Faith-Based Skepticism

LOCONTE, JOSEPH

Faith-Based Skepticism Evangelicals to Bush: Lead us not into temptation. BY JOSEPH LOCONTE CHRISTIANITY is known for its paradoxes—the meek shall inherit the earth, the last shall be first,...

...At worst, recipients of public funds can terminate the partner-ship—which many charity leaders seem prepared to do...
...Many ministers and other leaders, however, take a different view...
...Still, it would be strange if evangelicals joined with secularists to block Bush's overture to people of faith who are addressing our social problems...
...Meanwhile, in addition to the funding idea, Bush is pushing a broad faith agenda that enjoys bipartisan support: Reform tax laws to stimulate charitable giving, and encourage a climate of church-state cooperation— open public schools to after-school tutors sent by churches, for example, or allow congregations to befriend and assist welfare families...
...He especially worries about the future of church-state partnerships once Bush leaves office: "I wouldn't touch the money with the proverbial ten-foot pole...
...Cortes says his agency—supported by about 40 local evangelical churches, all in low-income neighborhoods—has no qualms about segregating the religious and secular aspects of its programs...
...Leading supporters in the Senate, notably Rick Santorum, say they will wait several months before floating legislation, while in the House, J.C...
...It's not clear whether the criticism has dampened congressional enthusiasm for the plan, which ultimately would allow church-based groups to bid on hundreds of federal programs, including job training, drug treatment, and after-school services...
...But the plan's supporters point out that eliminating intrusive regulations has been part of the initiative from the beginning: Bush immediately established offices in five federal agencies to remove regulations unfriendly to religion (the requirement, for example, that emergency shelters operate "in a manner free from religious influence...
...Even amid the brickbats of the last few weeks, a consensus is emerging over a way to transform the critics into converts: vouchers...
...Other Christian leaders, however, are perfectly at home with the ground rules of religious pluralism...
...The Reverend Luis Cortes, president of Nueva Esperanza, a community development corporation in Philadelphia, looks forward to tapping new sources of public funding...
...We can't do this anymore.'" The question of proselytizing is a touchy one for both Left and Right, for opposite reasons...
...Ronald Sider, the president of Evangelicals for Social Action, sees Robertson and Falwell as "confused about the First Amendment"—and playing straight into the hands of their enemies, who caricature them as closet promoters of "theocracy...
...Moreover, countless religious entities— hospitals, charities, community development corporations, international relief agencies—already receive government grants and contracts and have done so for decades...
...There's plenty of preaching the gospel, but not enough living the gospel," Ballard says...
...John DiIulio, director of the White House faith office, angered some when he told a gathering of religious conservatives earlier this month that "conversion-focused" programs probably couldn't receive direct grants...
...Charles Ballard, president of the Institute for Responsible Fatherhood in Washington, D.C., for example, already gets federal money for fatherhood programs and job training...
...Several years ago Morgan got New York City money to open another facility, where religious activities are available but must be run by volunteers...
...There are lives at stake...
...Today city officials rank the program their most effective in leading men out of homelessness and addiction...
...BY JOSEPH LOCONTE CHRISTIANITY is known for its paradoxes—the meek shall inherit the earth, the last shall be first, whoever loses his life will save it...
...The strategy: Build trust through service, sacrifice, sweat—and time...
...A final worry among conservatives is that expanding government support for faith-based charities will mean backing for unpopular religious sects—including Wiccans, Hare Krishnas, and the Unification Church...
...Here's another: Evangelicals who complain that government is too secular, suddenly fear it's getting too much religion...
...But people will follow you into the fire if you know how to create relationships...
...White House officials say they cannot discriminate against any religious groups, so long as they are effectively helping the poor...
...He has teamed with the Hudson Institute's Michael Horowitz to rally other religious leaders around a document detailing their complaints...
...After all, government social policy has treated religious commitment with indifference or hostility for a long time...
...Watts is expected to introduce a bill later this month...
...Given the shifting fortunes of Joseph Loconte is the William E. Simon Fellow in Religion and a Free Society at the Heritage Foundation...
...Yes, there are risks, but they are risks worth taking," says Michael Cromar-tie, director of the Evangelical Studies Project at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C...
...The board of the National Association of Evangelicals, representing 51 denominations, also has endorsed it...
...Take the issue of government oversight...
...I'm ready to go to the board of directors any day and say, 'I'm sorry, this is untenable...
...Marvin Olasky, whose ideas helped shape the president's "compassionate conservatism," sees in the Bush plan a bias against organizations that make religious conversion central to their mission...
...DiIulio tried to nuance his remarks: Although federal law prohibits nonprofits from using taxpayer money for religious instruction or evangelism, it allows those activities to occur on site—as long as they are funded privately and separated from the social-service aspects of the program...
