8  
No GOP monopoly on God 
November 9, 2004  
BY _JESSE JACKSON_ (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])       Advertisement 
Did God vote Republican? You'd think so if you listen to some  of the 
evangelical supporters of George Bush.  
Regular churchgoers voted dramatically Republican in the election. Twenty  
percent of the voters identified "morals" as their major concern and voted  
overwhelmingly for George Bush (whereas those who named the economy and jobs or 
 
Iraq as their lead concerns voted 3 to 1 for John Kerry). 8  
Bush charged Kerry, a practicing Catholic, with representing Hollywood  
values. Many voters believed in Bush because he had straightened himself out by 
 
taking Jesus into his life, and because he uses the imagery and language of  
evangelicals through his speeches. Democrats, Republican operatives charged, 
are  
simply divorced from the values of mainstream, religious America.  
But Republicans have no monopoly on religion or on faith. And Republican  
policies often seem divorced from the teachings of the Bible. The Bible tells 
us  
we will be measured by how we treat the least of these. But under this  
president, poverty -- including childhood poverty -- is up. Poor children grow  
with inadequate nutrition, no health insurance, no preschool. Bush's policies 
of  
top-end tax cuts and cuts in support for the poor only make things worse.  
Jesus was born in a manger, not in a mansion. He had a manger-up view of the  
world, not a mansion-down view. Jesus taught that a rich man was as likely to 
 get into the kingdom as a camel through the eye of a needle. This was not  
exactly a widespread sentiment at the Republican convention.  
He urged his followers to beware of worldly goods, to simplify their lives  
and follow him. He instructed them to serve the poor, not neglect them. Jesus  
taught us to love every child, to rise above the divisions of race or tribe or 
 religion. When the men gathered to stone a prostitute, he challenged them. 
Who  amongst you, he asked, can throw the first stone? He asked us to stand 
with the  weak, the ill, the stranger in a foreign land. The politics of 
division 
 practiced in the last election, the appeals to our fear of the other, 
contrast  starkly with those teachings.  
Nor does Bush's rollback of environmental regulations reflect well. The Bible 
 teaches that nature is God's creation. We are as stewards to the bounty that 
God  has created. We should be working to preserve it, not rolling back 
regulations  to poison our air, neglect our seas and turn a blind eye to a 
global 
warming.  
Finally, Jesus was a man of peace. He came as the Messiah when people were  
expecting and praying for a mighty warrior who would deliver them from their  
oppressors. Instead, God brought them a baby in the manger. Jesus taught the  
power of love, hope and charity -- not of weapons. He delivered them by  
sacrificing himself that they may be free. His teachings are far removed from  
George Bush's "war of choice" in Iraq, the euphemism used to describe an  
aggressive war on a country that posed no threat to us.  
The pope has harshly criticized a war that the U.N. Secretary General Kofi  
Annan has called illegal.  
Democrats, particularly those like Kerry who serve in the Senate a long time, 
 do fall into the trap often of talking about plans and programs, not right 
and  wrong. They talk policy, not values. Not surprising, the Democrats who 
have  fared well politically -- Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton -- have been raised 
in 
the  church and are comfortable with the teachings of the Bible. Americans 
sensibly  want their leaders to have a strong moral grounding as they meet the 
challenges  yet to come.  
But God is not a political animal. The Bible tells us to tell a tree by the  
fruit it bears, not the bark it wears. Christ warns against hypocrisy -- the  
public display of faith without a true heart or without deeds of faith.  
Conservatives now suggest that God is on the side of Republicans at home and  
America abroad. That Bush is right to suggest that he has a mission from above  
in 
the war on terror. This gets the equation exactly wrong. It isn't a question  
of whether God is on America's side. The question is whether America is on 
God's  side.  
As war rages in Iraq and children go hungry in the richest nation on earth,  
the question should sober the political operatives who see God as a political  
weapon rather than an abiding guide.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
$9.95 domain names from Yahoo!. Register anything.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/J8kdrA/y20IAA/yQLSAA/XgSolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

     -----
    / o o \
===OO=====OO=============================================
(4)Portals (2)News Wikis (2)Conferences - No BuSHIT!
Start here: http://pnews.org/ (On Internet since 1982)
http://pnews.org/PhpWiki/ (West Coast News Wiki)
http://g0lem.net/PhpWiki/ (East Coast News Wiki)
=========================================================
 FIGHT THE RIGHT!
==================
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rhetoric-list/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to