REACHING TO THE CHOIR
THINK ALL EVANGELICALS ARE RIGHT-WINGERS? 
DON'T BELIEVE EVERYTHING YOU READ. 
JUST AS MANY ARE POLITICALLY MODERATE. 
CAN DEMOCRATS WIN THEIR VOTES? 
GOD ONLY KNOWS; IT'S WORTH A TRY.

By Ayelish McGarvey
The American Prospect
 Issue of April, 2004

In early February (2004), 60 minutes' Morley Safer portrayed white 
evangelical Christians as the carnies of American Protestantism. 
Nine million viewers tuned in and saw shots of vast "megachurch" 
congregations swaying hypnotically and raising their hands in song. 
Tacky cinematic renderings of a fiery Armageddon added some dramatic 
tension. The slick ringmaster of these goings-on, of course, was the 
Reverend Tim LaHaye, the famous apocalyptic entrepreneur and co-
author of the wildly popular Left Behind novels. (The series depicts 
the end of the world as prophesized in the Book of Revelation.) 
Safer eventually turned his attention to Washington, where he 
declared that "evangelical . . . beliefs have already reshaped 
American politics." As the visages of George W. Bush, Tom DeLay, and 
John Ashcroft flitted across the screen, the message was clear: The 
Republican Party has God on its side.  [1] 

Except that this year, a considerable group of evangelicals just 
might swing the vote -- in favor of the Democrats. 

Meet the "freestyle evangelicals." Compelled by evangelicalism's 
conservative theology but averse to the right wing's intolerance and 
lack of charity toward the poor, they occupy a curious political 
middle ground. Every four years they independently evaluate the 
state of the union through the lens of a Jesus-centered faith. But 
their concerns extend beyond the conservative morality issues of 
abortion and gay marriage to progressive matters of social justice, 
America's role in the world, and care for the environment. The 
sociologist Stephen Hart describes Christian faith as comprising a 
set of elemental moral "building blocks" that believers "assemble" 
in countless combinations to construct their social ethics. 
Freestyle evangelicals have neither an exclusively Democratic 
nor Republican worldview; they say they often find themselves in the 
tiresome position of electing officials who will do the least amount 
of damage rather than the most good. As one believer told the 
Prospect, "I am a political moderate, not despite my theological 
conservatism but because of it." 

The Bush presidency's extremism has left many moderate believers 
looking to the Democrats. Jim Wallis is a progressive evangelical 
and editor of Sojourners magazine. In a December New York Times op-
ed, he challenged Democratic presidential contenders to charge 
fearlessly onto the moral high ground. "How a candidate deals with 
poverty is a religious issue, and the Bush administration's failure 
to support poor working families should be named as a religious 
failure," he wrote. "Neglect of the environment is a religious 
issue. Fighting pre-emptive wars based on false claims is a 
religious issue. 

"True faith results in a compassionate concern for those on the 
margins. . . . Allowing the right to decide what is a religious 
issue would be both a moral and political tragedy." [2]

Jonathan Eastvold, 26, is a lifelong Republican and conservative 
Christian who attended Wheaton College, the premier evangelical 
institution in the country and alma mater of the Reverend Billy 
Graham. Eastvold voted for Bush in 2000 but became an avid supporter 
of Wesley Clark during the Democratic primaries. "The more I've 
thought about politics, the more discontent I've become with the 
facile [relationship] between theological conservatism and political 
conservatism," he wrote on the Christians for Clark blog. "[I]n 
fact, [I] spend most of my time discovering that a consistent 
reading of the Bible leaves me at odds with the GOP establishment -- 
whether we are talking about policies toward the poor, the 
environment, foreign policy, or even -- perish the thought in light 
of the last decade of GOP rhetoric -- presidential character." 

His posting received enthusiastic "amens" from other Christians fed 
up with the Bush presidency. "Anyone who really reads the New 
Testament ... knows . . . that Jesus' teachings are more in accord 
with LIBERALS social justice views!" exclaimed one. 

Freestyle evangelicals -- the term was recently coined by Steven 
Waldman, editor of the interfaith Web site Beliefnet -- defy the 
conventional wisdom about fundamentalist Christians. They are mostly 
white suburbanites in the South, Midwest, and Northwest. Many attend 
nondenominational megachurches, and their children go to public 
schools. They number between 8 million and 10 million and comprise 
30 percent to 40 percent of the total evangelical vote -- roughly 
the same number as the most hypertraditional evangelicals, the core 
of the Christian right. 

