By Mark Tooley on 7.10.06 @ 12:06AM
Democrats like Hillary, Barack Obama, and Howie Dean gather to pray at the altar of no tax cuts for the rich.
WASHINGTON -- Religious left activist Jim Wallis (author of the
best-selling Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn't
Get It) threw a party in Washington, D.C. and many liberal
politicians came. Hillary Clinton was there, as were Howard Dean
and Barack Obama. Marian Wright Edelman waxed poetic about "the
children."
"Pentecost 2006" was the Wallis convocation, a joint affair last month of his
Sojourners magazine and "Call to Renewal" political
organizing arm. Pentecost, of course, is when the Holy Ghost fell
upon the New Testament church in Jerusalem.
But there was no speaking in tongues at Wallis's Pentecost.
Instead there was a lot of tongue wagging, mostly at Republicans.
"Poverty is NOT a Family Value" was the theme.
Like most religious left outfits, Wallis's groups want to
disengage churchgoers from concerns about abortion and
homosexuality and refocus them on poverty and the environment.
Wallis, the old Students for a Democratic Society hell-raiser from
the 1960s, has tempered his rhetoric. But he still looks to the
federal welfare and regulatory state as the source of secular
salvation.
Wallis's soul must have been stirred by Howard Dean's nostalgic
call for a return to the 1960s. "We're about to enter into the
'60s again," Dean enthused, "Into the age of enlightenment, led by
religious figures who want to greet Americans with a moral,
uplifting vision."
Unfortunately, the Bush regime, like the old Eisenhower
dictatorship, is blocking the immediate path.
"We're here [today], back in the '50s in the McCarthy era," Dean
complained, "In the time when there wasn't [sic] civil rights, at a
time when there was an authoritarian government that felt they
deserved everything and that nobody needed to know anything."
Dean was savvy enough to issue some words of warning about
reliving his generation's golden days "The problem is, when we hit
that '60s spot again, which I'm optimistic we're about to hit, we
have to make sure we don't make the same mistakes." He evidently
was referring to some of the failed dreams of the "Great
Society."
"When I heard the hallelujahs," Dean told the liberal religious
activists, "I know I am at home, finally, [with] a group of people
that want to praise the Lord and help their brothers and sisters."
It is doubtful that Dean ever heard any such shouts at his stodgy
Vermont Congregationalist church.
Dean shared hope for America as a "moral nation," with national
health care, an increased minimum wage, and a protected estate tax.
"The folks in this church are ones who live their faith through
works -- that is the mark of a real Christian," he assured his
audience.
DEAN, AS FAMOUSLY REPORTED DURING his 2004 presidential bid,
switched from his Episcopal to a Congregationalist Church in a
dispute over a bike trail. Hillary Clinton, the lifelong Methodist,
seems to take her denominational commitment more seriously. Jim Wallis enthusiastically
introduced her as "someone who quotes Matthew 25 often, and she
quotes it right!" By this reference, of course, Wallis meant that
Clinton rightly understands Christ's supposed commands about
enlarging federal welfare programs.
"I missed the Sunday school lesson about how we help the poor by
giving tax cuts to the rich," Clinton observed sarcastically. "The
budget is a moral document!" Clinton insisted, repeating an old
religious left refrain. "Behind those numbers are decisions. How
are we going to give a boost up the economic ladder when too many
tools have been removed to make that happen."
Like others at the Wallis event, Clinton warned against the
seductive allure of the religious right. "Don't let people get away
with nice words," she implored. "Don't let them quote scripture to
you."
Clinton's colleague Barack Obama also warned the sheep to be
wary of the false shepherds. "We are tired of seeing faith used as
a tactic," the senator from Illinois lamented. But Obama also
expressed more comfort with religion as a guiding moral force than
many on the left.
"More people believe in angels than evolution," Obama admitted
about Americans. "Not every mention of God in public is a violation
of church and state," he asserted, citing the appropriateness of
voluntary school prayer and the "under God" in the Pledge of
Allegiance. "We need Christians, Jews, and Muslims on Capitol Hill
to make objections for morality," Obama enthused, citing the faith
that guided Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King, Jr. They
recognized that "law is a codification of morality."
But Obama also warned, "Whatever we once were, we are not a
Christian nation." He wondered, "Besides, even if we expelled all
non-Christians from America, whose Christianity would we teach in
the schools?" Likewise, Obama worried about religionists who make
political arguments based exclusively on their faith rather than
reason. "This is difficult for some who believe in the inerrancy of
the Bible as many Evangelicals do," Obama said. "To base our policy
on such commitments would be dangerous."
JIM WALLIS GAVE OBAMA the "Joseph Award," named after the biblical
patriarch. But the "Amos Award" was reserved for Marian Wright
Edelman, for her Old Testament style prophetic witness as the
matriarch of the Children's Defense Fund, which sees the federal
government as the only reliable parent for children everywhere.
With her usual gusto, Edelman ploughed into Republicans for perpetuating war
at the expense of "the children." "You see how quickly they
[Congress] can go to war," she complained. "They [Congress] can
find billions to give tax cuts to millionaires." Edelman demanded:
"No more budget cuts for the poor and tax cuts for the rich." She
called for prompt action by Congress in expanding the federal
programs she favors: "We need to do this NOW!"
Supposedly quoting anti-Nazi martyr Diedrich Bonhoeffer, Edelman
declared: "You can judge a nation by its treatment of children."
(The actual quote from Bonhoeffer appears to have been: "The moral
test of a nation is how it educates its children.") America under
the Republicans, of course, is failing that test. She wants
socialized medicine, more gun control, and a "National Disaster
Policy" to care for all affected by hurricanes, earthquakes,
etc.
More bizarrely, Edelman adopted the persona of abolitionist
Sojourner Truth and began to speak in an attempted slave accent.
Ostensibly the old escaped slave woman spoke of social problems as
"weasels." Channeling the spirit of the Underground Railroad's most
celebrated conductor, Edelman named today's "big weasels" that are,
she believes, embedded in the U.S. Constitution. These
constitutional weasels include the "Special Interest Weasel," the
"Greedy Military Weasel," the "Robin Hood in Reverse Weasel," and
the "Only Right Way to God Weasel."
As Edelman explained, the "Special Interest Weasel" robs poor
children of government funding. The "Greedy Military Weasel" steals
from the hungry by demanding money for arms. The "Robin Hood in
Reverse Weasel" justifies taking from the poor to give to the
rich.
In her description of the "Only Right Way to God Weasel,"
Edelman claimed, without further explanation, that the Constitution
has permitted religious conservatives to control American
religion.
"God sent the angel to Mary, Joseph, and Muhammad," Edelman
declared as a rebuttal to these religious exclusionists. "We are
all God's children."
Edelman did not explain how the Constitution should prohibit
conservative Christians and others from making exclusive truth
claims about their religion. Nor did she explain which
schizophrenic "angel" was visiting both the parents of Jesus and
the Prophet Muhammad.
But Edelman was an appropriate icon for Jim Wallis' "Pentecost
2006," in which it is not the Holy Ghost but big government who
visits the church of liberal religion, for which politics and not
religious dogma are the most important guideposts.
topics:
Health Care, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Religion, Abortion, Environment, Constitution, Law, Military, NATO