Is candidate Rick Santorum an “evangelist”?

The first word that a journalist needs to think of when writing about former Sen. Rick Santorum is “conservative” and the second is “Catholic.”

Yes, I am well aware that in 2005 Time magazine named him one of America’s 25 most influential evangelicals, which simply makes no sense at all in terms of doctrine and heritage. Ah, but who cares about religion when you can use “evangelical” as a political label? Thus, Time noted that Santorum “may be a Catholic, but he’s the darling of Protestant Evangelicals.” Conservative, daily Mass Catholics tend to think highly of him, too, but nevermind.

Readers may also recall that former New York Times editor Bill Keller memorably twisted the senator’s faith, as well, in his essay that sort of compared traditional believers with those who embrace space aliens. The correction dutifully noted: “The essay also erroneously includes Rick Santorum among politicians affiliated with evangelical Christianity. Mr. Santorum is Catholic.”

Cable television watchers may have noticed that Santorum continues to seek the GOP presidential nomination and, this time of year, that means courting Iowa evangelicals. Alas, there appear to be no Catholics in Iowa.

‘Tis the pre-primary season. Thus, the DC bureau of the McClatchy Newspapers recently produced this news feature about the candidate, with the headline, “Rick Santorum’s presidential ambition is rooted in his faith.”

One would assume that the words “his faith” in that headline refer to the faith that is practiced by Santorum.

The story opens like this:

WASHINGTON – For former Sen. Rick Santorum, it’s always been about faith.

Deep religious faith fuels Santorum’s conservative politics. It’s what propelled him into becoming one of Congress’ leading opponents of abortion, same-sex marriage and wrongdoing by fellow lawmakers, regardless of party affiliation. Faith is the key ingredient that also powers Santorum’s long-shot drive for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination.

The story accurately notes that Santorum continues to stress moral and cultural issues in a year in which most Americans are worried about the economy. However, social issues remain crucial in GOP primary season (ask Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney) and Santorum soldiers on.

The top of the report is dominated by politics and then, at last, 10 paragraphs or so down, readers are returned to the main subject:

A devout Catholic and father of seven children, Santorum was elected to the House of Representatives in 1990 at age 32. He was a member of the so-called “Gang of Seven” House GOP freshmen who rankled House leadership in both parties by highlighting check-writing abuses by their fellow lawmakers at the now-defunct House bank. …

In the Senate, Santorum became known for his social conservatism. … Santorum’s stances earned him a solid following among religious conservatives and a spot on Time magazine’s 25 most influential evangelists list in 2005. It also earned him the enmity of many Democrats, women’s groups, abortion rights advocates and gay rights supporters, who disliked what they considered Santorum’s holier-than-thou attitude.

The 25 most influential WHAT?

Oh my, was that word “evangelists?” Would that be “evangelists” as in Christian men and women who evangelize nonbelievers, often in large public rallies?

So the conservative Catholic is an “evangelist” as well as, in political terms, an “evangelical.” One cannot help but flash back to 2004 and that edgy Books & Culture essay by sociologist Christian Smith of the University of Notre Dame, the piece entitled “Religiously Ignorant Journalists: In search of Episcopals and evangelists.”

All together now, let’s read aloud this ever memorable passage near the top:

As a scholar of American religion promoted to journalists by my university’s PR department as an alleged expert, I constantly receive inquiries from reporters wanting background, quotes, and contacts for religion stories they are writing. Usually they have one or two days to complete the story. As often as not, the journalist mispronounces the name of the religious group he or she is covering.

“Evangelicals” is one of their favorites to botch. Often in our discussions, journalists refer to ordinary evangelical believers as “evangelists” — as if the roughly 70 million conservative Protestants in America were all traveling preachers like Billy Graham and Luis Palau — or, more to the point, televangelists like Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggert. Hey, aren’t all evangelicals really pretty much like these last two, or rather as many reporters tend to see them — scandal-prone limelight seekers with ambitions to impose a repressive Christian moral order on all America? Other journalists simply cannot pronounce “evangelicals” at all. They get confused and flustered, and after a few uncomfortable tries at “evangelics” and “evangelicalists” they give up and resort to referring to evangelicals simply as “them.”

So, to the McClatchy bureau, we must say, “Correction please.”

NOTE: In your comments, please discuss the journalism issues in this post, not your opinions of Santorum or his candidacy.

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About TMatt

Terry Mattingly directs the Washington Journalism Center at the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities. He writes a weekly column for the Scripps Howard News Service.

  • Ed Mechmann

    Do they do any kind of fact-checking of their work? If Mr. Santorum is “the darling of Protestant Evangelicals”, they have a funny way of showing it — he’s never been above 5% of the polls.

  • Karl

    The term “evangelical” can be very broad, but non-Protestants are definitely not evangelicals. I wonder if confessional Protestants (the ones who view their adherence to the Westminster standards or the Book of Concord like a marriage vow) should be called “evangelicals.”

