jamierowe
11/4/08
  Another re-post....

Sitting here watching election coverage on Fox News and happy to see Barack Obama  on the road to being elected.

I found yet another blog worthy of a repost. This time it's from "Blue Like Jazz" author Don Miller. That book has become a modern classic to many Christians these past few years. Read on as he describes his journey to supporting Obama. Great read, even if you voted McCain.

True peace-

jamie

Read original blog post here.

 

My Journey from being a Reagan Republican to an Obama Democrat

I grew up in a Southern Baptist Church along the Gulf Coast in Texas. It was a suburban church nowhere near a bus line, protected as it were from most demographics that didn’t have our common interests. Those interests were embodied in the Republican Party, then led by President Ronald Reagan. Reagan captured our attention with an anti-communist, anti-atheist message, that was easy to understand, emboldening the American people against a clear threat , that of nuclear war and a godless communist regime. Reagan rode that same horse his entire career, even as an actor while President of the Screen Actors Guild, taking stands against blacklisted actors and directors thought to be sympathizers with communist ideology. The Democrats, on the other hand, were squishy, hard to understand, and believed life was complicated. They sounded intellectual and suspicious.

We were told that if Democrats were given power we would certainly be destroyed by nuclear weaponry, indefensible by our weak military. We were told that, if a Democrat lived in the white house, we would become a socialist nation and you would not be able to choose your own profession, drive a car that you wanted or attend a school of your preference. The government would make those decisions for you, we were told. We were taught all sorts of terrible things about the Democrats. We were told if a Democrat ever came to power the government would launch legislation that would mandate ten-percent of all public-school teachers be homosexuals. But when a Democrat came to power, none of that happened. Instead, the average family’s base-earning went up by $7,500 per year and we operated under a balanced budget. And we didn’t go to war against an enemy we couldn’t exactly find and certainly didn’t understand.

Our theology insinuated that shortly after original sin, once Adam and Eve at the apple, they registered as Democrats and went on with their lives, trying to create large governments that would enable lazy people through expensive social programs. We believed we were right and they were wrong, our ideas were Biblical and their ideas were pagan. And we did not know, exactly, who “they” were. Our church wasn’t on a bus line, and our church programs catered to a slim demographic, and so “they” didn’t come to our church. We were all of the same race, the same theological disposition. Our conservative, moral ethos transcended politics. We looked down on Methodists and Catholics because they drank and danced. In fact, when one of the elders at our church visited a western bar with his wife and another couple, presumably to participate in a line-dancing event, our pastor had him paged at the dance hall and told him to meet him in his office, immediately at the church. He was forced to resign as an elder, scolded by the pastor and later committed suicide, leaving behind a wife and three children, along with a grieving, confused church.

My mother was active, politically. She would occasionally volunteer when her Christian beliefs were threatened by government legislation. I remember her coming home late one night, having worked on a campaign opposing equal rights for same-sex partnerships. She told a thrilling story about a fellow volunteer who had a bullet-hole through his license plate, presumably put there by a lone, homosexual gunmen. And when a law was proposed banning spanking in public schools, my mother put my sister and I into the car and drove to the capital, in Austin, where we visited our state legislator. We sat on a leather couch across from his desk and my mother wagged her finger at him and, in no uncertain terms, told the man exactly what the Bible said about sparing the wand. I sat breathless and quiet. I had seen that wagging finger before and I knew what came after. I breathed again only when we were leaving the man’s office and I was assured my mother would not be taking the legislator over her knee.

Like I said, I grew up in the Reagan years. My mother, single and struggling as a secretary at an oil company, afforded a house because of a special loan available, in part, due to legislation proposed by the Reagan administration. We loved that man. I remember being in algebra class, my junior year in high school, when the principle came over the speaker system to announce there had been an accident, that the space shuttle Challenger had exploded over the Atlantic Ocean, off the coast of Florida. All the astronauts were lost. Those astronauts were our men, you see. They were from Houston, and lived only twenty miles from my house. There was a gasp at first, then a long minute of silence, led by the principle himself. School was dismissed, after that. We all went home and watched the footage on television. We watched all afternoon as flowers were placed along the gates at NASA, and on the sidewalks of the Astronauts homes. That night Ronald Reagan was to address the nation in the State of the Union speech. Those plans were changed, of course, and he came to us live from the Oval Office, perfectly delivering comforting lines I now know to have been written by Peggy Noonan, who borrowed her lines from the poet John Magee:

“We will never forget them,” Reagan said, “nor the last time we saw them, this morning, as they prepared for their journey and waved good-bye and “slipped the surly bonds of earth” to “touch the face of God.”

i don’t know of a political figure who could have more nobly delivered those lines. I have since longed for a statesman who understood and could employ words to unite our country during a difficult time.

