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December 3, 2008
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Home > 2008 > August (Web-Only)Christianity Today, August (Web-Only), 2008  |   |  
Americans (and More Evangelicals) Want Churches out of Politics
Pew survey also raises questions about whether Democratic faith outreach is working.



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A majority of Americans want religious institutions to keep out of political matters, a survey by the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life shows.

For a full decade, majorities of Americans voiced support for religious institutions speaking out on social and political issues, but the survey found that a narrow majority (52 percent) say churches should keep out of politics.

Among evangelicals, 36 percent say that churches should keep out of politics, a jump from 20 percent who said the same thing in 2004.

"It doesn't mean that conservatives have abandoned the idea that religion should be involved in politics; it seems to be a frustration we're picking up," said Greg Smith, a research fellow with the forum.

The survey also showed that the Democratic Party is seen as slightly less friendly to religion than it was in 2004. The party and the Obama presidential campaign have made numerous efforts to reach out to religious voters since the last presidential election.

Only 37 percent of Americans say the Democratic Party is friendly toward religion, compared with 40 percent who said the same in 2004. The number of evangelicals registered as Democrats rose slightly from 28 percent in 2004 to 30 percent this year.

For the first time, an interfaith gathering will mark the official opening of the Democrats' convention week on Sunday. The party will also hold four forums for people of faith, two of which will be moderated by Sojourners head Jim Wallis.

Florida megachurch pastor Joel Hunter will give the benediction after Sen. Barack Obama's nomination speech at Invesco Field. Evangelist and sociologist Tony Campolo, a member of the party's platform committee, has pushed for an abortion-reduction plank.

Obama's campaign has held several faith forums across the country, and the candidate has repeatedly talked about his faith.

Still, 15 percent of Americans believe the party is unfriendly toward religion, compared with 13 percent in 2004.

"This question is closely linked with overall views of the party," Smith said. "People who view either party as unfriendly toward religion view them unfavorably."

The numbers for the Republican Party stayed the same over four years, with 52 saying the party is friendly toward religion. Although a majority of evangelicals support Sen. John McCain, their enthusiasm is less strong than their support for President Bush in 2004. The survey showed that McCain had the support of 68 percent, up from 61 percent in June but down from 71 in 2004. And while most evangelicals back McCain, only 28 percent of them say they "strongly support" him, compared with 57 percent who strongly supported Bush in August 2004.

Mark Silk, professor of religion in public life at Trinity College, said that unenthusiastic voters are voters who often turn out less.

"While it's clear that evangelicals are not as anywhere enthusiastic about John McCain [as about] George W. Bush, it doesn't mean that they're going any other way," Silk said. "The question is whether evangelicals will turn out in the same kinds of numbers."

As a group, evangelicals dropped their Republican Party affiliation from 66 percent in 2004 to 62 percent this year, according to the survey, which polled 2,905 adults between July 31 and August 10. Of those evangelicals, 38 percent of evangelicals think religious conservatives have too much power over the Republican Party, up from 28 percent last year.

The survey shows that more evangelicals put their thinking caps on this election. This year, 79 percent of evangelicals said they thought "a lot" about the election, compared with 69 percent in 2004 and 59 percent in 2000. In order of importance, evangelicals listed these issues as very important: moral values, the economy, terrorism, energy, Iraq, education, abortion, health care, immigration, gay marriage, environment, and trade policy.





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 19 comments.See all comments
Jason   Posted: August 23, 2008 11:19 AM
It's been as clear as daylight for decades that both US mainstream parties have been bought out and paid for by very evil moneyed interests - lobbyists and campaign financers have more influence than the voters. The corrupt politicians on Capital Hill are beholden to the string-pullers, not to the people. Both parties supported the oilistic Bush family's Iraq adventures, and the catastrophic wars ("Blessed are the warmakers..") planned and promoted by the non- and anti-Christian Neocons since before 9-11, were supported almost totally by the paid-for politicans. The extraordinary symbolism of the New Babylon, centred on the Hudson, using shock 'n awe bombing to take out the old, centred on the Tigris, defiantly flouting the Nuremberg war-crimes principles. The mainstream media and Hollywood have long ago been taken over by the same dark anti-Christian forces. Evangelicals must wake up and reject the hireling "Judeo-Christian" New Babylonian shepherds in place of the true Kingdom.

Doug   Posted: August 22, 2008 4:11 PM
The lastest news is that Hunter WILL NOT give the bendiction. It's rather ironic that many conservatives want the church to dissassociate itself from political involvement. Tell that to the Black churches. If it wasn't for the political involvment of Christians and particularly the church with regard to slavery and discrimination many of these things would never have been rectified. I don't believe the church should be political by being for one party or another. But it must be active in speakaing out against injustice and other moral issues.

Bill   Posted: August 22, 2008 1:13 PM
I found the article above to be interesting. This is an area I have followed for a while and I am still somewhat conflicted about it. However, I am clear that Christians need to not be linked with political parties and they should not be overly enthusiastic in their view of any candidate. I think Evangelical Christians were too linked to the Republican Party for a period of time. Now I worry that Jim Wallis and others are making the same mistake in regards to the Democratic Party. Slogans like, "God is not a Republican....or a Democrat" are associated with Sojourners and Wallis. However, I read his recent comments about how Christian involvement had really helped with the input on the statements about abortion etc. and I found his enthusiasm to be really misplaced (the new wording did not seem all that positive to me). And his being identified with the Democratic Party is every bit as unfortunate as the identification of some other Christians with the Republican Party.

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