  • Jon in the Nati

    Is candidate Rick Santorum an “evangelist”?

    No, he is an evanglicalist. Get it right TMatt.

  • http://presbyterianblues.wordpress.com/ “Michael Mann”

    The journalists may be inadvertently right on this one. Santorum sure looked and sounded like an evangelical at the Family Leader Thanksgiving Forum in Des Moines. He talked of being saved as a Senator and emoted on cue. He home schools, which is a practice dominated by evangelicals.In addition, the red-meat faction of Iowa evangelicals think he and Bachmann are the candidates most like them.

    Anyway, the term “evangelical” is so elastic these days it’s getting harder to exclude anyone who has had a salvation experience and fights the culture wars.

  • http://gottagetgoing.blogspot.com Kunoichi

    “He home schools, which is a practice dominated by evangelicals.”

    As someone who’s home schooled for 18 years, I find this claim rather astonishing. I’ve yet to actually meet an evangelical home schooler in all my travels and moves. In my personal experience, most home schoolers are liberal secular humanists and aging, atheist hippies.

    Maybe it’s because I’m Canadian. ;-)

  • tmatt

    Michael Mann:

    Your comment is simply wrong.

    Saying that “Santorum sounds like an evangelical” would be a journalistic statement, sort of. Is that, however, Jim Wallis, Rick Warren or Franklin Graham that he sounds like?

    The fact that he is “most like” the Iowa evangelicals is rather crazy too, since most of them support Newt — another Catholic.

    No, Santorum is not an evangelical Protestant. He is a conservative Roman Catholic. Facts are facts and journalists should use them.

  • http://presbyterianblues.wordpress.com/ “Michael Mann”

    “Maybe it’s because I’m Canadian.”

    And here I must confess I know little about religion in Canada. Where I’m from, you can almost hear Billy Sunday still echoing.

    tmatt, sorry my posting was too subtle. Yes, of course journalists should know the difference between Catholics and evangelicals. But if you had a front row seat to the first caucus in the nation, you would be see Santorum talking and emoting very much like an evangelical in an attempt to win Iowa, the state that favored Mike Hucakabee and was quite enamored of Pat Robertson back in the day.

  • http://!)! Passing By

    “Evangelical” and “Catholic” are far from antonyms. From here:

    It is not enough to know who Jesus is; we must know Jesus.

    Through Word and Sacrament we are drawn by grace into a transforming union with the Lord Jesus, and having been justified by faith we are called to sanctification and equipped by the Holy Spirit for the good works of the new creation.

    Receiving the Sacraments without receiving the Gospel leads to superstition rather than living faith, and the Church must therefore take great care to ensure that those who receive the Sacraments also receive the Gospel…

    Being a follower of Christ requires moving from being a Church member by convention to a Christian disciple by conviction.

    Note that the pope has used language like this; it’s not wingnut stuff.

    This seems to me an issue not unlike that raised by tmatt in a previous thread. Evangelical and Catholic are not different religions, but they are different communities of Christians. So the question journalists should be asking is whether Santorum is this sort of Catholic. If he is, and journalists understand that Catholic and Evangelical are not religious opposites, it might resolve the confusion over Santorum’s actual affilitation.

    I have groused more than once about this obsession that plays out in the media over the religion of politicians. There are religious issues that matter. Honesty, integrity, political philosophy, and policy savvy are what I look for in a politician, and about these, religious affiliation and practice can reveal content. But the connection is far more subtle than framing stories in terms of religious conflicts.

  • http://!)! Passing By

    And yes, of course, confusing “evangelical” and “evangelist” is amateur stuff. But is it worst than that Baptist priest from a few days ago?
    :-)

  • teahouse

    While one might call someone an “evangelical Catholic” (I myself have been called that), it is certainly wrong to use the term “evangelical” on its own for a Catholic.

  • Julia

    Looks to me what’s going on is mixing up
    1)Evangelical as the name of a religious group,
    2) evangelical as a description derived from the perceived characteristics of Evangelicals and
    3) evangelical as description of a person who promotes the Gospel and its values.

    Santorum could fit #3 and so could the Pope.

    In fact, JP II called for a New Evangelization and Benedict is carrying that on in his pontificate.
    http://www.kofc.org/en/news/supreme/detail/fromthesk_20111201.html

    Same problem as people saying Catholics shouldn’t be allowed to call themselves Catholic without adding Roman to it because catholic includes everybody and Anglicans consider themselves Catholic, too.

    It’s proper noun v adjective.

  • Karl

    Well, Pope Benedict is somewhat of a small-e evangelical. Catholics and Evangelical Protestants still have major theological differences, even if they agree on the most basic level. Evangelical Protestants put almost no emphasis on sacraments, for example.

    I’ve heard the term “Evangelical Catholic” used to describe Catholics who support evangelistic outreach and high church Protestants who sort of mix Evangelical Protestantism with liturgy and other “high church” sensibilities.