The freestyles helped usher Jimmy Carter into office in 1976 and 
gave Bill Clinton 55 percent of their vote in both 1992 and 1996. 
But four years ago, dissatisfied with a party marred by presidential 
scandal, they changed course and voted for George W. Bush by a 10-
point margin. "This amounted to a shift of almost a million 
votes. . . . [M]ore important, it was concentrated in key states 
such as Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia, Arkansas, and Florida," 
wrote John Green, a political scientist and the director of the 
Bliss Institute at the University of Akron. 

Bush campaigned as a moderate with a "compassionate conservative" 
agenda that attracted Christian voters who firmly believe in the 
transformative effects of religious conversion. And like Clinton and 
Carter before him, Bush effortlessly laced his remarks with the 
parlance of the born-again: During an early presidential debate in 
Iowa, for example, he famously named Jesus as his favorite political 
philosopher, adding, "When you accept Christ as the savior, it 
changes your heart, it changes your life." Call that spiritual red 
meat for the party faithful. 

But this election year, many freestyle evangelicals' votes are up 
for grabs. This bloc lacks the fervor of traditionalists like Pat 
Robertson or Jerry Falwell; indeed, most of its members are offended 
by the dogmatic and self-righteous antics of leaders of the 
religious right. These believers might be concerned about gay 
marriage and abortion, but they will not be found picketing outside 
the Supreme Court anytime soon. 

Neither are freestyle evangelicals wilting lilies, abandoning their 
faith in the face of an aggressively secular mainstream culture. 
Rather, their beliefs require that they show tolerance and respect 
in a diverse society. Christian Smith is a professor and associate 
chair of sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel 
Hill and the author of Christian America? What Evangelicals Really 
Want. He explained it this way in his book: "[Many evangelicals 
believe] Jesus' teachings assumed that his followers would always be 
a minority surrounded by a plurality of nonbelievers, whom they 
should not try to dominate, but should love 
and serve for God's sake." [3]

Evangelical Christianity is a mighty force in the personal lives of 
nearly 25 percent of Americans today. While mainline Protestant 
denominations continue to shrink, evangelical churches are 
flourishing, thanks in part to members' high birthrates and 
successes at passing the faith on to their children. Contrary to 
secular conventional wisdom, evangelicalism is highly 
individualistic: Over and above all else, such Christians 
believe in a converting, transformative, and deeply personal 
relationship with a living Jesus Christ. Theirs is an abiding faith 
in the resurrected Christ as their lord and savior; only through him 
is eternal salvation achieved. Most evangelicals read the Bible as 
the inerrant and inspired word of God, trusting that all spiritual 
truth is found within its pages. And they believe that their faith 
calls them to lives of service, especially through evangelism -- 
spreading the gospel, that is -- 
and mission work. But that is about where the commonalities end. 

Secular liberals have long misunderstood the kaleidoscopic diversity 
of American evangelicalism, thereby granting polarizing figures like 
Falwell, LaHaye, and James Dobson, the founder of Focus on the 
Family, too much credit as spokesmen. The media do no better, 
commonly lumping all conservative Protestants together under the 
banner of the religious right. This often pejorative labeling blurs 
the lines between distinct -- and sometimes competing -- religious 
movements such as charismatic Christianity, Pentecostalism, and 
fundamentalism. Further, Smith's research reveals that nearly 70 
percent of conservative Christians do not even identify with or 
support the Christian right. But news stories like the 
one on 60 Minutes perpetuate the idea of an evangelical monolith 
hungry for political power and marked by intolerance and anti-
intellectualism. Ergo, it is not surprising that many Democratic 
politicians do their best to distance themselves from the very 
word "evangelical." 

But they should be studying the nuances, because the potential for 
Democratic votes there is, in fact, strong. The only two Democratic 
presidents of the past 35 years, Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, were 
both intimately familiar with evangelicalism. And both, Carter 
especially, infused political issues with a strong dose of moral 
imperative rooted in religious faith. Some of the most powerful 
movements in the progressive tradition -- those promoting abolition, 
child-labor laws, and civil rights -- were fueled by religious zeal. 
Yet today's liberalism operates in an almost entirely secular sphere 
of influence. "Just as there are religious fundamentalists with too 
much sway in the Republican Party, there are secular fundamentalists 
who have way too much influence in the Democratic Party," says Jim 
Wallis, himself a registered Democrat. "If Martin Luther King kept 
his faith to himself, where would we be today?" 

