Politics and Religion: ; Republican Presidential Campaign Blasphemous Charleston Gazette, The 10/08/2004
Webster defines blasphemy as "profane or contemptuous speech, writing, or action concerning God or anything held as divine."
Blasphemy is running rampant in our country as this election campaign proceeds, trivializing holy things as it moves on. The latest instance of it was the distribution by the Republican National Committee, in West Virginia and Arkansas, of a brochure with a picture of a Bible with the word "banned" across it, and another with the hands of two men with a wedding ring with the word "allowed" across it.
The implication is that the election of Sen. John Kerry would lead to the banning of the Bible and the approval of same-sex marriage. Those who distributed the brochure know that the claim is not true and not possible. The first amendment to the U.S. Constitution would not allow it, and Sen. Kerry's election would not lead to it. The brochure is not only insulting to the intelligence of West Virginians, targeted to the stereotype of Appalachians as "dumb hillbillies," it is blasphemous; it is profane and contemptuous writing concerning God and the Bible.
Clergy usually do not take public, partisan positions in an election. I have never before done so in more than 50 years of ministry as a pastor and a bishop. But in this election, the use of false teaching concerning scripture and the Christian faith by a political campaign demands response from religious leaders.
It is now widely believed that, of course, nearly all persons of religious faith will vote for President Bush. That "conventional wisdom" has originated in the Republican Party and been advanced by an uncritical media. The claim is not correct, and the statistics supporting it have been distorted and oversimplified. The "religious right" is not the only voice of religious faith in this country!
The issues on which the religious right has focused in this campaign are almost solely abortion and same-sex marriage. While those are important issues that need and deserve discussion, they are not the only, or even the primary, issues to which the Bible is relevant. On the other issues in the campaign, the president's policies are not in accord with Biblical teaching, or with the teaching of his own church.
The media has made much of the fact that Sen. Kerry's position on abortion contradicts the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church and, as a result, some bishops may deny him the Eucharist. Why does the media not investigate whether or not President Bush's policies are consistent with the teachings of his church, the United Methodist Church? Such an investigation would reveal that the president's policies are contrary to the Social Principles of his church (official church teaching), and to the broad consensus of ecumenical church teaching on many significant issues. I will name only three:
* War and Peace: The Social Principles of the United Methodist Church, and the dominant position among the churches of the world is that war is always a last resort. Pre-emptive war, now official U.S. government policy, can never be justified by church doctrine.
* Care of the environment, or "stewardship of creation": According to Genesis, the human was made responsible for the creation "to till it and to keep it." In violation of the Social Principles of the president's church, the policies of the administration have rolled back legislation protecting the environment that has been in force for many years under presidents of both parties, and our government has refused to sign international treaties on global warming and other threats to the environment.
* Concern for the poor: Jesus, quoting the prophet Isaiah, said "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he has sent me to bring good news to the poor." The teaching of the president's church seeks fulfillment of that promise to "bring good news to the poor." However, these last years have seen a dramatic increase in the number of persons living in poverty in the United States and millions have been added to the number without health care. The gap between the wealthy and the middle class and poor has increased each year under the policies of the government.
Not only are the policies of this government in conflict with scripture and the teachings of the president's church, but President Bush has been unwilling to listen to the counsel of religious leaders unless he knows in advance that they agree with him. Being open to other points of view within the Christian community is one of the marks of mature Christian life. The bishops of the president's church repeatedly and unsuccessfully have sought a meeting with the president. He is only the second president since Washington who has refused to have a discussion with Methodist bishops.
In the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, the National Council of Churches sent small delegations of Catholic, Orthodox and Protestant leaders to meet with the leaders of Great Britain, France, Germany, Russia, the Vatican and the United States of America. In nearly all of those visits, the delegation met with the head of state. Of those governments, only the president of the United States and his administration refused to receive a delegation.
I do not question President Bush's personal faith. But he has not studied the scriptures in relation to issues of justice and peace, or else he has ignored those teachings. The result is that he has allowed his religious beliefs, dominated by his political ideology, to make him absolutely certain that he is right, and unwilling to listen to other voices.
He is slow to admit a mistake because he believes his decisions are just and righteous. The dogged determination and staying on message that some so admire is self-righteous and very dangerous. It casts the current struggle against terrorism in "holy war" terms, as a conflict between absolute good on one side and absolute evil on the other, the same perspective held by the terrorists. The issues are between good and evil. The methods of the terrorists are evil. But it is very dangerous for us to see ourselves as totally righteous.
A mature understanding of scripture could help the president avoid the arrogance and hubris that have so offended the rest of the world. And in such a situation, to exploit, distort and manipulate religion for political advantage is blasphemous. It is to trivialize the holy for self-serving purpose.
Religious talk can be very cheap. Jesus said, "Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my father in heaven." What is the will of "my father in heaven"? That is a huge question. The president and his campaign would do well to reflect on that question, and to avoid the tendency to believe that they already know the answers. They also might consult with others who have studied the question who might have a different point of view. And meanwhile, they should be careful to avoid the sin of blasphemy.
Grove, a former West Virginia United Methodist bishop, lives in Charleston.
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