  • Bill

    Can’t we all just get along and refer to him as a devout, ultra-conservative, practicing catholic Catholic, evangelistic evangelical home-schooler?

  • Parker

    It’s not a Canadian thing, I was home-schooled, not for religious reasons (and my family is so far from what you would call Evangelist). Furthermore, very few of my home school friends were “Evangelists,” or if they were, they weren’t very good at evangelizing.

  • Evanston2

    ChristianityToday.com has an article today entitled “Evangelicals’ Complicated Relationship with Romney and Gingrich.” The author seems to use the words “Christian conservatives” as synonymous with “Evangelical” (4th sentence). Mainly discusses results of latest Pew poll but does not discuss how Pew defines the term.

  • Evanston2
  • Daniel

    “Evangelical Protestants put almost no emphasis on sacraments, for example.”
    I think we’re mixing theology up with journalism, in what I admit is an attempt to understand the issues at hand. When covering theology, journalists need to be aware that what is said by the theologians isn’t always practiced by the membership. People may of course be members of a church because they grew up in it, were convinced of one or another differing point from their previous background, or because they liked the company kept there. People in the pews may put great importance on the sacraments when their theologians don’t. But theology is important both in dividing and in unifying the churches.

  • http://www.tmatt.net tmatt

    Spiking away. As stated in the post, this is not the place for Santorum reviews and screeds. Stick to he journalism issues.

  • http://www.juliaduin.com Julia Duin

    Not only did the reporter err in saying “evangelists” instead of “evangelicals” but his editors didn’t catch the mistake either. McClatchy must not have fact checkers; the reporter also got the name of Santorum’s son wrong. Correct name was Gabriel Michael, not Michael Gabriel.
    So many outlets: Politico, National Journal, the DC bureau of the Economist, NewsMax, even the Wall Street Journal have had the opportunity to hire religion specialists who would not make mistakes like this. They all refuse to do so. The ignorance is willful. Tmatt has said of people who don’t get religion: How do you cover a story that you don’t know exists? Or, how do you make a correction when you don’t know the right answer?

  • tmatt

    OK, I spiked a comment that was off topic. But I responded to the writer by email. The author’s email was not valid.

    So I post my response here:

    > A conservative Roman Catholic, like Santorum and the pope, is an evangelist or evangelical in the truest sense of the word.

    There are Catholic evangelists, but the word JPII preferred was Evangel for that role.

    Evangelicalism is a movement within Protestantism — period. That is what the word means, historically.

    > When will evangelical journalists realize that their own prejudiced misunderstanding of Catholicism is an obstruction to true Christian unity and world evangelization?

    Who are you talking about? This post is about an article in the mainstream press.

  • teahouse

    tmatt,

    I agree with your overall point and your aggravation at this constantly repeated complaint. However, I don’t understand the following:

    “There are Catholic evangelists, but the word JPII preferred was Evangel for that role.”

    An evangelist is someone preaching the Gospel.

    Evangel however is another word for the Gospel.

    Both are quite different from evangelicals.

    … Catholic or otherwise.

  • Diane

    Since I knew that Senator Santorum had been a Latin Rite Catholic and tried to follow all the Church’s teachings, I was stunned when I first saw the article from Times in an e-mail he sent to me. I had to read the article to actually see that he had not converted to any evangelical faith and was still very much a Catholic.

  • http://presbyterianblues.wordpress.com/ “Michael Mann”

    An amusing follow-up to my earlier comments:

    “The Rev. Albert Calaway, a retired Assemblies of God minister who lives in Indianola, today endorsed Santorum – but said he’d like to see Bachmann as the vice presidential nominee.

    “There’s absolutely, positively no divine power vested in me for this, but if I had it, I’d personally love to pronounce Rick and Michele as lawfully wedded running mates,” Calaway told The Des Moines Register in a written statement.

    http://caucuses.desmoinesregister.com/2011/12/17/iowa-religious-leader-asks-bachmann-to-combine-with-santorum-condemns-rest-of-field/

  • http://parablemania.ektopos.com/ Jeremy Pierce

    In an interview with the NH bishop who was the first Episcopal gay bishop, Terry Gross of NPR’s Fresh Air asked him something about the evangelists, and the context made it clear that she meant something closer to evangelicals but really meant it in the political rather than theological or cultural sense of the term. She meant the religious right. So this is presumably a common error among people who have never had any serious personal interaction with evangelicals on a basic human level.

  • http://parablemania.ektopos.com/ Jeremy Pierce

    Terry emailed me to ask for a URL, which drove me to engage in a little bit of a closer examination of when this took place. I had the wrong interview. It was actually her interview with Lynne Cheney in February 2005. The conversation turned to her lesbian daughter and how her husband worked so closely with Bush, who won re-election in part because of his support for the Defense of Marriage Act. The term she used to describe one group mainly supporting DOMA was ‘evangelists’ rather than ‘evangelicals’. The interview audio can be found here. (NPR was not yet transcribing the text for their audio files at that stage, as they now do.)