The  following article really nails the issue of religion as the media sees 
 it.
Succinct  and objective reporting.
 
What  is especially noteworthy is David French's pointing out that the  Left
generally  and journalists in particular cannot "get" religion because  they
are  ideologically incapable of any such thing. For them, as for  Marx,
religion  is social superstructure, it has no essence besides the fact
that  it expresses economic grievances. All of religion reduces to
dollars  and cents, or much the same thing, it is all illusion,
there  is no there, there, for anyone to "get."
 
This  raises an important question because, for sure, sometimes  religion
does  act as a mask for other matters, including avarice, secret  desire
for  wealth or status, hence TV preachers who will send you a
"prayer  cloth" or some water that comes from a spring that has been
"blessed"   -no cost, but  please send a generous donation to keep
this  ministry working to further the word of God.
 
There  is (can be) a seedy side of religion. We need to address this  issue
and  we seldom do so. But to reduce all questions of faith to  hidden
economic  motivation is absurd. After all, among non-economic  motivators
surely  psychological factors are in play, so are cultural factors,
social  factors like language, and public values. And, needless to  say,
millions  if not billions of people witness to the spiritual effects  that
faith  has in their lives  -which  is then expressed in ways  that
may  cost people money, that may diminish their status,
but  that they regard as necessary because higher values
tell  them what is really right or wrong.
 
 
Billy  R.
 
 
=============================================
 
 
 
 
National   Review

 
 
If You Don't 'Get' Religion, You Can't 
'Get' America or the world  


by  DAVID FRENCH December 14, 2016 
 
Why is so much media coverage of religion so dumb? 
 
Honesty  is a wonderful thing. Last week, during an interview with Terry 
Gross, New York  Times executive editor Dean Baquet made a welcome confession: 
I  want to make sure that we are much more creative about beats out in the 
country  so that we understand that anger and disconnectedness that people 
feel. And I  think I use religion as an example because I was raised Catholic 
in New Orleans.  I think that the New York–based, and Washington-based too, 
probably, media  powerhouses don’t quite get religion. We have a fabulous 
religion writer, but  she’s all alone. We don’t get religion. We don’t get 
the role of religion in  people’s lives. And I think we can do much, much 
better. And I think there are  things that we can be more creative about to 
understand the country.


Baquet  is right. If you don’t “get” religion, you can’t understand our 
country or the  world. And yet, reporters and pundits too often cover 
religion badly, if at all.  The original sin of religion reporting is the 
failure 
to believe what religious  people say. There’s always an “other” reason for 
their actions. In much coverage  of American Christianity, this mindset is 
obvious: You believe that God ordained  marriage as the union of a man and a 
woman? Well, that’s just bigotry in search  of a belief system, religion 
wielded as a club against the marginalized. Our  nation has consistently 
misunderstood the challenge posed by jihadist terror,  too, in part because our 
secular leaders and reporters often don’t believe  jihadists mean what they 
say. Too many in the mainstream press believe jihadists  are mainly motivated 
by resentment of colonialism, or by anger over the Iraq  war, or by American 
support for Israel, rather than by the deep and ancient  desire to spread 
fundamentalist Islam across the entire world. The second sin of  religion 
reporting is believing that ideological inconsistency and moral  failings 
expose the bankruptcy of religious reasoning or the illegitimacy of  religious 
identification. 
 
A  fundamental tenet of the Christian faith is the notion of “original sin,”
 or  man’s fallen nature. We all sin. We all fall short of the glory of 
God. That’s  not hypocrisy, but humanity. The presence of sin isn’t proof that 
a person  doesn’t really believe; it’s simply proof that a person has 
failed, as people  do. Yes, there are some who don’t truly believe and exploit 
believers for  profit, but that’s a small minority. Even the great, failed 
televangelists of  the past, men such as Jimmy Swaggart and Jim Bakker, weren’
t closet atheists but  believers corrupted (as many believers are) by the 
notion that their  self-interests advanced God’s kingdom. In the world of 
jihad, sin and failure  can make a man more dangerous. Jihadist ranks are 
filled 
with drug and porn  addicts, men who live lives very different from the 
media stereotype of the  devout holy warrior. But while they visit prostitutes 
and frequent strip clubs,  they also retain a belief that they can still 
inherit paradise in one glorious  act of martyrdom. Indeed, their hedonism can 
empower their jihadism. Jihad is  their only way to glory.



Then  there’s the third sin: the belief that a good Google search or a 
quick Wikipedia  read transforms a reporter into a theologian. Few things are 
more  irritating  than the argument that, “If you really believed the Bible 
then  you’d . . . ” followed by a theological interpretation of  such 
profound stupidity that you’d be embarrassed for the reporter if he or she  had 
an 
ounce of shame. Finally, in spite of the enormous diversity of human  
experience, there are still those (even in the ranks of reporters and pundits)  
who believe that all religions basically teach the same things. Experience 
with  Evangelicals and jihadists most clearly shows the distinctions. 
Evangelicals  represent one of America’s most generous and charitable 
communities. 
But for  Mormons, they’d be the most generous.
 
Christians  follow a God who gave his life on a cross. Jihadists follow a 
warlord, and  they’re generous mainly with the sword. A reporter doesn’t 
have to be religious  to “get” religion. I’ve known atheists who understand 
Christians quite well. But  in my experience, secular reporters are 
selectively credulous. They’ll accept at  face value a secular activist’s 
motivations 
and question their sincerity only  when presented with evidence of 
opportunism. But when it comes time to extend  the same charity to a Christian, 
they 
either can’t or won’t discard their  skepticism that he truly believes the 
tenets of a faith that they find to be  repressive nonsense.


In  the 2016 election, white Evangelicals voted overwhelmingly for Trump. 
While some  Evangelical leaders were certainly corrupted to a degree by the 
pursuit of power  and their hatred for Hillary Clinton, the vast majority 
voted for Trump because  they saw the Democratic party standing squarely in 
opposition to their deepest  beliefs. Evangelicals may have been a cheap date, 
but at least Trump wanted them  in his car. The wisdom of this reasoning can 
and should be debated. The concerns  that motivated so many Evangelicals to 
adopt it, however, were entirely real and  entirely warranted. This is why 
the culture war — and the war against violent  jihad — will never go away. 
If an individual perceives that his most important  and sacred beliefs are 
at stake, he simply will not relent. Surrender is not an  option when the 
human soul hangs in the balance

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