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Religious tests for judges:
Part II on Sen. Frist and theocracy |
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Baptist Steelworker didn't say 'amen' to 'Justice Sunday' telecast
Jeff Wiggins is a Southern Baptist, a Democrat
and a Steelworker. He has a message for Christian conservatives who
say Democrats are "against
people of faith." "The
Bible says, ‘Judge
not, lest ye be judged,"
warned Wiggins, president of the Paducah-based
Western Kentucky Area Council, AFL-CIO. [4-27-05]
Read the story >> |
| Jesus Was No GOP Lobbyist
A tortured version of his message is being marketed for political gain.
[4-27-05]
Jack Hitt, writing in the Commentary section of the LA Times, ponders the
question, "What would Jesus filibuster? The question is bizarre, of course,
but the fact that many prominent religious and political leaders believe
that there is an answer surely marks our time as pretty strange."
He adds:
The Jesus who speaks in the Gospels is nothing like the fuming
Republican Jesus I see on TV now. Jesus was a leader who understood that
ambiguity and doubt are not to be feared but are, simply, facts of life
that a great teacher exploits to guide his followers on their own paths
toward conviction and belief.
Here is a quote from Jesus that you almost never hear: "What do you
think?" It's right there in the Bible. Jesus asks this question all the
time.
Read this in the
LA Times, or on
TruthOut.org |
Holy War Sunday
Here are a few reports and comments on the
simulcast/rally/revival (or whatever you choose to call it) held in
Louisville on Sunday, April 24, with Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist as
the star speaker, appealing to Christians to defeat efforts by
anti-Christian liberals to defend the right of US senators to speak their
minds – at length if necessary – as an exercise of resistance against "the
tyranny of the majority." [4-25-05]
"Holy War Sunday" is what the Courier-Journal in the host city
of Louisville called the religio-political rally in an editorial which said
that instead of "Justice Sunday: Stop the filibuster against people of
faith," the event should have been called, "Injustice Sunday: Demean the
holy and foment schism for partisan gain."
Read the editorial in
the Courier-Journal, or on
TruthOut.org
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Evangelical leaders use a simulcast to churches around
the country to support conservative judges. Other groups fear a 'religious
war.'"
So read the headline on
the LA Times report, which noted that Sen. Frist "shied away from
the fiery oratory offered by evangelical leaders," but nevertheless stuck by
his threat to use the "nuclear option," forcing an end to the use of
filibusters to delay and perhaps scuttle votes on some of the court nominees
considered most objectionable by Democrats.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Civil rights coalition using radio ads to
warn of the "nuclear option" as a threat to civil rights
On Tuesday, April 26, radio ads spotlighting Senate Majority Leader Bill
Frist's threatened "nuclear option" to arbitrarily cut off debate in the
U.S. Senate will begin airing in nearly a dozen U.S. cities.
"We are calling on the Senate to reject this politically divisive nuclear
option and put acrimonious partisanship aside. The Senate must get to work
on solving some of our nation's most pressing problems - creating more jobs,
educating our children, providing and improving healthcare and, reducing the
deficit," said Wade Henderson, Executive Director of LCCR, the nation's
oldest and largest civil and human rights organization.
More >> [This report provides links to the
audio ads themselves.]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A High-Tech Lynching in Prime Time
That was the term used to describe the event in a New York Times
opinion piece by Frank Rich
Read it in the
Times,
or on TruthOut.org.
http://www.tompaine.com/articles/faith_and_the_filibuster_fight.php?dateid=20050425
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Faith and the Filibuster Fight
Melissa Rogers, a Baptist professor of religion writes a thoughtful and
strong critique of the Sunday rally.
She begins:
I am a church-going, Bible-believing
Baptist, but I recently learned that I'm not a Christian. Indeed, I've not
only learned that I'm not a Christian, I've also learned that I'm
anti-Christian and hostile to religion. Why? Because I dare to disagree
with a certain political and legal agenda.
She goes on to offer a remarkable notion:
It's time to tell the truth.
There is no "filibuster against people of faith."
Religious people are on both sides of the debate about the filibuster and
certain Bush-nominated judges. And it's wrong for one of the country's
foremost political leaders to lend legitimacy to a contrary notion. Just
as no one should have to pass a religious test in order to hold political
office, no one should have to pass a political test in order to claim
religion or morality.
Further, the Senate has already confirmed the
overwhelming majority of President Bush's judicial nominees, and there is
every reason to assume that most of these judges are religious people.
Many of these judges presumably share the president's views on abortion
and same-sex marriage.
She concludes:
When I hear attempts to manipulate people in the pews, I
always think of one of my grandmother's favorite Bible verses: "For God
hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a
sound mind" (2 Timothy 1:7). May people of all faiths and political
stripes reject a spirit of fear and speak the truth, with power and with
love.
Read the rest >> |
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Stated Clerk calls on Frist to avoid
condemning people of faith
[4-22-05]
Clifton Kirkpatrick, Stated Clerk of the PC(USA), will
join with other religious leaders in a conference call with journalists
today to criticize the participation of Senate Republican leader (and
Presbyterian) Bill Frist in a teleconference scheduled for Sunday that will
depict Democrats as "against people of faith."
In an interview on Thursday, April 21, Kirkpatrick said
that "one of the hallmarks of our denomination is that we are an ecumenical
church. ... Elected officials should not be portraying public policies as
being for or against people of faith."
