaton is the flagship of a network of evangelical colleges, nearly 100 in all, whose enrollment has soared during the past decade.

Dr. DUANE LITFIN (President, Wheaton College): The mission statement of Wheaton is that we are interested in developing whole and effective Christians to impact church and society worldwide for Christ and his kingdom.

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SHELER: Wheaton grads have had plenty of impact. Among the most famous: evangelist Billy Graham and Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert.

(To Dr. Litfin): What makes a Christian college education distinctive?

Dr. LITFIN: They get a full liberal arts education at a place like Wheaton. But what does it mean to think Christianly about subjects? What does it mean to take a Christian take, to try to think in terms of what the Bible teaches or what historic Christianity has said?

(Wheaton College Students): The very nature of creation is that God allows us as human beings to have choice.

Dr. LITFIN: These are the kinds of perspectives that are brought in a setting like this, and students are helped to think things through for themselves.

ASHLEY WIERSMA (Student, Wheaton College): My marketing class right now is doing a really good job of integrating faith and learning from an ethical standpoint.

SHELER: Wheaton and other evangelical schools are sometimes criticized for requiring faculty to sign statements of faith, pledging fidelity to key evangelical doctrines.

Dr. WOLFE: Evangelicals say it’s the individual himself or herself that should find a personal relationship with Jesus. But then when you have a faith statement and you have to sign it, and it’s a pledge, you’re taking away that voluntary character.

Dr. LITFIN: We are teaching here from a Christian worldview, we are not just teaching about the Christian worldview. We are looking for people who themselves embody it.

SHELER: Also controversial, Wheaton students must sign a pledge prohibiting them from drinking and smoking. Until recently, the pledge even forbade dancing.

GRADY ROOT (Student, Wheaton College): I don’t have a problem with the pledge. A lot of people say that the pledge is restrictive, it keeps us from drinking and smoking and stuff like that. But I find those are things that I would choose to do regardless of whether or not I had a pledge.

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Rick Warren

SHELER: Wheaton dropped its ban on dancing just last year and, for the first time, held two on-campus dances — another sign that evangelicals sometimes blend in as they engage the wider culture.

But Christian pop culture also has an impact.

RICK WARREN (Pastor, Saddleback Church, Orange County, California): Really, THE PURPOSE-DRIVEN LIFE is about doing the will of God, saying “God, not my plan, your plan — not my will, your will.”

SHELER: Pastor Rick Warren of Saddleback Church in Orange County, California, is author of the runaway best-seller, THE PURPOSE-DRIVEN LIFE. It has sold more than 15 million copies and topped the NEW YORK TIMES advice best-seller list for weeks, promising to “reduce stress and simplify decision making” by pointing readers to Christ.

Mr. WARREN: Jesus said you find your life by losing it. By giving your life away in service, you find fulfillment. The world thinks fulfillment comes through salary or through success or through status or through sex. But actually, the Bible teaches, fulfillment comes through service.

Dr. WOLFE: I think he’s just simply put his finger on an unease that lots of Americans are feeling, that somehow their lives aren’t organized to a particular purpose. I see his book as appealing to many kinds of people, and not just evangelicals.

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SHELER: Other Christian books have been major best-sellers. The “Left Behind” series, action- packed novels about the second coming of Christ, by evangelical authors Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins, have sold more than 42 million copies worldwide, although LEFT BEHIND the movie flopped outside evangelical circles.

But evangelical marketing muscle helped make Mel Gibson’s THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST a box-office hit in the U.S., grossing $360 million in the first 10 weeks.

Professor BILL ROMANOWSKI (Calvin College): I think the mainstream media is most interested in profit making, and if they think they could make money off religious groups, then I think they will make money off religious groups. Are they particularly hostile? Sometimes they are. Sometimes I think it’s the people in mainstream media who don’t understand Christian values and how people in religious communities think.

SHELER: The billion-dollar-a-year Christian music industry remains a major evangelical success story. It began in the early ’70s with artists like Amy Grant mixing religious lyrics and contemporary music.

AMY GRANT (Recording Artist): And so you get someone who is a believer, and they play guitar and are at the coffeehouse, and so they are suddenly singing songs that sound like all the contemporary musicians they were listening to. But suddenly they were putting faith lyrics on it — messages very directly about Jesus, about faith, about belief.

SHELER: For those early Christian pop singers, music was a ministry, their songs a form of evangelism. That was until Amy Grant went to the top of the charts in 1991 with “Baby Baby” — a wholesome but secular love song.

Prof. ROMANOWSKI: When Amy Grant began to sing songs that were not explicitly religious, her fans just went ballistic. They were very critical of her, saw her as selling out. In another sense, you can also argue that Amy Grant was beginning to transcend or get beyond what was a pretty limited idea of what Christian popular art had to be.

Ms. GRANT: I feel like because somebody is a believer, it doesn’t necessarily mean that they are required to have all their songs express their faith. One lover of art might be most profoundly affected by a painting of a crucifix. Another lover of art might be moved to tears to the point of falling on their knees and seeing God for the first time, really looking at a landscape. And, for an artist, how you express your wonder at life and your hope and your faith and all of that — there are no rules to it.

SHELER: So in the end, who is influencing whom in this engagement of evangelicals and culture?

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Prof. ROMANOWSKI: In terms of their ideal, their model of using popular art to express very specific religious convictions, I don’t think that you see that taking root in the mainstream popular culture. In fact, I think you see the opposite happening. When evangelical artists get into that mainstream culture, they have to figure out ways to tell stories that are not explicitly religious.

Dr. WOLFE: One of my arguments really is that evangelicals often lose this battle. They’re far more shaped by the culture than they are capable of shaping the culture. I could give lots of examples, but I think the whole megachurch phenomenon. You downplay the Christian symbolism, you take the crosses off the church, you make the pews as comfortable as you possibly can, you put McDonald’s franchises in the lobby. Sometimes you don’t even know you’re in church when you go to church because the church doesn’t look like a church.

SHELER: Putting faith into action, sorting out what it means to be in the world but not of it –those are the challenges facing evangelicals like the Clausens.

Ms. CLAUSEN: I know some of my friends look at me a little funny sometimes and think, “Wow, you are pretty strict with the movies you let your kids watch. Your kids are always calling home saying, ‘Mom, can I go to this movie?'” If they feel this way, I’m very quick to say that I can’t do this on my own; I need a blueprint, and I’ve chosen God’s word. Yes, I’ll be labeled as an evangelical Christian, but boy, I feel that’s what’s helping me to parent and to be a good wife and a good neighbor.

SHELER: For RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY, I’m Jeff Sheler in St. Charles, Illinois.

