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Some Christian voters lean toward Obama, study finds (Religious Left Alert)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ^
| October 9, 2008
| Ann Rogers
Posted on 10/09/2008 8:08:10 AM PDT by rightwingintelligentsia
A new study suggests that young, white Christian voters have warmed toward big government while cooling toward social litmus tests.
"Younger Americans, including younger Americans of faith, are not the culture war generation," said Robert Jones, president of Public Religion Research, which did the survey.
"Young Catholics, mainline Protestants and evangelicals are bridging the divides that entrenched the older generation."
The study also suggests that while Sen. John McCain maintains the loyalty of weekly church attendees, Sen. Barack Obama has captured those who attend once or twice a month -- a group that split between President Bush and Sen. John Kerry in 2004.
Overall, it found Mr. Obama leading Mr. McCain 50 percent to 42 percent.
(Excerpt) Read more at post-gazette.com ...
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: aclumia; agitprop; christianity; christianleft; culturewar; dnctalkingpoints; faithinpubliclife; godgap; homosexualagenda; howtostealanelection; obama; proabortion; prosodomite; religiousleft
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To: Thane_Banquo
The ones that this article is referring to are “lost” - they’ve been indoctrinated, yet still hold to the idea that they are Christians.
Christianity is exclusive, and excludes all the ideas of the left.
As just a simple example, you can’t be Christian and think that inspiring people to covet others’ property and empowering government to steal it is OK.
21
posted on
10/09/2008 8:26:12 AM PDT
by
MrB
(0bama supporters: What's the attraction? The Marxism or the Infanticide?)
To: weegee
The big move to co-opt religion (specifically Christianity) got underway in 2004 and ramped up in 2006. Look at the keyword Godgap (or search God Gap on the internet). ReligiousLeft is another keyword to look back upon.
It was happeneing before then. It’s been slow and seductive. Rick Warren really sped things up with his works driven approach. I better understand it - he wants people to have a “purpose” and hopefully by doing good deeds you’ll find Christ. It typically doesn’t work that way. It’s all about turning over your life to Him and having good works follow but not the other way around.
This is part of the effort to target those voters who cling to religion. They figure you wont notice that Church teachings are changing before your eyes.
I’ve noticed. At the moment we aren’t going to church. It’s becoming more and more liberal and “in your face with it”. It’s not subtle as it used to be.
22
posted on
10/09/2008 8:27:44 AM PDT
by
nmh
(Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
To: rightwingintelligentsia
I got some news for you, those aren’t Christian voters, or they know nothing about Obama.
23
posted on
10/09/2008 8:29:51 AM PDT
by
SoConPubbie
(GOP: If you reward bad behavior all you get is more bad behavior.)
To: weegee
The big move to co-opt religion (specifically Christianity) got underway in 2004... No, it began long, long before that.
24
posted on
10/09/2008 8:29:57 AM PDT
by
polymuser
(Taxpayers voting for Obama are like chickens voting for Colonel Sanders)
To: MrB
The Bible is heavily in favor of taking care of the poor. Liberals like to claim to be righteous in this, but those who know the internal politics know that there is no way the Democrats want to help the poor get out of poverty, because people who get out of poverty tend to favor Republicans more than the poor.
Why have the Democrats, after being in power in Chicago forever, not cleaned up the crime and poverty on the South Side? Because they know that if they cleaned up the South Side, it would become more prosperous, safe, and educated, and thus more Republican. If you cut out the South Side of Chicago, then IL is as red a state as you’ll find anywhere.
25
posted on
10/09/2008 8:30:25 AM PDT
by
Thane_Banquo
("They aren't people! They're the ACLU!" - General Patton in An American Carol)
To: rightwingintelligentsia
"Younger Americans, including younger Americans of faith, are not the culture war generation," said Robert Jones, president of Public Religion Research, which did the survey. Many believe that large government can do the Lord's work, sadly. It enables people to wash their hands of having to care for the poor and so forth. But the fact remains that when Jesus said, "Love your neighbor as yourself", he was speaking to individuals. He did not say, "Go elect leaders who will do my work."
26
posted on
10/09/2008 8:33:01 AM PDT
by
mlocher
(USA is a sovereign nation)
To: rightwingintelligentsia
A new study suggests that young, white Christian voters have warmed toward big government while cooling toward social litmus tests.In other words, these Christians have become of the world, which Jesus warned against.
We shouldn't be surprised. The bible tells us there will be a falling away before Jesus' return.
27
posted on
10/09/2008 8:33:07 AM PDT
by
MEGoody
(Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall cause you to vote against the Democrats.)
