Rift Opens Among Evangelicals on AIDS Funding

c. 2006 Religion News Service WASHINGTON _ Focus on the Family founder James Dobson and religious broadcaster Pat Robertson may concur on many things, but one thing they do not agree on is how the U.S. government spends money to fight AIDS. As the world marks 25 years since HIV and AIDS first appeared, a […]

c. 2006 Religion News Service

WASHINGTON _ Focus on the Family founder James Dobson and religious broadcaster Pat Robertson may concur on many things, but one thing they do not agree on is how the U.S. government spends money to fight AIDS.

As the world marks 25 years since HIV and AIDS first appeared, a clash among high-profile evangelical leaders over an international relief foundation threatens to take center stage.


The dispute also lays bare a faultline among American evangelicals, who have been divided over the treatment and prevention of AIDS because of the disease’s perceived connections to homosexuality and sexual promiscuity.

The clash, which centers on the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, may have long-term ramifications, both for those suffering with diseases and for the reputation of American evangelicals, activists said.

If the U.S. fails to extend help because of objections from conservative Christians, “we will look on this as a very mistaken time,” said Tony Campolo, a prominent sociologist and Christian activist.

Since its founding in 2001, the Swiss-based Global Fund has spent $2 billion on programs that offer medical treatment and education in 130 countries, according to a spokesperson. The U.S. government has provided 30 percent of the public-private foundation’s finances through 2005, and appropriated $445 million for 2006.

Some of the programs bankrolled through the Global Fund _ such as those that distribute condoms to prostitutes or provide clean needles to drug addicts _ have drawn fire from conservative evangelicals. Hardline conservatives favor President Bush’s policy of abstinence and emphasis on fidelity in marriage. Others take a more pragmatic approach, and say that exporting Western morality to foreign countries is ineffective at best and calamitous at worst.

After the Senate passed a non-binding budget amendment last March to increase the U.S. contribution to the Global Fund to $866 million in 2007, Dobson lambasted the international foundation, saying it promotes “legalized prostitution and all kinds of wickedness around the world.”

As the House debates a foreign spending bill this week that would maintain the current $445 million to the Global Fund next year, Dobson’s Focus on the Family ministry has turned up the heat.


A five-page letter addressed to lawmakers criticizes the Global Fund’s board of directors, its spending habits and its “social marketing” of condoms “to the near exclusion of abstinence and faithfulness.” The letter is signed by Dobson and representatives from 29 other conservative organizations, such as Shepherd Smith of the Institute for Youth Development and former presidential candidate Gary Bauer of American Values.

Not all evangelicals, however, are siding with Dobson.

The Global Fund released its own letter on May 24 that quoted Scripture, detailing the foundation’s accomplishments and listing supportive signatures of prominent Christian leaders like Call to Renewal founder Jim Wallis, Campolo and, yes, Pat Robertson.

Interview requests with Robertson, an outspoken conservative evangelical and CEO of the Christian Broadcasting Network, were declined.

“Robertson would be the first to admit that we don’t agree on many issues. But there are certain issues that get people together all across the theological spectrum and this is one of them,” said Campolo, who heads the Evangelical Association for the Promotion of Education.

Campolo said he was surprised Dobson has spoken so forcefully against the Global Fund when “it’s a minute portion of the funding that would cause any objection in the evangelical community.”

In fact, the Global Fund financially supports more than 73 faith-based organizations, including the Salvation Army, Youth for Christ, and World Vision, a Christian relief agency based in the United States.


Focusing on “narrow” and contentious issues _ such as condom distribution _ dismisses and distracts from “all the good work the Global Fund is doing for suffering people,” said Jenny Eaton Dyer, national faith outreach director for DATA, an organization co-founded by U2 frontman Bono that is dedicated to eradicating disease and poverty in Africa.

Paul Hetrick, a spokesman for Dobson’s ministry in Colorado Springs, Colo., said Dobson is not “categorically opposed” to condom use by married couples, but would rather see money funneled to a Bush administration program that stresses abstinence.

“We’re just concerned,” he said, “about government programs where abstinence is given short shrift.”

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Although their ranks remain small, increasing numbers of American evangelicals are willing to donate money for AIDS education and prevention in Africa, according to recent polls.

The disease remains “a very touchy subject among evangelicals,” said John C. Green, a professor of religion and politics at the University of Akron.

But if young Christians follow the lead of musicians like Dan Haseltine, a singer-songwriter in the popular group Jars of Clay, some of that may be changing.

Two years ago, Haseltine, who signed the letter in support of the Global Fund, started a program to provide clean blood and water supplies to African communities. Working in those communities, Haseltine said he has come to appreciate, and be humbled by, “the messiness of life.”


“The church is kind of infamous for taking complex questions and finding really simple answers,” Haseltine said in an interview. “AIDS doesn’t work that way.”

KRE/LF END BURKE Editors: To obtain file photos of Dobson, Robertson and Campolo, go to the RNS Web site at https://religionnews.com. On the lower right, click on “photos,” then search by subject or slug.

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