Monday, March 2, 2009

United We Stand?

Although the Democratic Party has recently been able to attract an unusually high percentage of Evangelical support for President Obama and his platform, this support may prove rather ephemeral with the passing of the new $787 billion economic stimulus package. According to Tom Strode of the Southern Baptist Convention, evangelicals oppose this act on many fronts – particularly in claims that it will promote rationed healthcare, discriminate against faith on school campuses, and spend too much in areas that will not immediately stimulate the economy. Granted, this last point is a view that certainly isn’t unique to Evangelicals – many people believe that the stimulus will not do what it’s intended – but it’s not a surprise that a plan that expands the reach of the federal government would be opposed by this group. The preoccupations about healthcare and schooling are voiced stronger in this article: ethics leader Richard Land contends that, “there are a lot of things that are disturbing in this bill… but if I were to single out one thing that is most disturbing it would be the $1.1 billion to create a superstructure of rationed health care to the sick and elderly.” His worries are lodged in the new Federal Coordinating Council for Comparative Effectiveness Research that is to be organized, which, like the (socialized) British system, is designed to promote healthcare treatments that are cost-effective over those proven to be superior methods of medical treatment. Basically the new council will either “grant or deny healthcare based on whether it is cost effective” and, “kill health care… as far as quality.”

One encounters an uncanny feeling of déjà vu when reviewing the opposition to educational provisions: the stimulus allows funding to go to private colleges and universities, but prohibits funding for facilities used for sectarian instruction or religious worship. While this isn’t actually a change in policy since the Higher Education Facilities Act of 1963, the sentiments being harvested in Evangelical groups now mirror those that brought about the rise of the Religious Right in the late 1960s. William Martin explains in his book, With God on Our Side, that the Religious Right originated as a response from conservative Christians to new government policies removing the tax-exempt status that many private Christian schools enjoyed. The threat of higher tuition and school closures with the new burden of taxation manifested itself to conservative Christians as a threat to their ability to practice their way of life, and so, desperate for a return to the old status quo, this group saw no other choice but to involve itself in politics by becoming what is known as the Religious Right. This translates to a modern-day concern that schools without financial aid from the government will prove unable to maintain themselves, and Christians will need to send their children to secular schools. History suggests here that the rallying points that Evangelicals have found within the economic stimulus may be enough for a strong revival of the Religious Right and a return of religious value-voters to the Republican Party.

Speaking of expanding government influence, I can foresee the $500,000 cap on executive salaries causing outrage among Evangelicals as well. While the number of impacted families is small, this provision puts America on track to becoming a more socialized nation, and could rekindle a certain paranoia that Jerry Falwell, cofounder of the Moral Majority, explained the Christian Right once maintained about Communism inflicting American families. With a cap on the amount some Americans will be able to spend and more controls over schooling and healthcare, some may begin to feel that they are rapidly losing control of the ability to make their own life choices or teach principles unlike those off of which our government acts to their children.

A dichotomy has already manifested itself in the distribution of votes on the stimulus. The House voted 246-183 in favor, but no Republicans approved. In the Senate, the stimulus passed 60-38; with 3 Republicans and 55 Democrats supporting it and no Democrats in opposition. As the stimulus is implemented, outcry will only become louder; surely change won’t be visible immediately, so widespread panic and desperation will lead to more extreme activism. James Morone, author of Hellfire Nation, outlines the pattern of widespread panic unifying the masses under morality to raise opposition to the status quo. It appears that this is already beginning to take place over faster forms of communication like the internet. Several sources have also indicated recently that Christian Churches have seen swelling attendance rates due to recent economic disparity. According to Life Christian Church in New Jersey, “prayer requests have doubled – almost all of them aimed at getting or keeping jobs.” If people can be coerced into attending church in hopes of reviving their finances, it’s likely that they’ll listen to Evangelicals’ opinions about the economic stimulus and follow suit.

The pocketbook, as William Martin points out, is a fierce motivator in politics, as is the need for security. An economic crisis is one of the best things that could happen for the Religious Right seeking support for their political agenda. My prediction is that history will repeat itself; the Religious Right will not wane in the near future as some have predicted from the outcome of the election, it will utilize the economic stimulus as a rallying point for Evangelical involvement in politics. Can Obama's call for unity and cooperation prevail over the prevalent feelings of panic and desperation that our economic crisis invokes? I think it would take too much for one man – even the President – to get people to override their nature in favor of cooperation.

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