...For Robertson and Falwell, that creates "an intolerable situation...
...If the administration proposes a comprehensive voucher scheme, Olasky says he will happily join the parade...
...Already many states subsidize day care through vouchers redeemable by church-run centers...
...And last year, President Clinton signed an initiative allowing drug addicts to use federal vouchers in faith-based treatment programs...
...They agree with Bush that most faith-based groups have been unjustly shut out of government's social service regime, but are resisting his plan to greatly expand a provision of a 1996 law letting them compete for federal anti-poverty money...
...Unless an organization can strictly segment its religious and non-religious work with an army of accountants and lawyers looking over its shoulder, it would not be eligible to participate," says Olasky, a senior fellow at the Acton Institute...
...Nevertheless, if government regulators threaten the agency's spiritual mission, Morgan vows to walk...
...Even the contested funding concept has plenty of backers...
...these contrarians—Robertson's group is struggling with debt, and Falwell is more of a media target than a political player—they probably don't pose much trouble for the Bush White House...
...Gary Bauer, former head of the Family Research Council, thinks the idea has "hit a big pothole...
...Richard Land, president of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention—the nation's largest Protestant denomination—has "grave reservations" about public funding for religious charities...
...Christian Coalition leader Pat Robertson fears that once faith-based charities accept public funds, they will "give up their unique religious activities...
...Christianity Today, the flagship magazine of evangelicalism, gave the idea its editorial blessing and chided congregations who "may be enticed to use any regulations on evangelism as an excuse to exempt themselves from social services...
...The White House, meanwhile, is undaunted...
...The opportunities to expand ministries to the poor, the alcoholic, the drug abuser, the homeless, the needy are just too great to not find a way to make it work...
...These programs may be as religious as they want to be: Federal law—admittedly, as yet untested in the courts—places no content restrictions on religious programs helping individuals who participate freely and who pay with vouchers...
...Some worry that audits and bureaucratic scrutiny will distort the character of religious charities...
...But others might...
...While acknowledging the critics' concerns as serious and legitimate, the administration sees no inevitable threat to religion...
...More important, say the plan's defenders, the 1996 "charitable choice" law, designed to end discrimination against religious charities in federal contracting, puts government officials on a tight leash: They may not meddle with the content of faith-based programs or the people who staff them...
...Jerry Falwell, founder of the now-defunct Moral Majority, harbors "deep concerns" that government strings will come with government subsidies...
...Liberals see a slippery slope toward coercing participants into religious activities...
...Conservative criticism itself reflects a live-ly—and healthy—concern to guard the independence of churches and other religious entities...
...Nevertheless, the mini-revolt should come as no surprise...
...And at least one influential evangelical leader, Chuck Colson, a Baptist, has praised the plan...
...His organization constructs housing for low-income residents, offers job training, and operates a charter high school...
...While the Southern Baptist Conven-tion—historically committed to strict separation of church and state—will likely remain wary, it does not control (though it will influence) the decisions of Baptist charities...
...If a bureaucrat's helping hand becomes a scolding finger, agencies can remind him of this existing law...
...That, of course, explains the outcry from hardline separationists, who resist granting religion any public support...
...While enthusiastic about the new Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, they seem to regard government support for the faithful as the eighth deadly sin...
...One of them is Ed Morgan, president of the venerable Bowery Mission in Manhattan, a privately funded Christian shelter serving the homeless since 1879...
...He is the author of Seducing the Samaritan: How Government Contracts Are Reshaping Social Services (Boston: The Pioneer Institute, 1997...
...It has been embraced by some of the nation's leading black ministers, including Walter Fauntroy, Frank Reid, and Eugene Rivers...
...Conservative detractors see a slouching toward secularization, denaturing religious charities at their core...
...Even the president's critics on the right admit that his initiative represents a stunning repudiation of a political culture hostile to any but purely private religion...
...Reversing that pattern was never going to be easy or unproblematic...
...Despite their strong support for George W. Bush, a number of Christian conservatives have hurled stinging criticism at the president's highprofile attempt to enlist religious communities to battle social problems...
...Financial and program accountability, it is argued, need not be an imposition...
...His organization moves married couples into blighted neighborhoods, where they befriend men and help them reconnect with their families...
...We believe we will not lose our independence, and I know that we will not lose our faith...
...And that seems to be patently discriminatory...

Vol. 6 • March 2001 • No. 27


 
Developed by
Kanda Sofware
  Kanda Software, Inc.