By Mark Tooley on 7.23.09 @ 6:07AM
Richard Cizik, now in the employ of Ted Turner's UN Foundation,
dutifully advocates for "new" (i.e. liberal) evangelicals.
Across three decades Richard Cizik lobbied for the National
Association of Evangelicals (NAE), tugging the NAE leftward
during his last several years, especially on Global Warming. But
even the often rudderless NAE could not tolerate Cizik's
endorsing same-sex unions on National Public Radio late last
year. After his forced resignation, Cizik joined Ted Turner's
United Nations Foundation to advocate for "new-agenda
evangelicals." Although purportedly transcending predictable
ideologies, "new-agenda" largely seems to mean liberal
politically.
"What I'm in essence doing is creating the future," Cizik
sweepingly announced to the Washington Post religion
blog in April. "I'm attempting to provide a way for the new
evangelicals to be more effective." A more recent piece in the
Post religion blog highlighted Cizik for having "shook
up Conservative Christendom" and his "proclivity for dissent."
Will Cizik ever "dissent" from the hubris of his new employer,
which Ted Turner created and endowed to promote globalism?
In a June video interview on the Post website, Cizik
quite assertively disavowed his more conservative evangelical
past, to the gushing delight of his interviewer.
"Evangelicals became "captive to this unholy alliance in the
Republican party with big business corporate interests and the
rest," Cizik explained about resistance by some to his campaign
for "Creation Care" environmental activism. He opined that he was
"let go" by NAE for his "candor," as though disregarding the
NAE's stance on marriage were a minor issue.
"There's a contest going on for the future of the movement,"
Cizik enthused, clearly seeing himself as the champion for a
supposedly more relevant evangelical public policy message. "It's
not just that I enjoy being divisive as Dr. James Dobson accused
me, [but] …it's that people don't change their views unless
they're challenged, unless there's a dissonance a cognitive
disequilibrium between their highest aspirations which ought to
be for example the Gospel teaching on all these issues, including
care for the earth, and their status quo."
Cizik insisted that his "new-agenda" evangelicals will not become
"toadies" for Democrats as purportedly old agenda evangelicals
became for Republicans. "Challenge all the ideologies on issues
from the environment to torture to war," he urged. "Yes, even the
Iraq War, which evangelicals, younger evangelicals were willing
to say, 'we don't buy this.' And they were right." But Cizik
discerned an "opening' with President Obama for evangelicals. In
contrast, he chastised Republicans for their "denial, denial,
denial" about climate change and "millions upon millions of
Americans that don't have healthcare."
With some validity, Cizik surmised that "younger evangelicals do
believe that civil unions are acceptable" and are reluctant not
to "grant rights to gays lesbians and others like others have."
But rather than viewing that demographic trend as a challenge
needing evangelical response, he seemed to see it as an opening
for politically sidestepping the protection of marriage. "I don't
believe in gay marriage, but do I believe that people are
entitled to equal protection under the law and due process,"
Cizik said. "And thus civil unions, a widely, broadly written
civil union statute that isn't sexually oriented, broadly written
for everybody, might be the best way to protect sex and gender
based marriage."
As part of his gushing, the interviewer, citing Cizik's supposed
"lack of rigidity" and the "fluidity of your theology," asked him
why "younger evangelicals just dig Richard Cizik?" Seemingly
unembarrassed by the flattery, Cizik responded that, excepting
the old rigid-minded, "I'm the future." When further asked if
"new" evangelicals will become like old, more liberal Mainline
Protestants with an evolving theology, Cizik at first hesitated,
but then seemed to agree, at least partly, with his encouraging
interviewer that "absolutely" evangelicals will develop new
interpretations of Scripture.
"That's simply understanding that there isn't a new inspiration
going on here," Cizik explained. "We're not adding a new verse or
book to the Bible, but what we are doing is adding a new mind, a
mind, you see, that's been changed by Christ -- we are challenged
you see by Jesus to change our minds -- in other words, he says,
be transformed." Cizik celebrated that the "division between
evangelicals and the Mainline isn't as great as it once was." And
he professed to be a "bridge-builder, bridging outward to bring
Mainline and evangelical together and when that happens as I know
it will then we won't have the divisions we've had in the past."
Nearly getting the vapors, the interviewer reacted by hailing
Cizik as truly "one of the 100 most influential people in the
United States." Whether Cizik can retain all this supposed sway
over evangelicals, much less the nation, while working for the
secular and left-leaning UN Foundation, whose founding chieftain
is agnostic, seems doubtful. But at least Cizik's new employer
has deeper pockets, and no theological constraints.
Meanwhile, NAE recently has announced that Cizik's successor as
its Washington representative will be Galen Carey, who comes from
the NAE's relief agency, World Relief. Not renowned for political
statements, Carey likely will be low key and less divisive.
Whether he will be sufficiently "new agenda" to satisfy Cizik is
an open question.
topics:
Evangelicals, Richard Cizik