Mixing politics and religion: Pastor’s political pull inspires, divides

Mixing politics and religion: Pastor’s political pull inspires, divides

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Pastor Rick Warren

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The Los Angeles Times
Published: August 15, 2008

LAKE FOREST, Calif. — When John McCain and Barack Obama appear on the same stage today at the sprawling religious campus of Saddleback Church, their presence will vividly underline the reach that has made Pastor Rick Warren among the most significant evangelists of his generation.

But the joint appearance — one of Warren’s highest-profile endeavors — also will underscore a tension that is central to his role.

Warren has been called perhaps “America’s most influential pastor,” an evangelical megastar who leads the nation’s fourth-largest church, reaches thousands of ministers through the Internet and crusades against poverty and AIDS.

That globe-trotting work — and his successful book, “The Purpose Driven Life” — have propelled him into the vanguard of a movement that inspires young and socially conscious Christians.
But Warren’s willingness to soft-pedal political issues once central to U.S. evangelicals, such as opposition to abortion, has opened him to criticism that he has strayed from his calling to spread the Gospel.

It’s likely that both fans and critics will be watching closely when Warren hosts the two presidential contenders at his church complex in Lake Forest, home to 22,000 weekend worshipers.
The presumptive Democratic and Republican nominees won’t debate during the Civil Forum on the Presidency. But they will make a brief joint appearance, their first of the campaign, and Warren will interview each separately about the Constitution, poverty, AIDS, human rights and other subjects.

“America has a choice. It’s not between a stud and a dud this year,” Warren said. “Both of these men care about America. My job is to let them share their views.”

Many evangelicals believe that Warren’s growing profile, and his willingness to welcome Obama to his pulpit, are evidence that he has emerged as the most pivotal figure in U.S. evangelicalism.
The 54-year-old pastor, they say, is emblematic of a new breed of evangelicals who put social justice ahead of partisan politics. Some go so far as to call the plain-talking Warren, a bear of a man who prefers bluejeans to business suits, the Billy Graham of his era.

“He’s a guy whose message has met the right moment,” said Richard Land, a leading authority with the Southern Baptist Convention, the denomination to which Warren’s church belongs.
An excerpt from a letter Warren sent to his congregants suggests his reach. He noted that three Republican and three Democratic presidential candidates contacted the church during the
primaries:

“You know that I never endorse, nor campaign for, political candidates. Neither is it my role to give political advice. But I am a cultural observer and I do understand the unique stresses and responsibilities of public leadership, so I try to help leaders when asked.”

But detractors see Warren as a spiritual entrepreneur who has built his religious empire on what they call generic self-help ideas found in “The Purpose Driven Life.”

“For many evangelical leaders, Rick Warren is either a little too naive or a little too shrewd,” said the Rev. Rob Schenck, president of the National Clergy Council, a Washington group that works to meld Christian teachings into the debate over public policies.

“He is threatening to water down the essential message of evangelical Christianity,” Schenck said. “And that is what causes people to grow a little insecure and concerned, and maybe even
disconcerted.”

Warren insists that he remains firmly tied to his Southern Baptist roots.

At the center of the operation is Saddleback Church, which occupies 120 acres in the foothills of the Santa Ana Mountains.

The church, with nearly 400 employees, features nine types of weekend services, including one in the cavernous “worship center,” with seating for about 3,000 and Warren’s image beamed on jumbo screens.

More than 180,000 pastors and other church leaders subscribe to his weekly “ministry toolbox” e-mail.

“The Purpose Driven Life,” published in 2002, helped create this reach. “It not about you,” Warren writes in the opening of the book, which has sold 35 million copies.

“The purpose of your life is far greater than your own personal fulfillment, your peace of mind, or even your happiness. ... If you want to know why you were placed on this planet, you must begin with God.”
The senior managing editor of ChristianityToday, Mark Galli, said Warren “has that gift of being able to popularize ideas that are in some ways commonplace.” Galli’s magazine in 2002 described Warren as “just a regular guy who may be America’s most influential pastor.”

Warren now wants to mobilize 1 billion Christians to attack what he calls “five global giants”: spiritual emptiness, corrupt leadership, poverty, disease and illiteracy. His church has dispatched more than 7,000 volunteers to dozens of developing and Third World countries. Rwanda’s president, Paul Kagame, has spoken of his country becoming “the first purpose-driven nation.”

Following the lead of his wife, Kay, Warren also has championed the fight against AIDS in Africa, rallying support for U.S. relief programs. Warren interrupted a recent monthlong South American tour to watch President Bush sign a bill reauthorizing the AIDS funding. Kay Warren joined him.

Warren is playing an increasingly prominent role on the international stage.

Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair is scheduled to speak at Saddleback Church next month. And Warren plans to visit Kenya, at the invitation of its parliament, to conduct a training session.
His growing portfolio has attracted criticism.

“It’s not our business to make friends with all of the political leaders of the world,” said Bob DeWaay, an evangelical minister from Minnesota whose book, “Redefining Christianity: Understanding the Purpose Driven Movement,” critiques Warren’s work.

“We have a message about how people get right with God, not about how the world is going to get rid of its problems,” DeWaay said.

Warren insists that he is doing God’s work, if on a scale that most churches can only imagine. “As a pastor, if you love people, they will follow you,” he said. “I believe that Jesus Christ changes lives.”

Reader Reactions

Posted by ( Freedom ) on August 17, 2008 at 8:39 pm

..i just know ,that i dont want my tax dollars going to churches ,unchecked,uncharted,unaccount for,,i think it gets so mix in with the churchs money that we just dont know how much ends up in the pockets of a few,,mega houses for pastors,,mega churches,mega missionary groups going all over the world(7,000) to SAVE the world ,,yet we have a homeless man die at a churchyard in roanoke ,,we have so many people on skid row in calif and every major city in the usa,,we have many churches that shuns aids throughout the south and post signs and scream from the pulpit ,,oh its GOD,S revenge,,then get usa gov to spen 48 billion for world aids,,makes no sence why dont/cant we export that same hard hateful line to the world governments.. and then cheat our own aid population by giving them only a sliver of the aids pie of 1.7 billion,,when sorry folks ITS a preventable sickness,,unlike autism/childhood cancer and to give this money recklessly away when our governments admits that we r 500 billion in the hole,,but the truth is we r now 9 trillion in the hole,,i say give nothing to the churches,,but give it to social service/food stamp program/homeless housing/give it to an established /proven insitution that can be audit,,‘“GIVE unto GOD what is god,s and give unto CEASAR what is ceasar”,,when churches are taxed,,then consider giving churches tax dollars!!?

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