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The Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary - 
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Friday, August 27, 2004

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>>  Can I Take Your Faith, Sir?

When it comes to politics, must Christians check their beliefs at the
door? That question--and a host of others--was debated at a symposium
recently sponsored by the Brookings Institution. Entitled "One
Electorate Under God?," the symposium featured some of the leading names
in American politics and academic life. In the context of a presidential
election year, the symposium was well timed and well executed.

Participants included Gary L. Bauer, a former Reagan administration
official who also served as president of the Family Research Council;
Paul Begala, a Clinton administration official; and sociologists of
religion including Robert Bellah, Andrew Greeley, and Alan Wolfe.

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The centerpiece of the event was an exchange between former New York
governor Mario M. Cuomo and Congressman Mark Souder of Illinois. Cuomo,
a Roman Catholic long identified as a liberal Democrat, and Souder, an
evangelical Christian and a conservative Republican, offered an honest
and energetic exchange of arguments on the symposium's central question:
How should religious convictions impact public policy?

Mario Cuomo has addressed these issues before, most famously in an
address delivered at the University of Notre Dame while he was still New
York's governor. In that address, Cuomo argued that, as a Roman
Catholic, he was obligated to a set of personal commitments concerning
church teachings, but he insisted that he was not obligated to bring
those teachings to his administration and public life. In other words,
Cuomo insisted that he must oppose abortion as a practicing Roman
Catholic, but he simultaneously insisted that he was not obligated to
oppose abortion as New York governor.

In his Brookings Institution address, Cuomo insisted that religious
convictions could indeed be brought into public debates and could
determine the outcome of public policy, but only when those convictions
are a matter of universal agreement. As he told his audience, a
politician would have the right "to argue that his or her religious
belief would serve well as an article of universal public morality," but
the belief could not be "narrowly sectarian." Instead, it must instead
fulfill "a universal human desire for order or peace or justice or
kindness or love or all of those things--values most of us agree are
desirable, even apart from their specific religious priority."

Thus, Cuomo pointed to the existence of a natural law "derived from
human nature and human reason without the benefit of revelation or a
willing suspension of disbelief." Describing this law, Cuomo argued that
it "would occur to us if we were only 500,000 people on an island
without books, without education, without rabbis or priests or history,
and we had to figure out who and what we were." Extending his argument,
the former governor suggested that two basic principles derived from
natural law should be understood by all. The first is the unique human
ability to communicate with each other, and the second is "that we
should use our abilities to make the place as useful and as good as we
can make it."

As respondent John Green was later to make clear, Cuomo was espousing a
form of universalism. What Mario Cuomo rejects is the use of particular
religious convictions drawn from particular religions.

Cuomo reduces the moral framework he draws from the natural law to this:
"We need to love one another, to come together to create a good society,
and to use that mutuality discreetly in order to gain the benefits of
community without sacrificing individual freedom and responsibility."

Offering an example from his personal experience, Cuomo pointed to his
well known opposition to the death penalty. In this case, he argued that
his position is based on public rationality rather than religious
conviction, or even questions of morality. "My reasons are perfectly
appropriate in this pluralist society. The question is, What is good for
us, what is fair, what is reasonable? What works, what does not work?"

Using the death penalty as his example, Cuomo actually set a trap for
his own intellectual inconsistency. Claiming to base his rejection of
the death penalty on a universal framework drawn from the natural law,
Cuomo fails to acknowledge that this framework offers no true consensus
about what is good, what is fair, what is reasonable, what works, or
what does not work. In order to provide answers to those questions,
Cuomo must go beyond the natural law into his own personal convictions,
secular or otherwise.

Congressman Mark Souder was quick to reject Cuomo's dualism of public
and private spheres. Acknowledging disagreement among Christians over
some critical questions of public policy, Souder pointed to an
underlying consensus about the moral accountability. "Conservative
faiths, even sects within these faiths, differ on how involved the City
of God should be with the City of Man. But this much is true:
conservative Christians as individuals do not separate their lives into
a private sphere and a public sphere."