ABERNETHY: Several of the artists in our story were big winners this week at the Dove Awards — gospel music’s version of the Grammys. Cece Winans won Contemporary Gospel Recorded Song of Year. MercyMe was named Group of the Year. And Switchfoot captured several awards, including Top Contemporary Rock Album.

Interview with Mario Cuomo

Read the April 23, 2004 RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY interview with former New York governor Mario Cuomo (D) by correspondent Lucky Severson about the controversy over John Kerry and punishing Catholic politicians who support abortion rights:

What is your view of the Vatican’s and some bishops’ attempts to get tough with pro-choice Catholic politicians?

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We have to be precise about what the Vatican and the bishops are doing. First of all, in this country, not many bishops are saying anything about the political role of Catholics. Some bishops — one in John Kerry’s area — have taken the position that, in effect, a candidate for political office who happens to be a Democrat has to advocate the truths of the Catholic Church as delivered to him by his bishops. So if the bishops conclude, with the Vatican usually, that life begins at conception and therefore there can be no abortion, even to save the life of the mother, that is not only an injunction upon you as a Catholic to live a life free from abortion; it is a requirement of you as a politician that you advocate and promote that as vigorously as possible, thereby creating a unanimous view in this pluralistic society that the Catholic Church is right. Now, if that is the position, what they’re really saying is that whatever Catholic politician you elect — as a governor, as a president, as a legislator, as a judge — you’ll never be sure as to what his or her positions are, because the bishops and the Vatican could meet at any time and declare a new proposition.

The Catholic Church did not always teach that life begins at conception. St. Thomas Aquinas, Ambrose, Augustine said life begins after 40 days in the womb. At one point the Catholic Church taught the usury was a sin, etc., etc. In effect, therefore, if that is the position, then the only comfortable state for a Catholic would be a theocracy — a Catholic theocracy. Nothing else would make sense.

Do you think that other bishops will follow St. Louis Archbishop Raymond Burke in refusing Communion to Catholic politicians who support abortion rights?

No.

You don’t think this will be widespread throughout the Church?

If I’m correct, if my logic is intact, if what you’re really saying is that I, as a Catholic — and I am a Catholic, and I do have to live by the law against abortion, and the law against contraceptives, and that’s not easy, and I’ve been married in June 50 years, so I can tell you it’s not easy — and if you’re saying that I not only have to live that life as a Catholic with my wife, Mathilda, but that I have to insist on it for everybody in my pluralistic society when I, as a governor, am describing the rules by which they must live, then no one could ever vote for a Catholic without wondering what they would be required to listen to in the days that follow. Not only the truths already taught. What about the truths about to be taught? And that would make an impossible situation. Nor is it the practice, nor has it been the practice, of the Catholic Church.

They did not oppose slavery in 1865 and in the late nineteenth century, although the pope had spoken against it. They do not bring the same ardor to insisting on their position against the death penalty today. Nobody knows that better than I. I was badly mauled by people in New York State for being against the death penalty for 12 years. In all that period, the Church never spoke against it. Now they have spoken and said it’s wrong except in very few emergent situations where there is no punishment available, no prison, etc., etc. And, you know, Scalia, a Supreme Court justice, says the pope is wrong. I didn’t hear anybody say he ought to step down from the Supreme Court.

In a number of the so-called 16 “battle” states in the presidential election, the Catholic vote will be extremely important. Do you think this threat to deny Communion is becoming a political issue?

If it is a political issue, I suspect that it will not hurt John Kerry, but it may hurt the Church. And that troubles me. May I try to put it with a different emphasis? Religion is extremely important in this democracy, so important that it occupies a prime position in the Bill of Rights. Religion is defended, the right of people to hold any religion they wish: with a God, like the Hebrews, the Christians, the Muslims — they believe in a God; without a God, like the Confucians and Buddhists; or atheism, which has been declared a religion, believe it or not, in this country by the Supreme Court of the United States. Organized belief in spirituality — that’s what a religion is. One of the reasons the country was created was for me to be free to be a Catholic and you to be whatever you wish to be. In order to protect that freedom of religion, you must be careful not to intrude upon other people’s freedom of religion. For me to be protected in my right to be against abortion and against contraceptives, I have to make sure not to tread upon your right not to believe in those things, because if I can impose my religion on you, you can impose your religion on me. And so the best way to preserve the freedom of religion in this country is for government to stay away from making rules that are basically religious in nature.

Now, let’s not confuse this with a law like the law against murder, which my Catholic Church teaches me is a cardinal sin. It is, of course. But that is also something that you can justify without respect to any religion. Just as a matter of reason, to any pluralistic society that is rational, they would conclude this is a bad thing. What I am talking about are religious beliefs that are not commonly shared.

Do you think that the Republican Party will try to make this an issue with Kerry?

I think if the Republicans make it a political issue, it will blow up in their faces, really. Are you going to say to President Bush he shouldn’t be referring to his Christianity all the time? And if he does, he should be insisting that everybody live the same kind of Christian life that he lives? What would your position be as a Republican?

You don’t think that John Kerry should be denied Communion?

That is a question for the Church, not a question for the body politic. That’s a question that you decide with your church. You’re a member of the Catholic Church, and the Catholic Church tells you this or that, so you as a Catholic will make up your mind what you think the rule should be, and the Church will make up its mind. I don’t think that that’s a question for the politicians. It’s a question for all the Catholics, perhaps. They will make a judgment as to whether they think it’s correct for the Church to punish John Kerry for not taking the position they wish him to take on abortion, while at the same time they’re not saying the same thing about the death penalty, they’re not saying the same thing about the war in Iraq, which the bishops said was not a just war. I don’t hear them saying, “No Catholic politician should be in favor of the war in Iraq, because it is an unjust war.” It’s up to the Catholics to decide, do they think the bishops who are saying this are right or wrong? It’s for the Catholics to decide whether it’s a good thing to say to the 280 million people in the United States of America, “If you vote for a Catholic, remember, they’re going to have to do whatever the bishops tell them on a very important subject.” The Catholics will have to decide that.

Do the Catholic bishops now, in light of the sex abuse scandal, have the moral authority to pull this off, in the eyes of Catholic voters?

I don’t think they will try. I don’t think they will try. Look, let’s be candid. I am a Catholic. I hope to remain a Catholic. I hope to survive all its rigors. I hope to be good enough, knowing that we’re all sinners; I hope I’m not such a terrible sinner that I don’t make it to whatever reward awaits Catholics who have tried, even if they slip once in a while. But the reality here is that the Church has never tried hard to sell this entire agenda. This is something new. They haven’t tried in the past and they’re not trying now. They didn’t try with slavery. They’re not trying with the pope’s law that says the death penalty is wrong. Period. You shouldn’t take any life, even of the worst. They’re not trying. They’re picking an isolated case, an isolated candidate, and I don’t think that that will work. And I don’t think it’s good for the Church, frankly.

