Evangelicals optimistic about Obama presidency

|PIC1|WASHINGTON - Prominent evangelical leaders said Wednesday that they are optimistic about working together with the Obama administration and even noted that relationships have already been built by the campaign's faith outreach arm.

The leaders did acknowledge, however, that differences will continue to exist between the two groups, but pointed out that a growing number of evangelicals are looking to find common ground on culture war issues such as abortion and homosexuality.

"The strategy is very different from the past. The religious right practised this zero sum game where somebody else has to lose for us to win," commented the Rev Richard Cizik, vice president of the National Association of Evangelicals, during an election analysis teleconference on Wednesday.

"And our [centrist evangelical] strategy is a common good that says we are all in this together," he said. "That means we learned as evangelicals how to collaborate with whom we disagree."

Dr David Gushee, professor of Christian Ethics at Atlanta-based Mercer University, went as far as to maintain that the religious right was in decline and that it is up to the right to decide to change and adopt a broader agenda.

"I think that there is clearly a fracture between the evangelical right or Christian right and in many ways the rest of the country and the rest of the evangelical community," Gushee contended.

He questioned if there will be a permanent fracture between the Christian right and the rest of the evangelical body, and contrasted the right with centrist and progressive evangelicals who are "well positioned" to work with the government and the new administration on issues as broad as torture, the environment, immigration and nuclear weapon production.

"A posture that says we don't have to agree on everything but we can work on these things together is going to put us in a better position to be a constructive player in the next four years than the stance that the apocalypse is upon us because Barack Obama has won the election," Gushee asserted.

Both Gushee and Cizik commented on the change in evangelical perspective on social justice issues, which evangelicals increasingly see as value issues rooted in moral problems.

"I am optimistic, as David expressed he is, that this president understands problems in terms of not just of technical revolution but in terms of the moral complexity," Cizik said. "And that's a good sign."

National exit polls show that Obama made significant inroads among religious voters.

While Obama widely lost to Republican candidate Senator John McCain among evangelical voters (75 per cent to 24 per cent), his support among this group was five percentage points higher than Democratic presidential candidate Senator John Kerry in 2004.
News
Telling the untold story behind elections
Telling the untold story behind elections

There’s an untold story about the elections we have just had across England - and maybe about every election that ever gets held anywhere. It’s a story that matters just as much as the election results. 

Madagascan Christians called to lead by example in struggling country
Madagascan Christians called to lead by example in struggling country

“We cannot serve Jesus Christ in church, and the devil outside.”

Churches and cathedrals help kick off VE Day 80th anniversary commemorations
Churches and cathedrals help kick off VE Day 80th anniversary commemorations

Churches and cathedrals are playing a big part in this week's 80th anniversary commemorations of Victory in Europe - or VE - Day which marked the end of World War II in Europe in 1945. 

Faith, justice and change: Niall Cooper reflects on nearly three decades with Church Action on Poverty
Faith, justice and change: Niall Cooper reflects on nearly three decades with Church Action on Poverty

After 28 years at the helm of Church Action on Poverty, Niall Cooper is stepping down from his role as director – marking the end of a remarkable chapter in Christian social justice and offering a moment for both reflection and gratitude.