Singer Katy Perry performs on the final night of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, on July 28, 2016. Photo courtesy of Reuters/Jim Young |
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Katy Perry comes from the same conservative evangelical background I do. That may come as a surprise to anyone who saw her singing
in places like the Democratic National Convention and speaking in
support of Hillary Clinton. (Attending such events is not on the bucket
list of anyone from our background.)
I don’t know the details of
Perry’s breakup with political conservatism, but I spent over 20 years
as an evangelical pastor, and the more deeply I engaged with the life
and teaching of Jesus at the heart of my faith, the less enamored I
became with the political project to which evangelicalism was giving its
soul. I felt increasingly out of sync with an evangelical community
more concerned with conservative politics than the compassion of Christ.
How else do we explain why nearly 80
percent of white evangelicals currently embrace the candidacy of Donald
Trump, whose way of life and values could not be more opposite to their
own?
How else can we explain their visceral disgust with Hillary Clinton
who, whatever her flaws, is a committed Methodist Christian who grew up
in Sunday school, started out as a young Republican, and was drawn into
social justice concerns through the influence of a youth pastor?
Author Brian McLaren (Photographer Blair Anderson of
avisualplanet.com)
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Katy Perry and Donald Trump … They’ve got
me thinking about 10 reasons I have had to part company with the
Conservative Evangelical Project:
1. I want to associate with people who
are respectful and treat others, even their opponents, with basic human
decency and civility.
Too many conservative leaders have become
increasingly disrespectful to the point of being rude, crude and
mean-spirited. It’s become impossible to ignore — from Rep. Joe Wilson,
R-S.C., shouting “You lie!” during the president’s State of the Union
address to Donald Trump reaching historic lows with name-calling, crude
insults, genital braggadocio, and violent rhetoric.
2. I can’t support regressive thinking that longs for a time when life was worse for nearly everybody except people like me.
Whether you like President Barack Obama
or not, former religious right activist Frank Schaeffer told the ugly
truth about contemporary conservatism: It has carried out a vicious
“slow motion lynching” of our first African-American president. Today’s
conservatives have been undermining voting rights for minorities,
vilifying immigrants, scapegoating LGBTQ people, and resurrecting white
privilege and white supremacy to maintain systemic injustice. One simple
word in Trump’s campaign slogan — “again” – harkens back to a time of
deep discrimination against everyone who doesn’t look like or pray like
me.
3. I won’t be pandered to or manipulated based on religious self-interest or bigotry.
Today’s conservatives support a
frightening array of proposals that go against our Constitution’s call
for “equal protection”: banning people from entering the country based
on religion, mass surveillance of communities based on religion and
creating registries of people based on religion.
4. I am drawn to policies that support conquering poverty, not perpetuating it.
When I began to understand the complex
causes and conditions that trap people in poverty, I better understood
the need for quality education, nutrition, health care, child care,
occupational safety, fair pay, racial equity, and public transportation.
I became increasingly drawn to leaders who work to reduce poverty by
reducing teen pregnancy, addiction, family breakdown, domestic violence,
gangs, mass incarceration, and untreated mental illnesses. In short,
the more I became committed to poverty reduction, the more I saw how
conservatism keeps people trapped in poverty.
5. I cannot support the massive transfer of wealth from the poor and middle classes to the rich.
Conservatives often complain that
liberals want to transfer wealth, but the fact is, for decades
conservatives have supported a massive transfer of wealth to those who
need it least. They have long promised that if we just help the rich
through tax cuts, deregulation, and undermining worker rights, the
benefits would “trickle down” to the rest of us. When I was younger, I
was naive enough to believe this kind of voodoo economics, but with age
I’ve come to see that all that actually trickles down is a toxic slurry
of pollution, unemployment, crumbling infrastructure and economic
inequality that is pummeling Americans, regardless of race or religion.
6. I have grown so tired of being misinformed and manipulated about abortion.
Here are the facts: Abortion rates went
up under former Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, then down
under Bill Clinton, remained level during George W. Bush and have
fallen about 13 percent during the Obama administration. There were 29
abortions per 1000 women aged 15-44 in the Reagan years, and the number
has dropped to 16 today. As evangelical-born writer Rachel Held Evans
has said, criminalizing abortion only reduces its safety, not its
incidence.
