Archive for the ‘Abortion Reduction’ Category

Petitioning Brownback

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

For those of you who have missed this storm, Sen. Sam Brownback’s signature is on a fundraising letter directly questioning the authenticity of the faith of six of his fellow Senators as well as that of Speaker Pelosi. This is a new low in the Christian Right’s politicking — while such an accusation has often been implied, one Senator directly challenging the faith of his fellow colleagues for the purpose of raising funds for an outside group is a low that I hope is not replicated anytime soon.

Sen. Brownback’s office is not surprisingly backing off of the statements and has asked that the group quit using his signature. Catholic Advocate, the group whose fundraising letter has set off the whole firestorm, is refusing to back down and claims the language was properly approved by the Senator’s office.

Faithful America and Catholics United are running a petition drive to ask Sen. Brownback to clarify his statements to those who have received the letter and for Catholic Advocate to donate the funds raised off of this letter to be given to charity. I encourage you all to sign it here.

UPDATE: Faithful America is reporting that 3000+ and counting have so far called for accountability from Sen. Brownback.

The Traditionalist Awakening

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

In the media narrative, often progressive Christian political stances equates with liberal or non-orthodox theology. While that is undoubtedly sometimes true, the flip side, that somehow traditional, orthodox Christian faith is at odds with progressive political values, is a troublesome part of the political media narrative.

In view of this, I came across a real gem looking over John C. Green’s piece in First Things breaking down religious voters between the 2004 presidential race and the 2008 presidential race. The data split the White Catholic vote into three categories: modernist, centrist, and traditionalist. In what is not a major surprise, Obama slightly underperformed Kerry amongst the modernist and centrist Catholics — after all, Kerry himself fell somewhere in those two categories. Obama’s modernist vote dropped from Kerry’s level of 74 to 66, and his centrist vote from 41 to 34.

Here is where it gets interesting though: Among the White traditionalist Catholics, Obama had a 17 point gain over Kerry, jumping from Kerry’s 22 points to 39. Just as interesting, that also means that Obama did better in the traditionalist vote than the centrist vote.

Confused? Well, according to religion and politics CW you should be. That is not supposed to happen.

I think there could be a number of factors at play here. One that is less exciting but deserves mention is that Kerry’s abortion views may have received more play and done more damage to him among the traditionalists precisely because he was Catholic. However, a lot more than an intra-Catholic backlash is at play here. A 17 point swing like that means that something serious is afoot here.

John Greene noticed the same jump, and suggests a main factor was the deepening unpopularity of the Iraq War, which the Vatican has always been critical of. I agree, but I think this “traditionalist awakening” owes itself to two broader dual movements.

First, this shift follows the re-prioritizing of social justice in the Catholic dialogue. This includes anti-war sentiment, but it also means the renewed focus on economic justice and health care rights in an election where the economy and health care were front and center.

Second, this shift was made possible due to the subduing of the culture wars. These traditionalists are staunchly pro-life, yet 39% voted for Obama. How is this possible? One reason is that, as mentioned above, in the rising tide of other social justice areas, abortion lost its right to its one-issue pedestal. The other reason, however, is that Obama, unlike Kerry, actually reached out across this battle line to push for abortion reduction programs.

For all those critics of abortion reduction from the Left (most vocal amongst them perhaps Street Prophets’ pastordan), this is why abortion reduction matters from a political standpoint (which is not even to bring up the issue’s obvious moral and policy importance). To bring in these traditionalist votes, Obama did not need to agree with them on abortion; he just had to make it an issue they could move beyond. Once that bridge was built, many traditionalists noticed that the political grass did look greener on the other side.

And this is the real finding: Theologically “traditionalist” need not equal politically “conservative.” If this traditionalist awakening could be cultivated over the next few years and widened to the Protestant circles, the implications for the political landscape could be seismic.

After the jump I posted the full polling data chart.

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A Look Back

Monday, February 16th, 2009

I always find it insightful when dealing with social movements today to take a look back at the historical beginnings of these social movements. Over time issues that arose as fluid constructions eventually solidify and become dogmatized. New social coalitions that powered change naturally over time splinter and then re-group. Failure to understand these historical movements up to the present is to fail to really understand any social movement as it currently stands.

