Religion Challenges Left and Right. By E.J. Dionne, Jr.
Religion Challenges Left and Right. By E.J. Dionne, Jr. Real Clear Politics, August 5, 2013. Also at the Washington Post.
Dionne:
Whenever
I write sympathetically about religion, I get bombarded by tweets and notes
from readers who normally agree with me but cannot abide by the idea that
religious belief should be seen as intellectually serious.
And
because I have written favorably about Pope Francis, I get more than my share
of angry comments about the Catholic pedophilia scandal, which continues to
haunt the church and troubles even its most loyal members.
Getting
lambasted doesn’t bother me. On the contrary, citizens talking back to the
purveyors of opinion is a glorious aspect of free speech. But my correspondents
underscore the existence of a strong anti-religious current within a segment of
the liberal community that is both an important political fact and a potential
problem for progressives.
Here’s
the challenge: Americans who are left-of-center are far more religiously
diverse than their opponents on the conservative side. When it comes to matters
of faith, liberals and Democrats have a far more complicated task of coalition
management — although religion also raises some serious difficulties for the
right.
Consider
the findings of a survey (in which I was involved) released last month by the
Public Religion Research Institute and the Brookings Institution. Using the
answers to a wide variety of questions, we created a scale that broke our
respondents into four groups: Religious conservatives, moderates, progressives
and the nonreligious.
Overall,
we found that 28 percent of Americans could be
classified as religious conservatives, 38 percent
as religious moderates and 19 percent as religious
progressives. An additional 15 percent were
nonreligious.
Among
supporters of the two parties, Republicans were far more cohesive. The analysis
found that 56 percent of Republicans were religious
conservatives and 33 percent were religious
moderates. Only 5 percent were religious
progressives and just 6 percent were nonreligious.
Democrats,
by contrast, were all over our analytical map: 28 percent
were religious progressives, 13 percent were religious
conservatives, 42 percent were religious
moderates and 17 percent were nonreligious.
Among
self-identified political liberals, the proportion of nonreligious —
essentially, the folks sending me those messages — was even larger: 31 percent
of liberals were nonreligious, 33 percent
were religious progressives, 30 percent were religious
moderates and 6 percent were religious
conservatives.
Two
things are thus true simultaneously: Nonreligious Americans are a very
important part of the liberal constituency, yet the majority of liberals have
ties to religion. The survey found that African Americans, who are deeply loyal
to most liberal causes (and to the Democratic Party), are among the most
religious people in the country. For liberalism to thrive, there needs to be
acceptance and, even better, some respect across the boundaries of belief and
nonbelief.
Yet if
liberals face obstacles when it comes to faith, conservatives have problems of
their own. The most serious? The religious conservatism that is such an
important component of the right and the Republican Party is deeply
unattractive to the rising generation of voters. In addition, many, across age
groups, who are quite conservative in their theological views are rather
progressive when it comes to economics, especially on issues such as raising
the minimum wage.
The
generation gap on religious commitment is stark. In the Silent Generation
(Americans 68 and older), 47 percent are religious
conservatives, while only 12 percent are religious
progressives and 10 percent are nonbelievers. These
figures are reversed for Millennials (Americans 33 and under), only 17 percent
of whom are religious conservatives, while 23 percent
are religious progressives and nearly as many, 22 percent,
are nonreligious. (The remainder in both groups were moderates.)
These
trends should disturb conservatives looking to the future, but they should also
give pause to religious leaders. The association of religion, and particularly
Christianity, with conservatism appears to be turning off substantial numbers
of young Americans from faith.
On the
other hand, a concern for social justice not only unites large numbers of
believers across conservative-progressive lines but also appeals deeply to the
more skeptical young. This is one reason Pope Francis’s eloquent emphasis on
lifting up the poor, so visible during his recent trip to Brazil, could make
him a transformational leader.
Conservatives
need to pay attention to the power of justice and compassion. Otherwise, they
will find their cause undercut, even within their religious base, by a refusal
to grapple with the economic system’s unfairness. As for progressives, they
would be foolish to push away religious allies who are instructed by scripture
of the Almighty’s ambition to “loose the bonds of injustice” and “let the
oppressed go free.”