To: Harry Wurzbach
Young people are stupid.Correction, Some young people are stupid. I know a lot of conservative young folks with strong religious convictions that I am very proud of.
28
posted on
10/09/2008 8:34:44 AM PDT
by
mlocher
(USA is a sovereign nation)
To: Thane_Banquo
29
posted on
10/09/2008 8:35:56 AM PDT
by
MrB
(0bama supporters: What's the attraction? The Marxism or the Infanticide?)
To: Oldexpat
The old line, now liberal Churches are dying and have congregations that look geriatric.I've seen this as well.
The young people are flocking to the new big churches with programs and are 99% conservative.
I hope you are right. I haven't seen it.
30
posted on
10/09/2008 8:41:44 AM PDT
by
wmfights
(Believe - THE GOSPEL - and be saved)
To: nmh
Rick Warren really sped things up with his works driven approach. I better understand it - he wants people to have a purpose and hopefully by doing good deeds youll find Christ. It typically doesnt work that way. Its all about turning over your life to Him and having good works follow but not the other way around.I agree with you that good works follow faith. However, I do know people who want to help their neighbor who have gotten involved in church aid activities. By being near the Word, they somehow have a spiritual changing event. Perhaps they were Christians before that, in which case they had a spiritual "growth spurt". Or perhaps being near other Christians caused some of Christ's love to rub off on them and they were successfully evangelized. (If the latter, I would argue that their "good works" prior to conversion were not Biblical "good works", but did in fact help Christ get his work complete.)
31
posted on
10/09/2008 8:42:27 AM PDT
by
mlocher
(USA is a sovereign nation)
To: polymuser
There has been coption a long time, to be sure, but the Left has decided to tackle the hold outs by subverting the institution from within intead of denigrating the religious altogether.
After the 2004 election, where the Democrat talking heads were bemoaning how religious conservatives (including black Democrats) continue to vote against their "own financial self-interest" on these religious issues.
The God Not Guns coalition is predictably upset about the U.S. Supreme Courts overturning the Washington, D.C., handgun ban. It will embolden adherents of GUNdamentalism in their belief in the inerrancy of the 2nd Amendment, intoned the Rev. Nancy Smith, coalition founder and chief. Gundamentalism is a religious movement without spiritual grounding. Rather, it is rooted in the sale and promotion of violence.
-
Barack Obama may be talking up his Christian faith like he's doing today in Ohio and trying his best to appeal to Evangelicals with a new kind of politics, but hes got a problem. Many of his positions are the same liberal positions that have turned off Evangelicals for years. Obama delivered another speech about faith Tuesday. Hes done a few of these concerning his faith and how it shapes his public policy. But Sunday his campaign and the Democratic Party were handing out pro-gay rights flyers at the Pride Festival in St. Louis. How is that going to play...
-
Reaching out to evangelical voters, Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama is announcing plans to expand President Bush's program steering federal social service dollars to religious groups and -- in a move sure to cause controversy -- support some ability to hire and fire based on faith. Sen. Obama was unveiling his approach to getting religious charities more involved in government anti-poverty programs during a tour and remarks Tuesday in Zanesville, Ohio, at Eastside Community Ministry, which provides food, clothes, youth ministry and other services. "The challenges we face today ... are simply too big for government to solve alone," Sen....
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The day after the election, Slate's political writers tackled the question of why the Democratic Partywhich has now lost five of the past seven presidential elections and solidified its minority status in Congresskeeps losing elections. Chris Suellentrop says that John Kerry was too nuanced and technocratic, while George W. Bush offered a vision of expanding freedom around the world. William Saletan argues that Democratic candidates won't win until they again cast their policies the way Bill Clinton did, in terms of values and moral responsibility. Timothy Noah contends that none of the familiar advice to the partymove right, move left,...
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I say forget introspection. It's time to be honest about our antagonists. My predecessors in this conversation are thoughtful men, and I honor their ideas, but let's try something else. I grew up in Missouri and most of my family voted for Bush, so I am going to be the one to say it: The election results reflect the decision of the right wing to cultivate and exploit ignorance in the citizenry. I suppose the good news is that 55 million Americans have evaded the ignorance-inducing machine. But 58 million have not. (Well, almost 58 millionmy relatives are not ignorant,...
