First
Unitarian Universalist Society of Albany
“The Intersection of Liberal Politics and Religion”
by Rev. Samuel A Trumbore November 5,
2006
Let us turn inward
and witness the Spirit of Life
and Love
moving in us.
A spirit sensible in our breath and heart beat.
A cohesive power defending our body from germs,
and regulating the
nourishment, repair and replacement of our cells.
Always with us from the union of egg and sperm
till the
dissolution of our consciousness at death.
Let us feel deep gratitude for what we cannot see, feel or touch
that supports the good order
of our being.
Let us turn our attention now
to the outer body in which we
participate.
Tuesday is Election Day.
The vying for our attention and support will come to an end.
Tuesday we celebrate a National Sabbath
and participate in our holy
democratic ritual.
As faithful citizens,
We will use our gifts of intellect and reason;
We will study the issues and the positions of the
candidates;
We will seek to support the candidates that we
think best reflect our values;
Then, we will use the singular power of our vote.
May the hearts and minds of the electorate be
inspired
To elect candidates who will lead with integrity.
May those elected be men and women of
conviction
who are more concerned about doing what is right
than about securing a high approval
rating.
May we elect candidates who are honest
in the midst of what is often a jaded political process.
May we elect candidates
who desire what is best for all
Americans.
May these new leaders craft and pass laws
with knowledge and understanding.
May they grow in learning how to build consensus.
And when the elections are over,
May we pledge to support those elected,
and
register with regular communication our positions and concerns.
Most of all,
May this election work to unite us as a nation
dedicated to making this world
a better place for all beings.
from Georgist Thought And The
Theology Of Social Reform by Cliff Cobb
(Speech to the Torch Club,
Sacramento, December 1997)
As a result of disowning the
religious traditions that once served as the foundations of political
philosophy, our society has been left with barren, mechanical metaphors.
It is possible that an economic
revolution will occur purely on the basis of a rational acceptance of abstract
principles of justice and efficiency, but I doubt it. Few of us are capable of letting go of patterns of behavior
simply because they do not work.
Instead, we are drawn into a new world by the yearnings of the heart and
by the work of grace in our lives. The
same is presumably true of entire societies.
A deep transformation occurs only if we are drawn collectively toward
specific reforms that are felt to be part of a larger drama.
from
Postmodernism to Postliberalism by Nathan Gardels and Leila Conners
published in New Perspectives Quarterly Spring 1995, Vol. 12, No. 2
America, the oldest modern society, is wrenching
its way through a paradigm shift to a new social and moral order. Though the secular
liberal ethos of modernity confidently demolished the most archaic barricades
against human freedom, it has foundered in postmodernity's tabloidish display
of moral chaos that comes from having all that freedom without boundaries.
Americans know that the key problem in Western civilization now is not the
absence of tolerance, as it was when the West emerged from its catastrophic
religious wars, or the defense of free societies against the totalitarian
threat, as it was during the Cold War. The central problem now is how to cope
with so much freedom.
And, if images rule dreams and
dreams rule actions, this makes it a whole other ballgame of societal
self-subversion. The main meme, or ideological code, of the mass media seems to
be to subvert any and all authority from mom to Imam, from Pope to president;
to ridicule all, to trust no faith, to promote ironic detachment as the only
sophisticated, self- knowing mode of being. This is the propaganda of
postmodernism.
However these uncertainties
unfold, what matters in the end, what is at the core of the paradigm shift, is
a revival of the social instinct to set limits on freedom based on the
acceptance of some moral authority.
What makes the coming era postliberal is that the debate will no longer
be over which limits to erase, but where to draw the boundaries.
Quote from Benjamin Disraeli :
British statesman, prime minister & writer
A man who is not a liberal at
sixteen has no heart;
a man who is not a conservative at sixty has
no head.
As the mid-term elections
approach on Tuesday, predictions of at least the house swinging Democratic have
liberals drooling in an excited state of anticipation. Some might even think the Republican agenda
is being questioned and the tide is turning toward the Democrats.
