"Middle Church" is the vast majority of American faithful to whom these larger social issues matter, and in this book Bob Edgar urges a national political agenda that addresses these vital concerns. Passionate and thought provoking, Middle Church is a call for Americans of all faiths to join together on the moral issues that matter most.
"Middle Church" is the vast majority of American faithful to whom these larger social issues matter, and in this book Bob Edgar urges a national political agenda that addresses these vital concerns. Passionate and thought provoking, Middle Church is a call for Americans of all faiths to join together on the moral issues that matter most.
Middle Church: Reclaiming the Moral Values of the Faithful Majority from the Religious Right
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Overview
"Middle Church" is the vast majority of American faithful to whom these larger social issues matter, and in this book Bob Edgar urges a national political agenda that addresses these vital concerns. Passionate and thought provoking, Middle Church is a call for Americans of all faiths to join together on the moral issues that matter most.
Product Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780743289504 |
|---|---|
| Publisher: | Simon & Schuster |
| Publication date: | 09/11/2007 |
| Edition description: | Reprint |
| Pages: | 272 |
| Product dimensions: | 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.70(d) |
About the Author
Bob Edgar is the general secretary of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA, the leading U.S. organization in the movement for Christian unity. He has headed the 45-million-member NCC since January 1, 2000. An ordained elder in the United Methodist Church, Dr. Edgar came to the Council from the Claremont School of Theology in Claremont, California, where he was president from 1990 to 2000. Dr. Edgar is well known for his service as a six-term member of the U.S. House of Representatives, where he was the first Democrat in more than 120 years to be elected from the heavily Republican Seventh District of Pennsylvania.
Dr. Edgar has been a pastor, teacher, college chaplain, community organizer, and director of a think tank on national security issues. He serves on the boards of several organizations whose missions involve social justice. Dr. Edgar and his wife live in New Jersey and have three adult sons.
Read an Excerpt
Middle Church
Reclaiming the Moral Values of the Faithful Majority from the Religious RightBy Bob Edgar
Simon & Schuster
Copyright © 2007 Bob EdgarAll right reserved.
ISBN: 9780743289504
Introduction
One cold February day during my senior year of seminary, I did a controversial and, to some people, even radical thing: I boarded a bus and rode to Washington, D.C., to hear a Baptist preacher deliver a sermon on politics.
Like many others, I had read about his views and activities in the newspaper. I knew he preached against the decay of values in public life, and I knew he was often condemned for mixing politics and religion. His critics believed a clergyman had no business preaching about politics from the pulpit. Some feigned concern about the separation of church and state, but I think they were more opposed to the substance of his message than the fact that a minister was delivering it. He never called on the government to impose his Christian views. He simply spoke from his heart, and his heart and his faith were inseparable. He evaluated public policy according to his beliefs about right and wrong, and those beliefs were grounded in his Christianity. Faith led him to the conclusion that America was a morally sick nation that was ignoring Jesus' teachings, and in calling our society to account, in judging the policies of his country according to the principles of his faith, he threatened the familiarity and ease of the status quo. And, like so many messengers of faith who challenge ourcomfort too closely, he was denounced and vilified.
I was not troubled by the idea of a minister preaching politics from the pulpit, any more than I would discourage a rabbi or imam from delivering sermons that connect their religious values to public policy. I believe in the separation of church and state, but not in the separation of people of faith and institutions of government. What is politics, if not the highest expression of our moral feelings as a people? If discussion of morality is banished from the pulpit, then where is it permissible to speak about right and wrong? I had been a pastor of my own church since age nineteen, and I always felt the pulpit marked the beginning, not the boundaries, of ministry. So when a friend called and told me there would be a gathering of religious leaders in Washington who were concerned about the detachment between public policy and moral belief, I was intrigued enough to attend.
