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Sojourners has Lost All Credibility

By Matt · Comments (10)
Friday, September 18th, 2009

A few years ago I was searching for an alternative to the Religious Right style of Christian politics and came across Jim Wallis as he was doing a media tour promoting his new book God’s Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn’t Get It. It seemed like every website I went to and every news station I watched had a feature on Jim and his form of politics. It was a breath of fresh air to find an alternative way to be a Christian in America other than being in the tank for the Republican Party.

I never read God’s Politics, but I did sign up for regular emails from Sojourners, the organization that Wallis was associated with (I think he founded it, but can’t verify that) that is committed to “articulate the biblical call to social justice, inspiring hope and building a movement to transform individuals, communities, the church, and the world.” At the onset, I appreciated reading regular alternatives and perspectives on the political topics of the day.

I can say that no longer.

Sojourners has lost all creditability in my view. They are obviously in the tank for the Democratic Party and have lost any and all “prophetic distance” with which to be able to critique our culture, church, and politics.

Perhaps I had not noticed it for the years before the 2008 Presidential campaign and election, but as time went by I noticed increasingly partisan stances from their publications. Fair enough, I thought, perhaps the Republicans are beyond help. I tried to give Sojourners the benefit of the doubt. In the past few days, however, I have noticed something even more troubling: Sojourners talking points are the exact same talking points of the Obama administration and the Democratic representatives in Congress. To know what is coming in my email inbox the next day from Sojourners, all I need to do is watch a press conference with White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs or any of the Democratic Senators or Representatives on Meet the Press or This Week.

This week Sojourners has hit an all-time low, in my opinion. Rather than simply advocating for the Democrats version of health care reform, they have taken to the tactic of smearing conservative personalities Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and Bill O’Reilly. For three straight days I have received an email smearing each of these media personalities and supporting their stances with personal anecdotes. Here are some quotes from the closing lines of each of the three emails:

Does Bill [O'Reilly] really think that the health-care crisis is only a problem for poor people? Or that clinics alone are a real solution? While his band-aid suggestions and scare tactics obscure the issue, the health-care crisis is making people poor as costs skyrocket – even for those with coverage…

The major proposals for health-care reform ensure that all people have access to affordable care, either through an employer-based plan or through subsidies to buy insurance in an exchange marketplace. The proposals also ensure that mental health care is included. This affordable access could have allowed Joshua to live out his days and contribute to his community. Rush [Limbaugh's] deliberate misinformation about the health-care crisis in our country could block this important reform.

The major proposals for health-care reform would prohibit insurance companies from arbitrarily canceling insurance and from denying needed care due to pre-existing conditions. This would ensure that all people have access to the care they need, when they need it. If this provision existed, Robin could have had her surgery at an earlier time, before possibly critical months had passed by. [Sean] Hannity’s deliberate misinformation about “government rationing” could block this important reform…

What tips me off to their complete bias is their use of anecdotes to back up their stance, not any sort of economic or statistical data. You can’t make policy decisions for 300 million people based on anecdotes. But you can pull on people’s heart strings. And Sojourners is trying to rally the troops to support Obamacare without using any form of discerning speech, only by appealing to people’s emotions and by demonizing easy right-wing targets.

Christian organizations should always be in the truth-telling business. Both political sides want us to believe that we can reform our current system with no downsides, that all the personal anecdotes about health care atrocities that strike fear into our hearts will disappear if only their plan passes. Well, that is simply not true. No system will be perfect, and Sojourners, as a Christian organization, an organization in the truth-telling business, should own up to the potential downsides of the proposed system, not simply the downsides of the current system.

Sojourners is not a Christian organization, but a lobbying group for the Democratic Party. In my mind, they have lost all credibility.

[For other thoughts on Christianity, health care, and truth-telling, check out this post by Andew Tatum]

Comments (10)
Categories : News
Tags : Bill O'Reilly, health care, healthcare, obamacare, Politics, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, sojourners

Health Care and a Theology of Death

By Matt · Comments (1)
Friday, September 4th, 2009
Perhaps it is healthier to be prepared for death and die younger than it is to be afraid of death and constantly try to delay the inevitable.

