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9780060834470

God's Politics : Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780060834470

  • ISBN10:

    0060834471

  • Edition: Reprint
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2008-11-04
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publications

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Supplemental Materials

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Summary

New York Times bestseller God's Politics struck a chord with Americans disenchanted with how the Right had co-opted all talk about integrating religious values into our politics, and with the Left, who were mute on the subject. Jim Wallis argues that America's separation of church and state does not require banishing moral and religious values from the public square. God's Politics offers a vision for how to convert spiritual values into real social change and has started a grassroots movement to hold our political leaders accountable by incorporating our deepest convictions about war, poverty, racism, abortion, capital punishment, and other moral issues into our nation's public life. Who can change the political wind? Only we can.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: Why Can't We Talk about Religion and Politics? xvii
PART I Changing the Wind
1 Take Back the Faith
3(17)
Co-opted by the Right, Dismissed by the Left
2 A Lack of Vision
20(11)
Too Narrow or None at All
3 Is There a Politics of God?
31(12)
God Is Personal, but Never Private
PART II Moving Beyond the Politics of Complaint
4 Protest Is Good; Alternatives Are Better
43(13)
What Are We For?
5 How Should Your Faith Influence Your Politics?
56(16)
What's a Religious Voter to Do?
6 Prophetic Politics
72(15)
A New Option
PART III Spiritual Values and International Relations When Did Jesus Become Pro-War?
7 Be Not Afraid
87(21)
A Moral Response to Terrorism
8 Not a Just War
108(29)
The Mistake of Iraq
9 Dangerous Religion
137(22)
The Theology of Empire
10 Blessed Are the Peacemakers
159(13)
Winning Without War
11 Against Impossible Odds
172(15)
Peace in the Middle East
12 Micah's Vision for National and Global Security
187(22)
Cure Causes, Not Just Symptoms
PART IV Spiritual Values and Economic Justice When Did Jesus Become Pro-Rich?
13 The Poor You Will Always Have with You?
209(12)
What Does the Bible Say about Poverty?
14 Poor People Are Trapped—in the Debate about Poverty
221(20)
Breaking the Left/Right Impasse
15 Isaiah's Platform
241(18)
Budgets Are Moral Documents
16 Amos and Enron
259(11)
What Scandalizes God?
17 The Tipping Point
270(27)
Faith and Global Poverty
PART V Spiritual Values and Social Issues When Did Jesus Become a Selective Moralist?
18 A Consistent Ethic of Life
297(10)
Abortion and Capital Punishment
19 Truth Telling About Race
307(14)
America's Original Sin
20 The Ties That Bond
321(22)
Family and Community Values
PART VI Spiritual Values and Social Change
21 The Critical Choice
343(30)
Hope Versus Cynicism
Epilogue: We Are the Ones We've Been Waiting For 373(2)
Notes 375(10)
PLUS: The Monologue Is Over 385

Supplemental Materials

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Excerpts

God's Politics
Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It

Chapter One

Take Back the Faith

Co-opted by the Right, Dismissed by the Left

Many of us feel that our faith has been stolen, and it's time to take it back. In particular, an enormous public misrepresentation of Christianity has taken place. And because of an almost uniform media misperception, many people around the world now think Christian faith stands for political commitments that are almost the opposite of its true meaning. How did the faith of Jesus come to be known as pro-rich, pro-war, and only pro-American? What has happened here? And how do we get back to a historic, biblical, and genuinely evangelical faith rescued from its contemporary distortions? That rescue operation is even more crucial today, in the face of a deepening social crisis that cries out for more prophetic religion.

Of course, nobody can steal your personal faith; that's between you and God. The problem is in the political arena, where strident voices claim to represent Christians when they clearly don't speak for most of us. It's time to take back our faith in the public square, especially in a time when a more authentic social witness is desperately needed.

The religious and political Right gets the public meaning of religion mostly wrong—preferring to focus only on sexual and cultural issues while ignoring the weightier matters of justice. And the secular Left doesn't seem to get the meaning and promise of faith for politics at all-mistakenly dismissing spirituality as irrelevant to social change. I actually happen to be conservative on issues of personal responsibility, the sacredness of human life, the reality of evil in our world, and the critical importance of individual character, parenting, and strong "family values." But the popular presentations of religion in our time (especially in the media) almost completely ignore the biblical vision of social justice and, even worse, dismiss such concerns as merely "left wing."

It is indeed time to take back our faith.

Take back our faith from whom? To be honest, the confusion comes from many sources. From religious right-wingers who claim to know God's political views on every issue, then ignore the subjects that God seems to care the most about. From pedophile priests and cover-up bishops who destroy lives and shame the church. From television preachers whose extravagant lifestyles and crass fund-raising tactics embarrass more Christians than they know. From liberal secularists who want to banish faith from public life and deny spiritual values to the soul of politics. And even from liberal theologians whose cultural conformity and creedal modernity serve to erode the foundations of historic biblical faith. From New Age philosophers who want to make Jesus into a nonthreatening spiritual guru. And from politicians who love to say how religious they are but utterly fail to apply the values of faith to their public leadership and political policies.

It's time to reassert and reclaim the gospel faith—especially in our public life. When we do, we discover that faith challenges the powers that be to do justice for the poor, instead of preaching a "prosperity gospel" and supporting politicians who further enrich the wealthy We remember that faith hates violence and tries to reduce it and exerts a fundamental presumption against war, instead of justifying it in God's name. We see that faith creates community from racial, class, and gender divisions and prefers international community over nationalist religion, and we see that "God bless America" is found nowhere in the Bible. And we are reminded that faith regards matters such as the sacredness of life and family bonds as so important that they should never be used as ideological symbols or mere political pawns in partisan warfare.

The media like to say, "Oh, then you must be the religious Left?" No, not at all, and the very question is the problem. Just because a religious Right has fashioned itself for political power in one utterly predictable ideological guise does not mean that those who question this political seduction must be their opposite political counterpart. The best public contribution of religion is precisely not to be ideologically predictable or a loyal partisan. To always raise the moral issues of human rights, for example, will challenge both left and right-wing governments that put power above principles. Religious action is rooted in a much deeper place than "rights"—that place being the image of God in every human being.

Similarly, when the poor are defended on moral or religious grounds, it is certainly not "class warfare," as the rich often charge, but rather a direct response to the overwhelming focus on the poor in the Scriptures, which claim they are regularly neglected, exploited, and oppressed by wealthy elites, political rulers, and indifferent affluent populations. Those Scriptures don't simply endorse the social programs of the liberals or the conservatives, but they make it clear that poverty is indeed a religious issue, and the failure of political leaders to help uplift the poor will be judged a moral failing.

It is precisely because religion takes the problem of evil so seriously that it must always be suspicious of too much concentrated power—politically and economically—either in totalitarian regimes or in huge multinational corporations that now have more wealth and power than many governments. It is indeed our theology of evil that makes us strong proponents of both political and economic democracy—not because people are so good, but because they often are not and need clear safeguards and strong systems of checks and balances to avoid the dangerous accumulations of power and wealth.

It's why we doubt the goodness of all superpowers and the righteousness of empires in any era, especially when their claims of inspiration and success invoke theology and the name of God. Given the human tendencies of military and political power for self-delusion and deception, is it any wonder that hardly a religious body in the world regards the ethics of unilateral and preemptive war as "just"?

God's Politics
Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It
. Copyright © by Jim Wallis. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Excerpted from God's Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It by Jim Wallis
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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