In seeking the elusive end (or at least subduing) of the “culture wars,” one needs to look back to the 70’s to remember when the Christian Right really arose in all its (non-)glory. Abortion is one (if not THE) issue that deserves a close look. Our President is pro-choice. Yet his administration has made it clear that abortion reduction is one of his agenda items. Some have wondered whether it is possible for elements of the pro-life movement to lay down its ideological arms to join a pro-choice administration to embrace constructive societal progress on this front.

The numbers tell us it can. About a quarter of Obama’s vote came from pro-lifers, and about a third of his young vote identified themselves as pro-life.

And a look at history tells us it can too. The extreme polarization of this issue was never an inevitability. There is an interesting piece up today on the historical beginnings of the modern pro-life movement. It is worth a look through (FYI: it is written from a decidedly pro-choice angle). Here’s a snippet:

Few Texas Baptists were more influential during the 1970s and 1980s than Foy Valentine. A graduate of Baylor University and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, he served as director of the Christian Life Commission for Southern Baptists from 1968 to 1980. During his tenure, he pushed the denomination toward a liberal stance on issues of race and poverty and opposed Farwell’s near-exclusive focus on opposing abortion rights. From his perch of leadership in the national convention, Valentine articulated an alternative Christian vision of reproductive issues.

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Progressive & Religious – New Book Documents the Emerging Movement

Friday, February 13th, 2009

I wanted to be sure to flag for everyone in the Matthew 25 community my recent book, Progressive & Religious: How Christian, Jewish, Muslim, and Buddhist Leaders are Moving Beyond the Culture Wars and Transforming American Public Life (List: $22.95, Now: $16.47 on Amazon). I interviewed Matthew 25 co-founder Mara Vanderslice while doing research for the book, and it captures the voices of so many religious leaders who are working, as the Matthew 25 mission statement says, to support a new kind of politics “that supports the common good and justice for the least of these.”

On the book’s companion website, I’ve also included podcasts with religious leaders such as Rev. Jim Forbes, Rabbi David Saperstein, Rev. Dr. Susan Thistlethwaite, Eboo Patel, and others.

Here’s what some others have had to say about the book. I would welcome comments about the book here in this community.

Praise for Progressive & Religious:

“Robert P. Jones understands that progressive faith is not simply a ‘left’ alternative to the Religious Right, but a bringing together of religious belief and practice with progressive politics…. Progressive & Religious convincingly shows how people of many different faiths are creating an authentic social vision for a pluralistic America. I commend this book to all who are seeking to join their faith and politics in working for a better world.”—Rev. Jim Wallis, Sojourners, author of The Great Awakening

“Robert P. Jones is one of the most searching, thoughtful and practical thinkers in the revival of religiously-rooted progressivism, and his book is a great blessing for that cause and for the country. Anyone—left, right or center—who wants a guide to this new movement would do well to spend time with this book.” —E. J. Dionne, Jr., Washington Post, author of Souled Out

“This instructive book should be in front of every newspaper journalist and every spiritual progressive. Sensitive to theological as well as political concerns, Progressive & Religious is a valuable introduction to the contemporary struggle for a progressive spiritual transformation of the world that is taking place in most of the world’s religions.” —Rabbi Michael Lerner, Tikkun Magazine, The Network of Spiritual Progressives, author of The Left Hand of God

“An illuminating road map to religious re-discovery in contemporary America. With a marriage of journalistic enthusiasm and intellectual rigor, Robert P. Jones skips among the tensions that mar intra-religious relations in our society, smashing erroneous preconceptions and championing a renaissance in the way we look at faith. The result is a thorough examination of religion in modernity that highlights the progressive tendencies shared by all faiths in highly readable form.” —Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, American Society for Muslim Advancement


Quote of the Day…

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

From Amy Sullivan:

“I’m told by a religious leader who will be part of the Council that the president also plans to lay out four priorities for the Council. They will include focusing on global poverty (not surprising), the impact of economic recovery plans on low-income Americans (ditto), the faith-based initiative (OF COURSE), and…abortion reduction.