I’ve been trying to keep up with the health care debate since it is a pretty big issue, and there’s been one tactic that has me a bit worried. It seems that both sides are obsessed with extending a person’s lifespan:

  • Democrats, including President Obama, cite the average lifespan of Americans compared to other nations, saying that we need to make changes in order to live longer.
  • Republicans are using the term “death panels” to describe end-of-life counseling, with the assumption that any sort of end-of-life counseling that leads someone to decide to decline any sort of care and die at a younger age would be a bad thing.

We desperately need a theology of death. So, please take this theologically, not politically.

Health care should be about more than extending life; it needs as its goal to increase the quality of life. “My Old Lady” is one of my favorite episodes of the TV show Scrubs because it deals so well with the topic of death, especially with the “old lady” character. I’ve put Part 2 of that episode below, because it deals with the most pertinent part of the show (you can also view Part 1 and Part 3).

Money quote from this episode (occurs at 1:21 in the above clip):

J.D. (Doctor): “So, that’s basically it. Your kidneys aren’t responding to the medication anymore. I’m afraid we’re gonna have to start you on dialysis.”

Mrs. Tanner: “Oh, I’m not a big fan of dialysis.”

J.D.: “Yeah, unfortunately we don’t really have a choice.”

Mrs. Tanner: “Well, actually, I do have a choice.”

J.D looks confused.

J.D.’s In-head Narration: Certain things you never expect to come out of a person’s mouth.

Mrs. Tanner: “I think I’m ready to die.”

Now, I’m not advocating that people should die just to save money on health care costs. But I am saying that people’s lives should not always be extended at all costs. Yes, the individual person is the one who ultimately needs to be making that decision, but we as a culture do need to help people be prepared for death. Perhaps it is healthier to be prepared for death and die younger than it is to be afraid of death and constantly try to delay the inevitable.

Both sides need to own up to the fact that death is a part of life. Neither side needs to be scaring people by using death to persuade others that their form of health care will keep people alive longer.

The church should be in the death business because we worship a God who is in the resurrection business.

What if part of the health care debate is getting people ready to die? Yet again, we see a point where churches can step in and offer our culture the proper perspective rather than turning over our responsibility to one political party or another. The church should be in the death business because we worship a God who is in the resurrection business. May we help our country develop a proper theology of death and reorient the health care debate.

[For further thoughts, go here to listen to Stanley Hauerwas on medicine, death, and the Christian community. Also, if you were looking for a practical solution, sorry, I don't have one. Instead, go see Adam McLane's idea for fixing health care.]

Comments (1)
Categories : News, Theology
Tags : death, death panels, democrats, healthcare, obama, republicans

Dallas Independent School District is a Joke

By Matt · Comments (2)
Saturday, April 18th, 2009

I don’t live in the boundaries of DISD, but it is by far the largest school district in our metroplex area, so it gets all of the media coverage. And for good reason. They are clueless. I have lived in the area for less than three years, and in that amount of time, these stories have come to light:

  • Credit Card Fiasco – DISD employees were allowed to use district credit cards for pretty much anything, unchecked. Employees were not required to provide receipts, get approval for purchases, and broke contracts the district had with certain vendors. Click the link. You will be astonished.
  • Boys Basketball Team Forfeits 2005 & 2006 State Championship – After getting caught changing grades for ineligable athletes, the 2006 championship was stripped from South Oak Cliff High School. Apparently their 2007 title is also in question.
  • Giving Employees Fake Social Security Numbers – When hiring people from other countries, DISD couldn’t wait for them to be issued their social security number, so the district gave them fake ones and even ran background checks using the fake numbers. An “independent investigation” found no wrongdoing.
  • $64 Million Disappears – A lot of the good articles on this are archived in member-restricted news sites. But I remember this when it happened, and believe that the number was revised to $84 million. The way the stories read, the district was reviewing end-of-year finances and realized they had overspent $84 million. Ooops. I guess an $84 million hole is kind of difficult to spot coming from a long way off.
  • Cage fighting – Enough said.
  • A Policy to Pad Students’ Grades – Read on.

