|
|
Copyright. Permission to reprint required.
Column.
Many prominent Evangelicals have begun to decry publicly the rigid,
sectarian fundamentalism of the religious right and to call for
profoundly increased interfaith dialogue and wiser approaches to
U.S.-Mideast relations. (First published in the Turkish Daily News, July 7, 2008.) Back to Articles.
American Evangelicals: They May Surprise You by Charles Strohmer
Many
Christians in America have a blinkered view of the Muslim world.
Terribly misinformed, they tend to stereotype non-Western Muslims as
religious-political extremists, instead of understanding the many and
varied expressions of Islam. Equally lamentable is the fact that many
Muslims outside America have stereotyped Christians in America as
religious right extremists. It’s true, of course, that the religious
right, especially its hard-line fundamentalists, is sometimes publicly
foolish about the Middle East policies that it lobbies for in
Washington. And when that happens, it usually gets media coverage
overseas, while wiser policy recommendations of other Christian voices
get ignored. Add to that a President outspoken
about his Christian faith, but whose martial footprint in the Middle
East may, in the opinion of former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright, go down as the worst foreign policy disaster in U.S. history,
and it’s hard to fault Muslims for feeling badly about American
Christianity. Here in the States, however, a refreshing breeze is
blowing, largely under the media’s radar so far, and it’s coming from
the biggest Christian constituency in America, the Evangelicals. Many
prominent Evangelicals have begun to decry publicly the rigid,
sectarian fundamentalism of the religious right and to call for
profoundly increased interfaith dialogue and wiser approaches to
U.S.-Mideast relations. “Evangelical” is an
umbrella term for a diverse array of Protestant Christian denominations
and loosely knit independent churches, colleges, and parachurch
organizations that are broadly and in the main theologically and
socially conservative. Evangelicals comprise between 35%-40% of the
U.S. population. But it’s a very mixed bag. Even some prominent
religious right fundamentalists, such as Pat Robertson and John Hagee,
would identify themselves as Evangelical. In contrast to them and their
followers, the popular Evangelical leader Jim Wallis and his large
Sojourners parachurch organization represent a more theologically
inclusive and socially progressive wing. In fact, it was when Wallis’
book God’s Politics made The New York Times
best-seller list in 2005, that it became clear just how broad and deep
was the disillusionment about religious right politics. Boldly
challenging assumptions of the religious right and policies of the Bush
administration while also calling for a new vision, the book struck a
nerve in the American psyche. A promising
religious-political chain reaction followed, when a further wise step
was taken by many prominent Evangelicals in 2007. A significant step,
it moved forward interfaith dialogue between Western Christian leaders
and non-Western Muslim leaders, and it had a rather unlikely beginning
the previous year, with Pope Benedict’s controversial Regensburg
address in September 2006. Just one month later, spring-boarding off
the Pope’s address, a diverse group of 38 Islamic authorities and
scholars published an “Open Letter to the Pope.” Writing in “a spirit
of open exchange,” the signatories acknowledged Pope Benedict’s efforts
to oppose positivism and materialism and to maintain the proper place
of reason vis a vis faith in God, but they also addressed errors about
Islam which the Pope had made in his Regensburg speech. Then in October
2007, 138 Muslim scholars, clerics, and intellectuals reached out to
Christian leaders everywhere by publishing a remarkable document, “A
Common Word Between Us and You.” That common
ground approach to relationships between people who are different
quickly evoked a constructive Christian reply, “Loving God and Neighbor
Together: A Christian Response to ‘A Common Word Between Us and You’.”
Written by several prominent Christian scholars and theologians in
America, it commended “A Common Word” and welcomed further inter-faith
dialogue. It ran as a full page open letter in the November 18, 2007
edition of The New York Times.
To date, it has been signed by over 400 Christian theologians,
academics, ministers, and intellectuals, including prominent American
Evangelicals such as Ellen Charry, Richard Cizik, David Heim, Bill
Hybels, Brian McClaren, Richard Mouw, Jim Wallis, and Rick Warren.
Also in 2007, the “Letter to President
Bush from Evangelical Leaders” decried the perception that all American
Evangelicals oppose the creation of a Palestinian state that includes
the vast majority of the West Bank. Published in The New York Times on
July 29, the letter argued strongly for a two-state solution and
admonished the Bush administration to “proceed confidently and
forthrightly in negotiations with both sides.”
In all of these documents and initiatives one finds, either implied or
stated overtly, not the methodology of religious-political sectarian
checklists but a call for more common ground, or wisdom based,
approaches. “A Common Word Between Us and You,” for instance, is not
polemical. Instead, the signatories employed the traditional and
mainstream Islamic position of respecting the Christian scriptures, and
they explained that the basis for common ground already exists between
Christianity and Islam in “the very foundational principles of both
faiths: love of God and love of neighbor,” noting that this provides
the basis for peace and understanding. This
more wisdom-based approach can also be seen from a Christian
perspective in two important developments this past spring. In one, a
committee of 20 Evangelical leaders drafted a 7,000 word foreign policy
document titled the “Matthew 5:21-26 Project.” Besides drawing from
other parts of the Bible, the committee was particularly inspired by
Jesus’ teaching to make peace with an adversary, to love one’s neighbor
as one’s self, and to love one’s enemies. It extrapolates these
teachings of Jesus to geopolitics by calling for the next White House
administration to formulate its Middle East policies based on increased
international cooperation and, importantly, talking to adversaries not
only to allies. The signatories, who range across the spectrum of
Evangelical Christianity, have agreed that such actions would
facilitate dialogue and trust-building in working with others for the
common public good, and that this would help curb the temptation to use
American power “in inappropriate ways.” Also this
past spring, another mixed group of influential Evangelicals released
the “Evangelical Manifesto: A Declaration of Evangelical Identity in
Public Commitment.” The Manifesto eschews sectarianism and reaffirms
the historic Evangelical commitment to a pluralistic public square,
domestically and internationally. “What we need,” said former U.S.
Ambassador Robert Seiple, himself an Evangelical, “is a civil public
square where we know our own faith at its richest and deepest best, and
enough about our neighbor’s to respect it.”
Echoing the cry of many Muslims who practice ijtihad, the Evangelical
Manifesto calls for humility and “self-examination, reflection, and a
willingness to be corrected and to change,” and to “find a new
understanding of our place in public life.” To be followers of Jesus,
they write, “is to seek to be faithful to the freedom, justice, peace,
and well-being that are at the heart of the kingdom of God, to bring
these gifts into public life as a service to all, and to work with all
who share these ideals and care for the common good.”
Add to all of these developments other auspicious signs, such as
the memberships given by the Council on Foreign Relations
to prominent Evangelicals such as Richard Land and Rick Warren,
and those here in the States with ears
to hear and eyes to see notice a trend away from religious right
polemics toward a more wisdom-based (common ground) style in
U.S.-Mideast relations. Although Evangelicals
in America have the Bible in one hand, they do not have a sword in the
other. They are fed up with sectarian fundamentalism, whether of the
secular or religious variety. They are calling for mature common ground
approaches to religion and politics among people who are different. And
they are finding increasing degrees of like-mindedness among Muslims,
who with the Qur’an in one hand have extended the other hand in peace
and understanding. Things do seem more hopeful, though struggle
remains. But if the breeze increases, maybe our politicians will get
the message. And maybe our media will, too. (Charles
Strohmer’s religious and political writings have been published in
numerous magazines and online publications. He is a visiting research
fellow of the Center for Public Justice and is writing a book on
wisdom-based U.S.-Mideast relations.)
Back to Articles
|
|
|