Playing Hardball about God’s Role in America: Liberals vs. Conservatives

by: Richard Land - Jul 15, 2008 - comments: 5

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Steven Waldman of Beliefnet.com and John C. Green of the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life have identified what they call the “twelve tribes” of American politics, a configuration based on moral values, spiritual affinities, and religious affiliations. Their research yields intriguing insights into how and why people vote in particular ways on “moral values” issues and in relation to the religious convictions of political candidates. However, in the general clamor of the God-in-America debate, the noisiest voices seem to coalesce (predictably) around two opposing viewpoints, conservative and liberal.

Roughly speaking, the conservative view could be summarized as the traditional God-and-country position: “We’ve been taking God out of this country, and we need to put Him back in—where He’s always been before we headed down this godless road.” At the other end of the spectrum is the liberal view, which we could basically summarize in this way: “Separation of church and state means that God shouldn’t have anything to do with American politics and public life, so we need to take God out of this country—and keep it that way.”

Sam Harris, author of The End of Faith, condemns any belief that is not subject to rational, evidence-based reasoning. Thus our religious traditions are “intellectually defunct and politically ruinous,” he maintains, and religion is “nothing more than bad concepts held in place of good ones for all time. It is the denial—at once full of hope and full of fear—of the vastitude of human ignorance.” It is not enough for Harris simply to denounce religious faith as irrational, however. Citing religious war as the inevitable consequence when opposing belief systems clash, he calls for an end not just to religious extremism, but to “the very ideal of religious tolerance—born of the notion that every human being should be free to believe whatever he wants about God” as “one of the principal forces driving us toward the abyss.”

Harris would argue for more than simply taking God out of public debate in America; he calls for the literal marginalization of those who stubbornly persist in believing in God: It is time we realized that to presume knowledge where one has only pious hope is a species of evil….Where we have reasons for what we believe, we have no need of faith; where we have no reasons, we have lost both our connection to the world and to one another. People who harbor strong convictions without evidence belong at the margins of our societies, not in our halls of power.”

Do you think Sam Harris is a lone voice crying in the wilderness of liberal extremism? His book has become a best seller, garnering accolades and winning awards such as the prestigious 2005 PEN/Martha Albrand Award for Nonfiction. In the New York Times, reviewer Natalie Angier commended Harris’s depiction of “major religious systems like Judaism, Christianity and Islam as socially sanctioned forms of lunacy.” Further, she hailed his willingness to write “what a sizable number of us think, but few are willing to say in contemporary America.”

What’s God got to do with America? The voices in today’s heated arguments provide wildly opposing answers. From the standpoint of the past, the answer to this question is unequivocally, “Quite a lot.” Any study of American history necessarily involves understanding what Americans thought God had to do with them. From the perspective of the present, the answer also would seem to be, “God has a lot to do with America,” because that is the majority opinion according to numerous polls. Seven of every ten Americans say they want the influence of religion in our society to grow. It’s well documented that a majority of these individuals are referring to a religion centered on “God” as traditionally understood in the Judeo-Christian tradition.

If trends hold, America’s future will continue to involve “God” prominently and publicly because more people are becoming more religious or “spiritual.”

But these realities don’t address the question of what God really does have to do with America—why, how, and in what forms and ways? And how can we answer such a question when Americans differ so widely on their views of God (or no god), how their views influence their private and public lives, and how they feel others’ views about God ought to impinge on personal and public areas of their lives?

We can’t afford to get sidetracked in yet another screeching-to-the-choir wrangle that will only leave opponents more embittered and hostile to each other, with increasing numbers in the middle deciding, “This whole God thing is just a personal matter, and anyway, nobody really knows for sure.”

If we allow confusion or frustration to deflect our best efforts, we will miss what the underlying crisis truly is—a titanic clash of the worldviews masquerading as a political correctness debate about whether I have the right to impose my religious views on you, or whether you have the right to tell me what I can and can’t say or do when I step into the public square. Underneath this debate are critical assumptions that will radically shape the future of this country for good or for ill, and it is high time we learn how to respond to them in ways that will cut through our cultural impasse and lead us to a better future for all Americans.

This article is excerpted from Richard Land’s book The Divided States of America? What Liberals AND Conservatives are missing in the God-and-country shouting match! (Thomas Nelson, Inc., 2007). If you would like to purchase a copy of this book, please visit www.familybookstore.net or check your local bookstore.

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5 comments (post your own) feed

1 On Jul 15th, 2008, at 2:00pm, Sandra Sanderson wrote:

We must keep God n our Country and the radical lefts who seem to think they r so intelligent should maybe stop and read their American History and see that it was men of Christian Faith who founded this Country!Now is the time for us as Christians to fight the battle for we as christians r having our rights taken by more and more each day-not other religions ours of christianity-does it not make u wonder WHY?why do they fear the name of Jesus soo?We must come together as christians and pray like never before and fight for what is right and moral and stand up for it!We must forget what church we attend each Sunday and unite as christians to keep God in our great Country and we must reach a lost and dying world as commanded by God not me.

2 On Jul 15th, 2008, at 3:41pm, Rod Schull wrote:

Mr. Harris and many others deny the God whom our founding Fathers recognized in our nation’s founding under “the laws of nature and of nature’s God”. Which God is clearly revealed by “the evidence of things unseen” in creation and in every man’s conscience, which revealed truth Mr. Harris denies.

3 On Jul 15th, 2008, at 3:45pm, Richard Humphries wrote:

it might be helpful,Richard Land, if you looked at the vast majority of us who are in the middle.  The extreme left and right never have it right.

I am a faithful and active Church member and the old “Sin and Salvation” mainline Churches like the SBC are loosing young people who want us to show them how to deal with todays problems in a difficult world.  That is why the mega churches who are addressing these issues are succeeding.

Your opposition to abortion and homosexuality has no residence with me.  Your support for George Bush and the war in Iraq also counterproductive.

Most importantly, your opposition to Christian family values when it comes to illegal Immigrants is a real abomination.

Dick

4 On Jul 21st, 2008, at 5:36am, Leah Robinson wrote:

Dick, I completely agree with you. As someone who is also a moderate to liberal Baptist Christian, and having worked as a youth pastor and pastor, i can say that the young people will not carry on this left/right tradition set up by those of our generation and older.  i actually look forward to them taking over, i think they have the capability to make Christians seem relevant to those who are unbelievers, where our generation seems to appear increasingly irrational and irrelevant.

5 On Jul 23rd, 2008, at 6:43am, Dreama wrote:

Either you believe in something or you don’t. No fencesitters ever won battles. Remember comments in the Bible regarding those who are ‘lukewarm’? My 23-yr old daughter asks tough questios re:homosexuality, marriage...believing God/His Word requires courage. Sin is sin no matter how much we try to “spin” it. My answer to my daughter re: her homosexual friend required that I present God’s Word to explain we can’t pick & choose the parts of the Bible that suit our situation. Sin is sin. We must individually choose where we stand...therefore, as lovingly as possible present God’s Word as He stated it, not as those less brave would have it to ease their conscience. God is love & forgiveness; we as Christian’s are to share His Word, unapologetically, but lovingly. Be courageous. Teach the young ones how to stand for truth, love, forgiveness & to fight the battle against the enemy to save as many as possible from his deception & destruction.

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