Read the story in the New York Times
or on TruthOut.org |
|
Legal views of Frist's "nuclear option"
Gene TeSelle, Witherspoon's Issues
Analyst, sent this on Thursday, April 21, 2005
[Posted here 4-22-05]
Today I attended a forum at Vanderbilt's Law
School concerning the so-called "nuclear option" for the Senate, under which
a parliamentary maneuver would bypass the Senate's cloture rule and allow a
majority vote on the President's judicial nominees. The panel included two
law professors and an African-American minister. They gave lots of helpful
background, which also helped to clarify the foreground of the
issue.
They pointed out that Orrin Hatch as chair of
the Judiciary Committee during the Clinton years simply bottled up
nominations in committee, not letting them get to the floor B a seemingly
less "democratic" approach, since it foreclosed both debate and a registered
vote.
They commented that the current system, by
requiring sixty votes to close debate, encourages dialogue and negotiation
in the Senate. With the current party ratio, persuasion of five Democrats
can unlock debate -- and persuasion of five Republicans can make the vote go
the other way. Both have happened frequently.
They also reminded us that seven of the
current judicial appointments being opposed by the Democrats are
re-nominations; these are people who were rejected in the last Congress for
being too extreme or too ideological. Clearly the President's strategy is to
keep insisting on his way and precipitate a crisis.
Now to the really interesting part. The
"nuclear" scenario is one in which the President of the Senate,
Vice-President Cheney, would be asked to rule on a point of order. If he
were to rule that the cloture rule does not apply to judicial appointments,
his ruling would be challenged. And although it takes two thirds of the
Senate to change its rules, it takes only a majority vote to uphold a ruling
from the chair.
Asked whether such an action could be
challenged in the courts, the professors said that the Constitution allows
the Senate to make its own rules. This might make an appeal difficult. And
yet such an action would be a breach of the Senate's own rules. Thus there
might be an opening for court challenge.
Several dimensions of this strategy were
pointed out.
1. It is clearly a politicization of the
confirmation process, drawing lines and whipping up passions by talking
about "activist judges" who are making wrong, indeed immoral and unreligious
rulings. They would be replaced by other "activist judges" who, some hope,
will link church and state, inject religion into public schools and public
places, repeal reproductive rights, and ban legal rights for gays and
lesbians.
2. It is a disturbing kind of strategic
planning (some might call it conspiracy), under which the President of the
Senate, who is supposed to make parliamentary rulings impartially, would
participate in a scenario written in advance. This is what has several
Republicans in the Senate worried. It is also the reason many Republicans
tell pollsters that they are against it.
3. If it is still a possibility that the
Republicans will "go nuclear," Senator Bill Frist has already "gone
ballistic." He has promised to appear, on April 24, on a "Justice Sunday"
telecast sponsored by the Family Research Council. Tony Perkins, president
of the Family Research Council, thinks that the courts are trying to "rob us
of our Christian heritage and religious freedoms."
This, a panelist pointed out, amounts to
giving religious sanction to a political power play that breaks the agreed
rules of the Senate. It is a "teleological suspension of the ethical" in
which religious people, in effect, are telling the Senators to do evil so
that grace might abound. In holy war, after all, what is normally prohibited
becomes possible, even justifiable.
Theologians have loved to debate whether God
has the right C or the kind of character C to suspend God's own commands.
But most people would be reluctant to give that right to human beings, even
when they are religious leaders. Those who are not reluctant to do so are
likely to be theocrats, claiming that God rules through human
intermediaries who are to be obeyed because they have divine sanction.
The argument that is trotted out sooner or
later is that religion is an "absolute commitment" C as though this makes it
exempt from the rules of normal political behavior, and even confers the
privilege of defining those rules.
The difficulty, of course, is that many
competing groups can claim the right to carry their "absolute commitments"
into public discourse, and this promotes intolerance and eventually open
religious warfare.
Let's stifle the theocratic urge before it
gets to that point.
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Some blogs worth visiting |
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PVJ's
Facebook page
Mitch Trigger, PVJ's
Secretary/Communicator, has created a Facebook page where
Witherspoon members and others can gather to exchange news and
views. Mitch and a few others have posted bits of news, both
personal and organizational. But there’s room for more!
You can post your own news and views,
or initiate a conversation about a topic of interest to you. |
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Voices of Sophia blog
Heather Reichgott, who has created
this new blog for Voices of Sophia, introduces it:
After fifteen years of scholarship
and activism, Voices of Sophia presents a blog. Here, we present the
voices of feminist theologians of all stripes: scholars, clergy,
students, exiles, missionaries, workers, thinkers, artists, lovers
and devotees, from many parts of the world, all children of the God
in whose image women are made. .... This blog seeks to glorify God
through prayer, work, art, and intellectual reflection. Through
articles and ensuing discussion we hope to become an active and
thoughtful community. |
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John Harris’ Summit to
Shore blogspot
Theological and philosophical
reflections on everything between summit to shore, including
kayaking, climbing, religion, spirituality, philosophy, theology,
politics, culture, travel, The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), New
York City and the Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood by a progressive
New York City Presbyterian Pastor. John is a former member of the
Witherspoon board, and is designated pastor of North Presbyterian
Church in Flushing, NY. |
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John Shuck’s Shuck and Jive
A Presbyterian minister, currently
serving as pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Elizabethton,
Tenn., blogs about spirituality, culture, religion (both organized
and disorganized), life, evolution, literature, Jesus, and
lightening up. |
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Got more blogs to recommend?
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