Published on The Weekly Standard (_http://www.weeklystandard.com_ 
(http://www.weeklystandard.com/) )


 
____________________________________
Is the Evangelical Left Fizzling?

Mark Tooley
December 16, 2010 12:00 AM




Over the last several years the old religious right reputedly  has been 
melting down, with younger, more liberal evangelicals in the  ascendency. But 
exit polling from the 2010 midterm election indicate no major  political 
shift among evangelical or Protestant voters. 
According to _CNN's  exit poll_ 
(http://pewforum.org/Politics-and-Elections/Religion-in-the-2010-Election-A-Preliminary-Look.aspx)
 , 77 percent of 
self-described white evangelicals or born again  Christians voted Republican. 
This number is actually higher than the 74 percent  who supported George W. 
Bush’s reelection in 2004, which was considered a high  water mark for 
conservative evangelical activism.  Seventy percent of white  evangelicals and 
born-agains voted Republican in 2008 and 2006. The total white  Protestant vote 
(including members of more liberal mainline denominations) was  69 percent 
Republican this year, compared to 65 percent in 2004 and slightly  less in 
2008 and 2006. Total Protestant and other non-Catholic Christian support  for 
Republicans was 59 percent this year, compared to 57 percent in  2004.   
Jim Wallis has been the most prominent liberal evangelical  touting a 
supposed evangelical shift away from traditional concerns about  abortion and 
same-sex unions and towards environmentalism and more government  welfare.  
Frequently boasting of his ties to the Obama administration,  Wallis was 
euphoric about the 2008 election.  Remaining supportive overall  of Obama, he 
has 
dissented over Afghanistan policy and Obama’s tax cut  compromise with 
Senate Republicans. Wallis’s criticisms of Obama so far have  been rhetorically 
restrained, but his anger at Tea Party activism has been  acerbic. He let 
loose during a recent visit in Great Britain, where he was on a  “Justice Now” 
tour, and where British media described him as a “spiritual  advisor to 
Obama.” 
“We are now controlled by the right-wing media,” _Wallis  explained to the 
British_ 
(http://www.theblaze.com/stories/obamas-spiritual-advisor-in-england-describes-his-epic-battle-with-fox-and-beck-who-da
re-to-think-america-is-best-when-is-an-unjust-society/) , citing “Fox News and 
all the rest.”  The 
 conservative media is “ideological” and insists that “America is best” 
and “the  rest of you don’t even count,” he bewailed. America now regards “
the rich” as  representing “salvation.” And Glenn Beck, whose attacks on 
Wallis’s brand of  “social justice” Christianity have been ongoing, is America
’s “new big  star.”  Wallis complained that Beck weekly accuses him of 
being a  Communist, Marxist, socialist, or Nazi. But what else can be expected, 
in a  country where most are addicted to the “drug” of “consumerism,” 
Wallis observed  while condemning America as an “unjust society.” Most U.S. 
Christians are much  more influenced by “American materialism” and by “
American nationalism,” than by  the Gospel, he further opined, which is why 
they 
are “in decline.”  He also  bemoaned “endless, stupid wars in Afghanistan 
and Iraq.” In an interview with _a  British newspaper_ 
(http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/murdoch-vs-the-president-ndash-fox-accused-of-fait
h-slur-campaign-2143121.html)  Wallis lambasted Fox News as part of a "very 
calculated  attempt" by conservative media to undermine Obama. "The 
Murdoch-Fox News channel  is trying to religiously assassinate Barack Obama," 
he 
claimed, while also  surmising that the Tea Party is racist. 
Although less polemical than Wallis, the once conservative  National 
Association of Evangelicals (NAE) has for several years been moving  left.  
Somewhat oddly, NAE president Leith Anderson, a Minnesota megachurch  pastor, 
announced in a recent _NAE  news release_ 
(http://www.nae.net/news-and-events/525-evangelicals-concur-with-obama-on-multiple-issues)
  that: “President Obama 
has the support of evangelical leaders  on a number of issues and 
initiatives.”   The release cited 18  supposed issues of agreement, including 
support 
for the new START treaty, use of  drones to fight terrorism, and the “
reduction of abortion and emphasis on  fatherhood,” without explaining what 
those 
ostensible stances actually mean.  “Not surprisingly, immigration was the 
most mentioned item of agreement,”  boasted Anderson, who has made support 
for comprehensive immigration reform  probably NAE’s most high profile issue 
of late.  Remarkably, the retired  executive director of the Christian 
Reformed Church of North America was quoted  supporting Obamacare: “The bill 
that 
was passed may not be perfect, and the task  may not yet be done, but the 
President has my support for addressing a critical  issue against significant 
political opposition.” 
NAE conducted an “Evangelical Leaders Survey” of its own  board, in which 
respondents were restrictively asked to “name one issue on which  they agree 
with President Obama.” The survey was apparently not interested in  any 
disagreement. “In the current political climate, many focus their energy on  
fueling issues of disagreement – people of faith included,” Anderson said. 
"But,  I find it really interesting that evangelical leaders readily look for 
where we  can agree and support." Suggesting that most evangelicals support 
Obamacare  seems absurd. Its provision facilitating abortions is certainly 
not supported by  evangelicals, and was even, quietly, opposed by NAE. 
Several NAE officials have  touted New START, but it is hardly a widely 
mobilizing 
issue among among  evangelicals. The recent election results indicate that 
evangelicals, unlike the  NAE poll of itself, probably are not overly 
inclined to search for political  agreement with the administration. 
Exit polls of actual voting by evangelicals indicate that the  evangelical 
left remains primarily a phenomenon among evangelical elites on  seminary 
and college campuses and among some parachurch and activist groups. The  
prolonged wars, culture clashes, and ultimate financial collapse during the  
George W. Bush years undoubtedly moved some evangelical elites and young people 
 
to the left. But the ongoing recession, explosion of government spending, 
and  liberal stances on abortion and homosexuality by the Obama 
administration (the  NAE quietly opposes revoking “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”), 
along with 
the  president's discomfort with American exceptionalism, have likely 
solidified  grassroots evangelicals overall within their traditional 
conservative 
politics.  Like left-leaning mainline Protestant elites starting decades 
ago, evangelical  elites increasingly will probably denounce their own 
constituency for its lack  of political enlightenment.

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