Canon law says denial of Communion should always be a last resort if you wish to punish somebody. Does it seem that even that threat is a little extreme?

Again, that’s not a political question; that’s a religious question. Do I as a Catholic think it’s extreme? Of course I do. The consecration, the making of the bread and wine into the body and blood of our Savior, is the ultimate religious act for Catholics. And participating in it is the ultimate participation. So the insult of being told by your Church that you can’t participate in it, that’s very personally harmful, personally hurtful. It’s the reason I wrote the speech in 1984 on this subject, because an archbishop (who later became a cardinal and is since deceased), a very good man in many, many ways, Cardinal O’Connor, said on a television show, with me watching and my wife and my then-youngest son, Christopher, that, well, anybody who didn’t hold the line, like Geraldine Ferraro and Mario Cuomo, and didn’t say exactly what the Church was telling them to say on this subject, they could be in danger of losing the right to this and that, etc. It went through me like a blade. That’s when I sat down and did something that no Catholic had done before. I said, “We have to discuss this, discuss the theology of it. And we have to do it in a place where there are Catholics who know. And we have to let people witness it and make a determination: is this theology, as I see it, correct or isn’t it?” I said that in 1984. It was discussed by theologians. It was written [about] by theologians. If you look at the ENCYCLOPEDIA OF CATHOLICISM that’s put out by Notre Dame, it’s referred to. It’s referred to as a proper statement. So it’s a very big, very important subject.

What do I think will happen? I think nothing will happen. I think that most of the bishops of the Church will insist that we Catholics live as Catholics. Let’s face that, too. On abortion, the numbers show, regrettably, tragically, that Catholic women ignore the teaching on abortion as much as any other part of the population. And so if that’s the case, it seems to me, to put Catholic politicians in a position where they are arguing a principle that their own Church does not live up to, by all the measurements available to you, is an awkward thing to do to the Church and a damaging thing to do to the Church. The Catholic politician’s position and the Church’s position should be: Look, I believe many things as a Catholic. And when I think things I believe as a Catholic would be good for you, as an atheist, or a Jew, or a Sikh, or a Confucian, or a Buddhist, or an agnostic, or whatever you are — if I think it’s good for all of you, as a governor, I’m going to try to convince you with two things: my own good example and love. That’s how I’ll convince you. And I’ll tell you that I have lived up to this and it’s been good for me and good for my family, in this way or that way. And I want to share it with you, because I love you, not because I think you’re a sinner or because you’re wrong. And I give you the benefit of my own experience with this truth. And I wish to share it with you. And then maybe hope for a consensus. That’s the way it ought to happen. It doesn’t not happen by ukase. It does not happen by fiat, especially if that can be called hypocrisy.

We spent a little time up in Massachusetts on the gay marriage issue with State Senator Marion Walsh, a Harvard Divinity School graduate, a Catholic, who does not support a state constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. She talked about the enormous pressure she’s been under. She talked about the million-dollar campaign by the Catholic Church, which is reeling from financial losses from the scandal, to promote a constitutional amendment in Massachusetts banning gay marriage. Do you think that maybe the Church is going after hot-button issues at the expense of what many people think is the main mission of the Church — that is, to minister to the poor?

I think what the founder of the Catholic religion — all Christian religions, that’s why they call it Christian — would say, among other things: “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and render to God the things that are God’s.” When you talk about marriage, you have to define the word. What does “marriage” mean? Well, to a lot of people, it means only heterosexuals joining in a permanent union. Fine. And if your religion, like Catholicism, says that it has to involve just heterosexuals and can’t involve people of the same sex, great! Then they won’t be married in the Catholic Church. And if your religion does allow it — whatever your religion is — fine! Then you have a religious marriage, as a Protestant, atheist, or whatever you are, whatever religion you share. Nobody is going to complain about that. You can call it whatever you wish, if you want to call it a marriage. When you talk about, “We’re not going to allow people of the same sex to call it ‘marriage,'” tell me why. What is the rationale? Well, because marriage of heterosexuals is essential to society and always has been. Really? Why has it been essential to society? Well, it always has been. No, I didn’t ask you how long. Why? The truth is, because that’s the way you procreate, that’s the way you create babies. Okay. That was the basic reason in the beginning. But if that is your rationale, then two heterosexuals — wonderful, good people — who are not capable of bearing children would not be married. You would deny them the right to marry. And if you gave them the right to marry, and they had one child, would that be enough to justify marriage? And if they had the ability to raise children and just chose not to, would you deny them marriage? Would you deny me marriage if I grew too old for children? Do I have to fall out of the marriage? If that’s your rationale, it doesn’t make any sense. So I believe that you should, of course, as a matter of civic fairness and constitutional fairness, you should look at the equal protection clause. You don’t need a constitutional amendment; you have one. You have a number of them. And they say this: they say that you and I are entitled to equal protection, especially on the important things. And if I am a gay and you are not, we are entitled to the same civic benefits, if we enter unions with other people — called “marriage” or “civil union” or anything you want to call it — on a permanent basis, intending exclusivity. If that’s the point, then why shouldn’t I be treated exactly the way you are? Unless you throw procreation at me, and we know that doesn’t work as a rationale.

What about the issue of the separation of church and state?

It’s a nonissue, a nonissue. That was written in a letter by Thomas Jefferson. It’s not in the Constitution. If you mean by “the wall of separation between church and state” not a real wall; it is a curtain perhaps. What it suggests is that you ought to keep them as far apart as possible. That’s absolutely wise. And the Constitution does. That’s why, as I’ve said already, the right to be free in your religion, which you have in the First Amendment, is achieved in part by stopping the government from engaging in religion. They use the word “establishment of religion.” So we prevent government from establishing a religion. That means stay out of the business of religion as much as you can.

But it’s not a perfect wall. And as you’ll find when the constitutional experts in the Supreme Court find a way to put God into the Pledge of Allegiance — which I will bet you they will; I can’t imagine five of those judges saying, “No, you can’t say God in the Constitution” [sic] –they’re going to do a lot of damage to the idea of God when they write their opinions. So there is no absolute wall. But to the extent that we can keep them separated, that protects religion. And that’s the important notion. That is not adverse to religion. It’s not opposed to religion. It supports religion to stay away from religion, because that guarantees the freedom.

I spoke with Ambassador Ray Flynn about this, about whether or not the Catholic Church was trying to have too much influence on government. He said, “Are you kidding? We have never had less influence. We need to have more influence in government.”

