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Faith and Politics: How the "Moral Values" Debate Divides America and How to Move Forward Together

Faith and Politics: How the "Moral Values" Debate Divides America and How to Move Forward Together
By Senator John Danforth

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(Chris Y's pick) - Missouri's former three-term Republican U.S. senator (and an ordained Episcopal priest), John C. Danforth has watched the changes in his party and the church with growing alarm. He's already penned two New York Times op-eds criticizing the right for its focus on wedge issues that drive people apart: abortion, stem-cell research, gay marriage, the Schiavo case, the public display of religion. Now he speaks out again to call for a change.

Product Description

A former U.S. senator and ordained Episcopal priest examines the controversial intersection of faith and politics in America

As a former three-term Republican U.S. senator from Missouri and an ordained Episcopal priest, John C. Danforth has watched the changes in his party and the church with growing alarm. After penning two op-eds for The New York Times criticizing the right for its focus on wedge issues—abortion, stem-cell research, gay marriage, the Schiavo case, the public display of religion—that drive people apart, he speaks out again to call for a change.

"The Republican Party has been taken over by something that it’s not," Danforth says. "People do not want a sectarian political party, including a lot of people who are traditional Republicans." In Faith and Politics, Danforth provides suggestions for moving toward a more secular Republican party that inspires trust in the people of the United States. Based on years of hard- won political experience and a life of religious service, he calls for Christians to look to the Bible and Christian teachings for ways in which they can practice their faith day to day and turn the country’s focus to a common ground once more.

As a respected former senator, special envoy for peace in Sudan, priest, as an author, Senator Danforth is uniquely qualified to call for the change we so desperately need. He writes openly about his political life and ambition, humbly about his achievements, and above all with clarity and reason that both Republicans and Democrats hear all too little of.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #78089 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-09-19
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 256 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Danforth, a Missouri Republican as well as a lawyer and Episcopal minister, tended to avoid nasty partisan politics during his three terms in the U.S. Senate (with the notable exception of his defense of his protégé Clarence Thomas during U.S. Supreme Court confirmation hearings). After voluntarily retiring from the Senate in 1995, Danforth accepted appointments by White House Republicans, including ambassador to the United Nations and envoy for peace in Sudan. But the partisanship of President George W. Bush, a variety of other Republicans and quite a few Democrats has now led Danforth to urge political rivals to pull together to strengthen the United States, so the nation can in turn promote world peace. Danforth oozes sincerity and good sense as he excoriates "Christian conservatives" (naming James Dobson, Jerry Falwell, Ralph Reed and Pat Robertson, among others) for corrupting religious doctrine on reproduction and marriage and inappropriately inserting it in government. Conceding that he's an imperfect human being who sometimes failed as a student, husband, father, lawyer, minister and senator, Danforth comes across as a welcome paragon of virtue. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
*Starred Review* A former three-term Republican U.S. senator from Missouri and an ordained Episcopal priest, Danforth brings exceptional insight to the debate about the political use of religion and the separation of church and state. He worries that Republican courting of the Christian Right is distorting all notions of public and private morality. He laments that when Republicans voted to have federal courts overrule the state court in the Terri Schiavo case, violating long-held principles, it allowed the Christian Right to take over the party. Danforth urges more liberal and moderate Christians to challenge the presumptiveness of the Christian Right to speak for all Christians. Rather than construct a political agenda based on narrow interpretations of religious orthodoxy, Christians should focus an expansive faith in God that embraces conflicting opinions on a range of controversial issues, including stem-cell research and gay marriage. Danforth is honest in revealing his own struggles to maintain humility in seeking political consensus, and offers a primer for politicians to conduct themselves by Christian principles without dogmatic orthodoxy that ultimately divides the nation. This incredibly thoughtful book will give pause to readers of all political and religious beliefs. Vanessa Bush
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

From the Back Cover
Advance Praise:

"John Danforth was a Republican senator and is an Episcopal priest, and he is deeply disturbed by his party's engagement with religion. He knows whereof he speaks in this meditation about the contested terrain where politics and religion intersect."
-George F. Will

"Heed the call of this certain trumpet! No one speaks with more clarity, honesty or sincerity than my old friend Jack Danforth. When things would get rough in the U.S. Senate, he was the guy we would send off to negotiate our way out of the tough problems with the troops on the other side of the aisle. Heed this thoughtful and provocative message. He always gave his very best. He again does so here."
-Alan Simpson, served as Senator from Wyoming 1979-1997