This year’s Democratic National Convention was not the first political convention I attended.Sixteen years ago, then just a kid, I attended the Republican National Convention in Houston. I was not invited, but my mother found out that many of the local hotels hosted delegates, and if you went to the concierge and told them you’d like to go, many of the hotels had passes. Security was a bit different, then. And so my friend and I put on ties and carried clip boards and tried to look as professional as possible, and we made our way through security with false credentials, walked confidently through the press boxes and even sat behind the Bush family during the speeches. George W. was there, working on his fathers campaign. And Barbara in an elegant dress, and the girls, then just children. George H.W. Bush was running for reelection that year, against a governor from Arkansas who ran on the platform of change. Bush had promised the American people he would not raise taxes, but in the end had to break that promise, and that broken promise, along with an ailing economy, would cost him the election.

We didn’t like Bill Clinton. We listened to Rush Limbaugh, who told us not to think, that he would think for us, and so we bitterly groused against large government and our supposedly growing welfare state. He was a pro-choice candidate with a feminist wife who belittled women who only wanted to “stay home and make cookies.” Those were our women, we thought. And they made very good cookies.

I even attended a special camp in Colorado Springs in which we, as students (I thought we’d be campers, but we were in fact students) sat through eight to ten hours of lectures every day, covering why the Republicans were right, and why the democrats were wrong. We were taught George Guilder’s economic theory and that America’s drug problem was actually a communist infiltration. We learned there was no such thing as global warming, and the only way to build an economy was to deregulate the financial industry. (Total depravity, as a theological reality, did not apply to people in suits.) We were told a broader availability of healthcare was socialism, and we were shown images of poor communists (Rather than filthy rich and healthy Europeans) we were taught government programs would enable the lazy. We were taught to be angry, and to rise up against the secular humanist enemy that was trying to take away our way of life. And we were made to be afraid. They were out to get us. One night I had a long conversation with a young man in which I tried to convince him that bombing an abortion clinic would not be the best way to solve the problem. I went back to the camp, three-years running. The truth is I learned to think at the camp, to consider ideas to and defend positions. But my learning to think would ultimately be my demise. I wouldn’t just read conservative columnist and authors; I’d read the liberal ones too. And I’d read the British thinkers, too, in the Economist. And even more to my demise, I actually met the enemy, the students of Reed College, one of the more progressive campuses in the country. And I’d befriend Democrats, like my neighbor who is the former Governor of Oregon. I learned, then, that complicated problems could not be solved through simple solutions and emotional, even patriotic rhetoric. I also learned liberal, wishful thinking was fruitless. I learned to trust the value of numbers, hard data, and to realize nearly everybody has a motive, and power corrupts. I was shocked to find out abortion had decreased by 18% under President Clinton, and another 8% under George W. Bush (a significant slowing) and the pro-life lobby had largely ignored the economic factors that contribute to unwanted pregnancy. Bill Clinton won me over, in part for the unbelievably harsh things my Christian friends would say about him after the Monica Lewinsky scandal (and in part because the original investigation that unearthed the Lewinsky case found the President innocent of all white-water charges), but mostly because he spent the last year of his Presidency traveling to the most poor regions of America apologizing for his failure as President to help those he referred to as “the least of these.”

I didn’t realize the term “the least of these” was about to apply to my family. After more than 25 years working in the oil industry, my mother lost her entire retirement when Enron collapsed. Since then I’ve always thought we should have more regulation over companies that control enormous portions of America’s overall economy. My mother went back to school, having retired, and earned her Bachelors and Masters degrees and started teaching at the college level. She’s not teaching any longer, but still works today, though she should have retired years ago. She likes her job and her job likes her, and I’ve never heard her complain. Still, I wish Jeff Skilling would fork over the money he stole from her.