Believe it or not, there is more, but I’m tired of trying to hunt down the links and stories right now. Education, the future of America.

Comments (2)
Categories : News, Random
Tags : DISD, education

Celebrating Easter with a Cage Match

By Matt · Comments (5)
Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

From the “Why I think Relevance is a Myth” file, a church seeking to be relevant this Easter. Per the church website:

For years the church has taught us to be “the nice guy” when we have really been called to be Ultimate Fighters. But what do we fight for? Join us on Easter and throughout April, as we “jump into the Octagon of Life” and learn how to be the “The Ultimate Fighter!”

The pastor is quoted in a local news report as saying, “In the mixed martial arts arena there’s an expression, and the expression is don’t tap out and he [Jesus] didn’t tap out.” He continues, “We want a relevant message to teach to people. And we want to be able to take this ancient gospel and make it relevant to someone today.” You can go here to see a news video.

The truth is, yes, technically Jesus didn’t “tap out,” but he also didn’t fight back. Jesus was not a participant in the sport of ultimate fighting, but of ultimate beating. He was like a lamb being led to slaughter.

The words of 1 Corinthians 1 seem appropriate right now:

Where is the wise man? Where is the scholar? Where is the philosopher of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world? For since in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not know him, God was pleased through the foolishness of what was preached to save those who believe. Jews demand miraculous signs and Greeks look for wisdom, but we preach Christ crucified: a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles, but to those whom God has called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God. For the foolishness of God is wiser than man’s wisdom, and the weakness of God is stronger than man’s strength.

Comments (5)
Categories : News, Random
Tags : cage match, easter, relevance, ultimate fighting

Our Government at Work, Again: AIG

By Matt · Comments (0)
Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

I’ve been really busy the past couple of days. The next post in the building a church website series will get posted tomorrow or Friday.

Now, on to AIG. I’m quite disturbed by what I’m hearing. On of the reasons I didn’t like either of the bailouts (the one last fall by Paulson and the most recent one) was the speed in which they were constructed and pushed to the American people. Mistakes get made when anything is rushed, especially legislation, and this is no exception. Chris Dodd, of all people, supposedly insterted a clause into the legislation towards the end that would exempt companies from altering contractual agreements by a certain date. Now that Mr. Dodd, the rest of Congress, and the American people see the implications of that clause they are outraged. Oh the irony.

So, since the legislation appears to stipulate that AIG is not doing anything legally wrong, and Congress just doesn’t like it, crazy solutions to this problem are being suggested. One of which is to tax AIG bonuses at 90%. Is that even legal? I hope not. I don’t want the government to be able to tax specific people in specific situations in a way in which could take all of their money from them. Where could that lead?

Another suggestion I saw on TV was to tell AIG that if their executives accept their bonuses that the government will not give them any more money and let them go bankrupt. I laughed out loud at that one. We already gave them $180 billion because they were “too big to fail.” I bet AIG would call the government’s bluff on that one.

Lastly, when the Omnibus bill was passed, we were told that earmarks were only 2% of the entire bill, not a whole lot, so don’t get worried about it. It’s only $8 billion. Well, the AIG bonuses are only .2% if the $180 billion we’ve given them. That’s not a lot. I don’t think we should get too upset at it.

Comments (0)
Categories : News
Tags : AIG, bailout, bonuses

Our Government at Work

By Matt · Comments (0)
Friday, February 13th, 2009

I’m a little perplexed about the $787,000,000,000 bill that was passed in both houses of Congresss today. The full text was not posted until around 11:00 PM last night. It was over 1,000 pages long. Debate in the house started this morning at 11:43 AM. By 11:00 PM tonight, it had passed votes in both the House and the Senate.

That means in about 24 hours we had an almost $800 billion dollars go from final draft to law. This is after a Tuesday vote, three days ago, in which the “House unanimously approved a non-binding motion that called for members to have at least 48 hours to review the measure before voting on it.”