It was a clear day in Washington, bitterly cold but brilliantly sunny. As I leaned over the balcony rail from the upper level of the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, the preacher we had come to hear walked up the center aisle. It was one of those profound experiences that imprints itself on one's memory in the form of general feelings rather than specifics. I cannot recall his words, only that his voice seemed to fill every space in the church, that he was earnest and unafraid, and that he was able to challenge America's moral failings without seeming judgmental or alienating. For him, the Gospels formed a seamless tapestry with current events, and he was unafraid to speak of both in terms of right and wrong.
It was a scene that might be repeated in many a church today, with a Jerry Falwell railing against homosexuals, a Pat Robertson endorsing tax cuts, or a Franklin Graham denigrating Islam and proclaiming Christianity to be the one, true American faith. But these were not the voices that called me to ministry or inspired me to political activism. The preacher in the pulpit on that cold but clear February day in 1968 was a thirty-nine-year-old Georgia-raised Baptist named Martin Luther King, Jr.
The occasion was a meeting of Clergy and Laymen Concerned About the Vietnam War. His topics -- poverty and peace -- may seem somewhat foreign to observers of contemporary politics but should be familiar to any student of scripture. Today those issues have disappeared from too many pulpits, replaced by narrow issues of personal piety.
More than thirty-five years after a Baptist preacher from the Deep South first inspired me to political action, it is time for mainstream Americans -- the people I call "Middle Church," "Middle Synagogue," and "Middle Mosque," who may disagree sincerely on questions of personal piety but who can come together on many issues on which our three faiths are so clear -- to reclaim our faith and restore it to its proper and historic place in our nation's unfolding story: as a force for justice, peace, the poor, and for the health of our fragile planet.
The Bible mentions abortion not once, homosexuality only twice, and poverty or peace more than two thousand times. Yet somehow abortion and homosexuality have become the litmus tests of faith in public life today. Those with different ideas about them, or even those who simply believe religion is about far more, are routinely dismissed as un-Christian, unfaithful, even un-American. The politics of faith have been co-opted in the service of a political agenda defined by fascination with war, indifference toward poverty, and exploitation of God's creation for the benefit of a relative few.
It is time for Middle Church -- an umbrella term I use to refer to mainstream people of all faiths -- to stand up to the far religious right and to embrace Christianity no less sincerely. The classic, historical Christianity practiced by Middle Church is far more authentic than the narrow religious expression of most radical right-wing religious leaders. We in Middle Church, Middle Synagogue, and Middle Mosque are not secularists who wish to banish God from the public square. We are people of faith whose traditions lead us to work for peace and care for the poor.
The far religious right is fond of condemning homosexuality because they say the Scripture is immutable and its words are literal. I do not mean by this the many good people of faith who espouse conservative political views, but the far right, who are increasingly intolerant of dissent and whose influence in Washington has grown beyond measure. I do not personally believe God stopped talking to us with the final word in the book of Revelation. As a pastor, the services I led always included readings from the Old Testament, the New Testament, and what I call the "Now Testament." I did so because I believe if we listen, we can hear the divine in the words of people like King, Gandhi, or William Sloane Coffin, the mentor who invited me to Washington that day in 1968. But if scriptural literalism is to be the test of morality in public life, then I welcome the discussion that ensues.
I opposed the war in Iraq, for "a harvest of righteousness is sown in peace for those who make peace," according to the Epistle of James (James 3:18). I believe in environmental preservation because God placed Adam in the Garden of Eden "to till it and keep it," Genesis 2:15 reminds us, and I believe God's gift of "dominion" over the land was an invitation to steward God's creation. My faith cannot condone imprisoning suspected terrorists in deplorable conditions for unlimited durations without being charged with a crime or being given access to attorneys, for "justice, and only justice you shall pursue," God commands the Israelites in Deuteronomy 16:20. And most of all, I believe we must end poverty, heal sickness, and embrace the outcasts among us because the essence of faith is contained in Jesus' words in the Gospel of Matthew, words whose lesson is found in similar terms in other traditions, from Judaism to Islam:
for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.... Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me. (Matthew 25:35-36, 40 -- New Revised Standard Version [NRSV])
In these words and similar lessons in other traditions there is common ground on which Middle Church can meet. But to do so, we must broaden what faith means beyond the narrow confines of personal piety to encompass concern for the least of these our brothers and sisters. For this is the tradition of faith in public life. Religious leaders led the movement to abolish slavery, to enfranchise women, and to achieve civil rights for all Americans. It is those in the model of Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson, Tom DeLay and George W. Bush who are the aberration. Those who favor preemptive war and regressive tax cuts, who oppose welfare, and environmental protection.
