The
pundits have been just as eager to raise questions that seem obvious
and important: Should we let religious beliefs influence the making of
law and public policy?
Those
questions, however, assume that candidates bring the subject of faith
into the political arena largely to justify -- or turn up the heat
under -- their policy positions. In fact, faith talk often has little
to do with candidates' stands on the issues. There's something else
going on here.
Look at the TV ad that brought Mike Huckabee
out of obscurity in Iowa, the one that identified him as a "Christian
Leader" who proclaims: "Faith doesn't just influence me. It really
defines me." That ad did indeed mention a couple of actual political
issues -- the usual suspects, abortion and gay marriage -- but only in
passing. Then Huckabee followed up with a red sweater-themed Christmas
ad that actively encouraged voters to ignore the issues. We're all
tired of politics, the kindly pastor indicated. Let's just drop all the
policy stuff and talk about Christmas -- and Christ.
Ads like
his aren't meant to argue policy. They aim to create an image -- in
this case, of a good Christian with a steady moral compass who sticks
to his principles. At a deeper level, faith-talk ads work hard to turn
the candidate -- whatever candidate -- into a bulwark of solidity, a
symbol of certainty; their goal is to offer assurance that the basic
rules for living remain fixed, objective truths, as true as religion.
In
a time when the world seems like a shaky place -- whether you have a
child in Iraq, a mortgage you may not be able to meet, a pension
threatening to head south, a job evaporating under you, a loved one
battling drug or alcohol addiction, an ex who just came out as gay or
born-again, or a president you just can't trust -- you may begin to
wonder whether there is any moral order in the universe. Are the very
foundations of society so shaky that they might not hold up for long?
Words about faith -- nearly any words -- speak reassuringly to such
fears, which haunt millions of Americans.
These fears and the
religious responses to them have been a key to the political success of
the religious right in recent decades. Randall Balmer, a leading
scholar of evangelical Christianity, points out that it's offered not
so much "issues" to mobilize around as "an unambiguous morality in an
age of moral and ethical uncertainty."
Mitt Romney was
courting the evangelical-swinging-toward-Huckabee vote when he, too,
went out of his way to link religion with moral absolutes in his big
Iowa speech on faith. Our "common creed of moral convictions
the firm
ground on which Americans of different faiths meet" turned out, utterly
unsurprisingly, to be none other than religious soil: "We believe that
every single human being is a child of God
liberty is a gift of God."
No doubts allowed here.
American politicians have regularly
wielded religious language and symbolism in their moments of need, and
such faith talk has always helped provide a sense of moral certainty in
a shape-shifting world. But in the better years of the previous
century, candidates used religion mostly as an adjunct to the real meat
of the political process, a tool to whip up support for policies.
How
times have changed. Think of it, perhaps, as a way to measure the
powerful sense of unsettledness that has taken a firm hold on American
society. Candidates increasingly keep their talk about religion
separate from specific campaign issues. They promote faith as something
important and valuable in and of itself in the election process. They
invariably avow the deep roots of their religious faith and link it not
with issues, but with certitude itself.
Sometimes it seems
that Democrats do this with even more grim regularity than Republicans.
John Edwards, for example, reassured the nation that "the hand of God
today is in every step of what happens with me and every human being
that exists on this planet." In the same forum, Hillary Clinton
proclaimed that she "had a grounding in faith that gave me the courage
and the strength to do what I thought was right, regardless of what the
world thought. And that's all one can expect or hope for."
When
religious language enters the political arena in this way, as an end in
itself, it always sends the same symbolic message: Yes, Virginia (or
Iowa or New Hampshire or South Carolina) there are absolute values,
universal truths that can never change. You are not adrift in a sea of
moral chaos. Elect me and you're sure to have a fixed mooring to hold
you and your community fast forever.
That message does its
work in cultural depths that arguments about the separation of church
and state can never touch. Even if the candidates themselves don't
always understand what their words are doing, this is the biggest, most
overlooked piece in today's faith and politics puzzle -- and once you
start looking for it, you find it nearly everywhere on the political
landscape.
The Threat to Democracy
So, when it comes
to religion and politics, here's the most critical question: Should we
turn the political arena into a stage to dramatize our quest for moral
certainty? The simple answer is no -- for lots of reasons.
For
starters, it's a direct threat to democracy. The essence of our system
is that we, the people, get to choose our values. We don't discover
them inscribed in the cosmos. So everything must be open to question,
to debate, and therefore to change. In a democracy, there should be no
fixed truth except that everyone has the right to offer a new view --
and to change his or her mind. It's a process whose outcome should
never be predictable, a process without end. A claim to absolute truth
-- any absolute truth -- stops that process.
For those of us
who see the political arena as the place where the whole community
gathers to work for a better world, it's even more important to insist
that politics must be about large-scale change. The politics of moral
absolutes sends just the opposite message: Don't worry, whatever small
changes are necessary, it's only in order to resist the fundamental
crumbling that frightens so many. Nothing really important can ever
change.
Many liberals and progressives hear that profoundly
conservative message even when it's hidden beneath all the reasonable
arguments about church and state. That's one big reason they are often
so quick to sound a shrill alarm at every sign of faith-based politics.
They also know how easy it is to go from "there is a fixed
truth" to "I have that fixed truth." And they've seen that the fixed
truth in question is all too often about personal behaviors that ought
to be matters of free choice in a democracy.