Having met the enemy, I discovered the enemy wasn’t who I thought they were. They were flawed, even as we were flawed, but they were no less patriotic, and no less good. And what’s more, they weren’t out to get us like my conservative friends had told me. I began to see, honestly, the far conservative right, the radical right (not the balanced, objective right) as being paranoid. The advertisements on conservative radio talk shows were about guns and alarm systems.

I wondered how I could be made to feel so prejudiced against Democrats. And then I took a hard look at the culture I was raised in. I realized every church I’d ever attended had been an insular community. Every church had been far off in the suburbs, off a bus line, protected from the poor and marginalized and, quite honestly, racial minorities. It’s not that these churches did this intentionally. I don’t believe that. The decisions to reside in the suburbs had to do with property value and opportunity. But the end result was an insulated existence.

I heard a lecture once at a Christian conference by a man who had moved he and his family into the hardest neighborhood in Fresno, California. He told us that he had never really cared about the problem of police apathy until one night when a bullet went through his daughter’s window and he called the police and they never came. His point was that, until we understand firsthand the urgency of a problem, we simply don’t believe it is important. Solidarity matters. And what’s more, when we live insular lives, when everybody around us believes the same things we do, has our same color skin, shares our political interests, we are easily made to believe absurdities about everybody else.

A few days ago I did an interview with a writer for The Today Show, and after the interview she asked how it was evangelicals could come to believe the many lies being spread about Barack Obama. In answer I came back to the insular nature of the suburban church. “When we’ve never met people,” I said, “we are easily manipulated into demonizing them. We are easily made to fear.” And I’ll add there has been a great deal of fear in this campaign. I just received a letter, yesterday, from a prominent church leader in Georgia that accused Michelle Obama, who I have met and found to be a lovely and humble woman, of being be a racist. This was not a small-town backwards preacher, this was a best-selling Christian author, who, honestly, should be ashamed of himself.

Last year I vowed I wouldn’t make decisions out of fear. And because of that I’ve had one of the greatest years of my life. I went to Uganda and got to meet with the man who helped write their constitution. I wrapped up an evangelism project I believe will introduce more than a million people to the gospel. I rode my bike across America. All of this stuff took some degree of risk. But when calculating those risks, I realized the only reason not to try was fear. What if I was wrong, what if I couldn’t make it, what if the project didn’t work? But none of my heroes are controlled by fear. The commandment most often repeated in scripture, in fact, is “do not fear.” Fear is often something unrighteous trying to keep you from doing something good.

They will never write stories about people controlled by fear. Stories are written (and for that matter lived) by people willing to take stands against bullies and think for themselves. A month after returning home from Washington D.C., where the bike tour ended, I got a call and was asked to deliver a closing prayer at the DNC. Many of my friends told me not to go, that it would hurt my career. I was afraid, for a second, but then knew when you were asked to go somewhere and pray, you should. Fear is always a sign that a great story is about to be written (or not, depending on how you respond.) People live the most boring lives because they stand down when they encounter fear. And so I said yes.

While in Denver I met people from the Obama Campaign. I met Joshua Dubois and Paul Monteiro, Obama’s faith-policy advisors. Paul, like me, had been a Republican until recently. He is a staunch pro-lifer who got tired of Republicans not making enough strides on the issue and was won over by the dramatic effect economic policy has on unwanted pregnancy and the bottom-up effects of economic stimulation as opposed to the conservative, supply-side policy. And Joshua spoke to me about Senator Obama’s personal faith, his commitment to close his events in prayer, his daily morning devotions and his twenty-year history of talking openly about Jesus. I didn’t need to be won over. I’d started a mentoring foundation in Portland two years before and was attracted to Obama’s message on responsible fatherhood (along with his backing of The Responsible Fatherhood Act.)

I told Joshua and Paul I had been supporting the Senator since well before he decided to run, and told them I’d help in any way during the closing months of the campaign. Since then, I’ve received more than my share of e-mails containing the most absurd lies. Barack Obama is a Marxist, a terrorist who trained with Al-Qaida, that he has a pet dragon he flies on nights when there is a full moon and that if we vote for him all the computers will stop working at midnight on new years eve. I wondered how simple a person would have to be to believe such lies.

