“Surely, secularists are wrong when they ask believers to leave their religion at the door before entering the public square.”
That 2006 quote comes from Barack Obama’s politically self-conscious second book, The Audacity of Hope, whose title was taken from a sermon by Rev. Jeremiah Wright. Of course, in this political era of cross-on-your-sleeve public religiosity, secularists have been in retreat since John Kennedy affirmed the wall of separation between church and state in his 1960 speech to the Houston ministers.
It is a near certainty that religion will show up in a prominent place in the public square of the 2012 presidential campaign. The relevant question is not whether it will appear, but when—and how campaign reporters should cover it.
The New York Times revealed last month in a story by Jeff Zeleny and Jim Rutenberg that a leading Republican admaker tried to sell a Super PAC donor on a $10 million ad campaign to highlight Obama’s past relationship with the sometimes incendiary Wright. The vitriolic (and untrue) birther attacks on Obama, which I wrote about last week, are linked to equally fabricated claims that the president is a closet Muslim.
This time around, though, the flashpoint is likely to be Mitt Romney’s religion. Romney’s Mormonism is entwined with his biography: Not only was he a missionary in France, but he also served as a bishop and stake president, overseeing a dozen congregations in the Boston area. As Boston Globe reporters Michael Kranish and Scott Helman conclude in their biography, The Real Romney, “The portrait of Romney that emerges from those he led and served with in the church is of a leader who was pulled between Mormonism’s conservative core views…and the demands…for a more elastic, more open-minded application of church doctrine.”
All this would be ho-hum material if Romney were a Methodist or an Episcopalian. But Romney’s church, with its polygamous past and its easily mocked missionary zeal (The Book of Mormon), is outside the American religious mainstream. And that means that we are just one incendiary Super PAC donor or one intemperate cable TV comment by a Democrat away from a major campaign flap over Mitt’s Mormonism. So with that in mind, what should the journalistic rules be regarding Romney’s religion?
As recounted by both Jodi Kantor in the Times and Jason Horowitz in The Washington Post, the Romney campaign suggests that when reporters write about the Republican’s Mormonism, they should think about how the passage sound if they substituted the term “Jewish.” Needless to say, the Romney campaign is not an impartial arbiter of journalistic coverage. In any case, this WWJLD (“What Would Joe Lieberman Do?”) standard has its limits. Yes, it would eliminate snide references to Joseph Smith’s religious revelation and constrain anyone sneeringly referring to Mormonism as a “cult” (Bill Maher, please pick up the white courtesy phone). But left unanswered is the deeper question of the role of Romney’s religious faith in understanding his political persona.
Recalling the 2008 furor over Jeremiah Wright and his pulpit cry of “God damn America,” it may be tempting to expansively claim that everything about a candidate’s religion is fair game in the heat of a presidential campaign. But that is, I believe, a misreading of the Wright stuff. Wright’s rhetorical excess mattered because he was more than just a minister to a presidential candidate; he was the pastor who, in Obama’s words, “helped introduce me to my Christian faith.” What mattered journalisticaly was Wright’s longstanding closeness to Obama, rather than his pastoral role. Obama in his autobiography, Dreams from My Father, put Wright on a pedestal, which made the minister’s subsequent comments politically relevant. The same principle would hold if Obama had gushed in print about a lawyer friend, who was an atheist with outré views.
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Walter, it's not about trying "to get between a presidential candidate and his God." It's about trying to figure out how the candidate's world view and political views and real-world behavior are affected by his religious views and his role in his church. And that is a relevant inquiry if it has bearings on how he would act as president of all Americans. How he behaved toward those women he counseled as a Mormon lay leader is how he behaved, regardless of whether he was acting in his role as Mormon leader or not. If he weren't comfortable with what he had to do as Mormon lay leader, he could have stepped away from Mormonism.
#1 Posted by Harris Meyer, CJR on Fri 8 Jun 2012 at 12:28 PM
Harris wrote: "" It's about trying to figure out how the candidate's world view and political views and real-world behavior are affected by his religious views and his role in his church."
padikiller responds: Unless it's Obama and we're talking about a 20 year membership in an American-hating ("God Damn America!") freaky-deaky Black Liberation Theology church, run by the racist lunatic preacher who married you to your wife, of course.
That's off limits, journalistically. Don't go there.
And the political views of candidates are fair game, until and unless they involve Obama's membership in the New Party, his relationship with ACORN, or the fact that he launched his political career in the living room of an unrepentant terrorist bomber mentor, that is.
Hands off that, of course.
#2 Posted by padikiller, CJR on Fri 8 Jun 2012 at 01:12 PM
Padjerk
You missed a few right-wing talking points. Please review your preprogrammed robotic comments. There's a glitch.
#3 Posted by Atypical, CJR on Fri 8 Jun 2012 at 02:01 PM
I didn't "miss" these "talking points" (otherwise known as "facts").
The "professional journalists" did.
Obama in FACT was married to his wife by a radical preacher who has called for God to damn the United States of America. A man who preached that the U.S. deserved to be attacked on 9/11. This is just a FACT.
Obama really was a regular member of this radical preacher's church for 20 years. Another FACT thingie, there.
Obama really was a member of the New Party. Signed his membership contract on January 11, 1996. FACT.
Obama really did begin his political career in the living room of an unrepentant Weather Underground bomber, Bill Ayers. FACT.
When we see the WaPo or the NYT doing 5000 or 6000 words on these stories, you can get back to me about "robotic" commentary..
Until then, deal with the Reality.
