Posted on 05/15/2010 7:58:57 AM PDT by Colofornian
Glenn Beck is a darling of Fox News viewers and a must-see for legions of religious conservatives. So given his profile and right-of-center views, it was no surprise when it was announced that Beck would be a featured speaker at this Sunday's commencement at Baptist-run Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va., the brainchild of the late Rev. Jerry Falwell, founder of the Moral Majority.
Falwell's son, Jerry Jr., is the current president of Liberty. In a statement explaining the invitation, he called Beck "one of the few courageous voices in the national media standing up for the principles upon which this nation was founded."
Yet if conservative Christians share Beck's political and social views, many of them also remain extremely suspicious of Beck's Mormon faith. Beck became a Mormon as an adult and credits his faith with turning his life around. But evangelicals generally consider Mormonism a "cult" and not Christian.
As a result, Beck's appearance at Liberty has generated an unusual amount of public infighting among evangelicals -- and creating the kind of controversy that is often associated with Catholic colleges, such as Notre Dame experienced last year when President Obama was invited to be the commencement speaker.
Ryan Begue, a Florida pastor who is in this year's graduating class from Liberty's theological seminary, said he was "shocked and disappointed" at Falwell's invitation to Beck.
"It seems that the leadership's decision in this matter gives the impression that it is more committed to conservatism than the Gospel," Begue wrote in the Florida Baptist Witness. "I have no beef with Glenn Beck as a person, but I certainly do with his religious beliefs. Why does Liberty not invite a Christian?"
Liberty University's Facebook page also lit up with the debate, while prominent Christian conservatives also weighed in.
"Alliances such as these are not glorifying to God, in that what association has God with false religions?" wrote John Ferguson, founder of the Voice of Truth blog. "The tangential dangers when the evangelical community unites with the secular world for the sake of social or political agendas are numerous because it leads to a dilution of truths from the Word of God, opens the door to give credence to non-believers within evangelical circles and ultimately leads to the eternal destruction of lost people."
A 2007 Pew Forum survey showed 25 percent of Americans would be less likely to vote for a Mormon candidate for president, with only Muslims and atheists earning higher negatives. But among white evangelicals who attend church weekly -- the GOP base and the dominant demographic of Liberty University -- the number rises to above 40 percent. In 2008, Focus on the Family, a leading lobby of the Christian right, pulled an interview with Beck over concerns that they would appear to be sanctioning his Mormon faith.
And during his 2008 bid, Romney faced a serious pushback from evangelicals who even opposed the idea of John McCain selecting him as his running mate on the Republican ticket, one of the factors that led McCain to finally choose Sarah Palin.
(Mormons insist they are Christians because they believe in Jesus Christ and consider the Bible Holy Scripture. But most traditional Christian churches do not accept the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints -- the formal name for Mormons -- as Christian because of the religion's beliefs on the nature of God, salvation, the Trinity and their scriptures, such as the Book of Mormon, and other texts discovered by founding prophet Joseph Smith in upstate New York in the 1800s.)
Falwell seemed to anticipate the risks of the Beck invitation when he noted in his statement that Liberty University has always held two end-of-year ceremonies -- a baccalaureate ceremony to confer degrees that "always includes a gospel message brought by someone who is in complete theological alignment with the university" and a separate commencement ceremony that "has always featured leaders from all walks of life and all faiths who share the university's social values and traditional family values."
"Commencement speakers," he noted, "have included representatives from the following faiths: Roman Catholicism, Judaism, mainline Protestant denominations such as the Episcopal Church, and even some speakers with no religious affiliation at all."
Falwell's effort did not forestall the controversy, however.
"We are not to put politics first and the Lord second," wrote Steve McConkey, another prominent Christian conservative, who is upset at the Beck invitation. "If this country is to have another revival, we need to get back to the basics, just like an athlete who has to go back to the basics to learn proper skills. We join Glenn Beck in many of his viewpoints, however, we do not endorse his Mormon beliefs."
There has arguably been some softening, at least among the Southern Baptist leadership, in their view of Mormonism, perhaps influenced by the "ecumenism of the trenches" -- that in a culture war, all social conservatives must stick together. That is part of the reason that evangelicals and Roman Catholics now collaborate on fights against abortion and gay marriage despite their historical cultural divide and their ongoing doctrinal differences.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints used to be listed under "cults and sects" by the Southern Baptist Convention, but today is categorized among "newly developed religions" by the SBC's North American Mission Board. Similarly, some Southern Baptist leaders, such as Richard Land, have referred to Mormonism as the "fourth Abrahamic religion" after Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
But as the Glenn Beck commencement controversy shows, even fourth place isn't enough to overcome such long-held suspicions
I rest my case. lol.
More accurately, the acronym "lol" should be redefined as "Lack Of Laughter."
The list of its meanings includes, but is not limited to:
1) "I have nothing worthwhile to contribute to this conversation."
2) "I'm too lazy to read what you just wrote so I'm typing something useless in hopes that you'll think I'm still paying attention."
3) "Your statement lacks even the vaguest trace of humor but I'll pretend I'm amused."
4) "This is a pointless acronym I'm sticking in my sentence just because it's become so engraved into my mind that when chatting, I must use the meaningless sentence-filler 'lol.'"
C’est la vie. :)
I'm not talking about politics or FR. I'm talking about Christians, worldwide and in the US as well as on this forum, attacking each other. There are endless threads here with Catholics and Protestants assailing each other's faiths.
I believe the Mormons have serious doctrinal errors, but I'm not going to attack them. We have a common enemy; let's focus on fighting them rather each other.
I could agree wth you, but then we’d both be wrong.
Fine. Then let us be divided and conquered, because we were too busy debating doctrinal points to unit and fight our common enemy.
I didn't know you were french. :-) I hope that's ok with everyone in here.
I presume that Glenn Beck has not been invited to speak on religion in any specific sense. I imagine that Beck was invited for what he can contribute as a political conservative, who has a message about the state of politics in this country and a warning that keeping your eyes trained on God is our only hope for salvation.
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If not, "Chlanna nan con thigibh a so's gheibh sibh feoil". :)
Thanx. Now I have Celtic Women songs in my brain. :-)
Just be glad that you don’t have this in your brain, as I have for the last week :):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fK5CLplRIno
The mod busted you for a WEEK??
BUMMER!
No rest for the wicked...
timeflies - like an arrow.
Fruit flies like an apple.
Unfortunately; I doubt that the mouth will follow...
Not to worry; we will.
However; when MORMONs have the gall to say that THEY are Christian and spout their blather; it WILL be shown for the heresy it is.
Hayley WHO?
And you presume that "religion" is hermetically sealed/compartmentalized because why? And you presume that if, per say, Beck talks about "religious liberties" that this is based in something other than the God of religion?
I presume that Glenn Beck has not been invited to speak on religion in any specific sense. I imagine that Beck was invited for what he can contribute...[re:] a warning that keeping your eyes trained on God is our only hope for salvation.
Can you say Contradiction? He's not been invited to speak about religion specifically, except perhaps to keep your eyes trained on God as the only hope for salvation? (Good thing training your eyes on God for salvation isn't anything in the "religious" category)
Your are right, that was an ambiguous statement because I was not referring to spiritual salvation. I was referring to political and economic salvation. Sorry.
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