If the tide is turning, I’m not
sure it’s because the electorate likes the Democrats any better, more that they
are voting against some of the blunders of the Bush administration. Whatever happens on Tuesday, the operatives
of the Religious Right will continue to exert a lot of power and control in the
Republican Party. It would be a grave
mistake to underestimate the Religious Right’s ability to take back the
national agenda in 2008.
Much has been written and said
about the success and the power of the Religious Right to mobilize American
voters to support their candidates often against their economic interests. They have been so effective that many
legislators assume anyone who is religious is in their corner. That is a huge voting block given the large
percentage of the population who say they believe in God.
This assessment oversimplifies
the demographics of the American voter.
I recently read a fascinating survey of, what the author called, the
twelve tribes of American voters. Breaking
up the population by religion, national origin, theology, politics and voting
patterns, the survey gives a much more detailed picture of the American
electorate than right and left.
On the one extreme are the
Religious Right, Heartland Cultural Warriors and the Moderate Evangelicals
comprising a little over a third of the electorate. Issues like abortion, marriage equality, and the war on terrorism
light them up and drive their voting patterns.
Four fifths of the Religious Right strongly support mixing religion and
politics. Leaders who exemplify these
values range from Jerry Falwell, James Dobson and Tom DeLay, George W Bush,
William Bennett, Mitt Romney, and Bill Frist.
More in the middle of the
spectrum are the White Bread Protestants and Convertible Catholics with about
15% of the vote. The White Bread
Protestants lean Republican and the Convertible Catholics lean Democrat. These voters are not captured by social
issues but are more interested in conservative economics. These people tend to separate their
religious lives from their political lives.
Examples of these leaders include George H.W. Bush, Dick Cheney, John
Edwards, John Kerry and Arnold Schwartzenegger.
On the left you’ll find The
Religious Left, the Spiritual But Not Religious, the Seculars, the Jews, the
non-Judaic-Christian faiths, and Black Protestants who, together, add up to
about 40% of the vote. These folks are
strong on the separation between religion and politics but split up on social
issues. A significant number of the
Black Protestants and Muslims for example oppose marriage equality and
reproductive choice. Each group has its
own core issue. For Jews and Muslims,
foreign policy and Israel. For the
Black Protestants the economy.
The wild cards are the Latinos
who lean Democratic but split ideologically right down the middle. Predominately Catholic they are conservative
on cultural issues but strong on government social spending. They are about 5% of the voters.
What is remarkable about this
analysis is the number of seculars who do not have any kind of religious
identification, only about 11% of the population – lower than I expected. Or to put it another way, 89% of the
population identify themselves as religious or spiritual. Less than half of those will be driven by the
agenda of the Religious Right. Michael
Lerner believes a larger majority will respond to a faith based vision of the
Religious Left.
Michael Lerner, a well known
leftist student organizer in the 1960’s, turned social psychologist in the
1970’s then turned Rabbi in the 1980’s.
Caught up in what was called, “the Movement,” in the 60’s he has tried
over the years to translate this into a mainstream political movement. His latest attempt to organize us
progressive types is his recent book, “The Left Hand of God.” I’ll be examining this book for the next two
Monday nights to see what Unitarian Universalists can learn from his analysis
and proposals.
The sacred text 86% of the US
population uses to shape their religious, ethical and moral values is, of course,
the Bible. So it behooves non-religious
progressives to open it up and look for the sources of the political thinking
of those on the Right and on the Left.
Given the wide value gap between the Religious Left and the Religious
Right, (at almost the exact same percentage of the population, 12.6%) I wonder
if they are revering the same book.
There are of course reasons for
the differences. The Bible presents a
lot of different images of God. Most
people tend to read the Bible quite selectively. On Christmas and Easter, the attention goes to the beginning and
end of the Gospels. For Passover, we
examine stories from Exodus. But if you
take the whole document as your revelation of God and try to reconcile it, what
starts becoming clear is there are two distinct divine voices, often mixed
together. Lerner labels them the Right
Hand of God and the Left Hand of God.