#4 Posted by padikiller, CJR on Fri 8 Jun 2012 at 04:45 PM
What about Obama's money?
By commie standards, he's a true 1% "plutocrat" who made himself a cool $12,000,000 (a million of it in his Chase checking account) by having Bill Ayers ghost write a couple of books for him.
#5 Posted by padikiller, CJR on Sat 9 Jun 2012 at 09:36 AM
Romney is "quiet" about his faith because there are over a hundred polygamous sects in Mormon controlled states where tens of thousands of women and children are stripped of their human rights –sexually, physically, and emotionally abused. The question must be answered: How will a Mormon president protect the rights of women and children in the U.S.? Google Banking On Heaven for more info.
The American public deserves to know!
#6 Posted by Poetico, CJR on Sat 9 Jun 2012 at 09:36 AM
Obama is "quiet" about the 20 years he spent in Rev "God Damn America!" Wright's church because the church was full of racist, anti-American radicals. The question must be answered: How will a president who spent nearly half his life as a member of a radical, anti-American church protect the rights of ANYONE in the U.S.? How can he be a Commander in Chief of our military, when he belonged to a church that taught that America deserved to be attacked on 9/11?
The American public deserves to know!
#7 Posted by padikiller, CJR on Sat 9 Jun 2012 at 10:21 AM
Romney is a member of a branch of religion that is actively hostile to my enjoying full citizenship -- I'm gay; the Mormon Church funded removal of my civil rights through Prop. 8 in California in 2008.
I don't think there is anything bigoted about my lacking confidence that a President Romney would treat me as an equal citizen unless he distances himself from this aspect of his Church's teachings. And he doesn't.
I think it is responsible journalism for media folks to highlight the doctrines of any candidate's church and ask whether their public activities will be constrained by the dictates of their doctrines. The press has done this with Catholics; why not Mormons?
#8 Posted by janinsanfran, CJR on Sun 10 Jun 2012 at 10:49 AM
Romney's position on homosexuality is consistent and based on clear Christian theology, which thoroughly and unequivocally condemns homosexuality (like most other religions do).
Not much to for a "professional journalist" with regard to Romney's position. Leviticus says homosexuals are an abomination to God.. Romney says he believes the Bible.. And there you have it.
The energy of the "professional journalists" would be better spent tracking Obama's ongoing "evolution" on gay rights. Indeed, this remarkable evolutionary process has involved his taking polar opposite positions on gay marriage throughout his entire political career.
He was for gay marriage before he was against it before he was on the fence and then before he was most recently for it again (but also somehow still in favor of the Defense of Marriage Act).
Evolution is a wonderful thing to behold and process most worth of the attention of journalists.
If you press Romney hard enough on whether he believes the Bible's teaching with regard to homosexuality, he'll eventually say yes and spin.
What would Obama say if you did the same thing to him?
HUH?
#9 Posted by padikiller, CJR on Sun 10 Jun 2012 at 12:00 PM
Leviticus: "You are to keep My statutes. You shall not breed together two kinds of your cattle; you shall not sow your field with two kinds of seed, nor wear a garment upon you of two kinds of material mixed together." (19:19)
Deuteronomy: "If two men are fighting and the wife of one of them comes to rescue her husband from his assailant, and she reaches out and seizes him by his private parts, you shall cut off her hand. Show her no pity." (25:11-12)
#10 Posted by leviticus!, CJR on Mon 11 Jun 2012 at 01:38 PM
You won't get any argument out of me regarding religious silliness, Romney's OR Obama's.
My point is the the selective interest of the "professional journalists" in Romney's religious background, given Obama's 20 year membership in a radical, racist and anti-American church.
When the guy who officiated the President of the United States' wedding calls for God to "damn America" and publicly states that American got what it deserved on 9/11, you might just think that a "professional journalist" might look into it.
#11 Posted by padikiller, CJR on Mon 11 Jun 2012 at 03:23 PM
Excellent piece showing why Romney's Mormonism is relevant to media inquiry:
http://campaignstops.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/13/equal-rights-gay-rights-and-the-mormon-church/?hp
#12 Posted by Harris Meyer, CJR on Thu 14 Jun 2012 at 04:18 AM
LOL...
Let me get this straight....
The problem with Mormonism is that it (i) is intolerant of homosexuality and (ii) promotes polygamy?
Seriously?
Show me one verse in the Bible (Romney's or Obama's) that says that homosexuality is anything other than an abomination.
Show me one verse in the Bible (Romney's or Obama's) that forbids polygamy.
Romney clinches the nomination and Obama's in a tailspin and NOW, just now.. the issue of only Romney's religion piques the interest of "professsional journalism"?
#13 Posted by padikiller, CJR on Thu 14 Jun 2012 at 12:02 PM
If you go to the polls and cast a vote, but do not know what Kobol is, or what is a Laminite, or spirit prison, then you have not done your civic duty.
Romney's beliefs sit outside the mainstream and just as we would look at Tom Cruise's religious beliefs before casting a vote for him as leader of the free world and holder of the nuclear codes... we too should examine Romney's beliefs.
Romney chose to run for president and he chose to be LDS. It's all fair game and his beliefs should be front and center.... everyone should have a good understanding of his beliefs before we cast a vote in November.
I'd like to see this examined in greater depth in the media. Not the spin, but the actual theology.
The Dems seem to want to leave this alone and the Repubs will let it slide because (and only because) he's their candidate. But the press should examine it all in great detail... It's the duty of the 4th estate!
#14 Posted by John, CJR on Fri 6 Jul 2012 at 06:19 PM