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Edited on Wed Jan-19-05 11:37 AM by BurtWorm
I caught a few moments of Jim Wallis on Washington Journal yesterday morning, and while I am always thrilled to see an intelligent evangelist use the words "social" and "justice" in a common phrase to describe a goal worth working toward, I was struck by the very first call Wallis fielded from a more (stereo)typical evangelist from North Carolina. Wallis had been discussing his new book, whose subtitle is something like "Why the Right Gets Religion Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It," and his point is that left and right could find common ground if they made religious morality central to the values dialogue. Of course he doesn't argue that everyone become religious, just that the right face up to social problems like poverty, which are central to all modern religious values, and that the left face up to "family values."
This seemed reasonable enough even to an atheist like me, if we took the term "family values" loosely to mean something more like "common decency" or "civility." But of course the first caller immediately challenged Wallis's right to call himself an evangelist, claiming that no self-respecting one would hold the political and moral views Wallis espouses. Despite being seasoned at these kinds of debates, Wallis responded from a weak position, allowing the caller to define the terms. "Evangelism," according to this caller, is Bible-centered literalism, essentially, so Wallis claimed to be a Bible-centered literalist. I would have asked the caller how he could be sure, if he accepted his own fallibility and fallen state, that he knew what was in God's mind. This is a question that all right-wing evangelicals deserve to have shoved down their fat gullets, but it's not convincing coming from atheists, and for some reason, lefty Christians don't think to ask it.
In any case, it points up the central problem with God-based morality: no one agrees on what God-based morality is. And yet, give one faction of the religious enough rope and they'll hang us all with their certainty that THEY and THEY ALONE know what is in God's mind. This is precisely what is going on in the US now that the right-wing Christians are feeling their oats.
I welcome your comments and critiques of this analysis.
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