Jeffrey Johnson, 28, may be typical of the kind of conservative 
religious voter who is gravitating toward the Democratic side for 
2004. He grew up in west Texas, not far from President Bush's 
hometown of Midland. Like his parents and grandparents, Johnson is 
an evangelical Christian.But unlike the rest of his staunchly 
Republican family, he will be casting a ballot against Bush this 
year as a matter of conscience. 

After college at Baylor University, Johnson headed for Princeton, 
where he is working toward a doctorate in classics and the ancient 
world. On campus, he meets monthly with other Christian 
intellectuals who engage and encourage one another with discussion, 
prayer, and reading. At home, he and his wife often host a diverse 
group of students for meals and conversation. Last year, more than 
30 people packed into his tiny two-bedroom apartment to celebrate 
Thanksgiving. Johnson's Christian faith weaves its way through all 
facets of his life. "Ideally, it conditions my every waking 
thought," he explains. 

Johnson voted for Bush in 2000, believing in the rhetoric of 
compassionate conservatism. He is also firmly opposed to abortion, 
and feared that a Supreme Court vacancy under a Democratic president 
would be disastrous for the abortion-rights agenda. Johnson doubted 
Bush's intellectual heft, but he respected the candidate's 
professions of religious faith and seemingly moderate politics. How 
does he feel about Bush today? "In every instance where I credited 
him with farsighted change and good ideas," Johnson says, "he has 
turned out to be precisely the opposite of what I had in mind." 

As a Christian, Johnson believes that people must work to protect 
God's creation; his faith requires that he care for his neighbor and 
leave this world in better shape than when he entered it. This ethos 
of stewardship affects Johnson's decisions in the voting booth as 
well: He is furious about the Bush administration's rejection of the 
Kyoto Protocol to address global warming; he feels that Bush's tax 
cuts are extremely irresponsible, and shift a crushing burden onto 
those who can least afford it; and he firmly opposed the Iraq War 
from the get-go, faulting the president for disregarding the rest of 
the global community and waging war prematurely on false grounds. 

Back home in Texas, Johnson's family can hardly believe this 
ideological volte-face. Hoping to change the young man's mind, 
Johnson's grandfather mailed him a copy of David Horowitz's 
conservative bildungsroman, Left Illusions: An Intellectual Odyssey. 
It saddens Johnson that his family believes his new, mostly secular 
environment has somehow brainwashed him into "becoming a hardcore 
communist." That's because ultimately, their shared religious faith 
requires the entire Johnson family to live under the complete 
authority of the Bible. "It sounds paradoxical, but 
holding [the Scriptures as the inspired word of God] -- often 
considered a more theologically conservative position -- can land 
one in pretty progressive political territory," Johnson 
explains. "What do we do with verses that talk about God's concern 
for the poor, the oppressed, orphans, widows, and the [immigrants] 
in our midst? Do we just ignore these?" 

One person who doesn't think so is former president Jimmy Carter. A 
born-again Christian and an evangelical himself, Carter is arguably 
one of the most religious presidents in recent history; he still 
teaches a Sunday school class at his Baptist church in Plains, 
Georgia. In a recent phone interview, he laid out a scathing 
criticism of the Bush domestic agenda. 

"Christ was committed to compassion for the most destitute, poor, 
needy, and forgotten people in our society," he says. "Today, most 
of the people strongly committed to the Republican philosophy have 
adopted the proposition that help for the rich is the best way to 
help even poor people by letting some of the financial benefits drip 
down to those most deeply in need. [T]he ultra-right wing, in both 
religion and politics, has abandoned that principle of Jesus 
Christ's ministry." 

Echoing the sentiments of many other moderate believers, Carter also 
expressed grave concern over the Bush administration's foreign-
policy agenda. 

