It doesn't matter if you don't go to church, are not political, or refuse to 
get involved. I believe this essay should be pretty interesting to everyone - 
If it makes you squirm in your seat, you probably should. Kay Lee

Why Are So Many Christians Conservative?  
http://www.alternet.org/story/146855/why_are_so_many_christians_conservative/
By Mike Lux

May 19, 2010 "AlterNet" --  When you are in the political world, you have 
decisions to make every single day about who you will try to help and who you 
won't. In spite of the earnest quest of good technocrats everywhere, the simple 
fact is that there are only a few win-win solutions. Who you tax, who you give 
a tax break to, what programs you cut or add to, who you tighten regulations 
on, and who you loosen them on, what kind of contractors are eligible for 
government work, which school districts and non-profit groups get federal 
money, etc: these political decisions are generally not win-win. Instead, they 
mean that one group of people win, and one group of people loses. It is the 
nature of politics, and you can't take the politics out of politics.

The most fundamental difference between progressives and conservatives is that 
question of which side you are on. Conservatives believe that the rich and 
powerful got that way because they deserve to be, that society owes its 
prosperity to the prosperous, and that government's job when they have to make 
choices is to side with those businesspeople who are doing well, because all 
good things trickle down from them. Progressives, on the other hand, believe it 
is the poor and those who are ill-treated who need the most help from their 
government, and that prosperity comes from all of us -- the worker as well as 
the employer, the consumer as well as the seller, the struggling entrepreneur 
trying to make it as well as the wealthy who already have.

Usually, I might spend my time arguing which of those worldviews gives us 
better policy outcomes, or which is better politics, but in this post I want to 
focus on something else: which side the God of the Judeo-Christian Biblical 
tradition is on.

Between Glenn Beck's conspiracy theories about Christian social justice (Since 
Communists and Nazis both used the words "social" and "justice," sometimes even 
together, the phrase must be bad along with other words they used a lot like 
the, and, one, thank you, please, today, tonight, and tomorrow), Sarah Palin's 
"spiritual warfare," and my very fun e-mail debates with a much-beloved but 
sadly misguided conservative Christian relative, I have been thinking a lot 
about Christians and political ideology of late. As those of you who read me a 
lot know, I was raised in a church-oriented home, and I write about religion a 
fair amount. This isn't because I am conventionally religious: I decided about 
four decades ago that since there was no way for sure about the nature of God 
or the soul or all that metaphysical stuff, I wasn't going to spend much time 
thinking, caring, or worrying about it. If that sends one to hell, at least 
I'll be there with a lot of my favorite people. But I still have the social and 
moral teaching I learned from my upbringing embedded in me as a core part of my 
value system, and I still know my Bible pretty well.

That's why I am always puzzled by how people who claim to be followers of the 
Jesus I read about in the Bible can be political conservatives.

Now I know there are many people who have not been brought up in the Christian 
faith, or who were but aren't interested in it anymore. Perhaps like a great 
many folks, you have been turned off by all the high-profile preachers who 
claim to speak for Christianity but preach a brand of narrow, intolerant 
conservatism that you can't relate to. My view is that even if that is the 
case, it is still important to know something about the Christian New Testament 
because it is such a historical and cultural touchstone in our country. I also 
think it's important to have a sense of just how different the Bible is from 
how conservative Christians represent it. For those of you uninterested in all 
this, I understand why: you definitely won't want to dig into what follows. But 
for those of who are, here is my argument about Christianity and progressivism 
in politics.

Conservative Christians' primary argument regarding Jesus and politics is that 
all he cared about was spiritual matters and an individual's relationship with 
God. As a result, they say, all those references from Jesus about helping the 
poor relate only to private charity, not to society as a whole. Their belief is 
that Jesus, and the New Testament in general, is focused on one thing and one 
thing only: how do people get into heaven.

