Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Nation & World

God and Country by Dan Gilgoff

Gingrich Continues Faith-Based Campaign, Decrying Obama's 'War Against Churches'

April 06, 2009 02:43 PM ET | Dan Gilgoff | Permanent Link | Print

By Dan Gilgoff, God & Country

When I wrote recently about Newt Gingrich's new organization for mobilizing religious conservatives, I wondered about how much the former House speaker was personally invested in it. The group's day-to-day operations, after all, are handled by Gingrich's former communications director.

But I've noticed that Gingrich is speaking up more and more about what he says is the Obama administration's assault on religion. Take this recent interview with One News Now, the news arm of the American Family Association, a conservative Christian group. A few highlights:

  • Gingrich called President Obama's plan to reduce the charitable tax deduction for top earners a "war against churches and charities."
  • "I think there's a clear to desire to replace the church with a bureaucracy and to replace people's right to worship together with a government-dominated system."
  • On the Obama administration's intention to roll back so-called conscience protections for healthcare workers: "This is most aggressive, militant, secular program I can remember. And I think you have to be really clearly aware that they want an America which is radically different than the country which was created by those pioneers who first landed back in 1607 at Cape Henry and erected a cross to thank God for having allowed them to cross the Atlantic Ocean."

Gingrich's growing preoccupation with the concerns of Christian conservatives coincides with his conversion to Catholicism, which he discussed for the first time yesterday on Fox News Sunday:

CHRIS WALLACE: Mr. Gingrich, you have been a Baptist most of your life, and last Sunday you converted to Catholicism. Why, sir?
GINGRICH: I'm not talking about this much publicly, but let me just say that I found over the course of the last decade, attending the basilica, meeting with Monsignor [Walter] Rossi, reading the literature, that there was a peace in my soul and a sense of well being in the Catholic Church, and I found the mass of conversion last Sunday one of the most powerful moments of my life. [Rossi is the rector of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington.]

WALLACE: You have—it's no secret—been married and divorced twice. Will you be able to participate fully in communion and all the other rites of the Catholic Church?
GINGRICH: Yes, we have done everything within the law of the church, following all of the rules of the church over the last 10 years. And it's been a process. It's been a very long process and something which was deeply affected, in part, by Pope Benedict XVI's visit and the opportunity I had to sit in—as you know, my wife, Calista, sings at the basilica every Sunday, and I was allowed as a spouse to be there as part of the vespers program when the pope came. It's been a long process.

WALLACE: And if I might ask, just briefly, what is it about the pope's visit that led to this?
GINGRICH: I really believe, first of all, seeing the joy in his eyes, listening to his message, and I really believe that his basic statement, Christ our hope, is right. And I think much of what's wrong with our country and with the western world is a function of looking inside ourselves, not just looking at money or looking at our wallets.

Gingrich seems to be talking more about religion right now than any other prominent Republican. But he still has work to do with religious conservatives if he's eyeing them as a base of support for a White House run.

Tags: religion | Newt Gingrich | conservatives

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Reader Comments

Faith alone

Mr McArthur seems to conveniently overlook the epistle of St James which tells us that faith without good works is worthless.

James 2:24

America was founded in 1776, not 1607

Newt Gingrich is 100% correct to say that the country is dramatically different than the one Puritans landed upon in 1607 - their lives WERE 'faith-based'. But they were never a 'Country'.

But America was not founded by early 17th Century settlers. The 1600's were a nightmare of religious superstition, inquisitions, wars, 'witch' burnings and intolerance towards science and secular progress. From the ashes of that century, the 18th Century gave birth to 'The Enlightenment' and it is from that movement that the United States of America was born.

Newt Gingrich knows this, he has read Franklin, Madison, Jefferson and Paine, their writings and values are unambiguous and it is their values and ideas that formed our founding documents. A serious discussion about the evolving role of faith in 21st Century life NEEDS to occur, but the time for obscuring the secular foundation of the Republic has passed. America WILL go on as it has been, as a secular Nation that allows freedom of Religion. The question for believers is, do they honor their faith and their Nation and enjoy the fruits of belief AND freedom, or, like Islam, faced with modernity - will they retreat from the world and become a hardened and increasingly detached population.

Formidable? Certainly. Part of the future? Doubtful

Evangelical Christians vs. Catholics

Jennifer of MS wrote: In response to the lady who seems to think that Catholics are not Christian, boy are you uneducated.

Just to clarify...I didn't say that I, personally, do not think Catholics are Christians. I think they are. What I said was that many evangelical Christians do not think that Catholics are "saved," and for that reason, many of them will not come out in support of Newt Gingrich.

Read what well-known evangelical writer and minister John MacArthur has to say about this issue. (And again . . . this is my position. I am only pointing out that this is the position of many evangelical Christians.)

http://www.biblebb.com/files/macqa/1301-X-13.htm

Questioner

My brother and his wife are both Christians, and they went to Biola University [Christian college], and my brother taught at Biola. In the last three years, he started teaching at a Catholic high school, and he feels that I’m really narrow-minded about Catholics. And, in particular, he feels that many of the priests that he knows at this high school actually have salvation. My question is, can a Catholic priest actually be saved and remain a Catholic Priest?

John MacArthur's Answer

Not if he believes the Catholic system. If he doesn’t, if he doesn’t accept their baggage. If he believes his salvation is provided only through grace by faith in Jesus Christ, he could be saved. But, if he accepts the full sweep of Catholic dogma, there’s no way. He has cluttered up the simplicity of salvation with a works/righteousness system. But, there are priest in the system, as you know...Catholicism tolerates its dissidents. It absorbs them, and, therefore, perpetuates its system. It doesn’t expel them. That’s why it lasts so long. And, there are, within the system, those priests who have come to an understanding. Do you know Martin Luther never left the Roman Catholic Church? Never! He stayed in the system. But, he rejected the corruption of the doctrine of salvation.

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Dan Gilgoff covers religion for U.S. News & World Report. He is the author of The Jesus Machine: How James Dobson, Focus on the Family, and Evangelical America are Winning the Culture War, and is a former politics editor at beliefnet. E-mail Dan at godandcountry@usnews.com.

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