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Never a Religious Reason to Choose a Candidate

October 29, 2008 by James Hipps · Leave a Comment 

From Newsweek.WashingtonPost.com:

As we all know, part of the right-wing revolution in this country was the consolidation of the religious vote. That, in turn, depended on convincing churchgoers that they should vote their faith in the first place. The very notion of knowing who God backs in the race is laughable, but it became no laughing matter when the schism between red and blue states elevated splinter groups, including hard-line evangelicals, into the driver’s seat. As swing voters, the religious right discovered new and ever more unlikely rationales for seizing power. The basic argument of “God is on our side” was dubious enough, but it was stretched to extreme lengths: God is against Roe v. Wade, God demands that our children pray in school, God condemns homosexuals to hell. It would have been more truthful simply to label themselves as the intolerance faction.

Read the rest by clicking here.

Evangelicals and Politics: Rewriting the Political Bible

August 19, 2008 by James Hipps · Leave a Comment 

Anyone who still doubts that the evangelical Christian world is going through a political revolution was not watching Pastor Rick Warren’s presidential forum over the weekend. The era of reducing Christianity to a narrow set of ideological commitments is over.

Just a few years back, who would have imagined that Barack Obama and John McCain would hold a discussion of this sort in a church? Who would have thought that the session would be moderated by an evangelical pastor who was emphatic in counting both the Democrat and the Republican as his “friends”? Who would have predicted that in such a setting, the issues of abortion and gay marriage would not dominate the pastor’s queries?

Oh yes, and who would have anticipated that the passions of the pastor in question would be engaged not in the divisions created by the culture wars but in the imperative of civility in politics and the plight of the world’s 148 million orphans? Here’s betting that the next president will help those orphans find homes.

The notion that Christianity in general and evangelicalism in particular are by nature right-wing creeds has always been wrong. How can a faith built around a commitment to the poor and the vulnerable be seen as leading ineluctably to conservative political conclusions?

Read more at heraldnews.com.

Republicans Jump Ship - Want Separation of Church & State

July 21, 2008 by James Hipps · Leave a Comment 

Over the past few months, I have told several local non-religious Republicans that I can’t support the party, including one of the delegates to the state convention. Read why at seculargovernment.us.

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