"[W]hat do Christians stand for, based exclusively on the words and 
actions of Jesus Christ?" he asked rhetorically. "We worship him as 
a prince of peace ... . Therein we should not resort to war as a way 
to exalt the president as the commander in chief. [Today] it seems 
as though it is an attractive thing in Washington to resort to war 
in the very early stage of resolving an altercation -- a completely 
unnecessary war that President Bush decided to launch against the 
Iraqis is an example of that." 

The fundamentalist Christian Zionist movement is especially vexing 
to Carter. Conservative evangelicals like House Majority Leader Tom 
DeLay offer unilateral support to Israel based on the New Testament 
prophecy that the reconstruction of the ancient kingdom of David 
will usher in the "end times" and the Second Coming of Christ. 
Carter summarily dismissed this cause, tersely calling it "a 
completely foolish and erroneous interpretation of the Scriptures." 

"And," he went on, "it has resulted in these last few years with a 
terrible, very costly, and bloody deterioration in the relationship 
between Israel and its neighbor. . . . [T]his administration, maybe 
strongly influenced by ill-advised theologians of the extreme 
religious right, has pretty well abandoned any real effort that 
could lead to a resolution of the problems between Israel and the 
Palestinians." 

Overall, Carter expresses exactly the arguments that could win 
Democrats the moderate evangelical vote -- provided they make the 
case. He 
believes that religious voters who aren't of the Christian right 
will reject Bush on both his preemptive war and his policies toward 
the poor. "Those are the two principal things in the practical sense 
that starkly separate the ultra-right Christian community from the 
rest of the Christian world," Carter says. "Do we endorse and 
support peace, and support the alleviation of suffering among the 
poor and the outcast?" 

Late in 2001, Karl Rove dropped by the American Enterprise Institute 
to share his thoughts on the Bush presidency and electoral strategy 
with a friendly audience. Benefiting from hindsight, Rove lamented 
that the Bush campaign had failed to rally all corners of the party 
faithful, particularly some 4 million white evangelicals, 
fundamentalists, and Pentecostals who stayed home on election 
day. "[Y]et they are obviously part of our base," he declared. 

But that might be an overstatement. Judging from the editorial pages 
of newspapers in battleground states like Florida and West Virginia, 
Rove could be taking a little too much for granted. In early 
January, an editorial headlined "How Would Jesus Vote?" in West 
Virginia's flagship newspaper, the Charleston Gazette, sharply 
contrasted the actions of the Bush administration with the 
beatitudes from the Sermon on the Mount. The writer summed it up, 
noting, "[A] glaring contradiction exists: Everything that Jesus 
stood for seems opposed by Republicans now in control of 
Washington ... . Why on earth do so many churchgoers vote for the 
opposite of Jesus?"  [4]

Florida's Palm Beach Post ran a story in October 2002 
headlined "We're Christians and We're Not Stupid." The story 
profiled an evangelical woman who resented media caricatures of 
Christianity, saying, "I live a radical Christian life. I take my 
Bible seriously, and I believe in turning the other cheek." Defying 
the conventional wisdom about evangelicals, she went on to declare 
her support and love for her homosexual neighbors. "God tells us to 
love one another," she said simply. [5] 

And in late January, editorial columnist William McKenzie wrote in 
The Dallas Morning News, a newspaper that wends its way into the 
First Bedroom each morning, "Administration Neocons Elbow 
Evangelicals Aside," a piece that exposed the culture (socially 
liberal, centered in Washington and New York) and motivations (the 
establishment of an American empire) of the powerful 
neoconservatives lurking behind cow-eyed evangelicals in the 
Republican Party. "The way those two sides relate affects 
whether your son or daughter goes to war, whether peace gets struck 
in the Mideast, and how the war against terrorism gets run," wrote 
McKenzie. "At this point, the neocons are winning, hands down."  [6] 

The Bush re-election team has finally decided that a victory in 2004 
will be born out of the energy of a newly ignited conservative base. 
Bush's support for a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage 
sends an unmistakable message to conservative Christians, 
saying, "We haven't forgotten about you -- now do your part." But 
that strategy is bound to backfire among moderate believers. 