Demonstrating both courage and intellectual clarity, the congressman
pointed at the inconsistencies required by current standards of
political correctness. As he told the audience, he is never criticized
for bringing Christian arguments to bear as he works to preserve the
national parks. "I find that I am allowed to use these Christian values
in speaking out for national parks and in speaking out against spouse
abuse, but not when I speak out against homosexual marriage,
pornography, abortion, gambling, or evolution across species. Then, it
seems, I am supposed to check my religious beliefs at the public door.
In other words, some moral views seem to be okay in the public arena,
but other moral views, no matter how deeply held, are not okay."

In pointing to this inconsistency, Souder has performed a genuine public
service. Furthermore, he now forces the secular opposition to be more
honest about the real ground of its opposition. Secularists are not
concerned about religious convictions that serve their own purposes or
function in matters of common agreement. What they really oppose are
Christian arguments that would restrict sexual behavior and would
impinge upon the "lifestyle" issues at the heart of postmodern culture.

As an evangelical Christian, Souder rejects the theory of evolution.
This rejection becomes a matter of vital importance when set alongside
the reality that the secularist worldview assumes an evolving standard
of morality. Souder's central concern, however, was that liberals reduce
the debate over evolution to a simple matter of "science" versus
"religion." Souder rejected this overly simplistic and unfair
generalization. These debates, he insisted, "are about differing
scientific viewpoints, anchored in differing views of how the world came
to be." Continuing, he asserted: "It is not a science versus religion
debate, and it is unfair to describe it that way. It's unfair to claim
that other people's views are based on religion and therefore do not
belong in the arena of public debate."

Actually, Souder could have taken his argument to the next step, arguing
that the debate over evolution is really a matter of religion versus
religion. For many on the left, evolution functions as a religious
conviction, a central matter of faith essential to their worldview. It
is not merely a secular principle of rational discourse, nor merely an
explanatory theory of the universe and its origins--it is the very
foundation of the worldview that establishes morality, meaning, and
order in the cosmos.

In order to explain his position, Souder went back to the distinction
between universalist and particularist faiths. "What is evident from
this dialogue, whether respondents are considered conservatives or
liberals in the political world, and regardless of religious background,
is that they were overwhelmingly universalist. They believe the debate
in the public arena should be consensus-driven because consensus can be
achieved. Furthermore, almost all did not understand that they were
actually advocating a religious view representing, at most, half of
America. Universalists often intimidate, mock, and at the very least,
condescend to particularists. Universalists assume and assert that
education, science and reason back their positions."

Furthermore, the secular elite is so distant from the Christian
convictions of mainstream America that they assume all references to
personal piety are extreme, if not dangerous. Souder explained at the
Brookings Institution symposium that "faith is relying upon God's spirit
for direction." Nevertheless, "If I were to say, 'I was reading the
Bible this morning and prayed to Jesus about my concerns and He revealed
to me through the Holy Spirit how to proceed'--my lands, you're likely
to worry that I have a poisonous snake in the crowd here that I'm about
to pass around." Quickly getting to the point, Souder added, "No wonder
a gulf is appearing between an increasingly religious minority and an
establishment opinion in this nation. And, just for the record, we
[Christian conservatives] do read books."

What question should the Christian politician ask himself as he
contemplates public policy? Souder suggested this question: "To the best
of my limited ability to understand, what do I believe Jesus would have
me, as a humble sinner, do?" Souder was right to insist that the
universalist/particularist divide constitutes a major ground of
opposition and conflict. Nevertheless, it is the personal versus public
divide that constitutes the real fault line in this debate. So far as
Mario Cuomo is concerned, Christian conviction is a matter of personal
conviction, but not public policy. Mark Souder insists that he cannot be
a Christian in one arena, and not in the other.

Mark Souder wins the debate on this one--hands down. While believing
Christians may disagree even with each other about specifics of public
policy issues, we must never accept a division between the personal and
the public that silences Christian conviction in the public square. The
"One Electorate Under God?" project will soon be released in book form.
The Brookings Institution symposium is a good place to start a
discussion over these contentious but unavoidable issues, but it is no
place to stop. The outcome of this debate reaches to the very heart of
what it means to be an American, and it will determine the future shape
of the American experiment.

____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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