Friday, November 27, 2009

Nation & World

God and Country by Dan Gilgoff

Despite Kennedy's Death, Democrats' Ethnic Catholic Tradition Lives On

August 28, 2009 03:15 PM ET | Dan Gilgoff | Permanent Link | Print

By Dan Gilgoff, God & Country

Ted Kennedy's death is an end to several different eras, but Politics Daily's David Gibson warns against seeing it as the end of an era for the socially minded ethnic Catholic tradition in Democratic politics:

It is tempting to view Ted Kennedy's passing as the end of an era, both politically and culturally, but also religiously—the end of a reform-minded, socially oriented Catholicism that entered the mainstream in the 1960s and brought certain liberal values to the public square while remaining anchored, at times tenuously, to the religious (and ethnic) tradition that nurtured those values...

[But] surveys of young adult Catholics over recent years have shown that, in many respects, the younger generation resembles Kennedy's approach to faith and politics, with social justice and equality for women and gays as public markers of their religion, and devotion to the sacraments the lodestar of their private devotion.

Indeed, Barack Obama appears bent on reviving the socially minded ethnic Catholic Democratic tradition embodied by the Kennedy family. Obama's highest-profile personnel selections so far include:

  • Vice President Joe Biden, Irish Catholic
  • Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Latino Catholic
  • Democratic National Committee Chairman Tim Kaine, Irish Catholic
  • Surgeon general nominee Regina Benjamin, African-American Catholic

Not to mention House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, an Italian Catholic. Sure, all these people are over 50 years old. But a younger generation is leading a crop of new, politically progressive faith groups like Catholics United and Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good, raising the profile of socially minded Catholicism in Washington. Is the Kennedy socially minded Catholic tradition experiencing a renaissance?

Tags: Ted Kennedy | religion | Catholicism

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Reader Comments

Ted Kennedy's letter to the Holy Father

I am saddened by the hateful tone of the previous comments to the reporting about Senator Kennedy's letter to the Pope and the reply he received during his dying days.

I found his letter quite moving. Whatever his personal failings--and he who is without sin cast the first stone--Senator Kennedy's body of work as a Senator is strongly in keeping with Catholic social teaching in its support for the poor, working people, and his push to expand health care.

Jesus was a healer, not a hater. May Senator Kennedy rest in peace.

ted kennedy

as an irishman and a catholic I am embarased by his complete arrogance and his total hypocracy A man with no intestinal fortitude and no character did more to hurt this country and fellow americans than anybody in my life time from cheating to murder to murder again he never earned one red cent in business yet has no problem telling busines how they should be run.He lived off the tax payer. From his saying he did not know He signed up for 4 years in the army to get out in two because 4 year sign ups wre going to korea and 2 years was going to europe just a mistake i hope God forgives for him but I cant the list goes on and on just look at the facts 9 hrs to call the police as girl drowns in 5 ft of water please houses he just walks by to go muster up the baqckbone to face hes a coward theres no need to go on just lok at the facts

kennedys letter to the Holy Father

but Holy Father i never favored the death penalty for the convicted only for the innocent!

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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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