I do not doubt their sincerity. George W. Bush speaks eloquently of his own conversion, and I deeply respect how he harnessed faith to transform his life. During the 2000 presidential campaign, the intelligentsia ridiculed President Bush when he said his favorite political philosopher was Jesus. I might have given exactly the same answer. But there are times when I wonder whether he read the entire Bible, for his agenda does not square with the faith tradition I have preached as a United Methodist minister, nor is it compatible with Judaism and Islam as I understand them.
Faith and salvation are about more than our individual relationship with God. In the Bible, Jesus' ministry is focused on other people, and it occurs most often in settings of community, not solitude. He is always with the poor and the lepers, always walking among the people, and by defining morality according to how we treat "the least of these," he called us to communal action, not just individual prayer. I deeply respect strains of Christianity that place profound emphasis on salvation and eternity. I admit that I do not give much thought to the afterlife personally, if only because I am keeping plenty busy here on Earth and I trust God to sort out eternity. The promise of heaven and the threat of hell were simply not central themes in the faith tradition I was taught. But all people of faith can agree that there is work to do in this world, no matter what we believe awaits us on the other side. There is too much that is broken in our world to rest our souls on a theology of waiting.
It has become fashionable on the far religious right to describe America as a "Christian nation." But I cannot accept that idea, and neither can my Christian faith. America is a nation founded on the principle of respect for all faith traditions, and Christianity is a tradition rooted in tolerance and respect for those unlike ourselves. "Let mutual love continue. Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for by doing that some have entertained angels without knowing it," we read in Hebrews 13:1-2, and if an angel comes wrapped in a Jew's prayer shawl or kneeling on a Muslim's prayer rug, I do not want to miss his or her message.
Even those who believe in pluralism and tolerance are quick to accept the cliché that God has singled out America for a special mission, a claim increasingly employed to advocate empire. But faith teaches us to walk humbly with God, and there is a tragic arrogance in the belief that America has achieved a superior status conferred from on high. Why would God single out America among the nations? Because we have the most money? Surely not; it was Jesus who said it was easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the gates of heaven. Does God value America more because we are strong enough to impose our will on others, even though we have achieved that strength at the expense of aching human needs? My faith is rooted in the power of example, not the power of arms. How is it possible to reconcile a religion based on turning the other cheek with a doctrine that authorizes preemptive war? I love my country and I believe it is an extraordinary, special place. Patriotism is noble, but it is not divine. I believe God has a special mission for everyone who recognizes God's presence, whether born in America or Africa. And I believe in working collaboratively and with the help of the Holy Spirit to fix what is broken in the world and to care for all our brothers and sisters.
That is not to say I believe personal morality and self-restraint are unimportant. My wife, Merle, whom I married at age twenty-one, has been putting up with me for forty-two years, during which time one of her most important jobs has been keeping me from becoming a stuffed shirt. I'm not especially offended by dirty jokes or cursing, but I prefer not to communicate that way myself. (I'm more partial to puns that evoke groans rather than laughs.) I believe in the First Amendment, but I wish hotels would stop selling in-room pornography. And I'm very decidedly offended by the coarsening of our culture, the growing ease with which we employ epithets and insults, especially of a racial or ethnic character, and I deplore the casual familiarity of sex and violence on television and in the movies.
These are all measures of our morality. But so are hunger, illiteracy, disease, war, and environmental degradation.