I think there are many things that we as Catholics, Ray and I, believe that I wish were better respected, better understood by the people of this country. I think some of the best things our Church has ever done … the bishops wrote letters on the economy, letters on poverty. They’ve taken positions for years about the dangerous fragmentation in this country between people who make massive amounts of money and people — 35 million of them today — who are poor, 11 million children living at serious risk. The Catholic Church regards that as immoral for the wealthiest, most powerful nation in world history to tolerate a situation where there are so many poor. That’s lost on our population. That’s called “mushy-headed liberalism.” That’s Catholicism at its very best. If you study the life of Jesus for three years, he spent very little time in prohibitions and proscriptions. He did say, “Damn be he who calls his brother rock-eye,” so don’t curse anybody. And he did throw the moneylender down the steps of the temple, because it was a desecration. But most of his time was spent with people who were sinners, people who were ill. The Sermon on the Mount is the best illustration of Christianity at the core.

I guess that’s what I lost in my long question about Massachusetts and gay marriage, that the Catholic Church spent a million dollars on their public relations campaign for the state constitutional amendment. Sen. Walsh’s point, I think, was that the Catholic Church would have been much better, and it would have been more what Christ would have them do, to spend a million dollars on the poor.

[James] Wolfensohn is the head of the World Bank. He’s about to leave as head of the World Bank. But on the way out, he’s going to be giving speeches. He always says the same thing: Look at what we’re spending around the world on wars: $900 billion. And look at what we’re spending on poor people — and when so many of them live in Africa and in the Middle East, incidentally, where it’s particularly pertinent at the moment. We spend $200 [billion]. Look at the comparison in the ways we spend our wealth. And that’s true in this country. And the Catholic philosophy is very much ignored by many of the people in this country. And I think that’s what Ray Flynn means. I don’t think Ray Flynn means we need more influence in terms of getting everybody to agree with us that no woman should ever be entitled to an abortion under any circumstances. I don’t think Ray Flynn means that no one should ever use a contraceptive device. Not a child who has poor judgment about how they use their growing sexual capacities. Not people who have too many children to pay for already, but want to continue to be able to express their mutual affection. I don’t think he means that we’re not doing well in teaching people to use contraceptives. I don’t think he means that. I don’t think he means even coming out against the death penalty, although I would include that.

But do you think that the Church is misdirected when they’re spending money on that kind of a campaign?

It’s not for me to challenge my Church. I want the Church to take care of me as a very vulnerable sinner. I don’t want to lose my right to their solicitous attitude.

One of the things that Ray Flynn said was that he happened to be with the pope when the pope spoke against capital punishment. He said it was a very strong statement, but by the time it got here, it had lost all of its punch.

No, the Church here simply ignored it. Nobody knows it better than I. Twelve years, I was against the death penalty. I wrote to the Vatican. I said, “Give me a break. Help me here. I know you’re unhappy with what I did at Notre Dame, but give me a break. You’re against the death penalty. Say so! Don’t even mention me. Just say you’re against the death penalty.” It was 75 to 19 against me in the polls on this issue. Forget about me. I didn’t worry about me. I set two records for popularity despite the death penalty position, so that wasn’t the thing; the thing was, this is your teaching now, finally and belatedly; it should have been your teaching a long time ago. You had a pope 200 years ago say that this was wrong. Now you have cardinals who write books on Vietnam, talking about how what we did in Vietnam was right, and how the death penalty is absolutely correct. No, the Church just walked away from what the pope said.

That’s another reason why it’s very hard for the Church to come out en masse now in its bishops and say to politicians, “You must do this,” because they’re going to run into all the problems I’ve just given you.

And do you think that the sex abuse scandal has diminished some of their moral authority with Catholics?

Of course! Of course! Yes, it has, probably more than it should, for this reason: if you understand the Church the way I do — perhaps I misunderstand it — my understanding of the Church is that Christ came for the sinners, who are all of us; and that he offers us the chance of redemption for our sins, which are inevitable, by a life of love and penitence, etc. Now, that’s Christ. And when he created — not the first pope, because that didn’t happen for a few hundred years; we created popes, not Christ — the first leader of his organization, that first meager, humble organization of disciples, he picked as the leader Peter, who himself was going to commit three sins the first night. And he knew it. Who was going to three times deny Christ the first night. And he knew it, and he told Peter about it. Now, what was he saying when he made the first leader of the Church a sinner on the first night? So we’re all sinners. We’ve had popes who were colossal, ugly, catastrophes. How about the Crusade? What about the popes who murdered the husbands of their lovers?

So you should think of the Church as human beings. We are the Church, all the Catholics, the laypeople are part of the Church, the priests are part of the Church. And they are, like us, sinners. So when you catch a rabbi, if you’re Jewish, committing a bad sin, or a priest or a minister committing a bad sin, that doesn’t have anything to do with the religion. The religion doesn’t assume that everybody who strives to make themselves better by believing in some set of spiritual tenets is going to be a saint. That’s an absurdity. So there is a difference between the Church human and the religion it seeks to promote. There’s a difference between democracy and the president who is seeking to promote democracy. And if the president fails, however he or she fails, that doesn’t mean democracy fails. So if you see it that way, we shouldn’t despair about our religion. We should, however, be unhappy with our Church of humans, which we are. And to some extent, the human thing is to say, “Gee, now when my kids listen to a priest, they’re going to wonder whether the priest is good or bad.” But they should always have wondered about that. That should have nothing to do with the message. Elmer Gantry is a good example. It’s not the soul of the person who’s delivering the statement, it is the truth of the statement that is being delivered that makes it important.

Aside from capital punishment, were there other issues as governor where your faith collided with your public policy?

My faith never collided with my public policy on capital punishment. Some people in my Church did; my faith didn’t. There was nothing in my religion that I violated by saying, “Look, ROE V. WADE is the law. That’s the Constitution. You have the right to the Constitution, which says you can have an abortion.” My faith as a Catholic. … Now, remember, the word is “faith”; it’s not “knowledge.” The word is “faith.” And the reason you use “faith” is that you can’t use “knowledge.” It’s not that you know all these things to be true that are part of your religion when you’re talking about faith; it’s that you choose to believe them, you choose to suspend the need for intellectuality, because intellectually you can’t deal with it. And so you choose to believe it. You couldn’t possibly intellectualize that there’s a heaven. You choose to believe it. You can’t prove intellectually that Christ rolled back the stone. You choose to believe it. That’s called faith. It doesn’t collide with your intellect, but it’s not proven by your intellect. So nothing I did collided with my faith. It collided with what the bishops thought should be done politically. So our difference was basically political.