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The transcripts show that John F. Kerry said the right things to connect with religion-minded voters, with his earnest speeches about God's work on Earth and invocations of faith and Scripture. Yet they landed with a thud on a populace conditioned to view liberal Democrats as faithless intellectuals. No doubt Kerry's stiff New England style didn't help. This is not what religious faith looks like to much of the rest of the country, especially the South. Yet one candidate's stiffness cannot fully explain the "God gap" that drives people of faith, and those more concerned with moral issues than economic...
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I have to thank Jimmy Carter for saving my sanity. Granted, his was not a presidency that one looks back to with fondness. Gas lines stretched forever, Iran took our people hostage, and there was disco. But Carter's ex-presidency has been a model of that unofficial institution. He has built homes for the poor, mediated wars, helped feed the hungry in Africa, fought disease in Latin America. In so doing, Carter -- a deacon of Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, Ga. -- has obeyed a directive that Jesus issued to one of his disciples.
-
Bested by a Republican campaign emphasizing Christian faith, some Democrats are scrambling to shake off their secular image, stepping up efforts to organize the "religious left" and debating changes to how they approach the cultural flashpoints of same-sex marriage and abortion. Some call the election a warning. "You can't have everybody who goes to church vote Republican; you just can't," Al From, founder of the Democratic Leadership Council, said last week at a forum on the election. Religious traditionalists including Dr. Richard Land, president of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the conservative Southern Baptist Convention, and Jim Wallis...
-
Liberal religious figures, concerned about broad moral issues such as world poverty as well as the perception that ''moral values" helped win the election for President Bush, are stepping up their organizational efforts to support left-leaning candidates and their causes to prepare for the 2006 midterms and the 2008 presidential election.
-
Democrats, reeling from the Republicans' success at courting churchgoers, are focusing new attention on a religious and political anomaly: Jim Wallis, one of the few prominent left-leaning leaders among evangelical Protestants. At the start of the Congressional session, Senate Democrats invited Mr. Wallis to address their members at a private session to discuss issues. A group of about 15 House Democrats invited him to a breakfast discussion about dispelling their party's secular image. And NBC News has enlisted him to appear as a guest during its inauguration coverage opposite Dr. James C. Dobson, one of the most prominent evangelical conservatives....
-
The party of abortion has tapped a leader from the religious left to help it get back in the good graces of the red states. Democrats are looking for ways to tap the evangelical vote that went so strongly for Republicans and President Bush in November, so they've enlisted the leader of Sojourners, Jim Wallis, to help improve their party's poor image in the eyes of Christians. Wallis, one of the leaders of the evangelical left, told The New York Times that Democrats have a problem: They are being perceived as secular fundamentalists. Tim Wildmon, president of the American Family...
-
Like any preacher worth his salt, Jim Wallis, the self-described "progressive evangelical" leader and editor of Sojourners magazine who has lately been discovered by Democrats in Washington desperate to learn the language of "moral values," likes to tell a story to drive a point home. In his new book, "God's Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn't Get It" (HarperSanFrancisco), just published this week and currently sitting at #2 on Amazon.com, Wallis recalls speaking to "a group of Boston's best and brightest Left/liberal intelligentsia" gathered in "a large living room" a few blocks off Harvard Square....
-
Hillary Clinton, engaged in
God-drenching ...fundraiser organised by the Reverend Eugene Rivers
She lavished praise on faith-based organizations
...Clinton's speech was part of a growing debate on the left about how to close the God gap. Democrats want to change the focus of religious debate from abortion and gay marriage to, say, war and poverty. ...
Hillary told
pro-choice activists not only that abortion represents a sad, even tragic choice to many, many women but also that religious and moral values are the primary reason why teenage girls abstain from early sexual activity.
more proof of Mrs Clinton's political maturity...
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WASHINGTON, Jan. 31 (UPI) -- House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., wants her party to develop a faith agenda for 2006 to try to reconnect with religious-minded American voters. Pelosi has tapped U.S. Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., to lead the effort to recapture faith-based voters who, exit polls indicate, constituted a substantial bloc of votes in the 2004 U.S. elections. Clyburn said he would convene a working group to review party policies and ideas and look at new ways to frame those issues in faith-based terms, Roll Call reported Monday. "Our problem is not our programs," Clyburn added. "It's been...
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DURING THE DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION the Wesley Theological Seminary (in Washington, D.C.) sponsored a discussion of "Red God, Blue God: The God Gap in Presidential Politics: Is It Real?" So it was only fitting, since Democrats are on one end of that gap and Republicans on the other, for the seminary to host another confab in Gotham during the GOP convention. Mike McCurry, Bill Clinton's best press secretary, moderated a discussion at WNET Channel 13 (not far from Madison Square Garden) among Shaun Casey of Wesley Seminary, Michael Cromartie of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, and John Podesta, a Clinton...
