Politics/Current Events

A new website has been set up to track the massive flooding in Iowa, complete with pictures, videos, and on-the-ground accounts. Head to IowaFlood.com to check it out.

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It's a hard time to be a conservative evangelical, I imagine. Up until now, the objective has always been clear: as a Christian, the battles in politics are to be waged against abortion and gay rights/marriage. Yet it's becoming difficult to hear the cries of "It's a child, not a choice!" and "It's Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve!"1 amidst all of current tumult in the United States -- an unpopular, drawn-out war in Iraq, the spiraling economy, skyrocketing gas prices and unemployment rates,2 global climate change, and so on.3

In other words, the non-abortion and non-gay-rights issues have now become the elephant in the room for evangelicals. So what to do? One choice is to rally the troops and become even more vocal and politically active in pushing the agenda. More lobbying, more outspoken leaders, whatever. Another choice is to step back, to understand the complexity of things, and to embrace the other issues.

And that's exactly what's happening.

A recent article in the Seattle Times called Young, evangelical... for Obama? discusses this trend within the context of the current presidential campaign.

"Polls have shown," the article notes, "that young Christians aren't any less concerned about the 'family values' issues that have traditionally driven [evangelical] Christians to the Republican camp... It's just that they're also concerned about issues such as social justice and immigration, issues traditionally associated with Democrats."

Perhaps it's getting harder to hear the rally cries because John McCain is a stupendously weak GOP candidate who doesn't really push the traditional evangelical agenda. Or perhaps it's because Barack Obama is really the uniter who he has promised to be, erasing generations-old lines in the sand.

Either way, the evangelical agenda of old doesn't carry the same weight as it used to. The reign of the Religious Right is coming to an end, and young evangelicals are thinking for themselves. And when that happens, politics begin to look a little more messy than the easy-solution, tried-and-true dichotomies would have you believe.

From the same article in the Seattle Times, Andy Crouch, editor of Christianity Today, says,

"This could turn out to be the election where both parties realize that the evangelical vote is so hopelessly split down the middle that it's not worth courting them at all because what parties need are blocs that can be appealed to en masse. Paradoxically, evangelicals would become less relevant than ever before."

Beliefnet's God-o-Meter recently interviewed Mark DeMoss, the former chief of staff to Jerry Falwell and former chief liaison to evangelical leaders for Mitt Romney. In response to a question about Obama, DeMoss says,

"You’re seeing some movement among evangelicals as the term [evangelical] has become more pejorative. There’s a reaction among some evangelicals to swing out to the left in an effort to prove that evangelicals are really not that right wing. There’s some concern that maybe Republicans haven’t done that well. And there’s this fascination with Barack Obama. So I will not be surprised if he gets one third of the evangelical vote. I wouldn’t be surprised if it was 40-percent."

While I agree that Obama will get a large amount of votes from evangelicals in November -- I can't wait for the media to beat it to death -- I disagree with DeMoss about why some evangelicals are shedding their right-wing skin; I don't think it's reactionary. What is the rationale for "swing[ing] out to the left in an effort to prove that evangelicals are really not that right-wing?" Evangelicals have never had a problem being right-wing, why change now? Because it's not as popular to be conservative as it used to be? Not likely.

What's more likely is that a new generation of evangelicals are confronting the reality of the situation we find ourselves in, and realizing that we're not getting out of this mess by magically ending abortion or forestalling gay rights. It's just not that simple.

  1. Simple moral dichotomies make life so easy, don't they? []
  2. Job Losses and Oil Surge Spread Economic Gloom. New York Times, 06/07/08. []
  3. Image: Jesus Army Rally - Clapham Common, London courtesy of cromacom. []

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News bloat

May 29, 2008 · 2 comments

The above image is from a recent TED talk in which Alisa Miller (CEO of Public Radio International) gives a presentation discussing Why we know less than ever about the world. The map shows "the number of seconds that American network and cable organizations dedicated to news stories by country in February of 2007." You can clearly see that the United States and Iraq are totally bloated, and far outweigh the news coverage of all other countries.

At the conclusion of the presentation, Alisa says, "The real question: Is this distorted worldview what we want for Americans in our increasingly interconnected world?" I submit that it is not.

Click here to view the presentation (It's only 4:30 long).

This begs the question: Where do you get your global news? I get mine from the BBC News website, and I occasionally watch the BBC World News on PBS.

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I participated in the Iowa caucuses tonight in support of Barack Obama, who blew away Edwards, Clinton, and the rest of the field.

I caucused for the first time in 2004 for Howard Dean, and both experiences were intriguing and fun. This time around I was "elected" (I use quotes because it's no big deal, seriously) as a delegate for Obama to the county convention. The whole process is actually quite convoluted (At the county convention, delegates are chosen to attend the state-congressional-district convention, at which point delegates to the national convention are picked. You follow?)

Anyway, I live-twittered my time at the caucus, and below you'll find a redacted timeline of my tweets. The folks at Townhall.com organized a cool citizen-journalism effort via twitter, e-mail, and text messaging to report caucus results, which I participated in as well. I digress.

6:25pm ? This place is packed
6:51pm ? All the young people I see are in the Obama camp
6:56pm ? What if all these neighborhood people came to our church?
6:59pm ? This would be fun if it was also a candidate look-alike contest. I found Hillary.
7:05pm ? Overheard - "People over here [in the Obama camp] just look sensible." [This is actually a quote from my brother]
7:06pm ? Here we go...
7:14pm ? 264 people here.
7:26pm ? Obama has 97 out of 264 before any debating.
7:32pm ? Richardson and Biden have disbanded... No Kuccinich support at all
7:35pm ? This elementary school bathroom smells like cupcakes and urine
7:41pm ? No surprise... It's down to Obama, Clinton, and Edwards. People are trying to convert the leftovers
8:07pm ? The results are in: Obama 4, Edwards 2, Clinton 2
8:08pm ? I hear a lot of people talking about Obama dominating Iowa. I am excited to turn on the news.
8:10pm ? Been talking with a student reporter for the Yale Daily News
8:15pm ? I was just nominated as a county delegate for Obama
8:51pm ? Wow... Obama won by 7%.

What are your reflections on the caucuses (Iowans), and/or reactions to the results (anyone)? Leave a comment and let me know!

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December 3, 2007 · 0 comments

Bearing the Cross in the Global Economy analyzes a recent report about workers in China who make crucifixes and other religious items to be sold in the West. "The image of women toiling away in sweatshops while handling an icon of the suffering body of Christ is quite striking." See also, The Consumptive Church: The Religious Industrial Complex.

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Back to Rosebud

June 15, 2006 · 3 comments

I'd like to begin this post with a joke Tom told me:

Tom: You know how we know the indians were here first?
Jake: How?
Tom: They had reservations.

Kind of makes me miss the podcast (although there are talks of a summer episode).

On a serious note, I am heading back to Rosebud Indian Reservation for the fourth time in the last year on Saturday. I am going with four other leaders and fifteen high school students to the town of Parmeleee for a week.

The trip will be very much like last year, except this time we have fewer students and we're not sleeping in a high school gymnasium.

When I think of the extremely poor state of the reservation and the horrible living conditions, it makes me sick. I just pray that our time there positively affects the community and that we bring a feeling of love and compassion.

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