The point has been made by outstanding thinkers like Stephen
Carter and Richard John Neuhaus that the New York-Washington,
D.C. establishment eats up left wing religion and declares it
delicious. Give a radical a cross and we have activists
bravely "speaking truth to power" and "speaking prophetically."
Put the cross in the hands of a conservative and suddenly
secularism is the better course and church and state must be
rigorously separated lest theocracy loom every closer.
I tried to draw attention to this double standard in my new book
The End of Secularism by talking about both history and
current events which prove the point. Mollie Ziegler
Hemingway provided an excellent example in her Houses of Worship
column for the Wall Street Journal last Friday as she
reminded readers about the way faith-based initiatives have been
viewed in this administration and its predecessor.
Bush filled the faith-based initiatives office with a prominent
Ivy League sociologist and then with a former lawyer for Mother
Theresa. Obama has chosen a Pentecostal preacher in his
twenties to head up the office. Barry Lynn of the Americans for
the Separation of Church and State was an avid critic of the Bush
office. His position today? He serves on the advisory
council's task force for the office. Strangely, his
concerns about the interaction of religion and politics seem to
have dissolved now that the presidency has changed hands.
As I read Ms. Hemingway's cutting piece, I couldn't help but
think about the Swedish socialists of the late 19th and early
20th centuries who were determined to destroy the tie between the
nation's church and state. Once they gained power, however,
they had a change of heart. The church could prove useful
under their enlightened leadership. I wonder if Barry Lynn
feels the same way.