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The 'God Gap'Republicans Corner The Market On religious Voters by Lowman Henry The saying goes there are two things you should not talk about in polite company: religion and politics. Since I always like to turn political correctness on its ear, today we're going to talk about both at the same time. In the aftermath of the 2000 Presidential election much has been written about the wide gulf between the "blue" (ie: liberal Democrat) states, and the "red" (ie: conservative Republican) states. A poll conducted by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press has shed considerable light...
32
posted on
10/09/2008 8:43:14 AM PDT
by
weegee
(Obama's a uniter?"I want you to argue with them (friends,neighbors,Republicans) & get in their face")
To: rightwingintelligentsia; All
Huckabee and his supporters are proof of the articles assertions.
This “Jesus was a liberal” crap has infiltrated many churches and simply stating that those people aren’t “real” Christians is equivalent to sticking your head in the sand.
You are being infiltrated. The sooner you acknowledge that fact, the sooner you can begin to actually do something about it.
There’s a reason Ratzinger was made Pope. The Catholics have recognized the threat from within. He’s there to kick ass and take names. All the other Christian sects would do well to follow suit.
33
posted on
10/09/2008 8:45:41 AM PDT
by
Khepri
(Georgia is a Soros operation.)
To: weegee
I recently saw a bumper sticker that said
“Christian and Pro-Choice”
To: Thane_Banquo
Does your cousin realize that 0bama came to power threw the most corrupt political machine in the country? Does your cousin realize that Chicago doesnt even have democratic elections anymore, but rather the Dems pick the candidates and the community organizers deliver the votes via fraud? Does your cousin realize, for instance, that in a recent Cook County board election where a Republican was possibly going to get a seat for the first time since before ducks could fly, the Democrat machine withheld ballots and pencils to precincts that tended to be more GOP friendly? Does your cousin realize that 0bamas friend Gov. Rod Blagojevich is a hairs breadth from being indicted, or that it is an open secrt in Chicago that Richard Daley is a complete crook in bed with the mafia? He doesn't care. He thinks it is the "liberals turn now".
It isnt just abortion.
I know, but it is the clearest dividing line between believers and non believers. I do not believe you can support the destruction of innocent life and claim to be a Christian.
35
posted on
10/09/2008 8:50:01 AM PDT
by
wmfights
(Believe - THE GOSPEL - and be saved)
To: rightwingintelligentsia
SOME christians?
is this like the reporters using “SOME SAY” to cover their PERSONAL opinions.
SOME is one person or two?
SOME is the usual homosexual activists who want to have a hedonism based faith?
SOME?
SOME kind of steaming pile of bovine fertilizer.
36
posted on
10/09/2008 8:51:14 AM PDT
by
longtermmemmory
(VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
To: wmfights
Yep, the liberals’ turn. Last time it was the liberals’ turn, we got the 1970s.
37
posted on
10/09/2008 8:53:47 AM PDT
by
Thane_Banquo
("They aren't people! They're the ACLU!" - General Patton in An American Carol)
To: rightwingintelligentsia
I do not know any charismatic, truly evangelical, or true protestants who support Obama.
The Christians I know who support left wing things and Obama himself are United Methodist, PCUSA, some Lutheran, non affiliated ex-Baptist churches here and more than a handful of Catholics sadly.
Southern Church of Christ, Southern Baptist (not the black National Baptist Convention also here in Nashville), PCA, Southern Methodist, 7thDA and every danged Pentocostal church I know of all support PalinMac.
38
posted on
10/09/2008 8:55:02 AM PDT
by
wardaddy
(i can see now why despots always purge the media first.....if I had a rocket launcher)
To: SoConPubbie
I got some news for you, those arent Christian voters, or they know nothing about Obama.”
_______________________________
They are “religious” voters, a Christian voter will never vote for abortion. It IS the litmus test.
39
posted on
10/09/2008 8:59:37 AM PDT
by
cowdog77
("Are there any brave men left in Washington, or are they all cowards?" (Afghan guerilla leader))
To: 1curiousmind
“Some Christian voters lean toward Obama...”
I beg to differ. From my vantage point, I see many mainstream {Methodist, UCC, Presbyterian, Lutheran, Episcopal) Christian leaders will vote Obama, but the people in the pews are heavily favoring McCain/Palin.
They really favor Palin and will vote McCain only to keep Obama out of the WH.
40
posted on
10/09/2008 9:02:16 AM PDT
by
elpadre
(nation)
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