The conservative culture war on abortion
has failed. Its “baby-killer/women-hater” rhetoric has polarized and
paralyzed us for decades. If we want to reduce abortion, we must focus
on policies that have been proven to do so: better education, health
care, and wages — which, it turns out, are policies that also improve
women’s lives and strengthen families.
7. I care about the health of the earth.
My faith leads me to support
environmental policies that build a cleaner, more sustainable and
ultimately more profitable future. When I hear conservative candidates
talk about shutting down the Environmental Protection Agency and getting
rid of government regulations that protect the environment, I wonder
how many more Flint-style water crises there will be, how many more Gulf
oil spill disasters there will be, how many more inches (or feet!) the
sea will rise, and how much national and global instability will result.
I’m no fan of big government, but conservatives argue for shrinking
government to a size that it can no longer hold big business accountable
as it plunders our one and only beautiful planet earth for short-term
profit and long-term disaster.
8. I won’t feed terrorism.
Too few conservatives seem to understand
the simple strategy of terrorism: use inexpensive, unpredictable, and
highly visible attacks to instill fear among rich and powerful nations
to entice them to bankrupt themselves financially and morally through
endless and unwinnable wars. When conservatives advocate for “bomb the
hell out of them,” “waterboarding” and “carpet-bombing” strategies to
beat terrorism, they are foolishly marching us right into the trap the
terrorists have set.
9. I am sincerely concerned about Trump’s base.
A good friend of mine, a Trump supporter,
said this to me the other day: “Whatever you think of Trump, white men
like me feel like we’ve lost a lot. We’re everybody’s whipping boy.
We’re tired of being disrespected. Trump gets that.” I think there are
millions of Americans, many of them white and working class, who feel
like my friend. Their jobs were shipped overseas. They’ve been hurt by
an economy that aggregates wealth at the very top. They’ve fallen
between the cracks of a dysfunctional Congress so divided that it gets
next to nothing done. Sadly, beyond stirring them up with angry
speeches, once Trump gets what he wants from them — their vote — he’ll
leave them even worse off and therefore angrier. We need actual policies
that will help them build a better future, not vain promises about
returning to the past.
10. I believe in the power of love, not the love of power.
I understand that millions of Americans
are pumped up by Trump’s talk about being tough, his “punch him in the
face” bluster, his disgust with a free press, and his glib praise of
dictators and torture. But my faith leads me to see true greatness in
service and true power in love, self-control, and neighborliness — not
domination, reactivity, and revenge. Trump’s love of power may have
served him well in business and entertainment, but in political
leadership, it will be his Achilles’ heel, and his reactivity and lack
of humility will make him chaotic and dangerous.
Not only that, but supporting a crude,
angry, unaccountable and self-indulgent leader sets a terrible example
for our children and grandchildren. And if conservatives reward Trump
with a victory, can you imagine what the next generation of conservative
politicians will be like?
Listen, I don’t always agree with
everything that goes under the label of progressive, and progressives
need to be way more effective at communicating and implementing their
best ideas. But I cannot support any party or candidate — local, state,
federal or presidential — characterized by mean-spiritedness, bigotry,
unfairness, carelessness toward the poor, funneling wealth to the
richest, undermining abortion reduction, destroying our fragile planet,
playing into the hands of terrorists, exploiting the anger of
suffering people, and being driven more by the love of power than the
power of love.
Any one or two of these reasons would
have been sufficient to lead me away from voting conservative. All of
them together make me a consistent and passionate progressive voter in
this election, win or lose … not in spite of my Christian faith, but
because of it.
To all who come from the conservative
evangelical heritage Katy Perry and I share, I would say this: Your
pastors, parents, or radio/TV preachers may not grant you permission to
break up with conservatism, but you have it anyway.
Permission is granted by your conscience.
(Brian McLaren is an author, speaker, and networker among innovative faith leaders. His fifteenth book, The Great Spiritual Migration, will be released September 2016. He is an Auburn Senior Fellow and board chair of Convergence Network.)
Read more articles from Religion News Services, here.
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