How should the Catholic Church deal with politicians who consistently vote against Church teachings?

When you say “vote against Church teachings,” if you are voting for the death penalty, let’s say — which Catholics do in very large numbers, like most of the population — I think it’s possible for you to say, “I voted for the death penalty. That doesn’t mean I’d be an executor. I just think that that should be a tool available to my government. Personally, I don’t like it, but I think that should be a tool available to my society, if they choose to use it.”

When the Church teaches that you ought to love one another and try to help one another, and you ought to avoid killing one another unless it’s absolutely essential, and so they declare that some wars are “just” occasions for you to kill other people and some are not, that is obviously a truth that has significance only if you try to sell it to the population. And so, implicit in that truth is the importance of its being accepted by the whole population. But there the Catholic Church seems to be saying very little at the moment. Now, the bishops did declare the war unjust. So you would have to ask yourself, then, there’s a truth that really does have relevance to the whole population, whatever their religion. That’s one we should be banging away at, but apparently the bishops feel differently.

In 1984, you said in your Notre Dame speech, manipulating religion for political purposes is frightening and divisive. Do you see that happening today?

By President Bush or by the bishops? Do I see people manipulating religion in a way that … no, I don’t really. I see an awful lot of confusion about religion; for example, gay marriage. Are you talking about religious marriage? If you’re talking about religious marriage, we have no problem. Nobody is going to force you to have a religious marriage and nobody is going to ban a religious marriage. So if you choose to have a marriage in a religion that accepts gays, who’s going to complain? [If] I happen to be Presbyterian, and the Presbyterian Church now tells me gay marriages are all right — I don’t think they do, but let’s say they did — and we gay people get married, myself and another male. We call it a religious marriage. What’s the problem? What is the problem? So I think there’s a confusion in how we’re handling religion.

President Bush says he wants to give money to faith-based charities, to be distributed to poor people — very confusing to people. It should be very simple. We’ve been doing that forever. There is no dispenser of government money for poor people and people in need as great as the Roman Catholic Church in this country. They spend billions of dollars taking care of orphans, ill people. However, President Bush adds that he thinks that the faith that’s doing it — the Baptists don’t like this, most of them, but the Presbyterians or the Catholics — should have the right to limit their service to people who accept God as they see it. That’s all wrong. That’s absolutely wrong, that I can give you money which you can then use to propagate your religion. That just doesn’t make any sense.

And so I think that more than manipulating religion in a really dangerous way, there’s a lot of confusion about the way we’re using religion now.

Another thing you said in 1984 is that abortion is not the fault of government, nor should the government necessarily play a role in fixing the problem?

No, I don’t think I said that.

Did I misinterpret what you said?

Oh, yes. I’ll tell you how much. Right after Notre Dame, I wrote an op-ed piece in THE NEW YORK TIMES. I said, “Look, I’ve made myself clear on the abortion issue” — I think clearer than anybody ever did, because nobody wrote that much and shared it with the world the way I did. Let’s get something else clear. Whatever religion you’re in, I think most human beings would agree we have more abortions than we’re comfortable with — a million and a half a year, or whatever it is. The terrible choice that a woman has to make, whether to have an abortion or not, happens too frequently, especially in the case of unwanted pregnancies, undesired pregnancies. And so, without offending anybody’s religion, we should work very hard to limit the number of unwanted pregnancies. How do you do that? First, we should start with the young people and we should argue strenuously [for] abstention. I don’t believe in all this talk about, “What’s the point, they’re going to do it anyway.” Nobody knows better than I. I’ve got 11 granddaughters. I have five kids. I was young once. So I know that people are going to get involved anyway. But when you avoid teaching abstention, it’s the same as promoting the other thing. So just to cover that base, teach abstention: The best thing for you to do is wait until you get lucky and find somebody you really love, and then use this ultimate gift that God has given you. Because if you use it up before then, it won’t mean as much to you. Now, they’re not going to listen to you. So give them education as to birth control, only for those people whose religion allows them to use contraceptives. Make the contraceptives available. Give them education, whether they’re religious or not. Do it in the public schools. Teach them about this.

Now, if despite all of that and the availability of contraceptives, you have a young person or an older person who has a pregnancy she does not want, now the temptation is for abortion. Make sure you give that woman the same right, and the same help, in bringing the baby to term that you would in giving her the right for an abortion. So allow her to bring the baby to term and then help her with an adoption. Try to convince her, “Look, you don’t need an abortion here if you think you’re not ready for this child, if you think you’re not in a position to do the child justice. Let’s work toward an adoption.” Let’s make it easier to have an adoption. “And we’ll pay for your going to term. We’ll give you a good doctor. We’ll deliver the child and we will arrange the adoption.” I think if we worked aggressively at all those things, we could reduce significantly the number of abortions, without ever offending anybody, without ever denying a woman choice, and without ever breaking any religious rules.

Now, I was careful about contraceptives. Obviously, you are not going to push for somebody to use contraceptives who doesn’t want to. But for those people who are free to use them, you should make them available.

Anything more you want to say about how your faith as a Catholic informed your thought?

I can say something about my favorite thought on religion. I think this country desperately needs religion — I think all countries do — religion in the sense of belief in something much larger than yourself, that rationalizes your own existence. And I think the idea that people may still be killing one another over religious confusion, as they always have, is truly tragic, because all the religions I’m aware of, starting with monotheism (forget paganism), starting with the Hebrews, all the religions I can name, whether they have a god or not in them, have two principles. For the Jews, tzedaka and tikkun olam; for the Christians, love one another as you love yourself, for the love of me, for I am truth, and the truth is God made the world but didn’t complete it, and you ought to be collaborators in creation. So two truths: you should love one another as human beings and you should lock arms and make this place better to live in. The only truth you’re absolutely certain of, that you don’t need faith for, is the value of the next breath you’re going to draw, the value of your life. And the two religious truths that are common to everything, and should be common to our politics and the way we conduct our affairs, here and in Iraq and everywhere else, is that we’re supposed to love one another and we’re supposed to work together to make the place better. That’s the purest religion; that would be the best politics.

United Methodist Church Conference

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BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: The United Methodist Church — the second largest Protestant denomination in the U.S. — opened its 11-day-long General Conference in Pittsburgh this week. The highest legislative body of the church meets only every four years. This time, gay issues are expected to dominate, as Kim Lawton reports.

KIM LAWTON: Nearly a thousand delegates from all over the world have gathered to set the agenda for the United Methodist Church. They are addressing a host of issues, from Iraq to racism and church finances, and most contentious of all, the denomination’s opposition to homosexuality.