Many freestyle evangelicals privately disapprove of homosexuality, 
but they wince at the shrill, anti-gay posturing of the hard right. 
Tony Campolo is a progressive evangelical pastor and former 
professor of sociology at Eastern University, outside 
Philadelphia. "[Homosexual] behavior is not able to be reconciled 
with the teachings of Scripture, particularly the first chapter of 
Romans," he says. "[But it] was not on Jesus' top 10 list of sins." 
He continues: "What was No. 1 on the list? Religious people who go 
around creating hardships for everybody [with] 
their legalism." 

The one issue that still tethers many moderate evangelicals to the 
Republican Party is abortion. The GOP uses abortion as "a political 
football," as Jim Wallis puts it, while the Democrats' inflexibility 
on abortion is the single issue blocking many freestyle evangelicals 
from joining the party ranks. "The Democrats should at least have an 
open tent where people could be pro-life Catholics, for instance, 
and still be Democrats," Wallis argues. "Pro-life and pro-choice 
voters could unite together in a real effort to reduce teen 
pregnancy, reform the adoption process, and offer alternatives to 
women backed into difficult and dangerous choices." 

Of course, the Democrats are hardly on the cusp of making such a 
dramatic change. It might not hurt them much this year, when many 
freestyle evangelicals are, in the words of one believer, "voting 
against Bush rather than for a Democrat." But what about 2008 and 
beyond? Can the Democratic umbrella widen just enough to cover 
freestyle evangelicals after November? Will secular liberals ever be 
willing to stand shoulder to shoulder with "Jesus people" who aren't 
afraid to talk about their faith? 

After Jonathan Eastvold's preferred candidate, Wesley Clark, dropped 
out of the presidential race, he contacted the Kerry campaign to 
inquire about starting up a "Christians for Kerry" forum on the 
senator's Web site. Although he was unsure whether he would support 
Kerry, he hoped to correspond with other undecided believers in the 
lead-up to the election. The campaign Web site already hosted many 
other interest groups, such as "Firefighters for Kerry" 
and "Students for Kerry." Eastvold was politely informed that if he 
wanted to open up a Yahoo.com Web group, he would be welcome to do 
so -- but he was not invited to join the official campaign Web site. 
[7] 

In addition to being ideological associations, political parties are 
cultural amalgams. Open, unembarrassed professions of religiosity 
haven't been part of the Democratic Party's culture for some time 
now. One might say this is particularly true of white Protestant 
evangelicals; the Democratic Party is the home of many mainline 
Protestants, the vast majority of black evangelicals, many 
Catholics, and most Jews, but white evangelicals have long been 
considered GOP turf. The party won't change 
overnight. But the extremist ideology of this administration -- 
clearly antithetical to virtually everything Jesus Christ stood for -
- has created an opening among religious voters who are a much more 
diverse lot than the 60 Minutes segment let on. The Democrats can 
win some votes, redefine the role that religion plays in American 
public life, and neutralize one of the right wing's great wedge 
issues -- if they choose to pursue it.

Copyright � 2004 by The American Prospect, Inc. 

http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?
section=root&name=ViewPrint&articleId=7373 

[1] --  February 8, 2004 CBS's 60 Minutes -- 
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/02/05/60minutes/main598218.shtml 
-- GDD 

[2] --  Jim Wallis's New York Times op-ed article -- 
http://www.calltorenewal.org/news_room/index.cfm/action/god_politics.
html-- GDD 

[3] -- )  Information re Christian America? What Evangelicals Really 
Want -- http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?inkey=1-0520220412-6 --
 GDD 

[4] --  Easier to get to than The Charleston Gazette -- 
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/opinion/7740071.htm?1c -- GDD 

[5] --  Palm Beach Post article -- 
http://www.cwg.org/inspire/inspirenews/10-11-2002-1.html -- GDD 

[6] --  DMNews article-- 
http://www.dallasnews.com/s/dws/dn/opinion/columnists/wmckenzie/stori
es/012704dnedimckenzie.b76e3.html-- 
GDD

[7] --  There is a "Catholics for Kerry." Two of 'em -- 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/catholicsforkerry/ and 
http://www.catholicsforkerry04.org.  Public Christian has 
a "Christians for Kerry" page -- 
http://www.publicchristian.com/govtpolitics/chr4kerry.shtml . And 
there is a "Jews for Kerry" site that does not seem to have been 
active lately -- http://jewsforkerry.blogspot.com/ Yes, there is 
a "Muslims for Kerry" site -- http://www.muslimsforkerry.com/-- GDD 








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