I voted for Barack Obama (we vote early in Oregon) because I think he is right on healthcare (his plan will allow 27 million more Americans, including young, pregnant mothers to be cared for) and he is right on responsible fatherhood. I voted for Barack Obama because he will keep George W. Bush’ Faith-based Partnerships Program in play, only increasing it’s funding. I voted for Barack Obama because he has the respect of world leaders, which will be necessary to deliberate an American agenda around the world, and I voted for Barack Obama because he had the judgment to oppose the war in Iraq. I’ve taken some blows from the conservative right on my stance, but, even in public debate against McCain representatives, have not been deterred. I will not be guilted, shamed or controlled. I am not going to vote for one candidate because I have been made to fear the other. I support Barack Obama because he has beat back the dark hour of cynicism and irrational fear, and provided hope to a country closing in on itself. I believe there are great days ahead.

I will be glad tomorrow, when all this campaigning is done. Regardless of whether you agree with me or not, please vote. And thank you for considering these thoughts.

Sincerely,

Donald Miller

 
Comments:
Jamie, I'm SO happy Obama won. I've never been prouder to be an American...and a Virginian. My prayers have been answered...I seriously want to cry :-)

My wife and I watched the election coverage in my Mother's house. I'll never forget her knocking on the door of my old room where I was watching on the computer, tears in her eyes, wrapping me in a hug because Obama had won. Keep in mind this is a white woman who goes to a mostly conservative Anglican church. I guess since both my parents grew up poor, they were raised as Christian Democrats, so I was raised the same way and thought nothing of it. Or of accepting other people's religions, sexualities, and points of view, because I'm from such a diverse area. It blows my mind that some Americans have never met a Muslim.

I've never understood those who hate or fear or condemn others just because they're different. Or who use the word "liberal" negatively, as I truly believe that's how Jesus wants me to live, as a Christian.

This is such a great day for ALL Americans. I'm sure my earthly Father and Barack's Grandmother are both smiling down from Heaven. I can only pray that the evangelicals and fundamentalists on the far right give Barack a chance and that he can help end the ugliness that has divided us for too long, and bring us together as one nation. Sorry for the novel :-) God Bless - Justin
 
Obama supports abortion and gay marriage! Now I ask YOU Christians...is this the right person to follow and support as President? Christ is clearly against both...so WHY vote for an individual who DOES NOT support what we, as Christians believe?
 
I view homosexuality as sin.

Mr.McCain, by his own admission,does not.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7xutdzFPJg
 
Truth be told, I didn't really care for either McCain or NOBama but I do like Palin and I believe that she would have made a great Vice-Pres but the election is over and we see who won. God must have NOBama there for some reason and this nation, at the end of NOBama's term, we will all see if he helped better this Country by bringing "Change" or if he was just full of hot air! I tend to believe the latter, but hey!

May Jesus Christ bless us all...WE NEED IT!
 
Anonymous, please tell me in the Bible where Jesus specifically states homosexuality is a sin. Though I also believe the Bible was more influenced by Man's agenda than His.

I cannot imagine the loving Christ I know condemning someone for being gay, be they born that way or not. 2 people of the same sex are in love and its wrong, yet a man forces sex on his wife and that's ok - the hypocrisy is confounding. But that's just my view, I hate pushiness.

Anyway, Obama DOES NOT believe in gay marriage, so as a Liberal Christian, I disagree with him.

Abortion is an extremely touchy subject, but if the woman is raped or her health would be in danger, I cannot in good conscience see the problem if the procedure is done early enough.

Anyway, Palin scares me too much...too extreme. There should be separation of church and state.

Calling Barack "Nobama" - very mature of you...shine that light. Did you notice how the McCain supporters booed the mention of Barack's name, but the Obama supporters were too classy to fall into that trap? Very telling.
 
Justin, I said NOBama because from a moral stand point, I don't care for Obama, big deal! I did not curse him...so chill out man! Separation of church and state? Are you serious? Unfortunately, too many people believe that lie as well and that is one of the many ditches that we (As a nation) have dug ourselves and we cannot get out of it! Let me ask you a question, are you for or against prayer in schools? Praise to Jesus, I am FOR it! Be aware that I am NOT here to start a flame war and I am simply stating how I felt about the issue! Finally, Sarah Palin SCARES you? Too EXTREME? Who's the mature one and who needs to grow up? She's the ONLY one that made ANY sense throughout...come on!

May God bless you Justin and anyone else who cares to cast their stones at me, lol!

PRAISE BE TO JESUS CHRIST!
 
