The forum was held at George Washington University’s Lisner Auditorium and broadcast to a live audience on CNN.
Soledad O’Brien asks Edwards to talk about his views on evolution, creationism and gay marriage, and sin. She asks Obama to talk about God and war, Israel and Palestine, and executive salaries. She asks Clinton to talk about the Iraq war, how her faith helped her get through infidelity, and prayer. Wallis asks Edwards, Obama to talk about poverty. Watkins asks Edwards to talk about prayer. Cook asks Edwards to talk about rebuilding New Orleans. OSullivan asks Clinton to talk about restraint in regards to taxes, gun control, health care, and energy consumption.
Jim Wallis has gathered a group of fellow writers to start “God’s Politics”. Starting on September 15, the partnership between Sojourners and Beliefnet aims to provide fresh conversation about faith, politics and soceity. Writers include Brian McLaren, Amy SUllivan, Noel Castellanos, Robert Franklin, Diana Butler Bass, Obery Hendricks, Sister Helen Prejean, Ron Sider, Tony Campolo, Christine Sine.
This is a blog with a difference. One of Jim’s first posts was a dialogue with Ralph Reed, former director of the Christian Coalition in the United States. Wallis succintly outlines his concerns about the narrowness of the Religious Right’s agenda. Reed responds by suggesting that Wallis is fighting a ’straw man’. Wallis responds in turn with a more detailed analysis of the issues facing the Religious Right, asking for an alternative to the liberal/conservative polarisation found in American politics. And so the conversation goes…
There’s a link to a YouTube video of Jim Wallis on CBS Evening News.
Jim Wallis, here in Australia to promote his book, “God’s Politics”, was interviewed on ABC Radio Brisbane this morning, in the conversation hour. Richard Fidler. The conversation is available on the ABC web site in ASX, RAM and MP3 formats.
Also in the conversation is Michael Franti, a musician with band Spearhead, who engages with issues such as media monopolisation, corporate globalisation and incarceration.
From the ABC summary of the interview:
Jim Wallis is a Christian leader campaigning for social change. Thirty years ago he founded ‘Sojourners’ - Christians for justice and peace - and he continues to serve as the editor for Sojourners magazine, covering faith, politics and culture. He’s also the best-selling author of God’s Politics: why the right gets it wrong and the left doesn’t get it.
Jim believes there a few different reasons the ‘religious right’ is ‘getting it wrong’. “I don’t think God is an American,” he says. “I know that’s a shock!… The right reduce everything to one or two hot social issues… I insist that fighting poverty, protecting the environment, the ethics of war are fundamental religious and moral issues as well.”
Other groups are starting to demand answers, however. “The monologue of the religious right is finally over,” says Jim. “A new discourse has become a moral discourse on politics that we all need, and we’re all needed for. A new generation want an agenda for the rest of their lives… We’re talking about taking back the faith - how did Jesus become pro-rich, pro-war and pro-American?”
Jim was part of a group of religious leaders who met with President Bush after he was elected, to talk about these issues. “We had a frank conversation. We said, ‘Surprise us - be a Republican who leads on the issue of poverty.’ He said, ‘I don’t get it. I haven’t been around poor people… How do I get it?’ I said ‘You’ve got to listen to poor people and those who work with poor people.’
“His inaugural address talked more about poverty than anyone for a long time - a good start - but then it turned the other way. Poverty has risen every year for the last five years.”