One view of God presented in
the Bible is as giver of laws and protector against evil. In return God demands individual restraint
and sacrifice. God made a covenant with
the Jews, led them out of Israel. God
freed them from slavery in Egypt and gave them the 10 commandments to live by. In return, the Jews must worship no other
gods, for the One God of the Jews is a jealous God. When some worshipped the Golden Calf, a pagan fertility image,
God sent Moses out to smite them. This
God sent the Jews into the promise land and told them to conquer it with the
sword. This God is envisioned as a
warrior: powerful, combative, and harsh in judgment. This, Lerner explains, is the Right Hand of God.
Many Unitarian Universalists
reject this portrayal of God as a warrior image. For us, it speaks more of ancient times dominated by tribal
warfare. Up until the Jewish creation
of monotheism, most people populated the heavens with Gods and Goddesses like
Zeus and Hera, Tiamat and Apsu who were always fighting with each other. The Right Hand of God is closer to the
ancient vision of God as a supernatural tribal ruler.
For those whose lives are
dominated by fear, material scarcity and violence, this vision of God can feel
more accessible. Voices that preach
resignation, the war of good against evil, the corruption of the human soul,
the need to dominate before being dominated speaks to the basic human need for
security and survival. Feeling
powerless and tossed by forces beyond one’s control, seeing evil triumph over
good on earth, one can yearn for a saving vision of a champion God who swoops
down from the clouds and routs the evil doers – sort of like seeing God as a
cruise missile.
Thankfully, this is not the
only image of God in the Bible. There
is another image that can be found throughout its text, sometimes side by
side. The message of these passages is
not fear and violence but rather hope and love.
While God is cursing the
Egyptians with locusts, boils and droughts to get Pharaoh to let the Jewish
people go and then drowning the Egyptian soldiers in the Red Sea, God is also
delivering the Jews from slavery. This
God offers a message of hope. This
message of hope inspires the Jews to overcome their oppression and teaches the
world can be transformed toward the good.
This is the God that commands the Jews to “Love thy neighbor as oneself”
and to never oppress the stranger.
What we read about God’s nature
in the Torah, we see embodied in Jesus, according the Christian Scripture. Analyzing God made flesh in Jesus, we now
have a very different vision of God.
This God-man carries no sword.
This God-man heals and mediates divine forgiveness. This God-man makes no divisions between
those who are clean and unclean, Jew and gentile. First and foremost, Jesus embodies love, compassion, forgiveness,
mercy, generosity and restoration.
These Jewish and Christian images of love and hope are what Lerner calls,
the Left Hand of God. Unitarian
Universalists who draw their faith from the Bible find this image of the God of
love attractive. And so do many others
on the Liberal, Spiritual and Jewish Left.
The Religious Right is happy to
anchor its politics in this fear centered, punitive image of the Right Hand of
God. The Religious Left, however, refuses to make religious connections to the
Left Hand of God. Honoring separation
of church and state as liberals do, they move to secular support for the values
of love, compassion, giving and generosity.
Lerner has done his homework
here. Through his extensive
sociological research talking to a wide spectrum of average Americans, he has
discovered secular values don’t speak to the average American at a level that
can inspire hope and can counter their fears.
He argues the soul crushing power of greed stimulating materialism and
impersonal self-denying capitalism must be countered by a deep value system
with a religious grounding. Voting the
pocketbook doesn’t cut it.
To step away from the fear
mongering of the Religious Right, Lerner believes those values voters need a
hopeful vision that has a transcendent dimension. So far the Democratic party hasn’t offered one as effective as
the Religious right has offered to speak to people’s beliefs. Up to this election, fear based politics has
captured the voters.
