Only Jesus can decide this fight
Posted by Frank James at 12:40 pm CDT
Last week I wrote about the Red-Letter Christians, a new movement of evangelicals meant to contest the Religious Right for the moral high ground in the nation’s public policy debates. The RLC held their press conference to pre-empt the conservative Family Research Council’s Washington Briefing, an event meant in part to rally Christian conservatives before the November mid-term elections. So what was the FRC’s response? Pretty muted actually, from what I heard at the FRC conference. Speaking at the general session on Friday, Tony Perkins, the FRC’s president, dismissed the RR’s critics in a not-too-subtle attack on their authenticity as Christians. “There was a poll or survey just released by Baylor University, one of the most in-depth studies on Americans and religion,” Perkins said. “One of the things they pointed to was there really is a distinction between evangelicals.“And I know we’re hearing a lot especially this week as a number of left-leaning quote unquote evangelicals have been denouncing this event.
“What it boils down to (is we) are Bible-believing Christians. That’s the demarcation. That’s the point of difference. And in that poll it shows that 22 percent of Americans believe the Bible. That is almost a quarter and the fact that’s almost the same number of people who were identified as value voters in the 2004 election. There is strength in numbers. “We’re just encouraging Christians to say it’s OK to stand up and defend and proclaim the truth and we’re going to stand with you and we’re going to help you and together we will make a difference in this nation.” “Bible-believing” is a term many who take the Bible literally use to describe themselves. It the same as fundamentalism, though that term seems to have fallen out of favor. Perkins was essentially saying the BB Christians, his people, are real Christians because they “believe the Bible,” implying the other Christians really don’t so they aren’t real, a point he accentuated by saying "quote unquote evangelicals."
For their part, the RLC, so-called because they want to give greater priority in public to the social-justice message contained in Jesus’s words, printed in red in many Bibles, believe they are closer to Jesus’s truth because of their social-justice emphasis. “The Red-Letter Christians… (are) saying we have neglected the words of Jesus. And Christians are supposed to be first of all known by obedience to Jesus Christ,” said Rev. Jim Wallis, founder of Sojourners, a Christian group devoted to social justice.
“And we haven’t seen that or heard that in proclamations by those who claim to be Christian and so active in public life. We want to return to Jesus’s words to correct the politics that have become so skewed by a partisan application of them.”
more at link (There's even a Gannon sighting!): (free reg req'd)
http://newsblogs.chicagotribune.com/news_theswamp/2006/09/a_fight_only_je.html#more