Influential Dozen Try to Help Democrats Bridge the `God Gap’

c. 2006 Religion News Service WASHINGTON _ At a meeting of the House Democrats’ Faith Working Group, a perplexed congressman turned to his colleagues for pastoral guidance. How could he counter a local preacher who argued that all Jesus’ moral teachings were about the world to come, not the here and now? Rep. David Price, […]

c. 2006 Religion News Service

WASHINGTON _ At a meeting of the House Democrats’ Faith Working Group, a perplexed congressman turned to his colleagues for pastoral guidance. How could he counter a local preacher who argued that all Jesus’ moral teachings were about the world to come, not the here and now?

Rep. David Price, D-N.C., stood amid the sympathetic sighs and “you can’t convert everyone” comments to offer a new spin on an old parable.


The Good Samaritan is walking down the road and cares for a stranger who has been beaten and robbed, Price said. The next day, on the same road, another person has been beaten and robbed. So it goes for another week _ more robberies, more victims.

“How long is it going to take before the Samaritan says, `Hey, maybe we ought to patrol this road,”’ Price said. In other words, the congressman argued, there are some problems that individuals can’t solve on their own. They require the resources of a morally responsible government.

As Democrats seek to reframe America’s debate over moral values and close their lamented “God gap” with religious communities, conversations such as these are blowing like a mighty wind through party circles.

Gone are the days when “faith outreach” meant visiting African-American churches two weeks before an election, party leaders say. Instead, Democrats are seeking _ and getting _ regular meetings with megachurch pastors T.D. Jakes, Joel Osteen and Rick Warren.

Rather than cede red states to Republicans, the party is buying airtime on Christian radio stations, with the message that Democrats are indeed a party with deep moral convictions.

No longer leaning on 1960s-era preachers to guide progressive politics, Democrats are now also turning to young voices like strategist Mara Vanderslice, 31, and writer Amy Sullivan, 33, who offer new perspectives and fresh ideas.

While Republicans learned long ago how to connect with religious voters, Democrats are just now starting their own efforts.


After interviews with dozens of politicians, strategists, the think-tank set and a Noah’s ark-full of faith leaders, Religion News Service has identified the 12 most influential voices in helping Democrats reach people of faith. Those on the list are writing the party’s new testament, whispering in the ears of the powerful, and playing matchmaker between religious and political pace-setters.

They are:

_ The Theologian: Shaun Casey, an ethicist at Washington’s Wesley Theological Seminary, who provides a moral and historical framework for progressive faith-based politics.

_ The House Trinity: Reps. James Clyburn, Rosa DeLauro and David Price, who lead the effort on Capitol Hill to frame legislative debates in moral terms.

_ The Preacher: Leah Daughtry, chief of staff at the Democratic National Committee, who champions faith outreach at party headquarters.

_ The Model: Tim Kaine, governor of Virginia, who showed Democrats how a faith-infused campaign can turn a red state blue.

_ The Insider: Mike McCurry, former White House press secretary, who coaxes Washington Democrats into sharing their spiritual sides.


_ The “Blessed” One: Barack Obama, the junior senator from Illinois, who challenges his party to make room for religion in the public square.

_ The Prophet: Rabbi David Saperstein, head of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, who is Washington’s most articulate voice in progressive politics.

_ The Matchmaker: Burns Strider, a staffer who shepherds the House Democratic Faith Working Group and corrals Congress into meetings with the religious community.

_ The Agitator: Amy Sullivan, an independent but opinionated journalist who pens passionate pleas for Democrats to “get religion.”

_ The Strategist: Mara Vanderslice of the consulting firm Common Good Strategies, who works the campaign trail, helping candidates build relationships with diverse religious communities.

In some ways, these 12 apostles reflect the diversity on which Democrats pride themselves. They include a former Churches of Christ minister, a Pentecostal preacher, two Catholics, a Methodist Sunday school teacher, an Episcopalian, a progressive evangelical, Baptists and a rabbi.


Some at Democratic Party headquarters are taking an under-the-radar approach to faith outreach and are reluctant to divulge all the party’s plans and advisers.

“Our focus is not in putting someone behind a pulpit,” said Leslie Brown, the DNC’s “Faith in Action” coordinator. But after conducting polls, meeting with state party chairs and undertaking an “internal education,” Democrats are building a “message-driven machine,” Brown said.

“We want to talk about things in ways we can relate to the faith community,” said Clyburn, D-S.C., who heads the Faith Working Group. “I don’t talk about the environment just as keeping things green, I talk about it in terms of stewardship.”

But while recent polls suggest evangelicals may be growing disillusioned with Republicans, many are still reluctant to pull the lever for Democratic candidates, said the Rev. Richard Cizik, vice president of the National Association of Evangelicals.

“Simply using `faith language’ won’t redound to the benefit of any candidate, Republican or Democrat, without some authenticity there,” Cizik said.

“When evangelicals think about the reputation of the Republican Party, which isn’t too good right now, at least it does have a record of reaching out to those voters and it does have a record on Capitol Hill of at least trying to carry water for their issues,” Cizik said.


Still, there are issues such as the environment, poverty, war and health care on which Democratic positions dovetail with those of many religious Americans, party leaders say.

“It’s not always pretty,” Casey says of Democrats’ fledgling efforts to reach these voters. “But the good news is everybody realizes the party has to do a better job.”

KRE/PH END BURKE

Editors: Two group shots _ one of Clyburn, DeLauro and Price; the other of Casey, McCurry, Sullivan and Daughtry _ are available on the RNS Web site at https://religionnews.com. On the lower right, click on “photos,” then search by subject or slug. Also available are individual headshots, and an original illustration of all 12 Democrats by Monica Seaberry.

For one time only, RNS subscribers can download all photos associated with this story for the price of one photo.

A longer version of this story, RNS-DEMS-DOZEN, is also being transmitted Oct. 17. The longer version profiles the 12 people on the list.

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