Last month, a United Methodist jury in Washington State acquitted an openly lesbian pastor, the Reverend Karen Dammann, of violating church teachings.

Upset conservatives are pushing delegates to uphold church stands.

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MARK TOOLEY (Institute on Religion & Democracy): We’re confident that the conference here will once again reaffirm the historic church teachings on marriage and sex. But we’re hoping the conference will go beyond that and have something to say about enforcement and accountability.

LAWTON: Meanwhile, gay rights advocates are trying to change language in the church’s BOOK OF DISCIPLINE, which says that homosexuality is “incompatible with Christian teaching.”

Rev. PHIL LAWSON (Retired United Methodist Minister): We want those words deleted. Those words are used by many people to do violence against gays and lesbians and transgender people.

LAWTON: Vigorous debate is expected before the meeting ends on May 7. I’m Kim Lawton reporting.

Shambhala Meditation

 

BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: Buddhist meditation techniques are widely popular, and one such method is called Shambhala meditation, a simplified version of Tibetan practice. Recently, Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche, author and meditation leader, told a group of beginners to relax, note their breathing, set aside their thoughts, and just be — quietly — who they are. The setting was All Souls Unitarian Church in Washington, D.C.

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SAKYONG MIPHAM RINPOCHE (Spiritual Leader, Shambhala Buddhist Movement): “Shambhala” is a word that really connotes how a human being can live in the world and practice spirituality and not renounce anything, in a sense. It’s a notion that one can have a family, one could have a job, and one can still deepen and meditate and understand. And that life is a journey and that one does not have to become a renunciator or monastic in order to do that.

In Shambhala one needs to have what we call “windhorse” — developing your life-force energy. People struggle in their life — working, just getting through the day, trying so many things just so that they are able to survive. And they need energy, and they need strength. Discord and argument weaken our energy.

Meditation to me is strengthening the mind. In the Buddhist tradition, we say, in order just to feel a sense of joy — the word is “dewa,” bliss, happiness — one needs sleep, one needs food, one needs meditation, and one needs well-beingness. What I find interesting about this particular list, as it were, is that meditation is thrown in there. Just like you take care of the body, just like you need to sleep, at some point one needs to meditate. And that means a period in the day when one can strengthen, calm, and then you’re ready. Otherwise, life becomes overwhelming, and the level of agitation and stress begins to reduce our energy.

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Meditation really doesn’t have to take more than five or ten minutes. It’s better to do ten minutes than not to really focus and drag on for an hour. If one wants to meditate longer, great. But really the notion is consistency — just some time in the day when you reflect.

The word “meditation” in Tibetan is “gom,” and it means “familiarity.” So what do we become familiar with now? Our breathing. We’ll just breathe. So, everybody can breathe?

Whatever our thoughts are, those little ones, those are okay. Thoughts that are engrossing about the future, going over stories of the past where it takes us away totally from this room, those we should recognize that we are drifting and come back to the breathing.

We’re just trying to be at peace. Rest comfortably. And every time we rest, every time we follow the breathing, feel the breathing, our mind becomes stronger.

And, once we begin to strengthen, and our mind begins to settle down, then we’re able to perceive things in a deeper way. We begin to look and say, “What about love, what about compassion, what about the notions of egolessness or selflessness?” Those insights don’t come very often.

At a very basic level, every single sentient being is the Buddha. You discover the Buddha, as opposed to you become the Buddha.

Enlightenment is that rediscovery, you can say. And the process of meditation is sort of like cleaning a window — you finally get to see through.

W. Bradford Wilcox on America’s Evangelicals Survey

Read the comments of sociologist W. Bradford Wilcox on R&E’s national survey of America’s evangelicals:

This survey indicates that average evangelicals are deeply concerned about the moral health of the nation. Numerous observers have connected this concern to increased evangelical Protestant participation in politics. But this survey also suggests that evangelicals are as concerned about what happens in their own homes as they are about what happens in the U.S. House of Representatives. Evangelicals are seeking to change the moral climate both in the public and the private spheres.

Faced with a culture they see as debased and debasing, evangelical parents are devoting more attention to their families. One way they are doing this is by monitoring the media their children encounter. This survey, for instance, indicates that evangelical parents are more likely than other parents to prevent their children from watching objectionable shows (76% versus 54%) and playing violent video games (61% versus 47%).

Evangelicals are also investing more time and attention to parenting than many American parents. In my research, I find similarly high patterns of parental oversight and involvement among evangelicals when it comes to curfews, youth activities such as the Boy Scouts, and one-on-one activities such as reading to one’s children.

As this survey indicates, a clear majority of evangelical parents believe that too many children in the U.S. are not learning the right values. By focusing on their families, they are trying to ensure that their children acquire the values they worry other children don’t have.

W. Bradford Wilcox is an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Virginia and the author of SOFT PATRIARCHS, NEW MEN: HOW CHRISTIANITY SHAPES FATHERS AND HUSBANDS (University of Chicago Press, 2004).

William Romanowski Extended Interview

Read more from Jeff Sheler’s interview with William Romanowski, professor of communication arts and sciences at Calvin College:

On evangelicals and mainstream culture:

Evangelicals came to believe that the paramount, if not sometimes the only thing that distinguishes Christian popular art from mainstream products is what I call its confessional content. It has to make an explicit statement of faith. …

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On popular music:

For evangelicals the lyrics are really important. The music doesn’t matter at all. Contemporary Christian music employs a myriad of musical styles: country, rap, rock, whatever, as long as the lyrics are specifically about Jesus, about faith in God. So in many ways they use popular music styles as just a vehicle of evangelism. And evangelism is really key to understanding evangelical popular culture. A product has to be about the business of bringing people into the faith. That gives us a lot of insights, I think, into the dynamics and tensions that exist in evangelical popular culture.

On singer Amy Grant and crossing over:

When she began to cross over into the mainstream market, that raised questions: Are confessional lyrics really what evangelical music is all about? And so when Amy Grant began to sing songs that were not explicitly religious, her fans just went ballistic. They were very critical of her, saw her as selling out. In one sense, if it’s the rule for Christian music that the lyrics have to be explicitly religious, then to do other things is selling out. In another sense, you can also argue that Amy Grant was beginning to transcend or get beyond what was a pretty limited idea of what Christian popular art ought to be.