In the face of these challenges, how can our faith condone leaders who ignore and even exacerbate such problems simply because they take a hard line on questions of personal piety that merit but a few mentions in the Bible? And even more important, can Middle Church be distracted from these urgent needs and our common concern for them by our narrow disagreements on what the Bible clearly regards, at the very best, as ancillary issues? As one individual Christian, I hope our society ends its discrimination against homosexuals and embraces them with love. I believe abortion should remain each woman's choice. But just as fervently, I hope that the many sincere people of faith who disagree with me on those issues will remember the vast common ground -- those two thousand references to poverty and peace -- that unites us.
Does that mean I am exhorting people of faith to embrace any particular political agenda? Of course not. As the general secretary of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA, an ecumenical organization representing forty-five million Christians belonging to thirty-five different denominations, I am often asked to provide commentary on the role of faith in American life. As a former Democratic congressman, I tend to be pigeonholed as the "religious liberal." I'm not fond of labels, but I'm not ashamed of that one either, as I said earlier. Interviewers often ask me what Jesus would think of American politics today. I imagine they expect me to say Jesus would be a liberal and caucus with the Democrats. To be sure, I think he'd sooner vote for better child care than punitive welfare reform, and I'm pretty sure he'd be more likely to support more generous Medicaid benefits than to advocate cutting them. And somehow I just can't conjure an image of Jesus pleading for tax cuts at the top income bracket. After all, the only thing I can remember Jesus saying about taxes was to pay them.
But I don't believe Jesus would be a Democrat or a Republican. I suspect he would be as impatient with political labels as he would be with religious denominational ones. When I wonder what Jesus would say about our politics and how we treat the least of these in our community, I simply think of the words in the Gospel of John, chapter 11, verse 35, "Jesus wept."
There is a parable in the Gospel of Luke, chapter 5:1-11, in which Jesus comes upon a group of fishermen who have been casting their nets in a lake but catching nothing. One of the Bible's fascinating mysteries is that we do not know what Jesus says to the gathered crowd when he steps into the boats. We only know what he advises the fishermen to do. "Put out into the deep water," Jesus tells them, "and let down your nets for a catch." Soon, their nets are filled to bursting. The lesson is clear: We need the courage to venture into the deep waters, where the currents are rougher and success is less certain.
Leaders of the radical religious right are fond of saying that Christians are persecuted. This is their answer, it sometimes seems, anytime others disagree with them. The statement itself is somewhere between laughable and absurd, but the problem, I believe, is deeper. Christians like the Beatitudes. "Blessed are the peacemakers" is a favorite. So is "Blessed are the meek." But we tend to omit one of the most important: "Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness' sake." I believe the problem with Christianity today is that we are not persecuted enough, we do not risk enough, we do not offend enough. Politicians on the far right treat churches as theaters for applause, not forums for challenge. But Jesus did not change the world by assembling an audience of thousands. He had a staff of twelve, and even one of them didn't work out so well.
I like the story of the bishop whose church was destroyed in a fire. Everywhere he went after the fire, he was known as "the bishop of the church that burned down." One day, he told the story of being given that label and announced from the pulpit, "From now on, I want to be 'the bishop of the church on fire.'" That's what Middle Church, the faithful religious center, needs. We need to venture into the deep waters, into the deep currents, with passionate fire for justice in our hearts!
That trip to Washington was one of the first times I risked going out into the deep water. When we disembarked at the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, we encountered a group of protestors. Their picket line was led by Reverend Carl McIntyre, the Jerry Falwell of his day, who was waving a placard proclaiming "Kill a Commie for Christ's Sake!" I was shocked and revolted but I felt something else stirring within me, perhaps for the first time as a young man. I felt courage. Courage is what we need for mainstream people of faith to reclaim the political center.
There is only one more thing to say about that day in February 1968. Five weeks after it, Martin Luther King, Jr., was shot dead on a hotel balcony. Among the mixture of emotions I felt when I heard the news, amid the anguish and the anger, was a realization: For so much of the 1960s, we sat around waiting for leaders to arise. Today, many people from the left to the center resort to old excuses for apathy: No one is leading us. The system is impure. Politicians are imperfect. They are excuses we can't afford.