The Jesus of the New Testament was of course extremely concerned with spiritual 
matters: there is no doubt whatsoever about his role or interest in the issues 
of the day, that the spiritual well-being of his followers was a major interest 
of his. How much he was involved with or interested in the political situation 
of the day is a matter of much debate and interpretation. Some say it was a lot 
and others that it was pretty limited or, as conservatives would say, not at 
all. However, much of a priority or focus it was, though, if you actually read 
the Gospels, it is clear that Jesus' main concern in terms of the people whose 
fates he cared about was for the poor, the oppressed, and the outcast. 

Comment after comment and story after story in the Gospels about Jesus relates 
to the treatment of the poor, generosity to those in need, mercy to the 
outcast, and scorn for the wealthy and powerful. And his philosophy is embedded 
with the central importance of taking care of others, loving others, treating 
others as you would want to be treated. There is no virtue of selfishness here, 
there is no "greed is good," there is no invisible hand of the market or 
looking out for Number One first. There is nothing about poor people being 
lazy, nothing about the undeserving poor being leeches on society, nothing 
about how I pulled myself up by my own bootstraps so everyone else should, too. 
There is nothing about how in nature, "the lions eat the weak," and therefore 
we shouldn't help the poor because it weakens them. There is nothing about 
charity or welfare corrupting a person's spirit.

What there is: quote after quote about compassion for the poor. In Jesus' very 
first sermon of his ministry, the place where he launched his public career, he 
stated the reason he had come: to bring good news to the poor, liberty to the 
captives, to help the oppressed go free, and that he was here to proclaim a 
year of favor from the Lord -- which in Jewish tradition meant the year that 
poor debtors were forgiven their debts to bankers and the wealthy. In Luke 6, 
Jesus says the poor and hungry will be blessed, and the rich will be cursed. He 
urges his followers to sell all their possessions and give them to the poor. 
The one time he really focuses on God's judgment and who goes to heaven is in 
Matthew 25, where he says those who go to heaven will be those who fed the 
hungry, clothed the naked, visited those in prison, gave shelter to the hungry, 
and welcomed the stranger -- and those who don't make it were the ones who 
refused to help the poor and oppressed.

And he was a really serious class warrior, too -- he wasn't just into helping 
the poor; he didn't seem to like rich folks very much. In Matthew 6, he focuses 
on the love of money as a major problem. In Luke 11, he berates a wealthy 
lawyer for burdening the poor. In Luke 12, he says that the wealthy who store 
up treasure are cursed by God. In Luke 14, he says if we throw a party, we 
should invite all poor people and no rich people, and suggests that the wealthy 
already turned down their invitation to God's feast, and that it is the poor 
who will get into heaven (a theme repeated multiple times). He says that the 
rich people will have a harder time getting to heaven than a camel trying to 
pass through the eye of a needle. He chases the wealthy bankers and merchants 
from the Temple.

I have never heard a conservative Christian quote any of these verses -- not 
once, and I have been in a lot of discussions with Christian conservatives, and 
heard a lot of their speeches and sermons. The one verse they always quote (and 
I mean always -- I have never talked to a conservative Christian about 
economics and not heard them quote this verse) is the one time in which Jesus 
says that "the poor will always be with us." The reason they love this quote so 
much is that they interpret that line to mean that in spite of everything else 
Jesus said about the poor, that since the poor will always be with us, we don't 
need to worry about trying to help them. Apparently since the poor will always 
be with us, we can go ahead and screw them. But Jesus making a prediction that 
there will always be oppressive societies doesn't mean he wanted us to join the 
oppressors. By clinging desperately to that one verse in the Bible, and 
ignoring all the others about the poor and the rich, Christian conservatives 
show themselves to be hypocrites, plain and simple.

The Jesus of the New Testament spent his public career preaching about the 
nature of God and our relationship to God, but also about how we should deal 
with each other. He repeatedly blessed mercy, gentleness, peacemaking, 
community, and taking care of each other. He lifted up the poor and oppressed, 
and spoke poorly of the wealthy and powerful. If anyone in modern society 
talked like he did, you can bet your bottom dollar that conservatives would 
condemn that person as a class warrior, a socialist. Jesus may not have been 
primarily concerned with politics, but for what politics he did have, it is 
virtually impossible to argue that he was anything but a progressive thinker.