Lerner believes a liberal
spiritual politics grounded in the transcendental values of love, compassion,
giving and generosity can answer the politics of fear with a life giving
politics of hope. With or without God
having right or left hands, I believe we Unitarian Universalists can find those
values embedded in our tradition and in our principles.
The bedrock of any Unitarian
Universalist liberal spiritual politics of hope will be our first principle:
the inherent worth and dignity of every person. In night language, to use Michael Dowd’s term from his lecture on
Monday, we are all created in the image of God. Each one of us has the seed of goodness in us that cannot be
removed. We can deny it our entire
lives, reject it, act like trolls, banshees and goblins, but that seed remains
planted in us, waiting for encouragement to sprout. Rather than dividing the world up into good guys and bad guys,
the evil and the righteous, everyone must be approached with respect and
treated with dignity. We can prevent
others and ourselves from causing harm, not to vanquish a villain, but rather
to redirect a misguided soul. The human
scourges of lust, greed, fear, hatred and delusion are not the affliction of
one race, class, or culture. We all
need each other’s help to wake up from our delusions and find the path of love,
compassion, giving and generosity – including me.
The foundation built on that
bedrock of inherent worth and dignity will be respect for the interdependent
web of existence. Life flourishes in
diversity not in conformity or uniformity.
There is no one path up the mountain of life. There is not just one way to point at the moon. In the Sufi tradition, there are 99 names
for Allah. In the Hindu tradition there
are many ways to worship Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. The Christians who orient their spiritual lives around an exclusive
claim to divinity of Jesus need to get over it! Our capacity for love is much grander and more diverse than their
wildest dreams … which includes Jesus as the son of God … along with all the
rest of us who could be too. The
unlimited potential for love to become real knows no denomination or sect.
The framework for this pluralistic
liberal spiritual politics must be justice, equity and compassion in human
relations. The key word here is
relations. We must be in relations with
each other as one world community. The
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and the threat of global climate
change cannot be contained or ignored.
Both demand a worldwide response.
Global security cannot be commanded unilaterally, it must be negotiated
multilaterally. That security will
never be found without insuring the food, clothing, housing and health security
of the world’s people. The
richest nations will never achieve the security they crave, spending billions
upon billions for war and weapons, without being in a caring relationship with
the poorest of the world, the breeding ground for tomorrow’s terrorists and
revolutionaries.
We have within our religious
tradition the bedrock, foundation, and framework for a liberal spiritual
politics big enough to house people’s hopes and strong enough to withstand
people’s fears. This forward looking
politics focuses on encouraging the best in us rather than being limited by the
worst in us. It seeks to connect the
reality of people as they are today with the possibility of what they
could be tomorrow if we open up our lives to these spiritual resources of
love, compassion, giving and generosity.
As we go into the voting booths
on Tuesday, I encourage you to cast your vote for the candidates who are
forward thinking with a vision of hope rather than backward thinking fearfully
trying to preserve an imagined past.
Candidates with liberal spiritual values speak to the best of who we can
be rather than the worst of what we are.
These candidates can show up on any voting line, Democrat as well as
Republican, Conservative as well as Working Family.
Whether you vote with your left
hand or your right, may both hands come together around supporting a hopeful
vision of everyone’s inherent worth and dignity, of respect for the
interdependent web of all existence and of justice, equity and compassion in
human relations.
Boston Globe Columnist James
Carroll wrote,
Whatever else divides us,
Americans go to the polls with one large thing in common -- the sure knowledge
that our individual votes matter absolutely. To vote is to defy the pervasive
sense of civic impotence that is the curse of contemporary life… Are we mere
spectators to the flow of history, awaiting the outcome of mortal contests on
which everything we value depends yet on which we can have no influence? The
answer is: Not Tuesday. To vote in [this] election is to have an impact on how
the past is understood, the present redeemed, and the future built.
Go forth knowing your vote on
Tuesday is an affirmation of our faith in democracy and in the principles and
purposes of Unitarian Universalism.
Copyright © 2006 by Rev. Samuel
A. Trumbore. All Rights Reserved.