I was always for prayer in school without question..then someone asked me how will I feel when it's the muslim's turn to lead prayer... or the Buddhist's or the Hindu's. My community is largely Christian so it wouldn't really be an issue for me. But just 20 miles south, it would be a different story.

So I am on the fence with that issue personally.

Jesus is still God no matter what legislation is in place.

jamie
 
I can certainly understand where you are coming from Jamie because I have been asked that question before as well. However, it doesn't make sense when people try and take out and remove the name "God" or "Jesus" and whenever a major catastrophe comes our way...we are so quick to call on His name to fix it all and make everything better? I could not believe the new dollar coin that I received! I was looking at it and then it hit me, WHERE is "In God We Trust" found on the coin? Lo and behold, it is printed on the edge or side of the coin to where it can barely be seen! I just believe that we (As a Nation) are seriously headed for some troubled times and we should never lose sight that this country was founded on Christianity! Sadly though, all over the headlines, there is mention of the removal of Jesus and putting a stop to prayer everywhere and it pains me deeply! Whenever Christ is removed, it is disastrous! I guess with the Obama issue, let's just agree to disagree! I never want to fight or argue, especially with my fellow brethern!

May God bless you Jamie, Justin and who ever else may read this!

Peace & blessings!
 
Here is some food for thought. Putting my political views aside, it's a shame Christians spend more time arguing, than making the difference we are supposed to make. I was in Florida during the Bush/Gore mess and at the time I was a Bush supporter, however I was very ashamed of the way the Christian Right acted. It was incredibly embarassing, not to mention a terrible witness to unbelievers. The way I look at it, if we are so concerned about abortion or gay marriage, then we should do something about it. AND NOT EXPECT GOVERNMENT TO DO THE JOB FOR US FORCING PEOPLE TO LIVE A MORE CHRISTIAN LIFE. THAT MY FRIENDS IS CALLED BEING A LAZY LATHARGIC CHRISTIAN. I was never concerned about who would be elected, all I know is I had a right to vote and I did. AMERICA decided who they wanted in office and I'm sure Obama will do a fine job. If there are things I disagree with during his administration, I will suck it up and deal with it and pray about it.
- Robert Orr
 
Just for the record I am NOT this other anonymous guy! By the way what's up Jamie, I'm still living in Louisville. I would still love to play a little bass on a project.
PEACELOVE
- Robert Orr
 
Just for the record I am NOT this other anonymous guy! By the way what's up Jamie, I'm still living in Louisville. I would still love to play a little bass on a project.
PEACELOVE
- Robert Orr
 
Robert Orr, I agree with a lot of what you said; thank you.

Anonymous, my thoughts exactly on agreeing to disagree...time to moveon.org with my life ;-)

I apologize if you feel I was casting stones, that was not my intention, but I have seen and heard the “Nobama” phrase before and, as a supporter, it saddens my heart. Though I admit to tweaking McCain's name, so I'm no better :-)

Prayer in school - all thru high school I was for it, too. As I got older, I started questioning things and putting myself in other people's shoes. If you were a student in Iraq, for example, how would YOU feel about it?

I place myself in the shoes of an American Muslim, Hindu, or Buddhist student, and how uncomfortable they’d feel being made to pray a Christian prayer. I’ve been a misfit all my life - makes it easier to know how it feels to be left out, or empathize with those who are different, or see things in shades of grey.

In response to a previous point you made, while its important to vote based on issues, character is at least as important. Remember: we were voting for a President, not a Pastor ;-)

As this country was founded on religious freedom, that is why I believe in separation of church and state. Also because, as I said, I know what its like to not be with the "majority crowd". But Christianity is still the dominant religion, so everyone take a deep breath and smile :-)

My heart aches for those unable to celebrate and rejoice with our country and the world. I guess now they know what its like to be a misfit lol I’ll pray that God takes all the hardened hearts and does a beautiful thing with them as only God can.
 
Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]





<< Home
random thoughts :: some good, some bad, all mine.

Name:
Location: Fort Branch, Indiana, United States
Archives
December 2007 / August 2008 / September 2008 / October 2008 / November 2008 / December 2008 / January 2009 / February 2009 / March 2009 / April 2009 / May 2009 / June 2009 / July 2009 / August 2009 / September 2009 / October 2009 / November 2009 /


Powered by Blogger

Subscribe to
Posts [Atom]