Which brings us
to the next danger: Words alone are rarely enough to reassure the
uncertain. In fact, the more people rely on faith talk to pursue
certainty, the more they may actually reinforce both anxiety and
uncertainty. It's a small step indeed to move beyond the issue of
individual self-control to controlling others through the passage of
laws.
Campaigns to put the government's hands on our bodies
are not usually missionary efforts meant to make us accept someone
else's religion. They are much more often campaigns to stage symbolic
dramas about self-control and moral reassurance.
Controlling the Passions
American
culture has always put a spotlight on the question: Can you control
your impulses and desires -- especially sexual desires -- enough to
live up to the moral rules? As historian of religion John F. Wilson
tells us, the quest for surety has typically focused on a "control of
self" that "through discipline" finally becomes self-control. In the
2008 presidential campaign, this still remains true. Listen, for
example, to Barack Obama: "My Bible tells me that if we train a child
in the way he should go, when he is old he will not turn from it. So I
think faith and guidance can help fortify
a sense of reverence that
all young people should have for the act of sexual intimacy."
Mitt
Romney fit snugly into the same mold. He started his widely-heralded
statement on religion by talking about a time when "our nation faced
its greatest peril," a threat to "the survival of a free land." Was he
talking about terrorism? No. He immediately went on to warn that the
real danger comes from "human passions unbridled." Only morality and
religion can do the necessary bridling, he argued, quoting John Adams
to make his case: "Our constitution was made for a moral and religious
people" -- in other words, people who can control themselves. That's
why "freedom requires religion."
All too often, though, the
faith-talk view of freedom ends up taking away freedom. When Romney
said he'd be "delighted" to sign "a federal ban on all abortions," only
a minority of Americans approved of that position (if we can believe
the polls), but it was a sizable minority. For them, fear of unbridled
passion is stronger than any commitment to personal freedom.
In
the end, it may be mostly their own passions that they fear. But since
the effort to control oneself is frustrating, it can easily turn into a
quest for "control over other selves," to quote historian Wilson again,
"with essentially bipolar frameworks for conceiving of the world: good
versus bad, us versus them" -- "them" being liberals, secular
humanists, wild kids, or whatever label the moment calls for.
The
upholders of virtue want to convince each other that their values are
absolutely true. So they stick together and stand firm against those
who walk in error. As Romney put it, "Any person who has knelt in
prayer to the Almighty has a friend and ally in me."
That's
the main dynamic driving the movements to ban abortion and gay
marriage. But they're just the latest in a long line of such movements,
including those aimed at prohibiting or restricting alcohol, drugs,
gambling, birth control, crime, and other behaviors that are, in a
given period, styled as immoral.
Since it's always about
getting "them" to control their passions, the target is usually
personal behavior. But it doesn't have to be. Just about any law or
policy can become a symbol of eternal moral truth -- even foreign
policy, one area where liberals, embarked on their own faith-talk
campaigns, are more likely to join conservatives.
The
bipartisan war on terror has, for instance, been a symbolic drama of
"us versus them," acting out a tale of moral truth. Rudolph Giuliani
made the connection clear shortly after the 9/11 attack when he went to
the United Nations to whip up support for that "war." "The era of moral
relativism
must end," he demanded. "Moral relativism does not have a
place in this discussion and debate."
Nor does it have a place
in the current campaign debate about foreign policy. Candidate
Huckabee, for example, has no hesitation about linking war abroad to
the state of morality here at home. He wants to continue fighting in
Iraq, he says, because "our way of life, our economic and moral
strength, our civilization is at stake
I am determined to look this
evil in the eye, confront it, defeat it." As his anti-gay marriage
statement asks, "What's the point of keeping the terrorists at bay in
the Middle East, if we can't keep decline and decadence at bay here at
home?"
On the liberal side, the theme is more muted but still
there. Barack Obama, for instance, has affirmed that the U.S. must
"lead the world in battling immediate evils and promoting the ultimate
good. I still believe that America is the last, best hope of Earth."
Apparently that's why we need to keep tens of thousands of troops in
Iraq indefinitely. Clinton calls for "a bipartisan consensus to ensure
our interests, increase our security and advance our values," acting
out "our deeply-held desire to remake the world as it ought to be."
Apparently that's why, in her words, "we cannot take any option off the
table in sending a clear message to the current leadership of Iran."
When
words and policies become symbols of moral absolutes, they are usually
about preventing some "evil" deed or turning things back to the way
they (supposedly) used to be. So they are likely to have a conservative
impact, even when they come from liberals.
The Future of Faith Talk
In
itself, faith in politics poses no great danger to democracy as long as
the debates are really about policies -- and religious values are
translated into political values, articulated in ways that can be
rationally debated by people who don't share them. The challenge is not
to get religion out of politics. It's to get the quest for certitude
out of politics.
The first step is to ask why that quest seems
increasingly central to our politics today. It's not simply because a
right-wing cabal wants to impose its religion on us. The cabal exists,
but it's not powerful enough to shape the political scene on its own.
That power lies with millions of voters across the political spectrum.
Candidates talk about faith because they want to win votes.
Voters
reward faith talk because they want candidates to offer them symbols of
immutable moral order. The root of the problem lies in the underlying
insecurities of voters, in a sense of powerlessness that makes change
seem so frightening, and control -- especially of others -- so
necessary.
The only way to alter that condition is to
transform our society so that voters will feel empowered enough to take
the risks, and tolerate the freedom that democracy requires. That would
be genuine change. It's a political problem with a political solution.
Until that solution begins to emerge, there is no way to take the
conservative symbolic message of faith talk out of American politics.