I want to close on one other note here. I focused here on the Jesus of the 
Gospels (principally Matthew, Mark and Luke -- the Gospel of John is almost all 
focused on mystical spiritualism), but Jesus is not exactly the only Bible 
character concerned with issues of social and economic justice. All of the 
first five books of the Torah (the Old Testament for Christians) talk a lot 
about justice for the poor; the Psalms are full of verses about the helping 
poor; every Old Testament prophet castigates the Jewish people (and yes, their 
governments) for mistreating the poor. And in the New Testament, there are some 
dynamite passages promoting progressive thinking aside from all of the Jesus 
quotations I mentioned. Three of my very favorites:

  a.. In Acts 2: 44-45 says: "The faithful all lived together and owned 
everything in common: they sold their goods and possessions and shared out the 
proceeds among themselves according to what each are needed." My question: did 
Karl Marx quote that line directly, or did he come up with his 
each-according-to-their-own-needs doctrine on his own? 
  b.. Jesus' mother Mary says that Jesus will "fill the starving with good 
things and send the rich away empty" and will "pull the princes from their 
thrones and raise high the lowly." I guess the big guy came by his politics 
from his mom. 
  c.. Speaking of the big guy's family, in the Book of James, which is 
purportedly written by Jesus' brother (and scholars think there is a pretty 
good chance it really was), James really goes heavy into the class warfare 
stuff. In James 2: 1-13, there is an extended admonishment on respect for the 
poor and mercy. In 2: 5-8, he says it is the poor whom God chose to be loved, 
and the rich "who are always against you." In 2: 13, he says that "there will 
be judgment without mercy for those who have not been merciful themselves, but 
the merciful need have no fear of judgment." 
  d.. And in 5: 16, he condemns the rich again starting out: "Now an answer for 
the rich. Start crying, weep for the miseries coming to you... Laborers plowed 
your fields and you cheated them: listen to the wages you kept back, calling 
out: realize that the cries of the workers have reached the ears of the Lord." 
Judeo-Christian scripture is a rich and complicated work of literature. Written 
over the course of (at least) several hundred years by dozens of different 
authors, there are a variety of perspectives and many times outright 
contradictions in the theology and the politics of the writing (if it's all 
inspired word for word by God, He seems to have changed his mind a lot). But 
one thing is extremely certain: the poor seem to be who God is most concerned 
about. Yes, there are a few quotations (four, if I remember right) trashing gay 
people, along with quite a few more about the right way to do animal sacrifice 
and to be careful about eating shellfish and hanging out with women who are 
menstruating. But mercy, kindness, and concern for the poor and the weak and 
the outcast seems to matter a lot more, with literally several hundred verses 
referencing those agenda items. If you are a progressive, that is a pretty good 
ratio.

ABOUT MIKE LUX
Mike Lux is the co-founder and CEO of Progressive Strategies, L.L.C., a 
political consulting firm founded in 1999, focused on strategic political 
consulting for non-profits, labor unions, PACs and progressive donors.  
Previously, he was Senior Vice President for Political Action at People For the 
American Way (PFAW), and the PFAW Foundation, and served at the White House 
from January 1993 to mid-1995 as a Special Assistant to the President for 
Public Liaison.  He also played a role in five different presidential campaign 
teams.  While at Progressive Strategies, Lux has founded, and currently chairs 
a number of new organizations and projects, including American Family Voices, 
and the Progressive Donor Network. Mike currently serves on the boards of 
several important organizations, including the Arca Foundation, Americans 
United For Change, Center for Progressive Leadership, and Progressive Majority, 
the last three of which he co-founded. He also was a co-founder of Ballot 
Initiative Strategy Center and Women's Voices/Women Vote, has served on several 
other boards throughout his career, and played a role in helping launch the 
Center for American Progress and Air America. He is also a regular contributor 
to The Huffington Post.

On January 14, 2009, Lux released his first book, The Progressive Revolution: 
How the Best in America Came to Be. Lux's book was published by Wiley & Sons.


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