I’m sure most people in Congress vote on bills without reading them in their entirety. But at least they can let us think they might possibly have the time to read such a significant piece of legislation, couldn’t they?

Apparently, they didn’t want to even give us the illusion that they were informed in their vote today.

I’ll quit before I say something I regret.

Comments (0)
Categories : News
Tags : Politics

Why Politics is More Exciting than Christianity

By Matt · Comments (3)
Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

Watching people’s passionate involvement in the intense politics of the past month or so has been an interesting phenomenon.  We literally had millions of people working in one way or another to get their candidates elected, and last night we watched as euphoria erupted over an election of historic proportions.

It left me wondering: Why doesn’t the church drum up this much excitement and passion? My preliminary guess is that politics offers the kind of eschatology that should be offered in the church.

With each major election people talk and think about change.  New possibilites begin to form in imaginations.  “What if…” questions are asked and dreamed about.  Nothing is outside the realm of impossibility.  We make our stake for what we think the future should like like.  Changing the future is an exciting proposition.

In the church we talk about the past, about Jesus’s death and resurrection so that we might receive the forgiveness of sins.  And we talk about the future that awaits us after our own death and resurrection.  But we don’t often talk about the role of the church in between the two, other than the mandate for personal morality.

This is unfortunate because the church has a purpose other than as an incubator of souls for heaven.  The church is God’s change agent.  The church’s mission is found in the proclamation of the gospel, a proclamation that frees captives, heals the sick, and opens blind eyes.  Talk about new possibilities!  The church is the place where imagining a new future should be a perpetual practice, not just every four years.  The church should be about the business of changing the future, not just preparing people for it. We participate in bringing about God’s kingdom on earth, changing old to new, and seeing life where there once was death.

The passion that excites the public every four years in our politics is an eschatological passion.  And eschatology is the realm of Jesus and His church, not politics and the state.  May we learn how to live in that realm.

Comments (3)
Categories : Ecclesiology, News, Theology
Tags : 2008 election, eschatology, Politics

How Christians Can Avoid a Tax Increase Under Obama

By Matt · Comments (4)
Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

To the 74% of white evangelicals (and other Christians) who voted for John McCain and are worried that Obama will raise your taxes:

If his tax plan goes as he plans, only families making $250,000 or more will have an increase in taxes.  If that doesn’t sit well with you, you have an alternative.  Give more away to your church and favorite charities.  Check with your CPA on this, but I believe up to 50% of income can be deducted for charitable contributions.  So, if you make between $250,000 and $499,999, you’ll be in the lower bracket if you give away enough money to deduct until you are under the $250k mark.

Problem solved.  Small businesses will have to figure something else out.

Comments (4)
Categories : News
Tags : 2008 election, obama, taxes

These are Historic Times

By Matt · Comments (2)
Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

Last night I watched Sunday’s This Week with George Stephanopoulos in amazement as I saw republicans, democrats, former Treasury Secretaries, stock traders, and political commentators all agree that government ownership of financial institutions was the only option to get us out of the current financial crisis.  This would usually go against conservative principle, but they say there is no other alternative.

We learned later that, indeed, the federal government will begin purchasing ownership in banks.  One commentator announced, “We’re All Socialists Now.”

Yesterday, the Dow gained 936 points (11%) on the news.  Who knows what will happen today.

Is this what it feels like to live in the midst of historic times?  Will we learn anything from it?

Comments (2)
Categories : News
Tags : economy

Is the Financial Crisis the Church's Fault?

By Matt · Comments (0)
Monday, October 13th, 2008

Tony Jones makes the comment that without a wide swath of our culture subscribing to Calvinism and the “protestant work ethic” free market economies are a thing of the past.

Are free markets incompatible with secularism?  Is the only hope for the free markets a Third Great Awakening?  Or maybe the first Global Great Awakening?

Or, to put it another way, is the current financial crisis the church’s fault?

Update: David Fitch has a great post asking good questions about how this financial crisis might affect the church.

Comments (0)
Categories : Christianity, Ecclesiology, News
Tags : economy
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