Now that’s interesting.

Obama hinted at this in the statement that accompanied his order rescinding the Mexico City policy: “It is time we end the politicization of this issue. In the coming weeks, my Administration will initiative a fresh conversation on family planning, working to find areas of common ground to best meet the needs of women and families at home and around the world.” At the time, I heard a lot of scoffing from conservatives who read this as just talk. It seems, however, that the president is ready to move ahead on this issue more quickly than most people on either side expected…”

Bishops who called Obama vote a sin challenged

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

By Jerry Filteau, National Catholic Reporter

At a symposium Jan. 29 on Catholic social teaching and the new Obama administration, Catholic University of America history professor Leslie Woodcock Tentler challenged the recent declarations of some U.S. Catholic bishops who suggested it was sinful for Catholics to vote for Barack Obama.

The effect of episcopal statements focusing on legalized abortion as the nation’s overriding issue, she said, was to reduce U.S public perception of Catholic social teaching to what the church says about sex and to sever Catholic social teaching from the wider political discourse in the nation.

She said she is a lifelong Democrat who firmly believes that “our party is wrong on abortion,” but even if the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade decision is reversed, abortion will almost certainly remain legal in every state, as demonstrated by the successive 2006 and 2008 referendums in South Dakota, where voters twice defeated measures that would have made most abortions illegal.

Continue reading.

Quote of the Day… (from the old Matthew 25 blog)

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Just wanted to be sure this post made it over to the new blog and was still online… these were profoundly wise words when they were written nearly two decades ago, and seem just as sage advice now as then… Sad how little has changed.

“By the time I left the office of the Surgeon General, I had become convinced that both sides of the abortion debate had reached a dead end….Neither side seems to be winning any converts to it’s position. Sometimes I think both sides have forgotten why they are fighting. They care simply about winning. Winning each court case, each legislative battle, each electoral contest, each rally….I wonder if each side has not forgotten the human element that originally prompted the debate: the innocent unborn child, the agonized pregnant woman…

I began to search for a compromise…. I did see the possibility for a practical compromise that would at least lower the number of abortions….Abortion was not the problem. The problem was unwanted pregnancy. If the number of unwanted pregnancies could be reduced, abortion could be reduced. If the number of unwanted pregnancies could be eliminated, abortions could be eliminated. It was as simple as that.

[But] the extremists on both sides, I realized, did not seek compromise; perhaps they did not even seek resolution. They were in it for battle. But there were so many others who were weary of confrontation and who might listen to a better way, who would welcome concentration at the root of the problem….

In the years since the Supreme Court acted, the anti-abortion movement has made a very large tactical error by concentrating on legal and constitutional issues, when the issue is really moral or ethical….as we have seen with alcohol and tobacco, moral suasion can work better than prohibition….

I am enough of a realist to know that the abortion controversy in the United States will never offer an easy or popular solution. I wish no abortions were performed. I think most Americans agree with me on that….Abortions are failures. And for the most part, they are preventable failures. I would like to see both sides of the abortion controversy agree on this: it is one of the few points on which they can agree. And then they could take steps to avoid the failure that raises the issue of abortion.”

– From Dr. C. Everett Koop, Former Surgeon General for the Reagan Administration, written in 1991

Newsweek Catches Pivotal Moment in Abortion Conversation

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Newsweek captures a historic moment in the abortion debate. People, after nearly 30 years, are putting aside their political entrenchments to reach practical solutions to a real problem.

Pro-Lifers In Obamaland
Now that the political climate has changed, will those dedicated to eradicating abortion embrace abortion-reduction strategies instead?

Sister Sharon Dillon has been attending the annual March for Life for 20 years. A pro-life activist since high school, the 50-year-old former director of the Franciscan Federation doesn’t agree with Roe v. Wade—the 1973 Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion. But as strong as her convictions are, she’s also frustrated with the kind of single-minded activism she sees around her: young girls chanting, “hey hey, ho ho, Roe v. Wade has got to go!” “So much time has elapsed since Roe,” says Dillon. “I think among veterans, like me, few if any, think the Supreme Court is going to overturn it.”

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