Another one of my life's most powerful lessons came on the day I was sworn into Congress. Little more than a year earlier, I had become disgusted with Watergate and the seemingly never-ending Vietnam War. I looked up "Democratic Party" in the phone book and the next thing I knew I was running for Congress. I called a press conference to announce my candidacy, and one reporter and one photographer showed up. A couple of weeks later, the picture of the event appeared under the headline of the adjoining story: "Youth to Testify at Aunt's Murder Trial."
When I raised the idea of running for Congress with Merle, she laughed at first, then told me I could do whatever I wanted as long as she didn't have to make any speeches and I didn't borrow any money. We were plenty busy with our three young children -- Rob, who was eight, five-year-old David, and Andrew, bringing up the rear at two years old. Between family life, my work as a minister, and Merle's job as a nurse, there seemed to be precious little time to campaign. The whole thing was a long shot that would have made Don Quixote proud. I was supposed to lose the primary by a landslide, then I was supposed to lose the general election by even more, and somehow I won by nineteen thousand votes. On election night, Merle's comment to the press was "I don't care who he is, he still has to take out the trash." My high school guidance counselor attended my swearing-in. He was the same man who, having seen my SAT scores and undistinguished high school grades, made the perfectly defensible recommendation that I skip college. "This either says something about you, Bob," he said, "or it says something about Congress." It was the second half of the sentence that was right. As I looked around on the House floor that day -- intimidated by the presence of legends who a year earlier I had been watching on television -- it suddenly dawned on me that they weren't any smarter than I was. And trust me, I'm not any smarter than you.
In many ways, my life has been a series of "Forrest Gump" moments at which I somehow find myself in the middle of places or events that seem bigger than I am. I met Dr. King just before he died and a decade later, as a member of the House Select Committee on Assassinations, I met James Earl Ray, the man who ended King's life. After serving twelve years in the House -- enough for anybody -- I made an unsuccessful run for the U.S. Senate from Pennsylvania. Just as I was trying to figure out what to do with my life, the provost of Swarthmore College asked whether I'd like to spend six months as the Visiting Professor for Issues of Social Change. I was wrapping up that adventure when my old colleague Senator Paul Simon asked me to join his presidential campaign as finance director. Paul was a wonderfully down-to-earth man who would have made an extraordinary president, but the people never quite got enough of a glimpse of him to see that. That campaign fizzled, and I signed on as head of the Committee for National Security, an independent organization working for nuclear disarmament.
I was enjoying that job when a Republican businessman from California, Mark Lee, called to say he was coming to Washington and wanted to have lunch. I knew he had supported my Senate campaign in Pennsylvania out of frustration with the increasingly far-right tendencies of his party. What I didn't know was that he was on the board of trustees of a United Methodist seminary called Claremont School of Theology that had just endured a series of financial scandals and was now in serious trouble. Mark was on the search committee looking for a new president. At exactly the same time, I had begun applying to a small handful of religious colleges that were looking for new presidents. I felt too many religious colleges were trying to imitate the exclusivity of Harvard and Yale rather than provide opportunities for young people who possessed what I considered the most important credential, a passionate desire to serve humanity through the ministry. More often, the credentials schools counted most were academic qualifications like GPAs and College Board scores. I felt strongly that test scores rarely tell the whole story of a person's life. After all, Colin Powell and I had the same abysmal College Board scores and we turned out all right. Claremont, whose students were primarily adults turning to the ministry later in life, fit the bill perfectly. I took the job, and Merle and I headed out west.
I managed to stick with that job for a whole decade, during which we stopped Claremont's financial hemorrhaging and launched several innovative educational programs that trained aspiring ministers not simply to contemplate theological questions but to engage actively in their communities. In the fall of 1999, I stepped into my office one day and saw a little pink While You Were Out slip. "Please call Father Leonid Kishkovsky," it said. I had never heard of him, and I have to admit I didn't return the call right away. When we finally connected, he explained that he was a priest of the Orthodox Church in America, one of the member communions of the National Council of Churches, headquartered in New York City.
