RNS Morning Report: #ShowUpForShabbat; Evangelicals in Saudi; Church and state case

Two girls lean over the balcony rail at Squirrel Hill’s Beth Shalom Congregation, which held a community Shabbat service Nov. 3, 2018, on the one-week anniversary of the Tree of Life synagogue shooting in the Pittsburgh neighborhood. RNS photo by Yonat Shimron

Need to know: Monday, November 5, 2018

A week after Pittsburgh shooting, hundreds #ShowUpForShabbat

"I never thought I’d say this, but ‘thoughts and prayers’ feel great," said one local Jewish man at the first Shabbat service since the attack.

U.S. evangelical delegation meets with crown prince of Saudi Arabia

The meeting comes one month after the death of Washington Post contributing columnist Jamal Khashoggi, for which Saudi Arabia has acknowledged responsibility.

Death is a way of life as Mexico celebrates Day of the Dead

In Mexican families, the remembrance of loved ones is so frequent and natural that it can seem as if the deceased have never died.

South Korea courts Muslims to fill tourism gap

After a sharp decline in Chinese visitors, South Korea is adding halal restaurants and providing prayer rooms in a state-led effort to attract more Muslim tourists.

Supreme Court to rule on 40-foot war memorial cross at center of church-state debate

The case will give the court an opportunity to clarify its famously confused jurisprudence on government entanglement with religion.

About the Jewish mourners’ prayer on the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette front page

"When you conclude there are no words to express a community’s feelings, then maybe you are thinking in the wrong language," executive editor David Shribman wrote.

Latest news from RNS

In Pittsburgh, Muslims are eager to join Jews in fight against immigrant hate

Muslims, like many Jews, understand that a person like Robert Bowers could strike at their community too.

A TV God for the age of anxiety

The surprise success of the CBS show "God Friended Me" has some media watchers wondering whether the small screen is on the cusp of a religion renaissance.

This week’s parliament of religions is more than a big ‘pat on the back’ for faith

The gathering of some 8,000 people in Toronto will focus on ways religion "has been used to support genocide, wars, persecution and injustice," says one organizer.

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Evangelical Christians are racially diverse–and hold diverse views on immigration

(The Conversation) — The influence of white evangelicals on American politics is well known. More than 80 percent supported Donald Trump in the 2016 election. But two of the fastest-growing segments of the American population – Latino and Asian-American voters – also are part of evangelical America. What will drive their votes in the upcoming midterms?

Voting patterns

In my book, “Immigration, Evangelicals and Politics in an Era of Demographic Change,” I look at the tenacious hold of white evangelicals on political power, despite a dramatic decline in their numbers over the past decade. At least 1 out of 4 voters in the past three election cycles has been a white evangelical, even though they currently constitute only 17 percent of the total American population. Given that white evangelicals account for the largest religious group in some of the states hosting the most competitive house races this November, including Kansas, Virginia and North Carolina, it is important to first consider the role of religiously framed issues such as abortion.

Similar religious values

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="754"] Evangelicals during a mass prayer rally in Boston, Massachusetts. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)[/caption]
Popular assumptions contend that religious values are what set white evangelicals apart from others. A 2015 Public Religion Research Institute study suggests that white evangelicals are more likely than other Americans to express dismay that the U.S. is no longer a “Christian nation.” However, it is also the case that white evangelicals do not have a monopoly on religious values. In fact, Asian-American evangelicals report higher levels of church-going and fundamentalist beliefs than their white counterparts. And, on issues such as abortion, my research shows that Latino evangelicals express more conservative attitudes than their white counterparts. In the 2008 Collaborative Multiracial Post-Election Survey, for example, 76 percent of Latino evangelical voters opposed making abortion legal, compared to 72 percent of white evangelicals. And yet despite what appears to be higher levels of religious commitment, far fewer Asian-American and Latino evangelicals supported Trump compared to white evangelicals. In my book, I describe how less than 40 percent of registered evangelical Asian-Americans and less than 30 percent registered Latino evangelicals reported voting for Trump in 2016.

Immigration and race issues

What I argue is that attitudes toward immigration, more than religion, matter for white evangelicals’ political attitudes and vote choice. It is true that over the past decade, for example, a large number of white evangelical leaders have publicly stated their support for a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants. They have also voiced support for extending a program that allows young undocumented immigrants who arrived in the U.S. as children protection from deportation. However, what I argue is that the rank-and-file of white evangelicals in the U.S. have only become more conservative on these issues. In fact, while support for a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants had slowly been increasing among white evangelicals for the five years from 2009 to 2013, it dipped in 2014. A study by PRRI and Brookings Institution, found that from 56 percent, the support dropped to 48 percent. This downward trend is notable, since the change for the U.S. population as a whole was negligible – from 63 percent to 62 percent support. These results were based on interviews conducted in 2013 about their immigration views and re-interviews with the same set of people in 2014. Recent polling by PRRI shows that white evangelicals continue to be the most conservative of all major racial and religious groups on immigration issues ranging from policies to restrict the number of refugees entering the U.S. to separating families at the border. There are stark differences on immigration issues between white and non-white evangelicals. The survey of more than 10,000 people I use in my book shows that in 2016, Latino, black and Asian-American evangelicals were half as likely to say immigrants have a negative effect on the economy compared to white evangelicals. These differences remained even after I accounted for party identification and economic status.

Role of voter turnout

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="754"] Who will come out to vote matters. NextGen America campus organizer Simone Williams, left, talks with Grace Austin, a junior at the University of Wisconsin, about how to register to vote in Madison. (AP Photo/Scott Bauer)[/caption]
In modern times, midterm elections garner lower levels of participation than presidential contests. Political scientists contend this is due to lower interest among potential voters. Further, voters in midterm elections tend to be each party’s most reliable voters – those who have both high interest and strong voting histories. Research also shows that these reliable voters are generally both older, whiter and more conservative than less frequent voters. And conservative immigration policies are at the heart of the GOP agenda in the upcoming midterms. On the other hand, the voting rate among Latino and Asian-Americans has been lower than black and whites. Part of the reason could be that some of them may not be eligible to vote due to their citizenship status, or not being of voting age. But the other issue is not being registered as voters. In my view, conservative white evangelicals are not going to stay home on Nov. 6. While Latino and Asian-American evangelicals are increasing in number, they have yet to attain the same levels of political power.The Conversation (Janelle Wong is a professor of American Studies at the University of Maryland.) This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Christians can’t allow the Bible Belt to be the ‘death belt’

(RNS) — Would Tennessee's governor allow a man to be executed this week if he were to come to Friday prayers on death row?

He’s not a rabbi, and it’s not Judaism

What happened in Pittsburgh was anti-Semitic. What happened in Michigan was anti-Judaism.

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