On relating to mainstream popular culture:

Evangelicals engage mainstream popular culture on their own terms. … Much evangelical criticism of mainstream culture is along the lines of sex, profanity, and violence, and I would suggest that that is the order of priority. There’s not a lot of concern with aesthetic features or how a film might communicate a particular worldview. Nor would I say there’s much interest in features like depth of character, consistency of story, or things like that. They are more concerned about the very specific moral vision that is in a film. Sometimes I would think they promote things that are not necessarily consistent with a biblical vision. Most contemporary Christian music is generally seen as mediocre in many respects in terms of mainstream. There is no contemporary Christian artist on the lines of a Bruce Springsteen, for example. Is it all bad? No. A lot of it, because it’s so explicit and so intent upon communicating a message, turns it into religious propaganda. It seems to me that the best popular artworks don’t say something as much as they display it; they don’t tell you something, they show it to you. Cultural values, beliefs, ideals, and assumptions are really woven into characterizations and into story lines, and in that way they communicate a worldview. But simply to say what it is is more sermonic, and in that sense it doesn’t make as good art as the kinds of things we see happening in the mainstream culture. Here’s an example. A critic wrote about … the LEFT BEHIND film an immediate disclaimer: “This is not to denigrate the religious beliefs that inform the film LEFT BEHIND, but to talk about the hilariously bad manner in which they are communicated.” I think the critic is getting at something there. It’s not that you cannot bring a religious perspective into media productions. But how do you do that? Do you do in terms of consistency of story, depth of character, dialogue that sounds real? I think a lot of evangelical popular art has not been so interested in that as in making sure there is a clear presentation of the gospel there. In that sense it becomes religious propaganda and not so much really talking about art and being nuanced.

On the impact of crossover:

Contemporary Christian musician executives wanted to reach that 46 percent of Americans that went to church regularly, but only 10 percent of them shopped in Christian book and record stores, which is where Amy Grant and other contemporary Christian music artists primarily sold their records. It was really trying to expand their audience among churchgoers. But in the midst of the crossover, you have Amy Grant on the one hand trying to get beyond just dealing with religious themes to talk about other areas of life. But when she did that, she ends up writing just wholesome love songs. How does that affect mainstream culture? It alerted mainstream culture that there is a family market out there. …

Popular art reflects the culture that it helps to create. In many respects, by having evangelical artists in the media producing records, television programs, motion pictures that are very specifically about a religious group, that says to people out there sitting in the seats, “I exist. I see myself in the media.” I think it has created a greater awareness among evangelicals of themselves as a community, and probably has alerted mainstream producers that here is a particular community that can be exploited for commercial purposes. So all the major gospel record companies in the early 1990s were bought by media conglomerates. They became just one part of the huge entertainment conglomerates, aimed specifically at that evangelical market.

On megachurches:

There is a connection historically between contemporary Christian music and the megachurch movement. By bringing contemporary music into the worship service, it also brought all the cultural baggage that comes along with it. So contemporary Christian music, even though it might have grown out of purposes like evangelism and worship, gets used in an entertainment setting. Conversely, it brings that entertainment setting into the church. A lot of critics ask, has worship become entertainment? It professionalizes worship in a certain sense.

On popular culture and personal morality:

Contemporary Christian musicians see themselves as ministers. In many regards, then, they are treated as a minister. They are held to a certain kind of moral standard. There was a lot of uproar with the divorces of Sandy Patty and Amy Grant in the contemporary Christian music industry. People make them idols in many respects and perhaps put them on a pedestal and hold them up higher than they ought to. Evangelicals are very concerned about personal morality. Amy Grant could be making spectacular music, but if they don’t think that her life is right with God, evangelical listeners will not buy her records. In fact, there were radio stations that [said] they would not play her records or stores that would not stock them. So your personal life can have a significant impact on the business side of it as well.

On maintaining boundaries:

I advocate cultural engagement, but I’m not advocating cultural accommodation. I’m advocating going in with a Christian perspective and looking and thinking about things along those lines. The kind of evaluation I might talk about in popular art is not simply its confessional appearance, or does it have religious imagery or ministers, or are people praying in it. But what is the underlying vision, the cultural landscape that informs this work of art, and how might Christians think about that? I see it more as entering into a cultural dialogue, where people talk about different visions of life that are manifested in television programs, films, etc.

On media hostility:

I think the mainstream media is most interested in profit making, and if they think they can make money off religious groups, then I think they will make money off religious groups. Are they particularly hostile? Sometimes they are. Sometimes I think people in mainstream media don’t understand Christian values and how people in religious communities think. And because of that, they just don’t know how to deal with them. A lot of times they don’t think of religion as significant in life, and so they don’t cover it as well. It’s more complicated than that. But there are different perspectives at work. …

On THE PURPOSE-DRIVEN LIFE:

That book probably got at a key question for evangelicals, and that is if you believe that Christ is the Lord of all of life, then how am I to be faithful as a Christian in all of life? How can I be faithful in terms of business, in how I think about education, politics, popular arts? How do I apply faith to everything I do?

On movies:

Writers talk about Hollywood being the place where Satan has his throne, and movies were part of the worldly amusements that many Christians just simply boycotted. Church denominations did not allow their members to go to those. So evangelicals got into filmmaking later. But the same sort of tensions exist. … How do you reach the broad market with a very particular religious message, especially one meant to be forthright and explicit? That’s difficult to do, and I think that shows a weakness in the evangelical model for popular art. Popular artworks tend to affirm what people already believe rather than get them to think about new ideas; not that it can’t do that, but most people go to a motion picture and leave wanting to be affirmed in their view of life. When popular artworks got outside of that evangelical subculture, they had a hard time finding an audience in mainstream culture. That remains the case with films today. Some films like LEFT BEHIND and THE OMEGA CODE have been successful in the evangelical market but have not done well in the general theatrical release. A lot of evangelical filmmakers struggle with that tension, how to reach a broad audience. But at the same time, some way or another, their work has to have some explicit religious content in order to be Christian. That’s a tension they are working to overcome.

On THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST:

Here’s a film by a major filmmaker dealing with Christ’s Passion, an explicit religious film that would have great appeal among evangelical Christians. The Gibson film might identify that religious market, but the question is, for what? For more specific religious films. So we are going to get THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD again and again and again. And if history is any marker on this, we will have a couple films that might do incredibly well, but most of them will not be very successful. It’s like riding a wave. I’m more interested in developing a kind of tradition seeing Christians as an interpretive community that looks at popular artworks from a matter of a faith perspective, and looks at them along those lines having some respect for other faith perspectives. If you want to do films and music that’s evangelistic for other people, you should be open to them doing evangelism with you. … I’m arguing more about cultural dialogue, where people can examine an artwork for what it says about life, about human beings and their relationship to God and the world and particular issues, and how might we think about those issues from a Christian perspective.