I knew vaguely what the Council was, but its heyday had been its participation in the civil rights struggles of the 1950s and 1960s, and I, like most people, had not paid much attention to the group since then. Now, Father Kishkovsky explained, the Council was facing a financial crisis of its own, a severe deficit that threatened a revolt among the member communions, and was looking for a new general secretary. My work at Claremont had apparently gotten me a reputation as a turnaround specialist, and he wondered whether I would meet with their search committee.
I felt I had done all I could at Claremont, and Merle and I now had grandchildren back east. Not long after I met with the search committee, I attended a dinner in Colorado for deans and presidents of seminaries. One seminary president who had also been considered for the general secretary's job gave a thirty-minute commentary about the Council's woes, waxing eloquently and lengthily about what a terrible organization it had become. After he finished, I sauntered up to his table.
"I really appreciate this briefing," I said, "because I just said 'yes' to being general secretary." Everyone laughed!
And the rest is history -- or ongoing history, because the story of my life is still unfolding. But one moral is already clear: If an ordinary kid like me can stumble into opportunities like these, anyone can. We all have the power to make a difference. God never looks to the rich and powerful. In my tradition, Jesus came to us through a poor and homeless mother, and the disciples he attracted were fishermen, carpenters, and tax collectors. Judaism's prophets were ordinary people. "Woe is me! I am lost, for I am a man of unclean lips," Isaiah protested upon his call, an excuse God rejected for him and will not accept for any of us (Isaiah 6:5). Mohammed was a humble merchant before he became a prophet.
God is calling each of us, I believe, to be modern-day prophets, to care for the least of these, to work for peace, to preserve God's creation. To accomplish those goals, we must reclaim the mantle of faith from those who have co-opted it. For America's faithful majority, the millions of us who are eager to reassert the values of compassion and peace and preservation in public life, we are the leaders we've been waiting for. And our moment is now. The year before he died, Reverend King wrote:
We are now faced with the fact that tomorrow is today. In this unfolding conundrum of life and history, there is such a thing as being too late. Procrastination is still the thief of time. Life often leaves us bare, naked, and dejected with lost opportunity. The tide in the affairs of humanity does not remain at the flood, it ebbs. We may cry out desperately for time to pause in her passage, but time is deaf to every plea and rushes on. Over the bleached bones and jumbled residues of numerous civilizations, are written the pathetic words "too late."...We still have a choice today: nonviolent coexistence or violent co-annihilation. This may well be humankind's last chance to choose between chaos and community.
For the sake of our faiths, our country, our world, we, the faithful majority of Middle Church, Middle Synagogue, and Middle Mosque, must courageously embrace the fierce urgency of now.
Copyright © 2006 by Robert W. Edgar and Greg Weiner
Continues...
Excerpted from Middle Church by Bob Edgar Copyright © 2007 by Bob Edgar. Excerpted by permission.
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Table of Contents
Preface 1
Introduction 3
The Two Churches: Faith Based on Love-or Faith Grounded in Fear? 17
In the Beginning, God Created the Heavens and the Earth...So Stop Messing Them Up! 31
What Part of "Blessed Are the Peacemakers" Don't They Understand? 63
Deny Them Their Victory: Faith in the Age of Terrorism 85
We're the Good Guys-Let's Act Like It! 101
Reconciling Abraham's Children: Toward Peace in the Middle East 127
Compassion, Not Contempt: Hearing God's Call to Love the Poor 141
A Living Wage: Washington's Callous Antipathy to the Least of These 159
The Poverty That Kills: Hunger, Injustice, and AIDS: Our Global Moral Crisis 179
Changing Our Beatitudes: Guideposts for Deep-Water Citizenship 191
Acknowledgments 235
Notes 239
Index 247