It
used to be motherhood and apple pie. God was
what you battled and fought wars for. Remember?
More people have died in wars waged in the name
of God than for any other reason. Obviously,
God's agenda was not pushed by those battlefield
casualties, and neither is it being advanced
today by politicians who need to quench their
thirst for power even by sacrilegious means.
The
climate is ready for heightened religiosity in
this country. Moral and ethical absolutes are
gone, and a melding of religion and politics is
being sold to fill the vacuum. In a parable,
Jesus likens the faith of some to seeds that
land on rocky ground. Without much soil, they
sprout quickly, but when the sun rises, they are
scorched and wither away, because they have no
roots.
We
have to be incredibly skeptical and careful of
politicians who use religion as a means to
advance their own agendas. (Let us not forget
the tyrants, despots and dictators of history
who all rose to power with a god on their side.)
They use religion to polarize people rather than
to unite them around common themes, which build
communities and society. Their roots are
superficial, and once scrutinized, they wither
away.
God's
children include Democrats and Republicans, left
and right, young and old. God's agenda is not a
political one. It calls for peace. It strives
for harmony. It works for justice. It operates
with love. This agenda is pushed in the most
sacred of institutions: inside the human being.
If the agenda can be advanced inside each of us,
the politicians can argue and filibuster all
they want. Society is strengthened, and we win.
FATHER
VAZKEN MOVSESIAN
Armenian Church Youth Ministries
Glendale
President Bush has been accused of wearing his
religion on his sleeve. As a result, many
members of the media tend to criticize him. But,
as I see it, such media members are simply
refusing to cut him the same slack they cut for
past presidents, such as Jimmy Carter and Bill
Clinton, both of whom were linked prominently to
religion and to religious leaders.
Where,
one must wonder, did former President Jimmy
Carter wear his religion? Has religion ever been
more prominent in the presidency than in the
Carter administration?
And,
didn't Clinton suddenly become very religious
when he got caught in his lying-under-oath mess?
How can we forget the image of him going to
counseling with a trio of ministers or going to
church with his big black Bible in his hands?
When is it OK with the media for a leader to be
religious?
How is
it different for a Republican to meet with
religious-right leaders than it is for a
Democrat to meet with religious-left leaders?
Our
nation has had "religious" presidents, and we
have had those who seemed to have little or no
religion. And, it is obvious that both political
parties use religion sometimes in rather dubious
ways to try to make certain political points.
This has always been the case. Somehow the
Republic has survived. I suspect it will
continue to do so.
THE
REV. THOMAS E. WITHERSPOON
Unity
Church of the Valley
La
Crescenta
My
feeling is that Senate Republicans, and those in
the House and especially in the White House are
blatantly using ignorant people's religious
convictions as a way to gain even more political
power than they already have.
While
living lives that could hardly be called
religious, they pontificate in public about
family values. Even though many are divorced
themselves, they claim homosexual marriage will
ruin the institution. They privately plot to
destroy the filibuster so they can get
extreme-right-wing judges appointed to remove
even a minimal check on their policies.
Once
there is no protection for minority views, they
plan to eliminate Roe vs. Wade, removing
reproductive choices. Also on the agenda, I
believe, is the dismantling of Social Security
because Republicans have always resented its
success. It gives lie to the "trickle-down"
economic theory and clearly demonstrates the
societal benefit of helping the least prosperous
among us. Other hindrances to further
big-business profits are the minimum wage,
worker protections and safety regulations,
environmental protections and welfare programs.
All are in jeopardy from the neo-cons.
Keeping people poor also means more military
enlistments, lessening the need for an unpopular
draft.
Inserting religion into the public schools and
pushing vouchers for private religious schools
are part of the same political agenda. The
result of this interference is an undermining of
the public school system and a "dumbing down" of
the population. That makes it easier for
manipulative techniques to work in subsequent
elections.
Sadly,
this misuse of religion has been pretty
successful. Many people vote Republican against
their self interest. The only Americans well
served by this administration are the extremely
wealthy. Obviously many people think they're
voting for positive religious values when in
actuality they're supporting the excessive greed
of power-mad hypocrites.
SHARON
WEISMAN
Atheist
Glendale
When
reading about the recent Senate impasse, a
statement came to mind from the 2nd century
sage, Rabbi Gamliel. He said: "Be wary of those
in power, for they befriend a person only for
their own benefit; they seem to be friends when
it is to their advantage, but they do not stand
by a man in his hour of need."
This
statement does not apply to all politicians, as
most of them are good-hearted people who
sincerely serve their constituents. However,
there are definitely some who fall into this
category.
Watching the Senate morph into a three-ring
circus is disheartening and utterly shameful.
Seeing senators use religion as a political
weapon is unforgivable. Religion serves as a
beacon of light to millions of Americans who are
searching for the truth. When this beacon is
tarnished, its light is dimmed, and countless
people suffer.
My
advice to all Americans of faith, Republican and
Democrat alike, is to avoid politicians in
highly charged circumstances. They may seem to
befriend you, but their motives are inevitably
superficial. I believe that we should never drag
what is holy and sacred into the halls of
politics.
SIMCHA
BACKMAN
Chabad
Jewish Center
Glendale
This
use of the political process for anti-religious
rhetoric is dangerous. The fact that Senate
Majority Leader Bill Frist took part in a
telecast whose organizing theme was that those
who oppose some of President Bush's judicial
nominees are engaged in an assault on "people of
faith" is disingenuous at best.
Frist
should not have given legitimacy to those who
claim they hold a monopoly on faith.
Such
demagogues assert (for example, in the words of
Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research
Council and organizer of the telecast) that
there is a vast conspiracy by the courts "to rob
us of our Christian heritage and our religious
freedoms." There is no such conspiracy. The
reality is that they have been unable to ram
through the Senate the most extreme of the
president's nominees, and now they are spinning
new claims out of thin air.
Another example: In April, the Christian
Coalition convened a conference in Washington
entitled, "Confronting the Judicial War on
Faith," and their special guest speaker was
House Majority Leader Rep. Tom DeLay. When
leaders of any political party lend their
imprimatur to such outrageous claims, including,
at the conference, calls for mass impeachment of
federal judges, it should be of deep concern to
all who care about religion.
RABBI
JONATHAN BIATCH
Temple
Sinai of Glendale
I'm
beginning to wonder when the great middle in
this wonderful country will decide that it has
had enough!
The
fact that seven moderate Republican Senators and
seven moderate Democratic senators worked out a
compromise to keep Senate Majority Leader Bill
Frist's use of the so-called "nuclear option"
off the table is a great step in the right
direction. The trouble is that the so-called
"religious right" wants to overturn the Supreme
Court's landmark Roe vs. Wade decision of 1973
(a truly unconservative thing to do, to overturn
what has been the law of the land for more than
30 years!), and those folks don't care how it is
done, even if they run roughshod over Senate
rules that have been in effect since 1789!
What
is so interesting to me is the fact that the
political party that advocates fewer rules and
fewer taxes (the GOP) and less government
interference in your business or my business is
also the political party that wants to stick its
nose into the most personal of choices: whether
to carry a baby to term or to have an abortion.
I am obviously pro-choice and I am an American
Christian, and I hate like hell the implication
that because I don't believe the way the
"religious right" does that I'm somehow ungodly.
THE
REV. SKIP LINDEMAN
Congregational Church of the Lighted Window
United
Church of Christ, La Cañada Flintridge