"With passion, clarity, and common sense, John Danforth has given us a great gift: a lucid, powerful book that is at once reflective and instructive. By candidly writing about his own unusual pilgrimage through what Roger Williams called 'the wilderness of the world and the garden of the church,' Danforth--priest and politician--sheds light on the complexities and ambiguities of religion and politics. Jesus once told his followers that 'in this world ye shall have tribulation, but be of good cheer,' and, reading Danforth, one is heartened anew that if we all conduct ourselves with humility and a sense of history, we shall find fresh cause to be of good cheer as we face the storms of the present."
-Jon Meacham, managing editor of Newsweek and author of American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation

"This stirring book--part political memoir, part sermon, part moral plea--reminds us again why the remarkable Jack Danforth has become one of the most respected voices in American political life. His thoughtfulness, deep wisdom, and simple decency radiate from every page, and leave one at the end with rare hope that through commitment, faith and politics can ultimately enrich, and not corrupt, one another."
-Harold Hongju Koh, Dean, Yale Law School

"Danforth's is a welcome voice of reason and moderation during a time of divisive and polarizing rhetoric. As priest and politician he ably sets forth the deeper truths of the Christian tradition with clarity and compassion and applies them to the issues of our time."
-Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold, Episcopal Church


Customer Reviews

An Excellent Title To Consider This Election Season5
Danforth, who has led a very interesting and impressive life, delivers a very frank criticism of how religion--and Christianity, in particular--has imposed itself on today's most pressing public issues. While I don't necessarily agree with Danforth's assessment on how much blame Republican politicians and religious conservatives deserve, "Faith and Politics" did make me pause and reconsider the direction in which the Republican party is going.

too little, too late4
John Danforth has been a participant in Republican politics throughout the rise of the religious right. When the right could help him he gladly took their votes. As he watched the Republican party drift further to the right, driven by its increasingly conservative, religious base he largely sat silent. After his useful political life ended, he wrote this book, questioning the rise of the right and its effect on the Republican party and American politics. While much of what he says is true and much of his analysis is correct, to decry it now that it can no longer do him any good seems intellectually dishonest. Many will latch on to this book because it is written from the Republican, Christian side of the political aisle. In my opinion it is too little, too late.

Danforth begins by asking the question "Is faith a reconciler or divider? (My personal aswer is both). He posits 3 guidelines for the role of religion in politics.

1. We serve a large God, a transcendent God who cannot be shrunken by poliical activists and stuffed into their own agenda.

2. No one should presume to embody God's truth, including ourselves... our political programs however prayerfully inspired are no more than our best efforts to be faithful to God and we should pursue them with humility.

3. We believe God's truth is expansive enough to embrace conflicting opinions, even on hot button issues.

While I agree with the broad approach Danforth presents, the byproduct of his approach is the danger of living a passionless gospel. Eliminate the conservatives on the right and Jim Wallis on the left, much of the passion to create change disappears. Regardless of how we approach the Gospel, ultimately it demands passion and change. He talks about faith in relation to several hot political issues, sharing from his journey. He discusses the seach for certainty, the role of public religion, the Terri Schiavo case (which seems to be the straw that broke the camel's back for Danforth), abortion, stem cell research, gay marraige, peacemaking and the American role in the world with varying degrees of persuasiveness.

I recommend the book with reservations

Interesting5
As a 19 year old college student who is a currently a philosophy major and agnostic, I found this book extremely interesting. I grew up with a family of christianity and a sibling who and will pursue it for the rest of life itself, so needless to say it takes alot to get my attention on the subject.

After reading the first chapter alone I was absolutely blown away at what I was reading. Danforth may be too little too late but at least he made an effort period. His concepts, to me, display the truth about politicians using christianity for profitable gain in any form possible (in a nutshell). He spends much time clarifying his points with text from the bible and making an attempt to interprete their purpose in politics today. The fact that he's a republican is even more impressive that he had the guts to write such a novel.

Please understand...

This book was not written to give answers to all the problems. It figures that people would despise this book because it doesn't give an answer, and typical at that. As a famous artist once said, "Computers are useless because they only give you answers". This book is the inbetween. We as people have become computers only interested in finding the answer ALONE not concerned with the thought process that it takes to GET to the answer. With that mindset, we will never find the answer. It is the INBETWEEN that is the most vital.

To myself, this novel provides yet another vital step to understanding faith and politics in attempt to reach that answer that we seem to try to find. Bravo to Danforth.