On evangelicals in mainstream culture:

They exist in a hostile world and are defending their faith, particularly in personal kinds of ways, but at the same time they want control of that culture. They want their values to be the supreme ones. Largely, evangelicals’ popular art is not having a major impact on mainstream culture. … In their model of using popular art to express very specific religious convictions, I don’t think you see that taking root in the mainstream popular culture. In fact, I think you see the opposite happening. When evangelical artists get into that mainstream culture, they have to figure out ways to tell stories that are not explicitly religious. How do you do that? I’m suggesting rather than being sermonic about it, that you weave that vision into storytelling, into characterizations, into lyrics, and into musical style. Evangelicals need a better concept of art. For evangelicals, when it comes to popular art, faith is the issue; it’s all about expressing faith. I would suggest they use faith more as the context for doing popular art. You use views of human beings, for example, that are more ambiguous: that people are both good and evil and how you work through that, or trying to understand how we see God at work in our lives — telling stories that would explore those kind of things, as opposed to personifying God or making God into what one writer called some kind of magical outside assistance that gives self-reliant people a little boost along the way. I would suggest trying to really think about how we would work a Christian faith vision into a kind of cultural landscape that would inform storytelling, that would produce a whole different kind of Christian popular art that I think would be more interesting, more dramatic, and also would find a market in the mainstream culture.

Faith and Politics

 

BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: As an evangelical, President Bush has often spoken about trying to do God’s will in the world. We put together a few samples.

President GEORGE W. BUSH: God has planted in every human heart the desire to live in freedom. …

Freedom is the Almighty’s gift. …

God’s gift to every human being. …We understand our special calling. This great republic will lead the cause of freedom. …

It is not carried forward by our power alone. We can trust in that greater power. …

In the loving God behind all of life and all of history. May He guide us now. …

ABERNETHY: Here to talk about the president’s sense of mission are Richard Cizik, vice president of the National Association of Evangelicals, and Robert Franklin, professor of social ethics at Emory University in Atlanta.

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Dr. Franklin, when the president says he is trying to be a messenger of God’s will and speaks about the Almighty — what is the matter with that? Isn’t that what all Christians are supposed to do?

Dr. ROBERT M. FRANKLIN Jr.: (Professor of Social Ethics, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia): Indeed, all Christians should seek to fulfill God’s will, and I believe this president is sincere as he says those words. But, I feel that that language comes frighteningly close to placing the current military conflict in a religious framework. And that, I think, is likely to fuel anti-American and anti-Christian sentiments — certainly in the Muslim world.

ABERNETHY: Richard Cizik, any problem for you?

Reverend RICHARD CIZIK (Vice President, National Association of Evangelicals): Robert, I disagree. I’ve just come back from Morocco, where when we as evangelicals reference God, the Muslims in Morocco said, “We understand you.” The president was simply saying, “I acknowledge a higher power, a higher Father. I go to him.” If he didn’t in these times of war, that’s what would concern me. …

Dr. FRANKLIN: You are only half right …

Rev. CIZIK: … he didn’t pray.

Dr. FRANKLIN: … and, we are not at war with Morocco. We are at war with nations and groups, rather, that I think are exceedingly angry with our nation and its Christian referencing.

ABERNETHY: Richard, this is a pluralistic country …

Rev. CIZIK: Yes.

ABERNETHY: … Christian overwhelmingly, but lots of other religions represented, lots of people of no religion. And many of them get uneasy with the kind of language that the president has used. What do you say to them?

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Rev. CIZIK: Well, to those who don’t share all of his beliefs, I would simply say presidents have always played that role. Lincoln the prophet: “A nation divided [against] itself cannot stand.” FDR: “We have nothing to fear but fear itself.” The CHALLENGER and COLUMBIA explosions. Presidents have played that role of prophets, priests. These are roles presidents play, and we are comfortable as Americans with it. This is the nation with a soul of a church, right, Bob?

Dr. FRANKLIN: Well, I think we need our president at this unusual time in history to be an educator — to educate the American public about how we live with our deeply held religious differences.

Rev. CIZIK: He’s been doing that. He’s been saying this is not a religious war. He has been saying this. This is in no way a religious war.

ABERNETHY: Do you see any conflict or potential conflict between trying to do God’s will and upholding, on the other hand, the Constitution of the United States?

Rev. CIZIK: None whatsoever. I don’t see any conflict. None. Neither did the framers. Now, presidents can’t pursue a sectarian religious agenda, certainly not. But this president isn’t doing that. He’s affirming, in fact, the highest of our ideals. He’s saying, “Let’s address poverty, oppression, famine, disease in Africa, genocide in Sudan, [sex] trafficking.” He talks about our deepest values at the United Nations. That’s incredible.

Dr. FRANKLIN: I agree. He does articulate those ideals quite well. But the problem with the history of the American experiment with our Constitution hasn’t been articulating the ideals. It’s been fulfilling the reality of those.

Rev. CIZIK: Sure, yes.

Dr. FRANKLIN: And the problems with slavery and Jim Crow and so on remind us of the hypocrisy. And I think much of the world is looking on and saying, “Gee, Americans speak a good game, but their actions on the ground betray those high ideals.”

ABERNETHY: Richard, let me ask you about the idea of discernment. Many Christians, many religious people find this a very difficult thing, to be sure that what you think is God’s will really is. Isn’t there a danger that a president, particularly with all his power, could come to believe that something was God’s will when it might not be?

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Rev. CIZIK: That’s absolutely right. Our best of motives can be pursued by actions which are immoral and result in consequences that were never intended. That’s why the president has multiple advisors. That’s why we should pray for him. That’s why the Congress is involved. So the president just doesn’t hear a word from God and take us to war. God help us if that ever happens.

Dr. FRANKLIN: But whenever the president invokes God language as he talks about American foreign policy, I think it would be helpful for him to speak with greater humility and to say, “As we pursue these ideals, we recognize that we could be wrong; we could miss the mark in certain areas, and we do pray for God’s guidance and light.”

Rev. CIZIK: Yes, I for one don’t think the president should be afraid of saying, “Look, I assume as commander in chief for the safety of this nation, its security,” and to those who lost lives on 9/11, I don’t see why the president can’t say, “I’m sorry. I’m sorry it happened.” He won’t.

Dr. FRANKLIN: Good to hear you say that.

Rev. CIZIK: But I think he should be able to.

Dr. FRANKLIN: I concur.

Rev. CIZIK: Why not? It would be cathartic.

ABERNETHY: And quickly, any difference here between the kinds of speech from the civil rights movement, which was very religious, and this now?

Dr. FRANKLIN: I think this is different because it is a president presiding over a religiously diverse nation. And that was a movement that was attempting to fulfill those ideals.

ABERNETHY: Many thanks to Robert Franklin of Emory University in Atlanta and Richard Cizik of the National Association of Evangelicals.